1779 English cricket season
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The 1779 English cricket season saw the beginnings of Berkshire as a first-class county team.
Contents |
[edit] Matches
Date | Match Title | Venue | Source | Result |
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14-15 June (M-Tu) | Hampshire v All-England | Itchin Stoke Down | SB39 | Hampshire won by 6 wkts |
All-England 80 (W Bedster 23, R Miller 23; R Nyren 4w) & 179 (R Clifford 34, Mills 34, W Bedster 26, R Miller 25; R Nyren 2w); Hampshire 137 (T Sueter 44, R A Veck 30; E Stevens 4w, W Lamborn 3w) & 125-4 (R A Veck 39*, J Aylward 27, E Aburrow 25*; E Stevens 2w) |
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23-26 June (W-S) | All-England v Hampshire | Sevenoaks Vine | SB40 | Hampshire won by innings & 89 runs |
All-England 56 (W Bedster 22, E Stevens 21*; R Nyren 3w, N Mann 3w) & 87 (W Bedster 37; N Mann 3w); Hampshire 232 (R A Veck 79, N Mann 56; W Lamborn 5w, W Bullen 2w) |
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12 July (M) | Berkshire Club v Hants & Berks | Maidenhead | FL18 | result unknown |
This must have been an early match arranged by the famous Oldfield Club which achieved prominence in the next decade. The opposition is described as 11 picked men out of Hampshire & Berks. Advertised in the Reading Mercury a week earlier. |
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21-24 July (W-S) | Kent v Surrey | Bishopsbourne Paddock | FL18 | drawn (rain) |
Badly affected by rain, the game was abandoned and all bets were declared void. Surrey had scored 62 and Kent had replied with 83-8 when the rain intervened. Kent had two given men from Hampshire who were apparently Veck and Aylward. There was a return match on 9 August as recorded in S&B. |
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? August | Alresford v Berkshire | Odiham Down | FL18 | result unknown |
FL18 records a notice in the Reading Mercury that "some time in August", there would be a match on Odiham Down between Alresford and Berkshire. It says that Alresford would have some of the Hambledon Club and Berkshire would be with the Maidenhead Club. |
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9-11 August (M-W) | Surrey v Kent | Laleham Burway | SB41 | Kent won by 5 wkts |
Surrey 123 (J Minshull 40, W Yalden 27; J Boorman 3w) & 108 (H Attfield 25; W Bullen 3w); Kent 141 (R A Veck 55, R Miller 25; E Stevens 3w, W Lamborn 3w) & 91-5 (R Miller 25; W Lamborn 2w) R A Veck, who as the country's leading runscorer had probably his best season in 1779, played for Kent as a given man and his innings won the match for them. |
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23 August (M) | Hampshire v All-England | Broadhalfpenny Down | SB42 | Hampshire won by 134 runs |
Hampshire 167 (John Small 66, N Mann 45) & 182 (G Leer 58, T Sueter 24, N Mann 23; W Lamborn 4w, E Stevens 2w); All-England 112 (J Aylward 51) & 88 (R Miller 37; R Nyren 3w, N Mann 3w) No bowling or fielding details were found for the two first innings. In S&B, Mr Haygarth writes: "Another account says this match was played at Chertsey. In the score Berwick and Bowra were not mentioned as playing as given men for Hambledon, but as they do so in the next match, of course they must be in this. Why Berwick is a given man cannot now be said, as his doings do not entitle him to such a position. How the two sides were got out in their two first innings was not inserted in the score book from whence it was copied". |
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13-16 September (M-Th) | All-England v Hampshire | Moulsey Hurst | SB42 | Hampshire won by 2 wkts |
All-England 91 (W Bullen 35, R Clifford 33; R Nyren 3w) & 242 (E Stevens 52, H Attfield 46, R Miller 34, J Minshull 34, W Yalden 25); Hampshire 172 (T Taylor 80, N Mann 38; E Stevens 3w) & 162-8 (R A Veck 43, E Aburrow 35, R Nyren 23*) In direct contrast with the previous match, no bowling or fielding details were found for the two second innings! |
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5 October (Tu) | Berkshire v Oxfordshire | Henley | FL18 | result unknown |
One of the earliest references to cricket in Oxfordshire was in the Reading Mercury on Monday 4 October: On Tues. Oct 5 at Henley, the County of Berks v the County of Oxford, for £25 a side (see FL18) |
[edit] Other Events
Mon 7 – Tues 8 June. There was a "fives" game at the Artillery Ground in which the Duke of Dorset’s team beat Sir Horace Mann’s by 1 wicket. Dorset’s team was James Aylward, William Brazier, Sam Colchin, Phillips and Polden. Mann’s team was Richard Miller, William Bedster, William Bullen, Robert Clifford and one of the May brothers. This was reported in the Morning Post next day (see FL18).
[edit] Leading batsmen
Note that many scorecards in the 18th century are unknown or have missing details and so it is impossible to provide a complete analysis of batting performances: e.g., the missing not outs prevent computation of batting averages. The "runs scored" are in fact the runs known.
runs | player |
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280 | Richard Aubrey Veck |
176 | Richard Miller |
167 | Noah Mann |
146 | William Bedster |
131 | James Aylward |
126 | Robert Clifford |
120 | Henry Attfield |
120 | John Minshull |
116 | John Small |
114 | Thomas Taylor |
107 | William Bullen |
105 | Tom Sueter |
102 | George Leer |
98 | Edward "Curry" Aburrow |
[edit] Leading bowlers
Note that the wickets credited to an 18th century bowler were only those where he bowled the batsman out. The bowler was not credited with the wickets of batsmen who were caught out, even if it was "caught and bowled". In addition, the runs conceded by each bowler were not recorded so no analyses or averages can be computed.
wkts | player |
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18 | Lamborn |
16 | Richard Nyren |
16 | Edward "Lumpy" Stevens |
11 | Noah Mann |
9 | William Bullen |
[edit] Leading fielders
Note that many scorecards in the 18th century are unknown or have missing details and so the totals are of the known catches and stumpings only. Stumpings were not always recorded as such and sometimes the name of the wicket-keeper was not given. Generally, a catch was given the same status as "bowled" with credit being awarded to the fielder only and not the bowler. There is never a record of "caught and bowled"the bowler would be credited with the catch, not with the wicket.
ct/st | player |
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7 | William Yalden |
6 | William Bowra |
4 | William Bedster |
4 | John Small |
3 | several players |
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
- 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)
- Scores & Biographies, Volume 1 by Arthur Haygarth (SBnnn)
- The Glory Days of Cricket by Ashley Mote
- John Nyren's The Cricketers of my Time by Ashley Mote