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C. B. Fry

Charles Burgess Fry (25 April 1872 – 7 September 1956) was an English sportsman, teacher, writer, editor and publisher, who is best remembered for his career as a cricketer.[1] John Arlott described him with the words: "Charles Fry could be autocratic, angry and self-willed: he was also magnanimous, extravagant, generous, elegant, brilliant – and fun ... he was probably the most variously gifted Englishman of any age."[2]

C. B. Fry
Personal information
Full name
Charles Burgess Fry
Born(1872-04-25)25 April 1872
Croydon, Surrey, England
Died7 September 1956(1956-09-07) (aged 84)
Hampstead, London, England
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-arm fast-medium
RelationsBeatrice Holme Sumner (wife)
Stephen Fry (son)
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 95)13 February 1896 v South Africa
Last Test22 August 1912 v Australia
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1892–1895Oxford University
1900–1902London County
1894–1908Sussex
1909–1921Hampshire
1921/22Europeans (India)
Career statistics
Competition Test First-class
Matches 26 394
Runs scored 1,223 30,886
Batting average 32.18 50.22
100s/50s 2/7 94/124
Top score 144 258*
Balls bowled 10 9,036
Wickets 0 166
Bowling average 29.34
5 wickets in innings 9
10 wickets in match 2
Best bowling 6/78
Catches/stumpings 17/– 239/–
Source: ESPNcricinfo, 12 November 2008

Fry's achievements on the sporting field included representing England at both cricket and football,[3] an FA Cup Final appearance for Southampton and equalling the then-world record for the long jump.[4] He also reputedly turned down the throne of Albania. In later life, he suffered mental health problems, but even well into his seventies he claimed he was still able to perform his party trick: leaping from a stationary position backwards onto a mantelpiece.[5][6][7][8]

Education edit

C. B. Fry was born in Croydon; the son of a civil servant.[9][10] Both sides of his family had once been wealthy, but by 1872 were not as prosperous. After winning a scholarship, Fry was educated at Repton School and then at Wadham College, Oxford. His greatest strength academically was in the Classics. At Repton he won the school prizes for Latin Verse, Greek Verse, Latin Prose and French. He was also runner-up in German.[11] His weakest subject was mathematics; he gained the headmaster's permission to study Thucydides instead and dispensed with maths for the rest of his academic career.[12]

Repton has a strong tradition in football and Fry played for the under-16 Repton football side in his first term, aged thirteen.[13] He went on to captain both the school's cricket and football teams, and also won prizes for athletics.[14] At the age of sixteen he played for the Casuals in the F.A. Cup.[15]

Having won a further scholarship to study at Wadham College, Oxford, he won his university Blue in football, cricket and athletics, but narrowly failed to win a Blue in rugby union, because of an injury.[16][17] Fry's status brought him into the orbit of people whose fame was already spreading far beyond Oxford, such as Max Beerbohm, the writer and caricaturist. He gained a first in classical moderations.[18]

When Fry was only twenty-one, the magazine Vanity Fair published a caricature of him in its issue of 19 April 1894, with the comment: "He is sometimes known as "C.B."; but it has lately been suggested that he should be called 'Charles III'."[19][2]

In his final term at Oxford Fry experienced his first (but not last) bout of mental illness, suffering a mental breakdown.[20][21] There were a number of contributing factors to this. During his time at Oxford Fry had accumulated disturbingly large debts. In an attempt to alleviate his financial difficulties, Fry capitalised on his reputation to make some much-needed money. As well as writing articles (including one for Wisden), he did some private tutoring but although such activities reduced his debts they did not clear them and, further increased the intense pressure on his time. Fry's continuing indebtedness provides the most obvious explanation for his acceptance of an offer to do some nude modelling. These financial problems combined with his mother being seriously ill, placed an unbearable strain on him. Although he was able to sit his final exams, he was hardly in any fit state to do so, having hardly read a line for weeks. The result was Fry scraping a Fourth, bringing one of Oxford's most spectacular and successful careers to an inglorious end. So in the summer of 1895, only months after being the toast of Oxford, Fry found himself saddled with mounting debts and no way with which to repay them. In the short term, cricket came to his rescue. He was offered, and accepted, the chance to tour South Africa as a member of Lord Hawke's 1895–96 England touring party.[22]

Personal life edit

In 1898, Fry married Beatrice Holme Sumner (1862–1946),[23] daughter of Arthur Holme Sumner, of Hatchlands Park, Guildford, Surrey;[24][25] they had three children. Beatrice was ten years Fry's senior, and known for her 'fiery, strong-willed, aggressive' personality; she was reckoned to be 'a cruel and domineering woman', and Fry 'lived in fear of her for the duration of their marriage', as 'she made him thoroughly miserable and he tried to stay away from her as much as possible'. His unhappy marriage impacted Fry's mental health; his daughter-in-law observed: 'I should think anyone would have a breakdown married to her".[26] At Beatrice's death, they had been married for 48 years; Fry 'adjusted to her death with great equanimity and even her children showed all the freedom of the newly liberated'.[26][27] Their son Stephen later said: 'My mother ruined my father's life'.[28] He and his son, Charles Fry, also played first-class cricket.

Sporting career edit

Apart from his other sporting achievements stated below, Fry was also a decent shot putter,[29][30] hammer thrower[29][30] and ice skater, representing Wadham in the inter-College races on Blenheim lake in the winter of 1894–95 and coming close to an unofficial Blue as a member of the Oxford team who took on Cambridge on the Fens,[31] as well as being a proficient golfer.[32]

Cricket edit

Fry played for Surrey in 1891 (but not in any first-class fixtures),[33] Oxford University 1892–1895 (winning Blues in all four years and captaining the university in 1894, meaning that he was simultaneously not only captain of both the university cricket and football teams but president of the varsity athletics club as well)[34][35] Sussex 1894–1908 (captain 1904–1908), and Hampshire, 1909–1921. First selected by England for the tour of South Africa in 1895–96, he captained England in his final six Test matches in 1912, winning four and drawing two. He twice scored Test centuries: 144 v Australia in 1905 hitting 23 fours in just over 3+12 hours, batting at number four,[36][37] and 129 opening the batting against South Africa in 1907.[38][39]

As a highly effective right-handed batsman who batted at, or near the top of the order, Fry scored 30,886 first-class runs at an average of 50.22, a particularly high figure for an era when scores were generally lower than today. At the end of his cricketing career in 1921–22, he had the second highest average of any retired player with over 10,000 runs: only his Sussex and England colleague Ranjitsinhji had retired with a better career average. He headed the batting averages (qualification minimum 20 innings) for six English seasons (in 1901, 1903, 1905, 1907, 1911 and 1912). Against Yorkshire, the strongest county bowling attack of Fry's time, he averaged a remarkable 63.60 over the course of his career, including back to back scores of 177[40] and 229[41] against them in 1904. GL Jessop said that calmness was at the heart of his batting and that he was a superb judge of a run as well as being fast between the wickets.[42]

 
England v. Australia at Trent Bridge, 1899. Back row: Dick Barlow (umpire), Tom Hayward, George Hirst, Billy Gunn, J. T. Hearne (12th man), Bill Storer (wkt kpr), Bill Brockwell, V. A. Titchmarsh (umpire). Middle row: C. B. Fry, K. S. Ranjitsinhji, W. G. Grace (captain), Stanley Jackson. Front row: Wilfred Rhodes, Johnny Tyldesley

In his early career Fry was an enthusiastic and successful right-arm fast-medium bowler. He returned his career best figures of 6–78 in the 1895 Varsity match,[43] and he twice took ten wickets in a match: 5–75 and 5–102 for the Gentlemen of England against I Zingari in 1895,[44] and 5–81 and 5–66 for Sussex against Nottinghamshire in 1896 (a match in which he also scored 89 and 65).[45] The late 1890s saw a re-emergence of the throwing controversy in cricket. Several professional bowlers including Arthur Mold and Ernie Jones were no-balled; Mold was forced to retire. Fry's bowling action was criticised by opponents and teammates, and it was only a matter of time before he too was no-balled by umpire Jim Phillips.[46]

