[4] Schultz's Wisden obituary in 1938 recalled a less happy batting experience related in a letter to The Times by a Mr Edmund Peake about a match between the Gentlemen of England and Oxford University Cricket Club on the Christ Church College ground at Oxford in 1881: The fast bowler (I blush to say it) committed such havoc as would have made him famous in these days.
On arrival at the ground, my great friend Albert Hornby and EB Rowley came up, and in the most innocent way expressed their astonishment at my protest and said that Schultz had always played for Lancashire.
Representing Royal St George's, Schultz was one of eight men who met in Edinburgh in 1902 as organisers of what went on to become the annual England–Scotland Amateur Match.
[9] Schultz's brother Arthur was a member of the Royal and Ancient at the time, but was not a representative at the meeting.)
They lived in Kensington and then Chelsea, London; but they also spent a great deal of time in both Sandwich and Hove, where Schultz was a prominent golfer and where Mabel participated in the counties' social life.
In December 1914, after the start of World War I, he changed his Germanic-sounding surname to Storey, which was his mother's maiden name.