1767 English cricket season
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In the 1767 English cricket season, Hambledon’s success continued and the team staged some remarkable batting performances but unfortunately very little is known of them.
There was an interesting report concerning the Laws of Cricket in the Reading Mercury dated Monday 8 June which states: The Articles of the Game of Cricket as settled in the year 1744 by the Society of Noblemen & Gentlemen at the Star & Garter in Pall Mall, may be had at the Printing Office in reading or of the newsmen, neatly printed on a whole sheet of fine writing paper, price only 3d, or on a pasteboard bordered with marble paper, price 6d. See FL18, p.46.
The Society of Noblemen & Gentlemen may well have been the name of the organisation that ran cricket and other sports. It was essentially a social club with sporting interests. They have been loosely referred to as the "London Club" but that was surely a cricketing enterprise based at the Artillery Ground that they backed, as they also formed and subsidised the Jockey Club, and subsequently both the White Conduit Club and MCC.
[edit] Matches
Date | Match Title | Venue | Source | Result |
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6 July (M) | Greenwich v London | Blackheath | WCS | London won by 2 runs |
Afterwards, “an elegant dinner was provided at the Assembly Rooms”. |
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4 August (Tu) | Hampshire v Sussex | Broadhalfpenny Down | FL18 | Hampshire won |
No details are known other than the outcome, which was given in the Reading Mercury of Mon 10 August. GDC records a second Hampshire v Sussex game on Sat 8 August, also won by Hampshire, but this may be a duplicate of the above as it is not recorded elsewhere. |
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c.5 August (W) | Bourne v Surrey | Bishopsbourne Paddock | FL18 | result unknown |
This was announced in the Kentish Weekly Post on 5 August. Bourne Club (Horace Mann’s team) had four given men so may have had a very useful side. The announcement says: “Wickets to be pitched at 10 so the match may be played out that day (sic) on account of the Assizes.” We do not know what date “that day” was, unfortunately. The Surrey team was probably Mr Henry Rowett’s Caterham Club. Mon 17 August. There was a “fives” game on Richmond Green between Richmond and Brentford. King George III was present and ordered dinner for the players at the Feathers in Richmond. He also awarded a guinea each to the winners and half a guinea each to the losers (see WCS). |
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23 September (W) | Richmond v Kingston | Richmond Green | WCS | Kingston won by 2 wkts |
Richmond scored 70 & 55; Kingston replied with 71 and 55-8. |
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c.21 September (M) | Caterham v Hambledon | Duppas Hill, Croydon | WCS | Hambledon won by 262 runs |
A very large margin for the times and Hambledon reportedly had a partnership of 192 which was described in a contemporary report as the greatest thing ever known. This is the earliest known century partnership. The game was played for 200 guineas. GDC says the partnership was believed to have been between Tom Sueter and Edward Aburrow (i.e., Aburrow junior) but that is conjecture. The primary sources do not name the players. The WCS report simply says "October" and that the game was played a few days earlier. As it took place near Croydon, the venue was almost certainly Duppas Hill. |
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28 & 29 September (M-Tu) | Hambledon v Caterham | Broadhalfpenny Down | WCS | Hambledon won by 224 runs |
Another huge margin of victory but no details have survived. |
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14 October (W) | Caterham v Hambledon | Caterham Common | WCS | Caterham won |
This was played for £100 and, surprisingly, given the results of the two previous games, was won by Caterham. |
English cricket teams in the 18th century |
Berkshire | Essex | Hampshire | Kent | Leicestershire | Middlesex | Mitcham | Nottingham | Sheffield | Surrey | Sussex |
English cricket venues in the 18th century |
Artillery Ground | Bishopsbourne Paddock | Broadhalfpenny Down | Bromley Common | Dartford Brent | Duppas Hill |
English cricket seasons to 1815 |
1300 - 1696 | 1697 - 1725 |
to 1815 • 1816-1863 • 1864-1889 • 1890-1918 • 1919-1945 • 1946-1968 • 1969-2000 • from 2001 |
[edit] Main Sources
- Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians - various publications
- Cricket Scores 1730 - 1773 by H T Waghorn (WCS)
- Fresh Light on 18th Century Cricket by G B Buckley (FL18)
- Fresh Light on Pre-Victorian Cricket by G B Buckley (FLPV)
- Sussex Cricket in the Eighteenth Century by Timothy J McCann (TJM)
- The Dawn of Cricket by H T Waghorn (WDC)
[edit] Additional References
- A Social History of English Cricket by Derek Birley
- Cricket: History of its Growth and Development by Rowland Bowen
- Chertsey Cricket Club website
- Dartford Cricket Club website (DCC)
- From the Weald to the World by Peter Wynne-Thomas (PWT)
- Hambledon Cricket Chronicle by F S Ashley-Cooper (HCC)
- Hambledon: Men and Myths by John Goulstone (HMM)
- Kent Cricket Matches by F S Ashley-Cooper (KCM)
- Pre-Victorian Sussex Cricket by HF & AP Squire (PVSC)
- Scores & Biographies, Volume 1 by Arthur Haygarth (SBnnn)
- Start of Play by David Underdown
- The Cricketer magazine (Cktr)
- The Glory Days of Cricket by Ashley Mote (GDC)
- John Nyren's The Cricketers of my Time by Ashley Mote
- Wisden Cricketers Almanack (annual): various issues