Fry scored 94 first-class centuries, including an unprecedented six consecutive centuries in 1901. No one else has scored more consecutive hundreds. On 12 September 1901, playing for the Rest of England against Yorkshire at Lord's, he scored 105, which was his sixth consecutive first-class century.[47][48] He made his highest first-class score of 258 not out in 1911,[49] a season which led to his recall to the England Test team as captain in 1912. In 1921 Fry was once again considered for the Test side. The Selection Committee asked him to play in the First Test match at Nottingham under the captaincy of Johnny Douglas, with a view to taking over the captaincy for the remainder of the series if, as they anticipated, things went wrong. Fry declined on the basis that there was no sense in recalling a forty-nine-year-old merely as a player, but stated that he would consider returning as captain. As England were badly beaten at Nottingham the Selection Committee again pressed Fry to return for the Second Test but once again he declined, due to poor form. Following another heavy defeat in the Second Test the Selection Committee made a further attempt to persuade Fry to return for the Third Test as captain, a job he was now keen to accept. He injured a finger taking a catch during Hampshire's match with the Australians. In the short term, the injury did not appear too serious: he scored a half-century in Hampshire's first innings and, when they followed on in reply to the Australians' massive total he top scored with 37. Furthermore, in his next match against Nottinghamshire he scored 61 in the first innings (but registered a duck in the second). It appears however that the injury was affecting his fielding more than his batting and, for last time, C.B. felt obliged to stand down from the side for the next Test.[50] Fry later commentated on cricket matches, being called "one of the most eloquent cricket commentators of all time."[51]

 
Fry caricatured by Spy for Vanity Fair, 1894

For both Sussex and England, he was closely associated with the outstanding cricketer Prince Ranjitsinhji, the future Jam Sahib of Nawanagar.[52] Their contrasting batting styles complemented one another (Fry being an orthodox, technically correct batsman, and Ranji being noted for his innovation, particularly his use of the leg glance). Their friendship lasted well into the 1920s, and when Ranjitsinhji became one of India's three representatives at the League of Nations, he took Fry with him as his assistant.[53]

Athletics edit

In athletics, Fry won Blues in all four years at Oxford 1892–95, representing the university against Cambridge in the long jump in 1892, 1893, 1894 and 1895; the high jump in 1892 and the 100 yards in 1893 and 1894.[54][55] In 1892 Fry broke the British long jump record with a jump of 23 feet 5 inches (7.14 m)[56] and a year later on 4 March 1893 equalled the world long jump record of 23 feet 6+12 inches (7.176 m)[57][58] (tied with the American Charles Reber).[58] This is often incorrectly claimed to have stood as a world record for 21 years, but this length of time actually only refers to how long he held the university record, Cambridge's H. S. O. Ashington adding three-quarters of an inch to Fry's distance in 1913.[59] Fry's shared world record was broken on 5 September 1894 by Ireland's J. J. Mooney.[60]

In the first contest between universities from different countries, Oxford v Yale at the Queen's Club, West Kensington, in 1894, Fry came third in the long jump and won the 100 yards.[61][62] In addition to being an outstanding long jumper, sprinter and high jumper, Fry was also a talented hurdler, once competing against Godfrey Shaw the champion hurdler of the time, who beat him but told him, as Fry later recalled: "He was sure if I took up hurdling seriously I might win the championship."[63][64] Fry was also president of the Oxford University athletics club in 1894.[34][65]

Football edit

C. B. Fry
 
Personal information
Height 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
Position(s) Full-back
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1891–1903 Corinthian
1900–1902 Southampton 16 (0)
1902–1903 Portsmouth 2 (0)
International career
1901 England 1 (0)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Fry's achievements extended to association football.

A defender with exceptional pace,[66] Fry learned his football at Repton School, where he played for and captained the school team.[15][67] While still at school he also played for the famous amateur club the Casuals, for whom he found himself turning out in an FA Cup tie at the age of sixteen.[15] Fry went on to win Blues in each of his four years at Oxford University captaining the side in his third year.[34][35][68] In 1891,[69] he joined another famous amateur club, Corinthian, going on to make a total of 74 appearances for them between 1891 and 1903 scoring four goals.[70] Although extremely proud of his amateur status, he decided that entering the professional game would enhance his chance of international honours. He chose Southampton F.C. (The Saints), as the leading lights in the Southern League, and also because The Dell was conveniently close to his home. He made his debut for Southampton (as an amateur) on 26 December 1900,[71][72] against Tottenham Hotspur and went on to help them win the Southern League title during that 1900–01 season.[73][74][75]

Fry's game was probably a little too refined for the hurly-burly of professional football, he never relished the aerial challenges that were more prevalent in the professional game, but having worked tirelessly to improve his heading ability he achieved his aim of international honours when (along with Southampton's goalkeeper, Jack Robinson), he was picked to play as a full-back for England in the match against Ireland on 9 March 1901 (played in Southampton).[76][77]

The following season (1901–02), Southampton reached the FA Cup Final, playing against Sheffield United,[78][79] which was drawn 1–1,[79][80] but Southampton lost the replay, 2–1.[81][82] Although he had moments during the cup run in which he excelled, his positional play was sometimes questioned.[83][84] Fry played in all eight of the FA Cup games for Southampton that season,[85] but in only nine Southern League matches,[85][86] with Bill Henderson being forced to give way whenever Fry was available.[87] The following season, he played twice at centre forward, without success, but Southampton released him partly due to his lack of availability. Fry made 25 first-team appearances for Southampton.[85] He then joined Southampton's local rivals Portsmouth, making his debut for them on 21 January 1903.[66] Fry made three appearances for Portsmouth (as an amateur) before retiring from football due to injury.[66]

Rugby union edit

 
Fry wearing Barbarians kit, c.1893.

Fry played rugby union for Oxford University, narrowly missing out on a Blue in his final year due to injury,[16][17] Blackheath, for whom he made ten appearances,[88] and the Barbarians, for whom he made three appearances.[88][89] Fry was also chosen, as he later recalled, as the "first reserve for the South against the North" – a match that was, in effect, an England trial. Unfortunately for Fry, no one pulled out before the match and, as there were no substitutions allowed in rugby at the time, he did not get to play.[90][16][88]

Acrobatics edit

Fry's party trick was to leap from a stationary position on the floor backwards onto a mantelpiece; he would face the mantelpiece, crouch down, take a leap upwards, turn in the air, and bow to the gallery with his feet planted on the shelf. Persuasion would occasionally get him to perform this turn at country houses, much to the interest of the guests.[5][7][8]

Career outside sport edit

Teaching edit

In 1896 Fry took up a teaching position at Charterhouse.[33] Two years later in 1898 he left the profession, moving on to a successful and much more lucrative and less time-consuming career in journalism. He later recalled: "I could earn by journalism three times the income for the expenditure of a tenth of the time."[91] In December 1908 he became the Captain Superintendent of the Training Ship Mercury,[92][51] a nautical school primarily designed to prepare boys for service in the Royal Navy; this was run by his wife Beatrice from 1885 to 1946, she having founded the school with her lover (and father of her illegitimate children), the rich banker Charles Hoare. She subjected the boys, 'hounded from morn to night', to 'barbarities' including ceremonial floggings of extreme violence and forced boxing matches inflicted as punishment.[27] Fry held this position until he resigned to make way for a younger man in 1950.[93] Eventually he was given the rank of captain in the Royal Naval Reserve (RNR).[94] Alan Gibson wrote: "He ... would stride about in his uniform looking, as I think it was Robertson-Glasgow who said, every inch like six admirals."[95] Interviewed about the Mercury, and his role in its development, he was addressed as 'Commander C. B. Fry'.[96]

