- Nicholas Felix
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Nicholas Felix Nicholas Felix (seventh from right)
with the 1847 All-England ElevenPersonal information Full name Nicholas Wanostrocht Born 5 October 1804
Camberwell, London, EnglandDied 3 September 1876 (aged 71)
Wimborne Minster, Dorset, EnglandBatting style Left-handed Bowling style Slow left arm orthodox (underarm) Role Batsman Domestic team information Years Team 1834 – 1852 Kent 1846 – 1852 Surrey 1830 Marylebone Cricket Club Career statistics Competition First-class Matches 149 Runs scored 4556 Batting average 18.15 100s/50s 2/15 Top score 113 Balls bowled 124+ Wickets 9 Bowling average unknown 5 wickets in innings – 10 wickets in match – Best bowling 3/? Catches/stumpings 112/– Source: CricketArchive, 3 September 1876 Nicholas "Felix" Wanostrocht (born 5 October 1804 at Camberwell, London; died 3 September 1876 at Wimborne Minster, Dorset) was a noted English amateur ("Gentleman") cricketer.
He is one of the few players who - at his request - was routinely known by his nickname, which was in effect a pseudonym. When his father died in 1824 he had inherited the running of his school, aged only nineteen, and he was afraid that the parents of pupils might think that cricket was too frivolous a pastime for a schoolmaster.
He was a specialist left-handed batsman, though he did occasionally bowl underarm slow left-arm orthodox. Felix was a mainstay of the great Kent team of the mid-19th century alongside such players as Alfred Mynn, Fuller Pilch, William Hillyer and Ned Wenman. In the words of the famous elegy, best loved of Bernard Darwin,
- And with five such mighty cricketers 'twas but natural to win
- As Felix, Wenman, Hillyer, Fuller Pilch and Alfred Mynn.
He played for Kent from 1830 until 1852. He also appeared for MCC and was a popular member of the All-England Eleven.
In his overall first-class career, Felix played in 149 matches and had 264 innings including 13 not out. He scored 4,556 runs at 18.15 with a highest score of 113. He made 2 centuries, 15 fifties and took 112 catches. It should be remembered when studying his batting average that he played at a time when prevailing conditions greatly favoured bowlers. Felix was rated very highly by his contemporaries.
He was the author of a famous instruction book: Felix on the Bat, Baily Bros, 1845. He also invented the Catapulta (a bowling machine) as well as India-rubber batting gloves. A man of many talents, he was also a classical scholar, musician, linguist, inventor, writer and artist.
Felix is buried in Wimborne cemetery. Ten yards from his grave is the grave of another cricketer, Montague John Druitt, better known as a prime suspect in the Jack the Ripper crimes.
External links
References
- Scores & Biographies, Volume 1 by Arthur Haygarth (SBnnn)
- Barclay's World of Cricket - 2nd Edition, 1980, Collins Publishers, ISBN 0-00-216349-7, p10.
Categories:- English cricketers
- Kent cricketers
- Marylebone Cricket Club cricketers
- All-England Eleven cricketers
- Surrey cricketers
- Gentlemen cricketers
- North v South cricketers
- English cricketers of 1826 to 1863
- 1804 births
- 1876 deaths
- Cricket historians and writers
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