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W. G. Grace

William Gilbert Grace MRCS LRCP (18 July 1848 – 23 October 1915) was an English amateur cricketer who was important in the development of the sport and is widely considered one of its greatest players. He was nominally amateur as a cricketer, but he is said to have made more money from his cricketing activities than any professional cricketer. He was an extremely competitive player and, although he was one of the most famous men in England, he was also one of the most controversial on account of his gamesmanship and moneymaking.

W. G. Grace
Grace photographed by George Beldam, c. 1902
Personal information
Full name
William Gilbert Grace
Born(1848-07-18)18 July 1848
Downend, near Bristol, England
Died23 October 1915(1915-10-23) (aged 67)
Mottingham, Kent, England
NicknameW. G., The Doctor, The Champion, The Big 'Un, The Old Man
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-arm medium
RoleAll-rounder
Relations
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 24)6 September 1880 v Australia
Last Test1 June 1899 v Australia
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1869–1904MCC
1870–1899Gloucestershire
1900–1904London County
Career statistics
Competition Test First-class[a]
Matches 22 870
Runs scored 1,098 54,211
Batting average 32.29 39.45
100s/50s 2/5 124/251
Top score 170 344
Balls bowled 666 124,833
Wickets 9 2,809
Bowling average 26.22 18.14
5 wickets in innings 0 240
10 wickets in match 0 64
Best bowling 2/12 10/49
Catches/stumpings 39/– 876/5
Source: CricInfo, 28 May 2022[a]

He played first-class cricket for a record-equalling 44 seasons, from 1865 to 1908, during which he captained England, Gloucestershire, the Gentlemen, Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), the United South of England Eleven (USEE), and several other teams.

Right-handed as both batsman and bowler, Grace dominated the sport during his career. His technical innovations and enormous influence left a lasting legacy. An outstanding all-rounder, he excelled at all the essential skills of batting, bowling and fielding, but it is for his batting that he is most renowned. He is held to have invented modern batsmanship. Usually opening the innings, he was particularly admired for his mastery of all strokes, and his level of expertise was said by contemporary reviewers to be unique. He generally captained the teams he played for at all levels because of his skill and tactical acumen.

Grace came from a cricketing family: E. M. Grace was one of his elder brothers and Fred Grace his younger brother. In 1880, they were members of the same England team, the first time three brothers played together in Test cricket. Grace took part in other sports also: he was a champion 440-yard hurdler as a young man and played football for the Wanderers. In later life, he developed enthusiasm for golf, lawn bowls, and curling. He qualified as a medical practitioner in 1879.

Early years Edit

Childhood Edit

W. G. Grace was born in Downend, near Bristol, on 18 July 1848 at his parents' home, Downend House, and was baptised at the local church on 8 August.[2] He was called Gilbert in the family circle, except by his mother, who apparently called him Willie,[2] but otherwise, as "W. G.", he was universally known by his initials. His parents were Henry Mills Grace and Martha (née Pocock), who were married in Bristol on Thursday, 3 November 1831 and lived out their lives at Downend, where Henry Grace was the local GP.[3] Downend is near Mangotsfield and, although it is now a suburb of Bristol, it was then "a distinct village surrounded by countryside" and about four miles from Bristol.[4] Henry and Martha Grace had nine children in all: "the same number as Victoria and Albert – and in every respect they were the typical Victorian family".[5] Grace was the eighth child in the family; he had three older brothers, including E. M. Grace (always known as "E. M."), and four older sisters. The ninth child was his younger brother Fred Grace, born in 1850.[6]

Grace began his Cricketing Reminiscences (1899) by answering a question he had frequently been asked: i.e., was he "born a cricketer"? His answer was in the negative because he believed that "cricketers are made by coaching and practice", though he adds that if he was not born a cricketer, he was born "in the atmosphere of cricket".[7] His father and mother were "full of enthusiasm for the game" and it was "a common theme of conversation at home".[8] In 1850, when W. G. was two and Fred was expected, the family moved to a nearby house called "The Chesnuts" which had a sizeable orchard and Henry Grace organised clearance of this to establish a practice pitch.[9] All nine children in the Grace family, including the four daughters, were encouraged to play cricket although the girls, along with the dogs, were required for fielding only.[10] Grace claimed that he first handled a cricket bat at the age of two.[9] It was in the Downend orchard and as members of their local cricket clubs that he and his brothers developed their skills, mainly under the tutelage of his uncle, Alfred Pocock, who was an exceptional coach.[11] Apart from his cricket and his schooling, Grace lived the life of a country boy and roamed freely with the other village boys. One of his regular activities was stone throwing at birds in the fields and he later claimed that this was the source of his eventual skill as an outfielder.[12]

Education Edit

Grace was "notoriously unscholarly".[13] His first schooling was with a Miss Trotman in Downend village and then with a Mr Curtis of Winterbourne.[13] He subsequently attended a day school called Ridgway House, run by a Mr Malpas, until he was fourteen. One of his schoolmasters, David Bernard, later married Grace's sister Alice.[13] In 1863, Grace was taken seriously ill with pneumonia and his father removed him from Ridgway House. After this illness, Grace grew rapidly to his full height of 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m).[14] He continued his education at home where one of his tutors was the Reverend John Dann, who was the Downend parish church curate; like Mr Bernard before him, Mr Dann became Grace's brother-in-law, marrying Blanche Grace in 1869.[15]

Grace never went to university because his father wanted him to pursue a medical career. But Grace was approached by both Oxford University Cricket Club and Cambridge University Cricket Club. In 1866, when he played a match at Oxford, one of the Oxford players, Edmund Carter, tried to interest him in becoming an undergraduate.[16] Then, in 1868, Grace received overtures from Caius College, Cambridge, which had a long medical tradition.[17] Grace said he would have gone to either Oxford or Cambridge if his father had allowed it.[17] Instead, he enrolled at Bristol Medical School in October 1868, when he was 20.[17]

Development as a cricketer Edit

Henry Grace founded Mangotsfield Cricket Club in 1845 to represent several neighbouring villages including Downend.[9] In 1846, this club merged with the West Gloucestershire Cricket Club whose name was adopted until 1867.[11] It has been said that the Grace family ran the West Gloucestershire "almost as a private club".[11] Henry Grace managed to organise matches against Lansdown Cricket Club in Bath, which was the premier West Country club. West Gloucestershire fared poorly in these games and, sometime in the 1850s, Henry and Alfred Pocock decided to join Lansdown, although they continued to run the West Gloucestershire and this remained their primary club.[18]