Politics edit

 
C. B. Fry in the early 1920s whilst standing for one of the Brighton seats

As far back as his time at Wadham College, Fry had been interested in politics, but admitted: "I take a great interest in heaps of things that I know nothing about ... politics for one".[97]

In 1920 when his friend and former Sussex teammate Ranjitsinhji was offered and accepted the chance to become one of India's three representatives at the newly created League of Nations in Geneva he took Fry with him as his assistant.[53] It was whilst working for Ranjitsinhji at the League of Nations, in Geneva, that Fry claimed to have been offered the throne of Albania.[98][99] Whether this offer genuinely occurred has been questioned, but Fry was definitely approached about the vacant Albanian throne and therefore seems to have been considered a credible candidate for the post.[100][101]

He stood (unsuccessfully) as a Liberal candidate for parliament for the Brighton constituency in 1922.[102] Fry's presence certainly brought some welcome glamour and excitement to the election, and his campaign was given extra colour by the appearance, at an election meeting, of Dame Clara Butt, the opera singer (and a close personal friend of the Frys).[103] He won 22,059 votes, 4,785 fewer than the Conservative victor.

He later fought the seat of Banbury in 1923, losing by just 219 votes,[104] and the Oxford by-election in 1924, where he was defeated by 1,842 votes.[105]

 
Fry in 1922
General Election 1922: Brighton[106]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Unionist  YRt Hon. George Clement Tryon 28,549 32.0
Unionist  Y Sir Alfred Cooper Rawson 26,844 30.0
Liberal Charles Burgess Fry 22,059 24.7
Ind. Unionist H Wheater 11,913 13.3
Majority 4,785 5.3
Turnout 70.1
Unionist hold Swing
General Election 1923: Banbury[106]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Unionist Albert James Edmondson 12,490 45.8 -0.7
Liberal Charles Burgess Fry 12,271 45.0 +15.6
Labour Ernest Nathaniel Bennett 2,500 9.2 -14.9
Majority 219 0.8 -16.3
Turnout 27,261 76.0 -0.4
Unionist hold Swing -8.2
1924 Oxford by-election[106]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Unionist Robert Bourne 10,079 47.8 +3.9
Liberal Charles Burgess Fry 8,237 39.1 -17.0
Labour Kenneth Martin Lindsay 2,769 13.1 N/A
Majority 1,842 8.7 N/A
Turnout 21,085 80.3
Unionist gain from Liberal Swing +10.5

Writing, editing, publishing and broadcasting edit

Books by Fry include:

  • The Book of Cricket: A New Gallery of Famous Players (1899), editor, appeared in 14 weekly parts.[107]
  • Giants of the Game: Being Reminiscences of the Stars of Cricket from Daft Down to the Present Day (c. 1900), with R. H. Lyttleton, W. J. Ford & George Giffen.
  • Great Batsmen: Their Methods at a Glance (1905), with George W Beldam, who provided the photographs.[108]
  • Great Bowlers and Fielders: Their Methods at a Glance (1907), with George W. Beldam
  • A Mother's Son (1907), a novel written in collaboration with his wife.[109]
  • Cricket: Batsmanship (1912).
  • Key-Book of The League of Nations.[110]
  • Life Worth Living: Some Phases Of An Englishman (1939), his autobiography.[105]
  • Cricket on the Green For Club And Village Cricketers And For Boys (1947), with R. S. Young.

He is also believed to have written much of The Jubilee Book of Cricket (1897), of which the nominal author was Ranji.[111] He wrote prefaces and introductions for a number of other cricket books, and wrote articles on cricket and football for The Strand Magazine in the early years of the 20th century.[112] In the 1930s, he wrote a column for the London Evening Standard, which covered many topics.[105] The column was credited with a considerable increase in the paper's circulation.[95] He launched and edited C. B. Fry's Magazine. In his magazine he promoted toys such as the diabolo. A History and Bibliography of Fry's Magazine was published in December 2022 by Sports History Publishing.

His broadcasting career began in 1936 with commentary for the BBC on a match between Middlesex and Surrey. He declined to join the panel on Any Questions but in 1945 began a successful stint on The Brains Trust. In 1946 he was one of the BBC radio commentary team for the Tests between England and India.[113] In 1953 he gave a 3-hour interview to the BBC which was edited down to 30 minutes for the programme Frankly Speaking. In 1955, he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews for the fifth episode of the new television show This Is Your Life.[114][115] Amongst the friends gathered to relive his best moments were Jack Hobbs and Sydney Barnes.[114][116]

Later life edit

In the 1920s, Fry's mental health started to deteriorate severely. He had encountered mental health problems earlier in his life, experiencing a breakdown during his final year at Oxford, which meant that, although academically brilliant, he achieved a poor degree. In the late 1920s, he had a major breakdown and became deeply paranoid. He reached breaking point in 1928 during a visit to India, becoming convinced that an Indian had cast a spell on him.[117] For the rest of his life, he dressed in bizarrely unconventional clothes.[118] He did recover enough to become a popular writer on cricket and other sports, and even into his sixties he entertained hopes of becoming a Hollywood star. At one point when he was staying in Brighton he was supposed to have gone for a walk along the beach early in the morning and suddenly shed all his clothes, trotting around stark naked.[118]

In 1934, as reported in his 1939 autobiography, Life Worth Living,[90] he visited Germany with the idea of forging stronger links between the uniformed British youth organisations, such as the Boy Scouts, and the Hitler Youth, so that both groups could learn from each other. Fry met Adolf Hitler who greeted him with a Nazi salute which he returned with a Nazi salute of his own.[119][120] He failed to persuade von Ribbentrop that Nazi Germany should take up cricket to Test level. Some members of the Hitler Youth were welcomed at TS Mercury, and Fry was still enthusiastic about them in 1938, just prior to the outbreak of war.[121] Fry's laudatory statements about Hitler persisted through his autobiography's third impression in July 1941[122] but appear to have been purged in the fourth impression (1947).

He retired from his position at TS Mercury in 1950, and died in 1956, in Hampstead, London.[121][123] The English writer and critic Neville Cardus wrote the following words for Fry's obituary:[citation needed]

Fry must be counted among the most fully developed and representative Englishmen of his period; and the question arises whether, had fortune allowed him to concentrate on the things of the mind, not distracted by the lure of cricket, a lure intensified by his increasing mastery over the game, he would not have reached a high altitude in politics or critical literature. But he belonged – and it was his glory – to an age not obsessed by specialism; he was one of the last of the English tradition of the amateur, the connoisseur, and, in the most delightful sense of the word, the dilettante.

His ashes were buried in the graveyard of Repton Parish Church, next to Repton School's Priory. In 2008, his grandson, Jonathan Fry (chairman of the governors at Repton), was in attendance at the rededication of Fry's grave, which was inscribed with, "1872 C B Fry 1956. Cricketer, scholar, athlete, Author – The Ultimate All-rounder'.

Honours edit

Southampton F.C.

