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#1800

4 incidents tagged

Mild

Death of Joseph 'Joey' Ring — Hambledon's Last Regular Bowler, July 1800

n/a

1800-07-19

Joseph 'Joey' Ring of Hambledon — left-arm fast underarm bowler and one of the last surviving regulars of the great Hambledon side of the 1780s — died at Hambledon in July 1800 in his early forties. His death is one of the markers historians use for the end of the Hambledon era proper: of the eleven who beat England at Sevenoaks in 1777, only Beldham, Walker and a handful of fielders were still in major cricket.

#regency-cricket#underarm#joey-ring
Mild

Tom Walker's Marathon Defensive Innings — Hampshire v Surrey, June 1800

Hampshire vs Surrey

1800-06-23

On 23 June 1800 Thomas 'Old Everlasting' Walker batted for the best part of two days for Hampshire against Surrey at Lord's. Contemporaries said he scored at a rate of barely a run an over. The innings — 41 in roughly four and a half hours — was Walker's longest at Lord's and the most extreme example of the Hambledon-school defensive batting that had governed the major game since the 1780s.

#regency-cricket#underarm#lord-s-old-ground
Mild

Lord Winchilsea Raises an England XI at Burley-on-the-Hill — August 1800

England XI vs Rutland & Leicestershire

1800-08-12

In August 1800 George Finch-Hatton, ninth Earl of Winchilsea — co-founder of the MCC and the most important patron of late-Hambledon cricket — staged one of his last great country-house matches at his Rutland seat, Burley-on-the-Hill. He brought down a near-Test-strength England XI to play a combined Rutland and Leicestershire side in front of a paying gallery on the lawn below the great house. The fixture is one of the clearest pieces of evidence we have that the patron-led model of major cricket survived into the new century, even as the MCC at Lord's was beginning to absorb its functions.

#regency-cricket#underarm#lord-s-old-ground
Mild

The Hambledon Club Reforms — Village Cricket Restored, 1800

n/a

1800-08-01

Four years after its last grand-club meeting, at which 'no Gentlemen were present', the Hambledon Club reformed in 1800 as a village cricket club. Stripped of the naval officers and London patrons who had made it a national power in the 1770s and 1780s, the rebuilt club played local matches around Broadhalfpenny Down and Windmill Down through the early 1800s. It was the quiet, modest survival of cricket's first great institution after its glory had passed.

#hambledon-club#1800#broadhalfpenny-down