At Cambridge, Humphry shot for the university against
Oxford in the short-range
Chancellors' Plate each year between 1870 and 1873; the team won twice, in 1870 and 1872, and lost in 1871 and 1874. In 1871, as an
ensign in F Company of the
Cambridge University Rifle Volunteers (CURV) and a second-year undergraduate, he won the
Queen's Prize. The Queen's was the premier competition in
target rifle shooting in the British Empire, contested as part of the British
National Rifle Association's
annual meeting then held on
Wimbledon Common. His score in the final, contested at the ranges of 800, 900 and 1,000 yards (, and metres), was 68 out of a possible 84 points. In the same meeting as his Queen's victory, he was part of the victorious Cambridgeshire team in the inter-county China Cup. In 1875 Humphry placed second in the
Grand Aggregate, the overall ranking of the competitors at the Wimbledon Meeting, thereby winning the Silver Cross of the National Rifle Association (NRA). In 1878 he won the Grand Aggregate outright, thereby winning the NRA's Gold Cross. He also won several individual competitions of the association's annual meeting, including two wins each in the Duke of Cambridge (1877 and 1880) and the Curtis and Harvey (1878 and 1880). Apart from his 1871 victory, he qualified three times (in 1872, 1885 and 1877) for the final stage of the Queen's Prize. His performance at the 1878 meeting won him more prizes than any other competitor, either at that meeting or any previous NRA meeting.''. Humphry is in the front row at far left. |alt=Photograph of a large number of men, almost all bearded or with moustaches, in formal suits. Humphry is among the moustachioed. For names, see the image's description page. In 1877, as a
private in the
23rd Middlesex (Inns of Court) Rifle Volunteer Corps, Humphry was part of the touring British team that visited
Creedmoor Rifle Range in New York. The British team, led by
Sir Henry Halford, were defeated by the United States by 92 out of 2,000 points. In 1882, by then a
major, he returned to Creedmoor, again under Halford, with another Great Britain team. Great Britain won the international match against the United States, and Humphry made the top score of all competitors at – an achievement which the American shooter
Henry Gildersleeve jokingly attributed to the presence at Creedmoor of Humphry's wife, Elizabeth, who loaded his
cartridges for him. Humphry was a member, alongside Halford, of the victorious England
match rifle teams in 1872 and 1888 match for the
Elcho Shield: his score in 1888 of 184 was the team's lowest. He also shot for England in 1877, when the team placed second behind Ireland. In 1881, Humphry presented a cup to be given as the prize for
the long-range match between the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, which had been conducted since 1869 and was shot at Wimbledon for the first time in 1880. The match has been named for him since. In 1897, upon the death of Halford,
The Times suggested that Humphry could claim, in the same way as
Horatio Ross and
George Charles Gibbs, to have been the best all-round shooter of his generation. By 1899, he had retired from both shooting and military service. In a 1913 volume on sport at British schools and universities,
Robert Lyttelton wrote that Humphry was "one of the most famous rifle shots of the world". == Personal and professional life ==