Two Brighton & Hove buses (429 and 829) were named "C B Fry" in his honour.[124]

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ a b Arlott 1984, pp. 20–23.
  3. ^ "Royalty on the cricket field". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 18 May 2018.
  4. ^ "A Boy's Own tale". ESPNcricinfo. 12 April 2008. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
  5. ^ a b Wilton, Iain (June 2004). "Charles Fry – Up with the Gods". ESPN. Retrieved 18 August 2012.
  6. ^ "The great all-rounder – C.B. Fry". angelfire. Retrieved 18 August 2012.
  7. ^ a b Ellis 1984, p. 34.
  8. ^ a b Wilton 2000, p. 94.
  9. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 6.
  10. ^ . Oxford University Association Football Club. Archived from the original on 15 December 2013. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
  11. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 30.
  12. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 20.
  13. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 21.
  14. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 23.
  15. ^ a b c Ellis 1984, p. 10.
  16. ^ a b c Ellis 1984, p. 30.
  17. ^ a b Wilton 2000, pp. 63–64.
  18. ^ "Fry, Charles Burgess, (25 April 1872–7 Sept. 1956), Hon. Captain, RNR". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.u237471. ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1. from the original on 9 September 2021. Retrieved 9 September 2021.
  19. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 62.
  20. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 70.
  21. ^ Ellis 1984, pp. 17–18.
  22. ^ Wilton 2000, pp. 70–76.
  23. ^ "SUMNER Beatrice" in Register of Births for Chelsea Registration District, vol. 1a (1862), p. 194; "Sumner, Beatrice Holme, & Fry, Charles Burgess", in Register of Marriages for Pancras Registration District, vol. 1b (1898), p. 176; "Fry Beatrice H, 82" in Register of Deaths for Southampton Registration District, vol. 2c (1946) p. 33
  24. ^ "The scandalous Beatie Sumner at Hatchlands Park". National Trust. Retrieved 4 March 2019.
  25. ^ "The Sumner family at Hatchlands Park". National Trust. Retrieved 4 March 2019.
  26. ^ a b "New light shed on CB Fry: A brilliant cricketer, a memorable character". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 4 March 2019.
  27. ^ a b "Beastly Beatie, C.B. Fry and the boys » 17 Aug 1985 » The Spectator Archive". The Spectator Archive. Retrieved 4 March 2019.
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  47. ^ "CB Fry on 12 September". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
  48. ^ The sequence was framed by scores in the 80s, so he nearly made it eight consecutive hundreds. For Sussex he scored 88 and 106 against Hampshire (scorecard), 209 against Yorkshire (scorecard), 149 against Middlesex (scorecard), 105 against Surrey (scorecard), 140 against Kent (scorecard), and then in his last innings of the season, for Rest of England, he scored 105 against the County Champions Yorkshire (scorecard). In his first innings of 1902, he scored 82 for London County against Surrey (scorecard). Donald Bradman equalled the record of six consecutive centuries in 1938–39, and Mike Procter did so again in 1970–71 [1]
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  74. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 146.
  75. ^ Holley, Duncan; Gary, Chalk (1992). The Alphabet of the Saints. ACL & Polar Publishing. pp. 131–133. ISBN 0-9514862-3-3.
  76. ^ Ellis 1984, pp. 138–139.
  77. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 147.
  78. ^ Ellis 1984, p. 145.
  79. ^ a b Wilton 2000, p. 153.
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  81. ^ Ellis 1984, p. 146.
  82. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 154.
  83. ^ Ellis 1984, p. 144.
  84. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 151.
  85. ^ a b c "Charles Burgess Fry". 11v11.com. Retrieved 4 March 2019.
  86. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 148.
  87. ^ Chalk & Holley 1991, p. 165.
  88. ^ a b c Wilton 2000, p. 64.
  89. ^ "C.B. Fry". Player Archive. Barbarian FC. Archived from the original on 19 April 2013. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  90. ^ a b Fry 1986.
  91. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 100.
  92. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 233.
  93. ^ Ellis 1984, p. 191.
  94. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 430.
  95. ^ a b Gibson 1989, pp. 102–108.
  96. ^ "TRAINING SHIP MERCURY". The Mercury. Hobart, Tas., 1860–1954: National Library of Australia. 18 January 1937. p. 8. Retrieved 18 October 2013.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  97. ^ Roberts 1958, p. 160.
  98. ^ Ellis 1984, pp. 196–199.
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  100. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 307.
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  102. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 313.
  103. ^ Wilton 2000, pp. 314–315.
  104. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 320.
  105. ^ a b c Marshall & Howe 2001, p. 182.
  106. ^ a b c British Parliamentary Election Results 1918–1949, FWS Craig
  107. ^ The Book of Cricket: A Gallery of Famous Players. Author: Charles Burgess Fry. Publisher: Newnes (1899)
  108. ^ Great Batsmen, Their Methods at a Glance, by George W. Beldam and Charles B. Fry. Publisher: Macmillan Publishers (1905)
  109. ^ Fry 2011.
  110. ^ Key-book of the League of Nations by C. B. Fry: With a Chapter on the Disarmament Question by Prince Ranjitsinhji, Maharaja Jam Saheb of Nawanagar. Authors: C. B. Fry, Ranjitsinhji. Publisher: Hodder and Stoughton (1923)
  111. ^ Arlott 1984, p. 171.
  112. ^ Search on Abebooks with Author field "C.B. Fry".
  113. ^ Martin-Jenkins 1990.
  114. ^ a b Ellis 1984, p. 266.
  115. ^ Wilton 2000, pp. 453–455.
  116. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 454.
  117. ^ Wilton 2000, pp. 348–349.
  118. ^ a b Wilton 2000, p. 349.
  119. ^ Ellis 1984, p. 233.
  120. ^ Wilton 2000, p. 370.
  121. ^ a b Robson, David (20 September 1989). "New light shed on CB Fry: A brilliant cricketer, a memorable character". ESPN. Retrieved 18 August 2012.
  122. ^ Bradshaw, Ross (11 December 2011). "Fry's German Delight". Five Leaves Publications. Retrieved 13 February 2016.
  123. ^ "England / Players / C.B. Fry". ESPN. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
  124. ^ "Names on the buses". History Buses. Retrieved 20 August 2012.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • CB Fry at Englandstats.com  
  • – biography on the Oxford University Association Football Club web site
  • Works by C. B. Fry at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
Sporting positions
Preceded by English national cricket captain
1912
Succeeded by
Preceded by Sussex county cricket captain
1904–1906
Succeeded by
Preceded by Sussex county cricket captain
1907–1908
Succeeded by