Alfred Pocock was especially instrumental in coaching the Grace brothers and spent long hours with them on the practice pitch at Downend.[19] E. M., who was seven years older than W. G., had always played with a full size bat and so developed a tendency, that he never lost, to hit across the line, the bat being too big for him to "play straight". Pocock recognised this problem and determined that W. G. and his youngest brother Fred should not follow suit. He therefore fashioned smaller bats for them, to suit their sizes, and they were taught to play straight and "learn defence, with the left shoulder well forward", before attempting to hit.[19]

Grace recorded in his Reminiscences that he saw his first great cricket match in 1854 when he was barely six years old, the occasion being a game between William Clarke's All-England Eleven (the AEE) and twenty-two of West Gloucestershire. He says he himself played for the West Gloucestershire club as early as 1857, when he was nine years old, and had 11 innings in 1859.[20] The earliest match in CricketArchive which involved Grace was in 1859, only a few days after his eleventh birthday, when he played for Clifton Cricket Club against the South Wales Cricket Club at Durdham Down, his team winning by 114 runs. Several members of the Grace family, including his elder brother E. M., were involved in the match. Grace batted at number 11 and scored 0 and 0 not out.[21] The first time he made a substantial score was in July 1860 when he scored 51 for West Gloucestershire against Clifton; he wrote that none of his great innings gave him more pleasure.[20] It was through E. M. that the family name first became famous. His mother, Martha, wrote the following in a letter to William Clarke's successor George Parr in 1860 or 1861:[22]

I am writing to ask you to consider the inclusion of my son, E. M. Grace – a splendid hitter and most excellent catch – in your England XI. I am sure he would play very well and do the team much credit. It may interest you to learn that I have another son, now twelve years of age, who will in time be a much better player than his brother because his back stroke is sounder, and he always plays with a straight bat.

Grace was just short of his thirteenth birthday when, on 5 July 1861, he made his debut for Lansdown and played two matches that month.[18] E. M. had made his debut in 1857, aged sixteen.[18] In August 1862, aged 14, Grace played for West Gloucestershire against a Devonshire team.[23] A year later, following his bout of pneumonia which had left him bed-ridden for several weeks, he scored 52 not out and took 5 wickets against a Somerset XI.[23][24] Soon afterwards, he was one of four family members who played for Bristol and Didcot XVIII against the All-England Eleven.[25] He bowled well and scored 32 off the bowling of John Jackson, George Tarrant and Cris Tinley. E. M. took ten wickets in the match, which Bristol and Didcot won by an innings, and as a result E. M. was invited to tour Australia a few months later with George Parr's England team.[26]

E. M. did not return from Australia until July 1864 and his absence presented Grace with an opportunity to appear on cricket's greatest stages.[27] He and his elder brother Henry were invited to play for the South Wales Club which had arranged a series of matches in London and Sussex, though Grace wondered humorously how they were qualified to represent South Wales.[27] It was the first time that Grace left the West Country and he made his debut appearances at both The Oval and Lord's.[28] It was in the match against "Gentleman of Sussex" played just before his 16th birthday that he scored his first ever century making 170 including a stand of 188 for the second wicket with his captain John Lloyd (political reformer).[29]

Cricket career (1864–1914) Edit

First-class career summary Edit

Although there is controversy among cricket statisticians about the details of Grace's first-class career, it is generally agreed that its span was 44 seasons from 1865 to 1908, and one source lists 29 teams, the England national team and 28 domestic teams, represented by Grace in important or first-class matches.[30] Most of these were ad hoc or guest appearances. In minor cricket, Grace represented upwards of forty teams. Besides playing for England in Test cricket (1880–1899), the key teams in Grace's first-class career were the Gentlemen (1865–1906), All-England aka England (i.e., non-international; 1865–1899), Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC; 1869–1904), Gloucestershire (1870–1899), the United South of England Eleven (USEE; 1870–1876) and London County (1900–1904). Apart from the London County venture in his later years, Grace had firmly committed himself to all of these by the end of the 1870 season when he was 22.[31]

1864 to 1870 Edit

Cricket in the 1860s underwent a revolution with the legalisation of overarm bowling in June 1864 and Grace himself said it was "no exaggeration to say that, between 1860 and 1870, English cricket passed through its most critical period" with the game in transition and "it was quite a revolutionary period so far as its rules were concerned".[32] Grace was still 15 when the 1864 season began and had turned 20 when the 1868 season ended and he began his medical career by enrolling at Bristol Medical School on 7 October 1868.[33] In the interim, specifically in 1866, he became widely recognised as the finest cricketer in England. Just after his eighteenth birthday in July 1866, Grace confirmed his potential with an innings of 224 not out for All-England against Surrey at The Oval.[34] It was his maiden first-class century and, according to Harry Altham, he was "thenceforward the biggest name in cricket and the main spectator attraction with the successes (coming) thick and fast".[23]

In 1868, Grace scored two centuries in a match, only the second time in cricket history that this is known to have been done, following William Lambert in 1817.[35] Summarising the 1868 season, Simon Rae wrote that Grace was "now indisputably the cricketer of the age, the Champion".[17] In 1869, Grace was made a member of MCC and scored four centuries in July, including an innings of 180 at The Oval which was achieved during the highest wicket partnership involving Grace in his entire career; he shared 283 runs for the first wicket with Bransby Cooper.[36] Later in the month, Grace scored 122 out of 173 in difficult batting conditions during the North v South match at Bramall Lane, prompting the laconic Tom Emmett to call him a "nonsuch", and declare: "He ought to be made to play with a littler bat".[37]

Grace had another outstanding season in 1870, during which Gloucestershire acquired first-class status, and Derek Birley records that, "scorning the puny modern fashion of moustaches", he grew the enormous black beard that made him so recognisable.[38] In addition, his "ample girth" had developed for he weighed 15 stone (95 kg) in his early twenties.[39] Grace was a non-smoker but he enjoyed good food and wine; many years later, when discussing the overheads incurred during Lord Sheffield's profitless tour of Australia in 1891–92, Arthur Shrewsbury commented: "I told you what wine would be drunk by the amateurs; Grace himself would drink enough to swim a ship."[40]

1871 Edit

According to Harry Altham, 1871 was Grace's annus mirabilis, except that he produced another outstanding year in 1895.[41] In all first-class matches in 1871, a total of 17 centuries were scored and Grace accounted for 10 of them, including the first century in a first-class match at Trent Bridge.[42] He averaged 78.25 and the next best average by a batsman playing more than a single innings was 39.57, barely more than half his figure. His aggregate for the season was 2,739 runs and this was the first time that anyone had scored 2,000 first-class runs in a season; Harry Jupp was next best with 1,068.[43] Grace produced his season's highlight in the South v North match at The Oval when he made his highest career score to date of 268, having been dismissed by Jem Shaw for nought in the first innings. It was to no avail as the match was drawn.[44] But the occasion produced a memorable and oft-quoted comment by Jem Shaw who ruefully said: "I puts the ball where I likes and he puts it where he likes".[45]

