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#1827

6 incidents tagged

Mild

Royal Brunswick Ground Opens at Hove — Sussex's New Headquarters, 1827

n/a

1827-06-04

In June 1827 the Royal Brunswick Ground opened at Hove — Sussex cricket's new principal venue, replacing the open Steine at Brighton as the county's main fixture ground. The Brunswick was used until 1872 and was the home of Sussex cricket through the great roundarm decades. Its opening confirmed Hove's emergence as a cricket centre and prepared the ground for the 1872 move to the present County Ground.

#roundarm-era#royal-brunswick-ground#hove
Mild

First Major Match at Bramshill Park — Hampshire Patron Cricket, 1827

Hampshire vs MCC

1827-08-08

On 8-9 August 1827 Hampshire played MCC at Bramshill Park — the seat of Sir William Cope — in one of the last great country-house major matches of the patron era. Cope had laid out a strip on the parkland in front of the house and stocked it for major cricket. The fixture is among the final examples of the eighteenth-century model of patron-funded country-house cricket carried into the new era.

#roundarm-era#bramshill-park#hampshire
Serious

The Roundarm Trial Matches — Sussex v England, Summer 1827

Sussex vs England

1827-07-25

To resolve the running argument over roundarm bowling, the MCC sanctioned three matches in the summer of 1827 between Sussex — whose bowlers Lillywhite and Broadbridge would deliver roundarm — and an England XI bowling only underarm. Played at Sheffield (4-6 June), Lord's (18-19 June) and Brighton (23-25 July), the series was meant to test whether roundarm should be legalised. Sussex won the first two and lost the third, the trial was declared inconclusive, and the law was nudged a step further the following year.

#roundarm-bowling#1827#sussex
Mild

The First Oxford v Cambridge Cricket Match — Lord's, 4 June 1827

Oxford University vs Cambridge University

1827-06-04

On 4 June 1827, on a wet single day at Lord's, Oxford and Cambridge played the first cricket match between the two universities — the oldest varsity sporting fixture in the world. The match arose from a personal challenge by Oxford's Charles Wordsworth, nephew of the poet, to his Cambridge counterpart Herbert Jenner. Oxford ran up 258 and bowled Cambridge out for 92, but rain prevented a finish and the match was drawn.

#oxford#cambridge#varsity-match
Mild

Sussex 'Champion County' — The First Informal Claim, 1825-1827

Sussex

1827-09-01

Through the mid-1820s Sussex established themselves as the strongest county side in England, on the strength of the roundarm bowling of Lillywhite and Broadbridge. The Sussex team was acclaimed by the press as 'champion county' from 1826 onwards — the first time the title was applied informally to a single county side and the seed of the formal County Championship that would emerge sixty years later.

#sussex#champion-county#1820s
Moderate

Lord Frederick Beauclerk — MCC President as the Old Order Ends, 1826-27

MCC

1826-05-01

Lord Frederick Beauclerk, the autocratic clergyman-cricketer who had dominated English cricket since the 1790s, served as MCC president for 1826-27 — the very years in which the roundarm revolution he had spent his life resisting reached its decisive phase. Still occasionally taking the field in his late fifties, Beauclerk was the embodiment of the old underarm order, and his presidency oversaw the trial matches that would condemn it.

#lord-frederick-beauclerk#mcc#1826