persons, similar, name, charles, disambiguation, charles, burgess, april, 1872, september, 1956, english, sportsman, teacher, writer, editor, publisher, best, remembered, career, cricketer, john, arlott, described, with, words, charles, could, autocratic, angr. For persons of a similar name see Charles Fry disambiguation Charles Burgess Fry 25 April 1872 7 September 1956 was an English sportsman teacher writer editor and publisher who is best remembered for his career as a cricketer 1 John Arlott described him with the words Charles Fry could be autocratic angry and self willed he was also magnanimous extravagant generous elegant brilliant and fun he was probably the most variously gifted Englishman of any age 2 C B FryPersonal informationFull nameCharles Burgess FryBorn 1872 04 25 25 April 1872Croydon Surrey EnglandDied7 September 1956 1956 09 07 aged 84 Hampstead London EnglandBattingRight handedBowlingRight arm fast mediumRelationsBeatrice Holme Sumner wife Stephen Fry son International informationNational sideEnglandTest debut cap 95 13 February 1896 v South AfricaLast Test22 August 1912 v AustraliaDomestic team informationYearsTeam1892 1895Oxford University1900 1902London County1894 1908Sussex1909 1921Hampshire1921 22Europeans India Career statisticsCompetition Test First classMatches 26 394Runs scored 1 223 30 886Batting average 32 18 50 22100s 50s 2 7 94 124Top score 144 258 Balls bowled 10 9 036Wickets 0 166Bowling average 29 345 wickets in innings 910 wickets in match 2Best bowling 6 78Catches stumpings 17 239 Source ESPNcricinfo 12 November 2008 Fry s achievements on the sporting field included representing England at both cricket and football 3 an FA Cup Final appearance for Southampton and equalling the then world record for the long jump 4 He also reputedly turned down the throne of Albania In later life he suffered mental health problems but even well into his seventies he claimed he was still able to perform his party trick leaping from a stationary position backwards onto a mantelpiece 5 6 7 8 Contents 1 Education 2 Personal life 3 Sporting career 3 1 Cricket 3 2 Athletics 3 3 Football 3 4 Rugby union 3 5 Acrobatics 4 Career outside sport 4 1 Teaching 4 2 Politics 4 3 Writing editing publishing and broadcasting 5 Later life 6 Honours 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksEducation editC B Fry was born in Croydon the son of a civil servant 9 10 Both sides of his family had once been wealthy but by 1872 were not as prosperous After winning a scholarship Fry was educated at Repton School and then at Wadham College Oxford His greatest strength academically was in the Classics At Repton he won the school prizes for Latin Verse Greek Verse Latin Prose and French He was also runner up in German 11 His weakest subject was mathematics he gained the headmaster s permission to study Thucydides instead and dispensed with maths for the rest of his academic career 12 Repton has a strong tradition in football and Fry played for the under 16 Repton football side in his first term aged thirteen 13 He went on to captain both the school s cricket and football teams and also won prizes for athletics 14 At the age of sixteen he played for the Casuals in the F A Cup 15 Having won a further scholarship to study at Wadham College Oxford he won his university Blue in football cricket and athletics but narrowly failed to win a Blue in rugby union because of an injury 16 17 Fry s status brought him into the orbit of people whose fame was already spreading far beyond Oxford such as Max Beerbohm the writer and caricaturist He gained a first in classical moderations 18 When Fry was only twenty one the magazine Vanity Fair published a caricature of him in its issue of 19 April 1894 with the comment He is sometimes known as C B but it has lately been suggested that he should be called Charles III 19 2 In his final term at Oxford Fry experienced his first but not last bout of mental illness suffering a mental breakdown 20 21 There were a number of contributing factors to this During his time at Oxford Fry had accumulated disturbingly large debts In an attempt to alleviate his financial difficulties Fry capitalised on his reputation to make some much needed money As well as writing articles including one for Wisden he did some private tutoring but although such activities reduced his debts they did not clear them and further increased the intense pressure on his time Fry s continuing indebtedness provides the most obvious explanation for his acceptance of an offer to do some nude modelling These financial problems combined with his mother being seriously ill placed an unbearable strain on him Although he was able to sit his final exams he was hardly in any fit state to do so having hardly read a line for weeks The result was Fry scraping a Fourth bringing one of Oxford s most spectacular and successful careers to an inglorious end So in the summer of 1895 only months after being the toast of Oxford Fry found himself saddled with mounting debts and no way with which to repay them In the short term cricket came to his rescue He was offered and accepted the chance to tour South Africa as a member of Lord Hawke s 1895 96 England touring party 22 Personal life editIn 1898 Fry married Beatrice Holme Sumner 1862 1946 23 daughter of Arthur Holme Sumner of Hatchlands Park Guildford Surrey 24 25 they had three children Beatrice was ten years Fry s senior and known for her fiery strong willed aggressive personality she was reckoned to be a cruel and domineering woman and Fry lived in fear of her for the duration of their marriage as she made him thoroughly miserable and he tried to stay away from her as much as possible His unhappy marriage impacted Fry s mental health his daughter in law observed I should think anyone would have a breakdown married to her 26 At Beatrice s death they had been married for 48 years Fry adjusted to her death with great equanimity and even her children showed all the freedom of the newly liberated 26 27 Their son Stephen later said My mother ruined my father s life 28 He and his son Charles Fry also played first class cricket Sporting career editApart from his other sporting achievements stated below Fry was also a decent shot putter 29 30 hammer thrower 29 30 and ice skater representing Wadham in the inter College races on Blenheim lake in the winter of 1894 95 and coming close to an unofficial Blue as a member of the Oxford team who took on Cambridge on the Fens 31 as well as being a proficient golfer 32 Cricket edit Fry played for Surrey in 1891 but not in any first class fixtures 33 Oxford University 1892 1895 winning Blues in all four years and captaining the university in 1894 meaning that he was simultaneously not only captain of both the university cricket and football teams but president of the varsity athletics club as well 34 35 Sussex 1894 1908 captain 1904 1908 and Hampshire 1909 1921 First selected by England for the tour of South Africa in 1895 96 he captained England in his final six Test matches in 1912 winning four and drawing two He twice scored Test centuries 144 v Australia in 1905 hitting 23 fours in just over 3 1 2 hours batting at number four 36 37 and 129 opening the batting against South Africa in 1907 38 39 As a highly effective right handed batsman who batted at or near the top of the order Fry scored 30 886 first class runs at an average of 50 22 a particularly high figure for an era when scores were generally lower than today At the end of his cricketing career in 1921 22 he had the second highest average of any retired player with over 10 000 runs only his Sussex and England colleague Ranjitsinhji had retired with a better career average He headed the batting averages qualification minimum 20 innings for six English seasons in 1901 1903 1905 1907 1911 and 1912 Against Yorkshire the strongest county bowling attack of Fry s time he averaged a remarkable 63 60 over the course of his career including back to back scores of 177 40 and 229 41 against them in 1904 GL Jessop said that calmness was at the heart of his batting and that he was a superb judge of a run as well as being fast between the wickets 42 nbsp England v Australia at Trent Bridge 1899 Back row Dick Barlow umpire Tom Hayward George Hirst Billy Gunn J T Hearne 12th man Bill Storer wkt kpr Bill Brockwell V A Titchmarsh umpire Middle row C B Fry K S Ranjitsinhji W G Grace captain Stanley Jackson Front row Wilfred Rhodes Johnny Tyldesley In his early career Fry was an enthusiastic and successful right arm fast medium bowler He returned his career best figures of 6 78 in the 1895 Varsity match 