Grace had numerous nicknames during his career including "The Doctor", after he achieved his medical qualification, and "The Old Man", as he reached the veteran stage. He was most auspiciously nicknamed "The Champion".[46][47] He was first acclaimed as "the Champion Cricketer" by Lillywhite's Companion in recognition of his exploits in 1871.[48] However, Grace's great year was marred by the death of his father in December.[49]

1872 to 1873 Edit

 
Picture of Grace taken in 1872 by Elliott & Fry

Grace and his younger brother Fred still lived with their mother at Downend. Their father had left just enough to maintain the family home but the onus was now on the brothers to increase their earnings from cricket to pay for their medical studies (Fred started his in the autumn of 1872). They achieved this through their involvement as match organisers of the United South of England Eleven which played six matches in the 1872 season including games in Edinburgh and Glasgow, Grace's first visit to Scotland.[50] 1872 was a wet summer and Grace ended his season in early August so that he could join the tour of North America.[51]

Grace became the first batsman to score a century before lunch in a first-class match when he made 134 for Gentlemen of the South versus Players of the South at The Oval in 1873.[52][53] In the same season, he became the first player ever to complete the "double" of 1,000 runs and 100 wickets in a season.[52] He went on to do the double eight times in all:[54]

  • 1873 – 2,139 runs and 106 wickets
  • 1874 – 1,664 runs and 140 wickets
  • 1875 – 1,498 runs and 191 wickets
  • 1876 – 2,622 runs and 129 wickets
  • 1877 – 1,474 runs and 179 wickets
  • 1878 – 1,151 runs and 152 wickets
  • 1885 – 1,688 runs and 117 wickets
  • 1886 – 1,846 runs and 122 wickets

1873 was the year that some semblance of organisation was brought into county cricket with the introduction of a residence qualification. This was aimed principally at England's outstanding bowler James Southerton who had been playing for both Surrey and Sussex, having been born in one county and living in the other. Southerton chose to play for his county of residence, Surrey, from then on but remained the country's top bowler. The counties agreed on residence but not on a means of deciding a County Championship and so the title, known as "Champion County", remained an unofficial award until 1889. Grace's Gloucestershire had a very strong claim to this unofficial title in 1873 but consensus was that they shared it with Nottinghamshire. These two did not play each other and both were unbeaten in six matches, but Nottinghamshire won five and Gloucestershire won four.[55]

1874 to 1875 Edit

 
Grace pictured in 1874 with Harry Jupp

Having toured Australia in the winter of 1873–74, Grace arrived in England on 18 May 1874 and was quickly back into domestic cricket. The 1874 season was very successful for him as he completed a second successive double. Gloucestershire again had a strong claim to the Champion County title although some sources have awarded it to Derbyshire and Grace himself said that it should have gone to Yorkshire.[56] Another good season followed in 1875 when he again completed the double with 1,498 runs and 191 wickets.[57] This was his most successful season as a bowler.

1876 to 1877 Edit

 
An 1877 illustration of Grace by Leslie Ward emphasises his trademark beard and MCC cap

One of the most outstanding phases of Grace's career occurred in the 1876 season, beginning with his career highest score of 344 for Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) v Kent at the St Lawrence Ground, Canterbury, in August.[58] Two days after his innings at Canterbury, he made 177 for Gloucestershire v Nottinghamshire;[59] and two days after that 318 not out for Gloucestershire v Yorkshire,[60] these two innings against counties with exceptionally strong bowling attacks. Thus, in three consecutive innings Grace scored 839 runs and was only out twice. His innings of 344 was the first triple century scored in first-class cricket and broke the record for the highest individual score in all classes of cricket, previously held by William Ward who scored 278 in 1820. Ward's record had stood for 56 years and, within a week, Grace bettered it twice.[61] In 1877, Gloucestershire won the unofficial championship for the third and (to date) final time, largely thanks to another outstanding season by Grace who scored 1,474 runs and took 179 wickets.[62]

1878 Edit

There was speculation that Grace intended to retire before the 1878 season to concentrate on his medical career, but he decided to continue playing cricket and may have been influenced by the arrival of the first Australian team to tour England in May. At Lord's on 27 May, the Australians defeated a strong MCC team, including Grace, by nine wickets in a single day's play.[63] According to Chris Harte, news of the match "spread like wildfire and created a sensation in London and throughout England".[64] The satirical magazine Punch responded to it by publishing a parody of Byron's poem "The Destruction of Sennacherib"[65] including a wry commentary on Grace's contribution:[66]

The Australians came down like a wolf on the fold,
The Mary'bone Cracks for a trifle were bowled;
Our Grace before dinner was very soon done,
And Grace after dinner did not get a run.

There was bad feeling between Grace and some of the 1878 Australians, especially their manager John Conway; this came to a head on 20 June in a row over the services of Grace's friend Billy Midwinter, an Australian who had played for Gloucestershire in 1877. Midwinter was already in England before the main Australian party arrived and had joined them for their first match in May. On 20 June, Midwinter was at Lord's where he was due to play for the Australians against Middlesex. On the same day, the Gloucestershire team was at The Oval to play Surrey but arrived a man short. As a result, a group of Gloucestershire players led by W. G. and E. M. Grace went to Lord's and persuaded Midwinter to accompany them back to The Oval to make up their numbers.[67] They were pursued by three of the Australians who caught them at The Oval gates where a furious altercation ensued in front of bystanders. At one point, Grace called the Australians "a damned lot of sneaks" (he later apologised). In the end, Grace got his way and Midwinter stayed with Gloucestershire for the rest of the season, although he did not play for the county against the Australians.[68] Afterwards, the row was patched up and Gloucestershire invited the Australians to play the county team, minus Midwinter, at Clifton College.[69] The Australians took a measure of revenge and won easily by 10 wickets, with Fred Spofforth taking 12 wickets and making the top score.[70] It was Gloucestershire's first ever home defeat.[71] The events at The Oval had a postscript during the following winter when W. G. and E. M. were called to account by the Gloucestershire membership because of the expenses they had claimed from Surrey for that match, and which Surrey had refused to authorise.[72]

Despite his troubles in 1878, it was another good season for Grace on the field as he completed a sixth successive double.[62] He made 24 first-class appearances in the season, scoring 1,151 runs, with a highest score of 116, at an average of 28.77 with 1 century and 5 half-centuries. In the field, he held 42 catches and took 152 wickets with a best analysis of 8/23. His bowling average was 14.50; he had 5 wickets in an innings 12 times and 10 wickets in a match 6 times.[62]

1879 to 1882 Edit

Grace missed a large part of the 1879 season because he was doing the final practical for his medical qualification and, for the first time since 1869, he did not complete 1,000 runs, though he did take 105 wickets.[62] Having qualified as a doctor in November 1879, he had to give priority to his new practice in Bristol for the next five years. As a result, his cricket sometimes had to be set aside. He had other troubles including a serious bout of mumps in 1882. He never topped the seasonal batting averages in the 1880s and from 1879 to 1882, he did not complete 1,000 runs in the season.[73]

Grace was badly upset by the death of his brother Fred in 1880, soon after all three brothers played for England against Australia in what is retrospectively recognised as the inaugural Test match in England. Fred's death has been seen as a major factor in the subsequent decline of the Gloucestershire team. Grace made only 13 appearances in 1881. In 1882, he was in the England team that lost the "Ashes Match" at The Oval.

