Lieutenant colonelGeoffrey John Dean (12 November 1909 – 12 December 1995), known as Tinny Dean, was a British Army officer and England international rugby union player.
Dean, a diminutive scrum-half, went by the nickname "Tiny", which was morphed into "Tinny" after he was commissioned into the Royal Tank Corps in 1931.[2] He played his rugby for the Army, Barbarians, Cambridge University, Combined Services, Harlequins and Sussex. In 1931, Dean gained an England cap, preferred over varsity teammate Brian Pope for the Five Nations match against Ireland at Twickenham.[3][4]
In World War II, Dean was awarded a Military Cross and served as a Squadron Commander with the 2nd Royal Tank Regiment in North Africa, where he was badly injured in 1941 when his tank ran over a landmine. His foot was immediately amputated and he underwent further surgery after getting gangrene. Following a period in Italian captivity, Dean returned home in 1942 and became an instructor at Sandhurst.[1]
Dean remained with the army until 1949, when he settled in Devon to breed cattle and pigs. He was a friend of RAF flying ace Douglas Bader, his former Combined Services halfback partner, who was also an amputee.[2]