43 and he twice took ten wickets in a match 5 75 and 5 102 for the Gentlemen of England against I Zingari in 1895 44 and 5 81 and 5 66 for Sussex against Nottinghamshire in 1896 a match in which he also scored 89 and 65 45 The late 1890s saw a re emergence of the throwing controversy in cricket Several professional bowlers including Arthur Mold and Ernie Jones were no balled Mold was forced to retire Fry s bowling action was criticised by opponents and teammates and it was only a matter of time before he too was no balled by umpire Jim Phillips 46 Fry scored 94 first class centuries including an unprecedented six consecutive centuries in 1901 No one else has scored more consecutive hundreds On 12 September 1901 playing for the Rest of England against Yorkshire at Lord s he scored 105 which was his sixth consecutive first class century 47 48 He made his highest first class score of 258 not out in 1911 49 a season which led to his recall to the England Test team as captain in 1912 In 1921 Fry was once again considered for the Test side The Selection Committee asked him to play in the First Test match at Nottingham under the captaincy of Johnny Douglas with a view to taking over the captaincy for the remainder of the series if as they anticipated things went wrong Fry declined on the basis that there was no sense in recalling a forty nine year old merely as a player but stated that he would consider returning as captain As England were badly beaten at Nottingham the Selection Committee again pressed Fry to return for the Second Test but once again he declined due to poor form Following another heavy defeat in the Second Test the Selection Committee made a further attempt to persuade Fry to return for the Third Test as captain a job he was now keen to accept He injured a finger taking a catch during Hampshire s match with the Australians In the short term the injury did not appear too serious he scored a half century in Hampshire s first innings and when they followed on in reply to the Australians massive total he top scored with 37 Furthermore in his next match against Nottinghamshire he scored 61 in the first innings but registered a duck in the second It appears however that the injury was affecting his fielding more than his batting and for last time C B felt obliged to stand down from the side for the next Test 50 Fry later commentated on cricket matches being called one of the most eloquent cricket commentators of all time 51 nbsp Fry caricatured by Spy for Vanity Fair 1894 For both Sussex and England he was closely associated with the outstanding cricketer Prince Ranjitsinhji the future Jam Sahib of Nawanagar 52 Their contrasting batting styles complemented one another Fry being an orthodox technically correct batsman and Ranji being noted for his innovation particularly his use of the leg glance Their friendship lasted well into the 1920s and when Ranjitsinhji became one of India s three representatives at the League of Nations he took Fry with him as his assistant 53 Athletics edit In athletics Fry won Blues in all four years at Oxford 1892 95 representing the university against Cambridge in the long jump in 1892 1893 1894 and 1895 the high jump in 1892 and the 100 yards in 1893 and 1894 54 55 In 1892 Fry broke the British long jump record with a jump of 23 feet 5 inches 7 14 m 56 and a year later on 4 March 1893 equalled the world long jump record of 23 feet 6 1 2 inches 7 176 m 57 58 tied with the American Charles Reber 58 This is often incorrectly claimed to have stood as a world record for 21 years but this length of time actually only refers to how long he held the university record Cambridge s H S O Ashington adding three quarters of an inch to Fry s distance in 1913 59 Fry s shared world record was broken on 5 September 1894 by Ireland s J J Mooney 60 In the first contest between universities from different countries Oxford v Yale at the Queen s Club West Kensington in 1894 Fry came third in the long jump and won the 100 yards 61 62 In addition to being an outstanding long jumper sprinter and high jumper Fry was also a talented hurdler once competing against Godfrey Shaw the champion hurdler of the time who beat him but told him as Fry later recalled He was sure if I took up hurdling seriously I might win the championship 63 64 Fry was also president of the Oxford University athletics club in 1894 34 65 Football edit C B Fry nbsp Personal informationHeight5 ft 10 in 1 78 m Position s Full backSenior career YearsTeamApps Gls 1891 1903Corinthian1900 1902Southampton16 0 1902 1903Portsmouth2 0 International career1901England1 0 Club domestic league appearances and goals Fry s achievements extended to association football A defender with exceptional pace 66 Fry learned his football at Repton School where he played for and captained the school team 15 67 While still at school he also played for the famous amateur club the Casuals for whom he found himself turning out in an FA Cup tie at the age of sixteen 15 Fry went on to win Blues in each of his four years at Oxford University captaining the side in his third year 34 35 68 In 1891 69 he joined another famous amateur club Corinthian going on to make a total of 74 appearances for them between 1891 and 1903 scoring four goals 70 Although extremely proud of his amateur status he decided that entering the professional game would enhance his chance of international honours He chose Southampton F C The Saints as the leading lights in the Southern League and also because The Dell was conveniently close to his home He made his debut for Southampton as an amateur on 26 December 1900 71 72 against Tottenham Hotspur and went on to help them win the Southern League title during that 1900 01 season 73 74 75 Fry s game was probably a little too refined for the hurly burly of professional football he never relished the aerial challenges that were more prevalent in the professional game but having worked tirelessly to improve his heading ability he achieved his aim of international honours when along with Southampton s goalkeeper Jack Robinson he was picked to play as a full back for England in the match against Ireland on 9 March 1901 played in Southampton 76 77 The following season 1901 02 Southampton reached the FA Cup Final playing against Sheffield United 78 79 which was drawn 1 1 79 80 but Southampton lost the replay 2 1 81 82 Although he had moments during the cup run in which he excelled his positional play was sometimes questioned 83 84 Fry played in all eight of the FA Cup games for Southampton that season 85 but in only nine Southern League matches 85 86 with Bill Henderson being forced to give way whenever Fry was available 87 The following season he played twice at centre forward without success but Southampton released him partly due to his lack of availability Fry made 25 first team appearances for Southampton 85 He then joined Southampton s local rivals Portsmouth making his debut for them on 21 January 1903 66 Fry made three appearances for Portsmouth as an amateur before retiring from football due to injury 66 Rugby union edit nbsp Fry wearing Barbarians kit c 1893 Fry played rugby union for Oxford University narrowly missing out on a Blue in his final year due to injury 16 17 Blackheath for whom he made ten appearances 88 and the Barbarians for whom he made three appearances 88 89 Fry was also chosen as he later recalled as the first reserve for the South against the North a match that was in effect an England trial Unfortunately for Fry no one pulled out before the match and as there were no substitutions allowed in rugby at the time he did not get to play 90 16 88 Acrobatics edit Fry s party trick was to leap from a stationary position on the floor backwards onto a mantelpiece he would face the mantelpiece crouch down take a leap upwards turn in the air and bow to the gallery with his feet planted on the shelf Persuasion would occasionally get him to perform this turn at country houses much to the interest of the guests 5 7 8 Career outside sport editTeaching edit In 1896 Fry took up a teaching position at Charterhouse 33 Two years later in 1898 he left the profession moving on to a successful and much more lucrative and less time consuming career in journalism He later recalled I could earn by journalism three times the income for the expenditure of a tenth of the time 91 In December 1908 he became the Captain Superintendent of the Training Ship Mercury 92 51 a nautical school primarily designed to prepare boys for service in the Royal Navy this was run by his wife Beatrice from 1885 to 1946 she having founded the school with her lover