1883 to 1886 Edit

 
Grace in 1885
 
Portrait of Grace by Herbert Rose Barraud, c. late 1880s

In 1883, Grace's medical priorities caused him to miss a Gentlemen v Players match for the first time since 1867. Injury problems restricted his appearances in 1884. Grace achieved his career-best bowling analysis of 10/49 when playing for MCC against Oxford University at The Parks in 1886; and he scored 104 in his only innings to complete a rare "match double".[74] 1886 was the last time he took 100 wickets in a season.[62]

1887 to 1891 Edit

In 1888, Grace scored two centuries in one match v Yorkshire (148 and 153) and labelled this "my champion match".[75] He had reduced his bowling somewhat in the last few seasons and he became an occasional bowler only from 1889. Injury problems, particularly a bad knee, took their toll in the early 1890s and Grace had his worst season in 1891 when he scored no centuries and could only average 19.76.[62] Despite this, few doubted that he should lead the England team on its 1891–92 tour of Australia. Australia, led by Jack Blackham, won the three-match series 2–1.[76]

1892 to 1894 Edit

Following his injury problems and loss of form in 1890 and 1891, Grace rallied somewhat during the next three seasons and reached 1,000 runs each time.

1895 Edit

Against all expectation, Grace produced in 1895 a season that has been called his "Indian Summer".[77] He completed his hundredth century playing for Gloucestershire against Somerset in May.[78] Charles Townsend, his batting partner when he reached the milestone, said that as he approached his hundred: "This was the one and only time I ever saw him flustered..." Eventually Sammy Woods bowled a full toss which Grace drove for four to reach his century.[79] He then went on to score 1,000 runs in the month, the first time this had ever been done, with scores of 13, 103, 18, 25, 288, 52, 257, 73 not out, 18 and 169 totalling 1,016 runs between 9 and 30 May.[80] His aggregate for the whole season was 2,346 at an average of 51.00 with nine centuries.[81] He was aged forty-six at the start of the season. Following his "Indian Summer", Grace was the sole recipient of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year award for 1896, the first of only three times that Wisden has restricted the award to a single player, there being normally five recipients.[82]

1896 to 1899 Edit

By the time of his fiftieth birthday in July 1898, Grace had developed a somewhat corpulent figure and had lost his former agility, which meant he was no longer a capable fielder. He remained a very good batsman and at need a useful slow bowler, but he was clearly entering the twilight of his career and was now generally referred to as "The Old Man".[83] As a special occasion, the MCC committee arranged the 1898 Gentlemen v Players match to coincide with his fiftieth birthday and he celebrated the event by scoring 43 and 31 not out, though handicapped by lameness and an injured hand.[84] He terminated his association with both England and Gloucestershire in 1899 and relocated to South London where he joined the new London County club.

1900 to 1908 Edit

With the demise in 1904 of London County as a first-class team, the number of Grace's appearances dwindled over the next four seasons until he called it a day in 1908. His final appearance for the Gentlemen versus the Players was in July 1906 at The Oval.[85] Grace made his final first-class appearance on 20–22 April 1908 for the Gentlemen of England v Surrey at The Oval, where, opening the innings, he scored 15 and 25.[62][86][87]

Gentlemen v Players Edit

In 1864, having scored 5 and 38 for the South Wales club in his first match at The Oval,[27] Grace was outstanding in the next match and scored 170 and 56 not out against the Gentlemen of Sussex at the Royal Brunswick Ground in Hove.[88] His innings of 170 was his first-ever century in a serious match.[89] The third match, against Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) was Grace's debut at Lord's and he was joined by E. M. who had just disembarked from his voyage.[90] Grace scored 50 in the first innings only three days after his sixteenth birthday.[91]

His name now well known in cricketing circles, Grace played for Gentlemen of the South v Players of the South in June 1865[92] when he was still only 16 but already 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) tall and weighing 11 st (70 kg).[93] This match is regarded by CricketArchive as his first-class debut.[94] He bowled extremely well and had match figures of 13 for 84. It was this performance that earned him his first selection for the prestigious Gentlemen v Players fixture.[23]

 
Gentlemen, captained by W. G. Grace, versus Players, Lords 1899

During this period, before the start of Test cricket in 1877, Gentlemen v Players was the most prestigious fixture in which a player could take part. This is apart from North v South which was technically a fixture of higher quality given that the amateur Gentlemen were usually (until Grace took a hand) outclassed by the professional Players. Grace represented the Gentlemen in their matches against the Players from 1865 to 1906. It was he who enabled the amateurs to meet the paid professionals on level terms and to defeat them more often than not. His ability to master fast bowling was the key factor.[95] Before Grace's debut in the fixture, the Gentlemen had lost 19 consecutive games; of the next 39 games they won 27 and lost only 4.[95] In consecutive innings against the Players from 1871 to 1873, Grace scored 217, 77 and 112, 117, 163, 158 and 70.[95] In his whole career, he scored a record 15 centuries in the fixture.[96]

Grace's 1865 debut in the fixture did not turn the tide as the Players won at The Oval by 118 runs. He played quite well and took seven wickets in the match but could only score 23 and 12 not out.[97] In the second 1865 match, this time at Lord's, the Gentlemen finally ended their losing streak and won by 8 wickets, but it was E. M. Grace, not W. G., who was the key factor with 11 wickets in the match. Even so, Grace made his mark by scoring 34 out of 77–2 in the second innings to steer the Gentlemen to victory.[98]

In 1870, Grace scored 215 for the Gentlemen which was the first double century achieved in the Gentlemen v Players fixture.[99]

Grace last played at Lord's for the Gentlemen in 1899 though he continued to represent the team at other venues until 1906.[100]

Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) Edit

Grace became a member of Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) in 1869 after being proposed by the treasurer, Thomas Burgoyne, and seconded by the secretary, Robert Allan Fitzgerald.[101] Given an ongoing rift in the sport during the 1860s between the northern professionals and Surrey, MCC feared the loss of its authority should Grace "throw in his lot with the professionals" so it was considered vital for them and their interests to get him onside. As it happens, the dispute was nearly over but it has been said that "MCC regained its authority over the game by hanging onto W. G.'s shirt-tails".[102] Grace wore MCC colours for the rest of his career, playing for them on an irregular basis until 1904, and their red and yellow hooped cap became as synonymous with him as his large black beard.[38] He played for MCC on an expenses only basis but any hopes that the premier club had of keeping him firmly within the amateur ranks would soon be disappointed for his services were much in demand.[38]

Grace, a medical student at the time, was first on the scene when George Summers received the blow on the head that caused his death four days later. This was in the MCC v Nottinghamshire match at Lord's in June 1870.[103] Grace was fielding nearby when Summers was struck and took his pulse. Summers recovered consciousness and Grace advised him to leave the field. Summers did not go to hospital but it transpired later that his skull had been fractured.[104] The Lord's pitch had a poor reputation for being rough, uneven and unpredictable all through the 19th century and many players including Grace considered it dangerous.[105]

Gloucestershire Edit

 
Gloucestershire County Cricket Club in 1880 shortly before Fred Grace's untimely death. W. G. Grace is seated front left centre. Fred (hooped cap) is third left in rear group. Billy Midwinter (directly behind W. G.) is fourth left in rear. E. M. Grace (bearded) is sixth left in rear.

It is generally understood that Gloucestershire County Cricket Club was formally constituted in 1870, having developed from Dr Henry Grace's West Gloucestershire club.[106] Gloucestershire acquired first-class status when its team played against Surrey at Durdham Down near Bristol on 2, 3 and 4 June 1870.[107] With Grace and his brothers E. M. and Fred playing, Gloucestershire won that game by 51 runs and quickly became one of the best teams in England. The club was unanimously rated Champion County in 1876 and 1877 as well as sharing the unofficial title in 1873 and staking a claim for it in 1874.[108] Surrey and Gloucestershire played a return match at The Oval in July 1870 and Gloucestershire won this by an innings and 129 runs. Grace scored 143, sharing a second wicket partnership with Frank Townsend (89) of 234.[109] The Grace family "ran the show" at Gloucestershire and E. M. was chosen as secretary which, as Birley points out, "put him in charge of expenses, a source of scandal that was to surface before the end of the decade".[38] W. G., though aged only 21, was from the start the team captain and Birley puts this down to his "commercial drawing power".[38]

In 1878, Gloucestershire made its first visit to Old Trafford Cricket Ground in July to play Lancashire and this was the match immortalised by Francis Thompson in his idyllic poem At Lord's.[110] In a match against Surrey at Clifton, the ball lodged in Grace's shirt after he had played it and he seized the opportunity to complete several runs before the fielders forced him to stop. He disingenuously claimed that he would have been out handled the ball if he had removed it and, following a discussion, it was agreed that three runs should be awarded.[111]

In the 1880s, Gloucestershire declined following its heady success in the 1870s. One of the reasons was the early death of W. G.'s younger brother Fred from pneumonia in 1880, there being a view that "the county was never quite the same without him".[112] Apart from W. G. himself, the only players of Fred Grace's calibre at this time were the leading professionals. Unlike the south-east and northern counties, Gloucestershire had neither the large home gates nor the necessary funds that could have secured the services of good quality professionals. This was at a time when a new generation of professionals was appearing with the likes of Billy Gunn, Maurice Read and Arthur Shrewsbury. As a result, Gloucestershire fell away in county competition and could no longer match Nottinghamshire, Surrey and Lancashire who had the strongest sides in the 1880s.[73]

Grace had received an invitation from the Crystal Palace Company in London to help them form the London County Cricket Club.[113] Grace accepted the offer and became the club's secretary, manager and captain with an annual salary of £600.[113] As a result, he severed his connection with Gloucestershire during the 1899 season.[113]

United South of England Eleven (USEE) Edit

The United South of England Eleven (USEE) had been formed by Edgar Willsher in 1865 but the heyday of the travelling teams was over and their organisers were desperate to feature new attractions. Grace had played for the USEE previously and he formally joined the club in 1870 as its match organiser, for which he received payment, but he played for expenses only.[38]

Overseas tours Edit

Grace made three overseas tours during his career. The first was to the United States and Canada with RA Fitzgerald's team in August and September 1872.[114] The expenses of this tour were paid by the Montreal Club who had written to Fitzgerald the previous winter and invited him to form a team. Grace and his all-amateur colleagues made "short work of the weak teams" they faced.[115] The team included two other future England captains in A. N. Hornby, who became a rival of Grace in future years; and the Honourable George Harris, the future Lord Harris, who became a very close friend and a most useful ally. The team met in Liverpool on 8 August and sailed on the SS Sarmatian, docking at Quebec on 17 August. Simon Rae recounts that the bond between Grace and Harris was forged by their mutual sea-sickness. Matches were played in Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, London, New York, Philadelphia and Boston. The team sailed back from Quebec on 27 September and arrived at Liverpool on 8 October.[116] The tour was "a high point of (Grace's) early years" and he "retained fond memories of it" for the rest of his life, calling it "a prolonged and happy picnic" in his ghost-written Reminiscences.[117]

Grace visited Australia in 1873–74 as captain of "W. G. Grace's XI". On the morning of the team's departure from Southampton, Grace responded to well-wishers by saying that his team "had a duty to perform to maintain the honour of English cricket, and to uphold the high character of English cricketers".[118] But both his and the team's performance fell well short of this goal. The tour was not a success and the only positive outcome was the fact of the tour having taken place, ten years after the previous one, as it "gave Australian cricket a much needed fillip".[119] Most of the problems lay with Grace himself and his "overbearing personality" which quickly exhausted all personal goodwill towards him.[120] There was also bad feeling within the team itself because Grace, who normally got on well with professional players, enforced the class divide throughout the tour.[121] In terms of results, the team fared reasonably well following a poor start in which they were beaten by both Victoria and New South Wales. They played 15 matches in all but none are recognised as first-class.[122]

Despite his injury problems in 1891, few doubted that Grace should captain England in Australia the following winter when he led Lord Sheffield's team to Australia in 1891–92. Australia, led by Jack Blackham, won the three-match series 2–1.[76]

Test career Edit

Although the early matches were recognised retrospectively, Test cricket began in 1877 when Grace was already 28 and he made his debut in 1880, scoring England's first-ever Test century,[123] against Australia.[124] He played for England in 22 Tests through the 1880s and 1890s, all of them against Australia, and was an automatic selection for England at home, but his only Test-playing tour of Australia was that of 1891–92.[125]

 
England's team in W. G. Grace's final Test at Trent Bridge in 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.

