Frederick Greenfield
Frederick Francis John Greenfield (10 May 1850 – 25 October 1900) was an English cricketer and Anglican priest.
Greenfield was born in Gorakhpur, Bengal (now in Uttar Pradesh), and was educated at Hurstpierpoint and Peterhouse, Cambridge. He played cricket for Sussex and was twice club captain in the periods 1876–78 and 1881–82. He also played for Cambridge University 1874–76 and was captain in 1876.[1] He appeared in 85 first-class matches from 1873 to 1884 as a righthanded batsman who bowled right arm slow with a roundarm action. He scored 2,549 runs with a highest score of 126 and took 111 wickets with a best performance of seven for 26.[2]
Greenfield was ordained as a Church of England priest in 1879 and after various curacies was chaplain of the Poor Law Union in the district of Cuckfield, West Sussex, 1884–91 and also of the Sussex county lunatic asylum 1885–90. He then moved to South Africa and was headmaster of a school near Dundee, KwaZulu-Natal, from 1896 until 1900 when, during the Second Boer War, he was taken prisoner by the Boers, was robbed of everything and died of pleurisy.[3]
Notes
- ↑ "Past CUCC captains". Cambridge University Cricket Club.
- ↑ Frederick Greenfield at CricketArchive
- ↑ "Greenfield, Frederick Francis John (GRNT873FF)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.