- 1750 English cricket season
Infobox cricket season
season =1750 English cricket season
imagesize =
caption =
cricket formats = first-class andsingle wicket
tourists =
county champions = Kent
knockout cup winners =
national league winners =
most runs =
most wickets =
most victims =
most catches =In the 1750 English cricket season, Kent and Surrey played three inter-county matches.
In "At the Sign of the Wicket",
F S Ashley-Cooper gives the opinion that the famousHambledon Club was founded in or about 1750, but there is no evidence to support this view and the fact is that the club's origin is unknown. As the team was playing top-class cricket in the 1756 season (i.e., its earliest recorded matches), it seems likely that a local club of some kind was founded much earlier than 1750 as it must have risen to a position of prominence in Hampshire before being able to take on the likes of Dartford from 1756.It is possible, as with many later county clubs, that a parish club was in existence for a long time and was then subject to substantial reorganisation after its team became famous. This might explain the many "origins" of the Hambledon Club up to about the 1767 season.
Honours
* Champion County [An unofficial seasonal title proclaimed by media or historians prior to December 1889 when the official County Championship was constituted] – Kent [http://www.jl.sl.btinternet.co.uk/stampsite/cricket/histories/champions.html Champion counties from 1728] ]
Matches
Other events
"Thurs
26 July ". Five of Richmond played Five of London for a guinea a man on theArtillery Ground . No details are knownF S Ashley-Cooper , "At the Sign of the Wicket: Cricket 1742-1751", "Cricket" Magazine, 1900] ."Wed
8 August ". Death ofCharles Lennox, 2nd Duke of Richmond (1701 – 1750), who was arguably the greatest of the game’s early patrons, particularly of theSlindon Cricket Club and of Sussex cricket in general. His death was followed by an immediate slump in Sussex cricket and it is not until 1766 that a recovery can be discerned ."Mon
10 September ". The first of three "fives" betweenStephen Dingate andTom Faulkner at theArtillery Ground . Faulkner won this one, which was played for fifty guineas. Teams were:Stephen Dingate , John Bryant, James Bryant, John Bell and Thomas Bell versusTom Faulkner , Joseph Harris, John Harris, Durling and Perry ."Fri
14 September ". The second match ended in a tie, both sides totalling nine. As single-wicket rules applied, all batsmen were out. It is known they were all bowled (but not who by) except for Dingate who was caught in the 2nd innings, Thomas Bell who was run out in the 2nd innings and Joe Harris who was caught in the 2nd innings (apparently while trying to hit the winning run) ."Mon
17 September ". The third and deciding game of "fives" was won by Tom Faulkner’s side by an innings and one run. Dingate’s team scored 10 & 18 but Faulkner’s scored 29. Interestingly, the individual figures in the recorded score of Dingate’s second innings add up to 20 but 18 was definitely the correct total so one or more of the individual scores was wrong .First mentions
* Robert Bartholomew
*Thomas Brandon
* Perry (Surrey)References
External sources
* [http://www.cricketarchive.co.uk/Archive/Seasons/1750_ENG.html CricketArchive match lists]
* [http://www.jl.sl.btinternet.co.uk/stampsite/cricket/main.html From Lads to Lord's; The History of Cricket: 1300 – 1787]Further reading
* H S Altham, "A History of Cricket, Volume 1 (to 1914)", George Allen & Unwin, 1962
*Derek Birley , "A Social History of English Cricket", Aurum, 1999
*Rowland Bowen , "Cricket: A History of its Growth and Development", Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1970
*David Underdown , "Start of Play", Allen Lane, 2000
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