Grace's most significant Test was England v Australia in 1882 at The Oval.[126] Thanks to Spofforth who took 14 wickets in the match, Australia won by 7 runs and the legend of The Ashes was born immediately afterwards. Grace scored only 4 and 32 but he has been held responsible for "firing up" Spofforth. This came about through a typical piece of gamesmanship by Grace when he effected an unsporting, albeit legal, run out of Sammy Jones.[127]

The highest Test wicket partnership involving Grace was at The Oval in 1886 when he and William Scotton scored 170 for the first wicket against Australia. Grace's own score was also 170 and was the highest in his Test career.[128]

An oft-repeated story about Grace is that, in 1896, the Australian pace bowler Ernie Jones bowled a short-pitched delivery so close to his face that it appeared to go through his beard. Grace reportedly reacted by demanding of Australian captain Harry Trott: "Here, what's all this?" Trott said to Jones: "Steady, Jonah". Jones replied: "Sorry, doctor, she slipped". There are multiple variations of the story and, although some sources have recorded that the incident happened in a Test match, there is little doubt that the game in question was the tour opener at Sheffield Park.[129] This is separately confirmed by C. B. Fry and Stanley Jackson who were both playing in the match, Jackson batting with Grace at the time.[130][131]

Grace captained England in the First Test of the 1899 series against Australia at Trent Bridge, when he was 51. By this time his bulk had made him a liability in the field and, afterwards, realising his limitations all too clearly, he decided to stand down and surrendered both his place and the captaincy to Archie MacLaren.[114] It is evident that Grace "plotted" his own omission from the England team by asking C. B. Fry, another selector who had arrived late for their meeting, if he thought that MacLaren should play in the Second Test. Fry answered: "Yes, I do." "That settles it", said Grace, and he promptly retired from international cricket.[132] Explaining his decision later, Grace ruefully admitted of his diminished fielding skills that "the ground was getting a bit too far away".[133]

London County Edit

 
Grace (left) with former Australian Test captain Billy Murdoch when both played for London County.

Having ended his international career in 1899, Grace then began the last phase of his overall first-class career when he joined the new London County Cricket Club, based at Crystal Palace Park, which played first-class matches between 1900 and 1904.[134][135] Grace's presence initially attracted other leading players into the team, including C. B. Fry, Ranjitsinhji and Johnny Douglas, but the increased importance of the County Championship, combined with Grace's inevitable decline in form and the lack of a competitive element in London's matches, led to reduced attendances and consequently the club lost money.[136] Nevertheless, Grace remained an attraction and could still produce good performances. As late as 1902, though aged 54 by the end of the season, he scored 1,187 runs in first-class cricket, with two centuries, at an average of 37.09.[62] London's final first-class matches were played in 1904 and the enterprise folded in 1908.[137]

Later years Edit

Despite his age and bulk, Grace continued to play minor cricket for several years after his retirement from the first-class version. His penultimate match, and the last in which he batted, was for Eltham Cricket Club at Grove Park on 25 July 1914, a week after his 66th birthday. He contributed an undefeated 69 to a total of 155–6 declared, having begun his innings when they were 31–4. Grove Park made 99–8 in reply.[138] The last match of any kind that Grace played in, though he neither batted nor bowled, was for Eltham v Northbrook on 8 August, a few days after the outbreak of the First World War.[139]

Style and technique Edit

Approach to cricket Edit

Grace himself had much to say about how to play cricket in his two books Cricket (1891) and Reminiscences (1899), both of which were ghost-written. His fundamental opinion was that cricketers are "not born" but must be nurtured to develop their skills through coaching and practice; in his own case, he had achieved his skill through constant practice as a boy at home under the tutelage of his uncle Alfred Pocock.[140]

Although the work ethic was of prime importance in his development, Grace insisted that cricket must also be enjoyable and freely admitted that his family all played in a way that was "noisy and boisterous" with much "chaff" (a Victorian term for teasing).[141] W. G. and E. M. in particular were noted throughout their careers for being noisy and boisterous on the field. They were extremely competitive and always playing to win. Sometimes this went to extremes (for example, on one occasion at school, E. M. was so upset about a decision going against him that he went home and took the stumps with him), and it developed into the gamesmanship for which E. M. and W. G. were always controversial.[141]

We in Australia did not take kindly to W. G.. For so big a man, he is surprisingly tenacious on very small points. We thought him too apt to wrangle in the spirit of a duo-decimo lawyer over small points of the game.

Report in an Australian local newspaper, 1874[111]

Because of gamesmanship and insistence on his rights, as he saw them, Grace never enjoyed good relations with Australians in general, though he had personal friends like Billy Midwinter and Billy Murdoch.[142] In 1874, an Australian newspaper wrote: "We in Australia did not take kindly to W. G. For so big a man, he is surprisingly tenacious on very small points. We thought him too apt to wrangle in the spirit of a duo-decimo lawyer over small points of the game."[111]

He was just the same in England, and even his old friend Lord Harris agreed that "his gamesmanship added to the fund of stories about him".[143] The point was that Grace "approached cricket as if he were fighting a small war" and he was "out to win at all costs".[68] The Australians understood this twenty years later when Joe Darling, touring England for the first time in 1896, said: "We were all told not to trust the Old Man as he was out to win every time and was a great bluffer".[113]

Batting Edit

 
W. G. Grace taking guard

"W. G." was a very correct batsman. His left shoulder pointed to the bowler. He held his bat straight and brought it straight through to the ball. His beard hung right over the ball as he stroked it – the ball, I mean, not his beard. He was the most powerful straight-driver I have ever seen. When he drove at a ball I was mighty glad I was behind the stumps.[144]

Colonel Frank Crozier, 'The Man Who Played With Grace'

With regard to Grace's batsmanship, C. L. R. James held that the best analysis of his style and technique was written by another top-class batsman K. S. Ranjitsinhji in his Jubilee Book of Cricket (co-written with C. B. Fry).[145] Ranjitsinhji wrote that, by his extraordinary skills, Grace "revolutionised cricket and developed most of the techniques of modern batting" and was "the bible of batsmanship".[144] Before him, batsmen would play either forward or back and make a speciality of a certain stroke. Grace "made utility the criterion of style" and incorporated both forward and back play into his repertoire of strokes, favouring only that which was appropriate to the ball being delivered at the moment. In an oft-quoted phrase, Ranjitsinhji said of Grace that "he turned the old one-stringed instrument [i.e., the cricket bat] into a many-chorded lyre" and that "the theory of modern batting is in all essentials the result of W. G.'s thinking and working on the game".[146]

