1726 English cricket season

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[edit] Season Overview

Details remain few but the reports seem to widening in scope because at last we begin to read the names of players as well as patrons. With a name we can envisage a person and with a few more details we can understand something of the character, background and achievements of that person. The first players we know of are Perry of London and Piper of Hampton. They played a single-wicket match and they must have been good players or it would not have been reported. The main story of the year, as in some earlier seasons, concerns cricket's relationship with the law, though once again the issue was non-payment of gambling debts.

[edit] Major Matches

The London Evening Post dated 27 August carried an advertisement for a single wicket match between players called Perry (of London) and Piper (of Hampton, Middlesex). The venue was Moulsey Hurst, near Molesey in Surrey. This is the earliest reference we have of cricket being played there. It was famous for various sporting activities, especially prizefighting, and was often used for cricket throughout the 18th Century.

Date Match Title Venue Source Result
29 Aug (M) London & Surrey v Mr Edward Stead’s XI Kennington Common WDC result unknown
? Sept (see 1724) Chingford v Mr Edward Stead’s XI Dartford Brent WDC result unknown

The match on 29 August was "for 25 guineas between the men belonging to Edward Stead, Esq. of Maidstone and the men of London and Surrey".

The second game is the conclusion of the 1724 match which was unfinished at that time and became the subject of a lawsuit. Lord Chief Justice Pratt ordered it to be played out. It is not known if Dartford Brent was the original venue but it seems certain the match was concluded there.

On the subject of legal matters, Mr G B Buckley recounts a letter written by an Essex resident. The writer complained that a local Justice of the Peace had seen fit to literally read the Riot Act, as it were, to some people who were playing cricket on Saturday 10 September. He had a constable with him who dispersed the players. It seems the JP considered any game or sport as a pretence covering the gathering of disaffected people in order to raise a rebellion! Given the ruling by Lord Chief Justice Pratt, who in effect ordered the game to be played in Dartford, the issue raised was that it was apparently lawful to play cricket in Kent but not in Essex.


English cricketers of 1701 to 1760

Edward Aburrow senior | William Anderson | Robert Bartholomew | William Bedle | John & Thomas Bell | "Little" & "Tall" Bennett
John Bowra | Thomas Brandon | Alan Brodrick | James & John Bryant | Robert Colchin | John Cutbush | Stephen Dingate
Durling | Robert Eures | Tom Faulkner | John Frame | Frederick, Prince of Wales | Sir William Gage | Stephen Harding
John & Joseph Harris | William Hodsoll | George Jackson | Thomas Jure | Kipps | John Larkin | Robert Lascoe
J Mansfield | John Mills | Richard Newland | Tom Peake | Duke of Richmond | Ridgeway | Val Romney
Lord John Sackville | William Sawyer | George Smith | Edward Stead | Thomas Waymark


English cricket teams in the 18th century

Berkshire | Essex | Hampshire | Kent | Leicestershire | Middlesex | Nottingham | Sheffield | Surrey | Sussex
Addington | Alresford | Bromley | Chertsey | Dartford | Hadlow | Hambledon | London | MCC | Slindon | White Conduit Club


English cricket venues in the 18th century

Artillery Ground | Bishopsbourne Paddock | Broadhalfpenny Down | Bromley Common | Dartford Brent | Duppas Hill
Guildford Bason | Kennington Common | Laleham Burway | Lord's Cricket Ground | Moulsey Hurst
Richmond Green | Vine Cricket Ground | White Conduit Fields


English cricket seasons to 1815

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[edit] Article & Match Sources