and father of her illegitimate children the rich banker Charles Hoare She subjected the boys hounded from morn to night to barbarities including ceremonial floggings of extreme violence and forced boxing matches inflicted as punishment 27 Fry held this position until he resigned to make way for a younger man in 1950 93 Eventually he was given the rank of captain in the Royal Naval Reserve RNR 94 Alan Gibson wrote He would stride about in his uniform looking as I think it was Robertson Glasgow who said every inch like six admirals 95 Interviewed about the Mercury and his role in its development he was addressed as Commander C B Fry 96 Politics edit nbsp C B Fry in the early 1920s whilst standing for one of the Brighton seats As far back as his time at Wadham College Fry had been interested in politics but admitted I take a great interest in heaps of things that I know nothing about politics for one 97 In 1920 when his friend and former Sussex teammate Ranjitsinhji was offered and accepted the chance to become one of India s three representatives at the newly created League of Nations in Geneva he took Fry with him as his assistant 53 It was whilst working for Ranjitsinhji at the League of Nations in Geneva that Fry claimed to have been offered the throne of Albania 98 99 Whether this offer genuinely occurred has been questioned but Fry was definitely approached about the vacant Albanian throne and therefore seems to have been considered a credible candidate for the post 100 101 He stood unsuccessfully as a Liberal candidate for parliament for the Brighton constituency in 1922 102 Fry s presence certainly brought some welcome glamour and excitement to the election and his campaign was given extra colour by the appearance at an election meeting of Dame Clara Butt the opera singer and a close personal friend of the Frys 103 He won 22 059 votes 4 785 fewer than the Conservative victor He later fought the seat of Banbury in 1923 losing by just 219 votes 104 and the Oxford by election in 1924 where he was defeated by 1 842 votes 105 nbsp Fry in 1922 General Election 1922 Brighton 106 Party Candidate Votes Unionist nbsp Y Rt Hon George Clement Tryon 28 549 32 0 Unionist nbsp Y Sir Alfred Cooper Rawson 26 844 30 0 Liberal Charles Burgess Fry 22 059 24 7 Ind Unionist H Wheater 11 913 13 3 Majority 4 785 5 3 Turnout 70 1 Unionist hold Swing General Election 1923 Banbury 106 Party Candidate Votes Unionist Albert James Edmondson 12 490 45 8 0 7 Liberal Charles Burgess Fry 12 271 45 0 15 6 Labour Ernest Nathaniel Bennett 2 500 9 2 14 9 Majority 219 0 8 16 3 Turnout 27 261 76 0 0 4 Unionist hold Swing 8 2 1924 Oxford by election 106 Party Candidate Votes Unionist Robert Bourne 10 079 47 8 3 9 Liberal Charles Burgess Fry 8 237 39 1 17 0 Labour Kenneth Martin Lindsay 2 769 13 1 N A Majority 1 842 8 7 N A Turnout 21 085 80 3 Unionist gain from Liberal Swing 10 5 Writing editing publishing and broadcasting edit Books by Fry include The Book of Cricket A New Gallery of Famous Players 1899 editor appeared in 14 weekly parts 107 Giants of the Game Being Reminiscences of the Stars of Cricket from Daft Down to the Present Day c 1900 with R H Lyttleton W J Ford amp George Giffen Great Batsmen Their Methods at a Glance 1905 with George W Beldam who provided the photographs 108 Great Bowlers and Fielders Their Methods at a Glance 1907 with George W Beldam A Mother s Son 1907 a novel written in collaboration with his wife 109 Cricket Batsmanship 1912 Key Book of The League of Nations 110 Life Worth Living Some Phases Of An Englishman 1939 his autobiography 105 Cricket on the Green For Club And Village Cricketers And For Boys 1947 with R S Young He is also believed to have written much of The Jubilee Book of Cricket 1897 of which the nominal author was Ranji 111 He wrote prefaces and introductions for a number of other cricket books and wrote articles on cricket and football for The Strand Magazine in the early years of the 20th century 112 In the 1930s he wrote a column for the London Evening Standard which covered many topics 105 The column was credited with a considerable increase in the paper s circulation 95 He launched and edited C B Fry s Magazine In his magazine he promoted toys such as the diabolo A History and Bibliography of Fry s Magazine was published in December 2022 by Sports History Publishing His broadcasting career began in 1936 with commentary for the BBC on a match between Middlesex and Surrey He declined to join the panel on Any Questions but in 1945 began a successful stint on The Brains Trust In 1946 he was one of the BBC radio commentary team for the Tests between England and India 113 In 1953 he gave a 3 hour interview to the BBC which was edited down to 30 minutes for the programme Frankly Speaking In 1955 he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews for the fifth episode of the new television show This Is Your Life 114 115 Amongst the friends gathered to relive his best moments were Jack Hobbs and Sydney Barnes 114 116 Later life editIn the 1920s Fry s mental health started to deteriorate severely He had encountered mental health problems earlier in his life experiencing a breakdown during his final year at Oxford which meant that although academically brilliant he achieved a poor degree In the late 1920s he had a major breakdown and became deeply paranoid He reached breaking point in 1928 during a visit to India becoming convinced that an Indian had cast a spell on him 117 For the rest of his life he dressed in bizarrely unconventional clothes 118 He did recover enough to become a popular writer on cricket and other sports and even into his sixties he entertained hopes of becoming a Hollywood star At one point when he was staying in Brighton he was supposed to have gone for a walk along the beach early in the morning and suddenly shed all his clothes trotting around stark naked 118 In 1934 as reported in his 1939 autobiography Life Worth Living 90 he visited Germany with the idea of forging stronger links between the uniformed British youth organisations such as the Boy Scouts and the Hitler Youth so that both groups could learn from each other Fry met Adolf Hitler who greeted him with a Nazi salute which he returned with a Nazi salute of his own 119 120 He failed to persuade von Ribbentrop that Nazi Germany should take up cricket to Test level Some members of the Hitler Youth were welcomed at TS Mercury and Fry was still enthusiastic about them in 1938 just prior to the outbreak of war 121 Fry s laudatory statements about Hitler persisted through his autobiography s third impression in July 1941 122 but appear to have been purged in the fourth impression 1947 He retired from his position at TS Mercury in 1950 and died in 1956 in Hampstead London 121 123 The English writer and critic Neville Cardus wrote the following words for Fry s obituary citation needed Fry must be counted among the most fully developed and representative Englishmen of his period and the question arises whether had fortune allowed him to concentrate on the things of the mind not distracted by the lure of cricket a lure intensified by his increasing mastery over the game he would not have reached a high altitude in politics or critical literature But he belonged and it was his glory to an age not obsessed by specialism he was one of the last of the English tradition of the amateur the connoisseur and in the most delightful sense of the word the dilettante His ashes were buried in the graveyard of Repton Parish Church next to Repton School s Priory In 2008 his grandson Jonathan Fry chairman of the governors at Repton was in attendance at the rededication of Fry s grave which was inscribed with 1872 C B Fry 1956 Cricketer scholar athlete Author The Ultimate All rounder Honours editSouthampton F C FA Cup finalist 1902 Two Brighton amp Hove buses 429 and 829 were named C B Fry in his honour 124 See also editList of English cricket and football players List of cricket and rugby union playersReferences edit Off side a cricketing XI that made strides in football International Cricket Council Retrieved 21 June 2018 a b Arlott 1984 pp 20 23 Royalty on the cricket field International Cricket Council Retrieved 18 May 2018 A Boy s Own tale ESPNcricinfo 12 April 2008 Retrieved 29 April 2019 a b Wilton Iain June 2004 Charles Fry Up with the Gods ESPN Retrieved 18 August 2012 The great all rounder C B Fry angelfire Retrieved 18 August 2012 a b Ellis 1984 p 34 a b Wilton 2000 p 94 Wilton 2000 p 6 Charles Fry Oxford University Association Football Club Archived from the original on 15 December 2013 Retrieved 19 August 2012 Wilton 