Ranjitsinhji summarised Grace's importance to the development of cricket by writing: "I hold him to be not only the finest player born or unborn, but the maker of modern batting".[147] Cricket writer and broadcaster John Arlott, writing in 1975, supported this view by holding that Grace "created modern cricket".[148]

But Grace's extraordinary skill had already been recognised very early in his career, especially by the professional bowlers. A very prescient comment was made by the laconic Yorkshire and England fast bowler Tom Emmett who, after playing against Grace for the first time in 1869, called him a "nonsuch" (without equal) who "ought to be made to play with a littler bat".[149]

H. S. Altham pointed out that for most of Grace's career, he played on pitches that "the modern schoolboy would consider unfit for a house match" and on grounds without boundaries where every hit including those "into the country" had to be run in full.[95] Rowland Bowen records that 1895, the year of Grace's "Indian Summer", was the season in which marl was first used as a binding agent in the composition of English pitches, its benefit being to ensure "good lasting wickets".[150]

It was through Alfred Pocock's perseverance that Grace had learned to play straight and to develop a sound defence so that he would stop or leave the good deliveries and score off the poor ones.[151] This contrasted him with E. M. who was "always a hitter" and whose basic defence was not as sound.[151] However, as Grace's skills developed, he became a very powerful hitter himself with a full range of shots and, at his best, would score runs freely. Despite being an all-rounder, Grace was also an opening batsman.

Bowling Edit

As a bowler, Grace belonged to what Altham calls the "high, home and easy school of a much earlier day".[133] Using a roundarm action, Grace was adept at varying both his pace and the arc of his slower deliveries which worked in from the leg side of the pitch. The chief feature of his bowling was the excellent length which he consistently maintained. He originally bowled at a consistently fast medium pace but in the 1870s he increasingly adopted his slower style which utilised a leg break.[152] He called his leg break a "leg-tweeker" but he put very little break on the ball, just enough to bring it across from the batsman's legs to the wicket and he invariably posted a fielder in a strategic position on the square leg boundary, a trap which brought occasional success.[152][153] He was unusual in persisting with his roundarm action throughout his career, when almost all other bowlers adopted the new overarm style.[154]

Fielding Edit

In his prime, Grace was noted for his outstanding fielding and was a very strong thrower of the ball; he was once credited with throwing the cricket ball 122 yards during an athletics event at Eastbourne.[155] He attributed this skill to his country-bred childhood in which stone throwing at crows was a daily exercise. In later life, Grace commented upon a decline in English fielding standards and blamed it on "the falling numbers of country-bred boys who strengthen their arms by throwing stones at birds in the fields".[12]

Much of Grace's success as a bowler was due to his magnificent fielding to his own bowling; as soon as he had delivered the ball he covered so much ground to the left that he made himself into an extra mid-off and he took some extraordinary catches in this way.[152]

In his early career, Grace generally fielded at long-leg or cover-point; later he was usually at point (see Fielding positions in cricket).[152] In his prime, he was a fine thrower, a fast runner and a safe catcher.[152]

Amateur status Edit

The expenses enquiry at Gloucestershire took place in January 1879. W. G. and E. M. were forced to answer charges that they had claimed "exorbitant expenses", one of the few times that their money-making activity was seriously challenged.[72] The claim had been submitted to Surrey regarding the controversial 1878 match in which Billy Midwinter was brought in as a late replacement, but Surrey refused to pay it and this provoked the enquiry. The Graces managed to survive "a protracted and stormy meeting" with E. M. retaining his key post as club secretary, although he was forced to liaise in future with a new finance committee and abide by stricter rules.[72]

The incident highlighted an ongoing issue about the nominal amateur status of the Grace brothers. The amateur was, by definition, not paid, and the dictum of the amateur-dominated Marylebone Cricket Club was that "a gentleman ought not to make any profit from playing cricket".[156] Like all amateur players, they claimed expenses for travel and accommodation to and from cricket matches, but there is plenty of evidence that the Graces made more money from playing than reimbursement of actual expenses, and W. G. in particular "made more than any professional".[157] In his later years he had to pay for a locum tenens to run his medical practice while he was playing cricket; he had a reputation for treating his poorer patients without charging a fee.[156] He was paid a salary for his roles as secretary and manager of the London County club.[113] He was the recipient of two national testimonials. The first was presented to him by Lord Fitzhardinge at Lord's on 22 July 1879 in the form of a marble clock, two bronze ornaments and a cheque for £1,458 (equivalent to £157,700 in 2021).[72] The second, collected by MCC, the county of Gloucestershire, The Daily Telegraph and The Sportsman, amounted to £9,703 (equivalent to £1,194,500 in 2021) and was presented to him in 1896 in appreciation of his "Indian Summer" season of 1895.[158]

 
Entr'acte cartoon: Bobby Abel to W. G. Grace: "Look here, we players intend to be sufficiently paid, as well as the so-called gentlemen!"

Whatever criticisms may be made of Grace for making money for himself out of cricket, he was "punctilious in his aid when (professional players) were the beneficiaries".[159] For example, when Alfred Shaw's benefit match in 1879 was ruined by rain, Grace insisted on donating to Shaw the proceeds of another match that had been arranged to support Grace's own testimonial fund. After the same thing happened to Edgar Willsher's benefit match, Grace took a select team to play Kent a few days later, the proceeds all going to Willsher. On another occasion, he altered the date of a Gloucestershire match so that he could travel to Sheffield and take part in a Yorkshire player's benefit match, knowing full well the impact that his appearance would have on the gate.[160] John Arlott recorded, "it was no uncommon sight to see outside a cricket ground":[161]

CRICKET MATCH
Admission 6d
If W. G. Grace plays
Admission 1/–

Grace and his brother Fred faced financial difficulty after their father died in December 1871 as they were still living with their mother, who had been left just enough to retain the family home.[162] As medical students, they faced considerable outlay in addition to their living expenses and it became imperative for them to make what they could out of cricket, especially the United South of England Eleven.[162] Grace as its match organiser had to find gaps in the first-class fixture list and then pull together a team to visit a location where a suitable profit could be made.[163] It has been estimated that the standard fee paid to the USEE was £100 for a three-day match (equivalent to £28,500 in 2021) with £5 (£500) each going to the nine professionals in the team and the other £45 (£4300) to W. G. and Fred.[163] Otherwise, Grace played for expenses but these were loaded as, for example, he is known to have claimed £15 per appearance for Gloucestershire and £20 for representing the Gentlemen.[163] Although the money he was paid is "small beer" compared with 21st-century sports stars, there is no doubt he had a comfortable living out of cricket and made far more money than any contemporary professional. To put it in context, a domestic servant earned less than £50 a year.[164]

First-class career statistics Edit

According to the statistical record used by CricketArchive, Grace's final first-class appearance in 1908 was his 870th, and concluded a first-class career that had lasted 44 seasons from 1865 to 1908, equalling the record for the longest career span held by John Sherman, who played from 1809 to 1852.[165] But according to an older version of Grace's career record, published by Wisden in 1916, Grace played in 878 first-class matches over the same span,[62] and other sources list Grace as playing 880 first-class matches.

