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#1803

4 incidents tagged

Mild

Beldham v Walker Single-Wicket Match — Lord's, August 1803

Beldham vs Walker

1803-08-22

On 22 August 1803 the two greatest survivors of the Hambledon batting school — William 'Silver Billy' Beldham and Tom 'Old Everlasting' Walker — played a single-wicket match at Lord's for stakes of 25 guineas. Beldham, faster-scoring and more elegant, won by 14 runs. The fixture is one of the few well-documented direct contests between the two senior professionals of the period.

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

William Fennex Pioneers Running In to Fast Bowling — Middlesex v Surrey, 1803

Middlesex vs Surrey

1803-06-15

In a Middlesex v Surrey match at Lord's in June 1803, the Buckinghamshire professional William Fennex did something contemporaries called 'astonishing': he advanced down the pitch to drive the ball before it pitched. Until that moment batters had played strictly from the crease, blocking length balls and waiting for the loose ball to cut. Fennex's running attack is the first recorded use of the technique that became the foundation of modern off-side play.

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

Death of David Harris — Hambledon's Greatest Bowler Dies at Crookham, May 1803

n/a

1803-05-19

On 19 May 1803, in the village of Crookham in north Hampshire, David Harris died at the age of 48. Hambledon's incomparable underarm bowler — described by John Nyren as 'masculine, erect and appalling' — had not played a major match since 1798, his career destroyed by gout. With his death the last great bowler of the Hambledon era passed into history, just as Lord Frederick Beauclerk and the new MCC generation were taking control of cricket.

#david-harris#hambledon#underarm-bowling
Moderate

Cricket Under the Napoleonic War — The Lean Seasons of 1803-1808

n/a

1803-05-18

Britain's Napoleonic War with France, resumed in May 1803 and continued until Waterloo in 1815, drained investment and manpower from English cricket. Only three major matches were recorded in 1803, six in 1805 (the year of Trafalgar), and the entire period from 1811 to 1813 produced just three. The MCC and a handful of well-organised London clubs kept the game alive through the lean years; without them, cricket might have lost a decade.

#napoleonic-war#cricket-decline#1803