Terence Cole (cricketer)
Terence George Owen Cole (14 November 1877 – 15 December 1944), played first-class cricket for nearly a quarter of a century, but only totalled 20 first-class matches in all.
In major cricket he appeared for Cambridge University, MCC and three county sides – Lancashire, Derbyshire and Somerset. But exactly half of his 20 first-class games came on the Lord Brackley's XI tour of the West Indies in 1904–05. He was a middle-order right-handed batsman, though was occasionally used as an opening batsman.
Cole was born at Llanrhaiadr, Denbighshire, the son of Francis Burton Owen Cole JP DL formerly Captain in the 7th Royal Fusiliers and his wife Mary Georgiana Lyster. Cole's mother died in 1881 and his father remarried two years later.[1] He was educated at Harrow School, where he was a promising schoolboy batsman and bowler. He made 142 for Harrow in the annual match against Eton College at Lord's in 1897, at the time the highest score ever made by a Harrow player in the match.[2] He also made the highest aggregate score in the match.[3] He went to Cambridge University, but at Cambridge the following year he played in only one first-class match and made little impression in that, nor in a second match for MCC against Cambridge in 1899.[4][5] He then played regularly in the Liverpool area in the early years of the 20th century before making a single appearance for Lancashire in a match against Leicestershire in May 1904. He was out for a duck.[6]
Lord Brackley's XI toured the West Indies in leisurely fashion in the first four months of 1905, playing 20 matches in all, half of which were deemed to be of first-class status. The team consisted mainly of amateur cricketers of very mixed abilities, plus a couple of hard-worked professionals. Cole played in all of the first-class matches, and made 50s in three of them, including 68 against Jamaica, batting at No 9, which remained his highest score.[7] In 1906, Brackley's team reassembled at Lord's for a match against the West Indian touring team: Cole made 59 as Brackley's team won the match, but it did not count as first-class.[8]
Seven years then passed before Cole's next appearances in major cricket. Between May and July 1913, he appeared six times for Derbyshire, making 171 runs at a fairly respectable average of 15.54 but having a highest score of only 36. That, though, came in a match against Sussex at County Ground, Hove, in which Cole top-scored in both innings as Derbyshire went down to a heavy defeat.[9]
After the First World War, Cole settled in Somerset and made frequent appearances for the amateur (and not wholly serious) Somerset Stragglers side. He also made one final first-class appearance for his new county: a game in 1922 against Oxford University in which he made 1 and 18.[10] Cole died at Stoke Court, Stoke St Mary, Taunton, Somerset.
References
- ↑ Marquis of Ruvigny & Raineval, marquis de Melville Henry Massue Ruvigny et Raineval, Marquis of Ruvigny and Raineval Staff Plantagenet Roll of the Blood Royal: The Anne of Exeter Volume, Containing the Descendants of Anne (Plantagenet), Duchess of Exeter Genealogical Publishing Com, 1994 ISBN 0806314338
- ↑ "M.C.C. Matches". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (1925 ed.). Wisden. pp. p73.
- ↑ Howson, Edmund Whytehead; Warner, George Townsend (1898). Harrow School. London: E. Arnold. p. 230.
- ↑ "Cambridge University v C. I. Thornton's England XI". www.cricketarchive.com. 9 May 1898. Retrieved 27 November 2008.
- ↑ "Cambridge University v Marylebone Cricket Club". www.cricketarchive.com. 12 June 1899. Retrieved 27 November 2008.
- ↑ "Leicestershire v Lancashire". www.cricketarchive.com. 9 May 1904. Retrieved 27 November 2008.
- ↑ "Jamaica v Lord Brackley's XI". www.cricketarchive.com. 19 January 1905. Retrieved 27 November 2008.
- ↑ "Lord Brackley's XI v West Indians". www.cricketarchive.com. 18 June 1906. Retrieved 27 November 2008.
- ↑ "Sussex v Derbyshire". www.cricketarchive.com. 9 June 1913. Retrieved 27 November 2008.
- ↑ "Oxford University v Somerset". www.cricketarchive.com. 31 May 1922. Retrieved 27 November 2008.