2000 p 30 Wilton 2000 p 20 Wilton 2000 p 21 Wilton 2000 p 23 a b c Ellis 1984 p 10 a b c Ellis 1984 p 30 a b Wilton 2000 pp 63 64 Fry Charles Burgess 25 April 1872 7 Sept 1956 Hon Captain RNR WHO S WHO amp WHO WAS WHO 2007 doi 10 1093 ww 9780199540884 013 u237471 ISBN 978 0 19 954089 1 Archived from the original on 9 September 2021 Retrieved 9 September 2021 Wilton 2000 p 62 Wilton 2000 p 70 Ellis 1984 pp 17 18 Wilton 2000 pp 70 76 SUMNER Beatrice in Register of Births for Chelsea Registration District vol 1a 1862 p 194 Sumner Beatrice Holme amp Fry Charles Burgess in Register of Marriages for Pancras Registration District vol 1b 1898 p 176 Fry Beatrice H 82 in Register of Deaths for Southampton Registration District vol 2c 1946 p 33 The scandalous Beatie Sumner at Hatchlands Park National Trust Retrieved 4 March 2019 The Sumner family at Hatchlands Park National Trust Retrieved 4 March 2019 a b New light shed on CB Fry A brilliant cricketer a memorable character ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 4 March 2019 a b Beastly Beatie C B Fry and the boys 17 Aug 1985 The Spectator Archive The Spectator Archive Retrieved 4 March 2019 CB Fry Reptonchurch org uk Retrieved 23 April 2023 a b Ellis 1984 p 31 a b Wilton 2000 p 37 Wilton 2000 p 65 Wilton 2000 p 411 a b Simkin John C B Fry Spartacus Educational Publishers Ltd Retrieved 19 August 2012 a b c Ellis 1984 p 40 a b Wilton 2000 p 56 England v Australia Australia in British Isles 1905 5th Test CricketArchive Oracles Retrieved 18 August 2012 Wilton 2000 p 189 Wilton 2000 pp 222 223 CA details CricketArchive Retrieved 4 March 2019 CA details CricketArchive Retrieved 4 March 2019 CA details Ccricketarchive com Retrieved 4 March 2019 Jessop GL 6 August 1921 My Reminscences The Cricketer Vol 1 no 15 p 2 Retrieved 12 April 2024 via CricketArchive Oxford University v Cambridge University University Match 1895 CricketArchive Oracles Retrieved 18 August 2012 Gentlemen of England v I Zingari CricketArchive Oracles Retrieved 18 August 2012 Nottinghamshire v Sussex County Championship 1896 CricketArchive Oracles Retrieved 18 August 2012 Harris 1970 p 16 CB Fry on 12 September ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 12 September 2016 The sequence was framed by scores in the 80s so he nearly made it eight consecutive hundreds For Sussex he scored 88 and 106 against Hampshire scorecard 209 against Yorkshire scorecard 149 against Middlesex scorecard 105 against Surrey scorecard 140 against Kent scorecard and then in his last innings of the season for Rest of England he scored 105 against the County Champions Yorkshire scorecard In his first innings of 1902 he scored 82 for London County against Surrey scorecard Donald Bradman equalled the record of six consecutive centuries in 1938 39 and Mike Procter did so again in 1970 71 1 Hampshire v Gloucestershire County Championship 1911 CricketArchive Oracles 2003 2012 Retrieved 18 August 2012 Wilton 2000 pp 286 290 a b Sentance 2006 p 223 Wilde 2005 pp 51 52 a b Wilton 2000 p 292 Ellis 1984 pp 31 33 Wilton 2000 pp 40 48 50 55 67 68 Wilton 2000 p 40 Ellis 1984 p 32 a b Wilton 2000 p 49 Ellis 1984 p 35 Wilton 2000 pp 49 51 Ellis 1984 p 33 Wilton 2000 pp 55 56 Fry 1986 p 96 Wilton 2000 p 474 Wilton 2000 p 55 a b c Wilton 2000 p 156 Wilton 2000 p 22 Charles Fry Varsity record Oxford University AFC Archived from the original on 15 December 2013 Retrieved 20 November 2012 Cavallini Rob 2007 Play Up Corinth A History of the Corinthian Football Club Tempus Publishing pp 234 235 275 ISBN 978 0 7524 4479 6 C B Fry Player Profiles Corinthian Casuals Archived from the original on 20 October 2012 Retrieved 20 November 2012 Ellis 1984 p 137 Wilton 2000 pp 144 145 Ellis 1984 p 139 Wilton 2000 p 146 Holley Duncan Gary Chalk 1992 The Alphabet of the Saints ACL amp Polar Publishing pp 131 133 ISBN 0 9514862 3 3 Ellis 1984 pp 138 139 Wilton 2000 p 147 Ellis 1984 p 145 a b Wilton 2000 p 153 Ellis 1984 pp 145 146 Ellis 1984 p 146 Wilton 2000 p 154 Ellis 1984 p 144 Wilton 2000 p 151 a b c Charles Burgess Fry 11v11 com Retrieved 4 March 2019 Wilton 2000 p 148 Chalk amp Holley 1991 p 165 a b c Wilton 2000 p 64 C B Fry Player Archive Barbarian FC Archived from the original on 19 April 2013 Retrieved 20 November 2012 a b Fry 1986 Wilton 2000 p 100 Wilton 2000 p 233 Ellis 1984 p 191 Wilton 2000 p 430 a b Gibson 1989 pp 102 108 TRAINING SHIP MERCURY The Mercury Hobart Tas 1860 1954 National Library of Australia 18 January 1937 p 8 Retrieved 18 October 2013 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint location link Roberts 1958 p 160 Ellis 1984 pp 196 199 Wilton 2000 pp 302 309 Wilton 2000 p 307 Ellis 1984 p 198 Wilton 2000 p 313 Wilton 2000 pp 314 315 Wilton 2000 p 320 a b c Marshall amp Howe 2001 p 182 a b c British Parliamentary Election Results 1918 1949 FWS Craig The Book of Cricket A Gallery of Famous Players Author Charles Burgess Fry Publisher Newnes 1899 Great Batsmen Their Methods at a Glance by George W Beldam and Charles B Fry Publisher Macmillan Publishers 1905 Fry 2011 Key book of the League of Nations by C B Fry With a Chapter on the Disarmament Question by Prince Ranjitsinhji Maharaja Jam Saheb of Nawanagar Authors C B Fry Ranjitsinhji Publisher Hodder and Stoughton 1923 Arlott 1984 p 171 Search on Abebooks with Author field C B Fry Martin Jenkins 1990 a b Ellis 1984 p 266 Wilton 2000 pp 453 455 Wilton 2000 p 454 Wilton 2000 pp 348 349 a b Wilton 2000 p 349 Ellis 1984 p 233 Wilton 2000 p 370 a b Robson David 20 September 1989 New light shed on CB Fry A brilliant cricketer a memorable character ESPN Retrieved 18 August 2012 Bradshaw Ross 11 December 2011 Fry s German Delight Five Leaves Publications Retrieved 13 February 2016 England Players C B Fry ESPN Retrieved 19 August 2012 Names on the buses History Buses Retrieved 20 August 2012 Bibliography editArlott John 1984 Arlott on Cricket His Writings on the Game Harper Collins Willow ISBN 978 0 00 218082 5 Carr J L 1977 Dictionary of Extra ordinary English Cricketers J L Carr Kettering ISBN 978 0 900847 80 6 Chalk Gary Holley Duncan 1991 The Alphabet of the Saints Complete Who s Who of Southampton Football Club Polar Print Group Ltd ISBN 978 0 9514862 3 8 Ellis Clive 1984 C B The Life of Charles Burgess Fry J M Dent amp Sons 1st edition ISBN 978 0 460 04654 1 Frith David 1987 Pageant of Cricket Macmillan 1st Edition ISBN 978 0 333 45177 9 Fry C B 1986 1939 Life Worth Living Pavilion Books ISBN 978 1 85145 027 5 Fry C B 1939 Life Worth Living some phases of an Englishman Eyre amp Spottiswoode ASIN B00085VPTM Fry Beatrice 2011 A Mother s Son Lightning Source UK Ltd ISBN 978 1 246 15195 4 Gibson Alan 1989 The Cricket Captains of England Pavilion Books ISBN 978 1 85145 395 5 Harris Henry Wilson 1970 Spectator harvest Books for Libraries Press ISBN 978 0 8369 1481 8 Harris Michael Lee Alan J 1986 The Press in English Society From the 17th Century to the 19th Century US Fairleigh Dickinson University Press ISBN 978 0 8386 3272 7 Marshall Don Howe Glenford 2001 The Empowering Impulse The Nationalist Tradition of Barbados Canoe Press ISBN 978 976 8125 74 3 Martin Jenkins Christopher 1990 Ball by Ball Story of Cricket Broadcasting Grafton ISBN 978 0 246 13568 1 Morris Ronald 1985 The Captain s Lady Chatto amp Windus ISBN 978 0 7011 2946 0 Roberts Sydney Castle 1958 Doctor Johnson and Others Cambridge University Press Robinson Nick 1987 Hamble A Village History Waterfront Publications ISBN 978 0 946184 32 3 Sentance P David 2006 Cricket in America 1710 2000 McFarland amp Co Inc Pub ISBN 978 0 7864 2040 7 Wilde Simon 2005 Ranji The Strange Genius of Ranjitsinhji Aurum Press Ltd ISBN 978 1 84513 069 5 Wilson Jeremy 2006 Southampton s Cult Heroes Saints 20 Greatest Icons Know the Score Books ISBN 978 1 905449 01 9 Wilton Iain 2000 C B Fry An English Hero Metro Books ISBN 978 1 86066 180 8 External links editCB Fry at Englandstats com nbsp nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to C B Fry Charles Fry biography on the Oxford University Association Football Club web site Corinthian Casuals F C Player profiles Works by C B Fry at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Sporting positions Preceded byJohnny Douglas English national cricket captain1912 Succeeded byJohnny Douglas Preceded byRanjitsinhji Sussex county cricket captain1904 1906 Succeeded byC L A Smith Preceded byC L A Smith Sussex county cricket captain1907 1908 Succeeded byC L A Smith Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title C B Fry amp oldid 1218533422, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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