Grace himself regarded the South Wales matches in 1864 as first-class fixtures, and refers to them in his Cricketing Reminiscences as "really big" games.[166] He was supported in his view by Lillywhite's Guide to Cricketers (1865 edition) which included his innings at Hove in a list called Scores of 100 or more made since 1850 in first-class matches. Grace's score was one of only six that exceeded 150.[167]

Despite Grace's own views on the matter, his "first-class career record" was effectively confirmed by F. S. Ashley-Cooper who produced a list of season-by-season figures to supplement Grace's obituary in the 1916 edition of Wisden Cricketers' Almanack.[168] These figures came to be known as Grace's "traditional" career record and granted him 126 first-class centuries, a total that remained a record until it was broken by Jack Hobbs in 1925; it was not until Roy Webber's research in the 1950s that Ashley-Cooper's list was challenged.[168]

Following further research by the Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians (ACS) in the 1970s and 1980s, an "amended" career record was published which reduced Grace's total of centuries to 124. This was challenged, for historical reasons, by Wisden in 1983 and the current situation regarding this controversy is that both sides generally accept each other's views.

For example, Rae points out that the statisticians are right to criticise Victorian compilers for "including minor matches to enable Grace to reach certain milestones", but he also respects the view of Grace's contemporaries that "any match in which he played was elevated in status by his very presence".[168][169]

In May 2022, Wisden updated its records and deleted ten matches from Grace's statistics that did not have first-class status, bringing it in line with the ACS.[1]

Other sports Edit

Grace was an outstanding athlete as a young man and won the 440 yards (400 m) hurdling title at the National Olympian Games at Crystal Palace in August 1866.[23] In addition to running, he was an excellent thrower, as evidenced when he threw a cricket ball 122 yards (112 m) during an athletics event at Eastbourne.[155]

Grace played football for the Wanderers, although he did not feature in any of their FA Cup-winning teams.[170][171]

In later life, after his family moved to Mottingham, Kent, he became very interested in lawn bowls. He founded the English Bowling Association in 1903 and became its first president.[172] He helped found an international competition with Scotland, Ireland and Wales, captaining England from the inaugural international at Crystal Palace in 1903 until 1908. He supported the pioneering all-female Womanhood Bowling Club at Crystal Palace by obtaining the use of a club pavilion for them in 1902.[173] He was also keen on curling.[174][175][176] His interest in golf brought him into intimate contact with one of his biographers Bernard Darwin, who said that Grace played golf "with a mixture of keen seriousness and cheerful noisiness". He could drive straight and sometimes putt well but, for reasons that Darwin could not understand, "he never could play an iron shot well".[177]

Personal life and medical career Edit

Importance of family Edit

 
Grace with his wife c. 1900

Despite living in London for many years, Grace never lost his Gloucestershire accent.[178] His entire life, including his cricket and medical careers, is inseparable from his close-knit family background which was strongly influenced by his father Henry Grace, who set great store by qualifications and was determined to succeed.[179][180] He passed this attitude on to each of his five sons.[179] Therefore, like his father and his brothers, Grace chose a professional career in medicine, though because of his cricketing commitments he did not complete his qualification as a doctor until 1879 when he was 31 years old.[181]

Married life and medical career Edit

Grace was married on 9 October 1873 to Agnes Nicholls Day (1853–1930), who was the daughter of his first cousin William Day. Two weeks later, they began their honeymoon by taking ship to Australia for Grace's 1873–74 tour.[182] They returned from the tour in May 1874 with Agnes six months pregnant. Their eldest son William Gilbert junior (1874–1905) was born on 6 July.[183] Grace had to catch up with his studies at Bristol Medical School, and he and his wife and son lived at Downend until February 1875 with his mother, brother Fred and sister Fanny.[184]

 
Grace on his 66th birthday, 1914

The Graces moved to London in February 1875, when W. G. was assigned to St Bartholomew's Hospital,[185] and lived at Earl's Court, about five miles from the City.[183] Their second son Henry Edgar (1876–1937) was born in London in July 1876.[186] A ward in the Queen Elizabeth II Wing at St. Bartholomew's Hospital used to bear the name "W. G. Grace Ward", caring for patients recovering from neurosurgery until demolition of the Queen Elizabeth II building.[187] In the autumn of 1877, the family moved back to Gloucestershire, where they lived with Grace's elder brother Henry, who was a general practitioner. Grace's studies had reached a crucial point with a theoretical backlog to catch up followed by his final practical session. Agnes became pregnant again at this time and their third child Bessie (1878–98) was born in May 1878.[188]

Following the 1878 season, Grace was assigned to Westminster Hospital Medical School for his final year of medical practice and this curtailed his cricket for a time as he did not play in the 1879 season until June. The family moved back to London and lived at Acton.[110] But the upheaval was worthwhile because, in November 1879, Grace finally received his diploma from the University of Edinburgh, having qualified as a Licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians (LRCP) and became a Member of the Royal College of Surgeons (MRCS).[181] After qualifying he worked both in his own practice at Thrissle Lodge, 61 Stapleton Road in Easton, a largely poor district of Bristol, employing two locums during the cricket season. He was the local Public Vaccinator and had additional duties as the Medical Officer to the Barton Regis Union, which involved tending patients in the workhouse.[189]

 
15 Victoria Square, Clifton, Grace's home from 1894 to 1896[190]

There are many testimonies from his patients that he was a good doctor, for example: "Poor families knew that they did not need to worry about calling him in, as the bills would never arrive".[156] The family lived at four different addresses close to the practice over the next twenty years and their fourth and last child Charles Butler (1882–1938) was born.[191]

After leaving Gloucestershire in 1900, the Graces lived in Mottingham, a south-east London suburb, not far from the Crystal Palace where he played for London County, or from Eltham, where he played club cricket in his sixties. A blue plaque marks their residence, Fairmount, in Mottingham Lane.[137]

Personal tragedies Edit

Grace endured a number of tragedies in his life beginning with the death of his father in December 1871.[49] He was badly upset by the early death of his younger brother Fred in 1880, only two weeks after he, W. G. and E. M. had all played in a Test for England against Australia.[192] In July 1884, Grace's rival A. N. Hornby stopped play in a Lancashire v Gloucestershire match at Old Trafford so that E. M. and W. G. could return home on receipt of a cable reporting the death of Mrs Martha Grace at the age of 72.[192] The greatest tragedy of Grace's life was the loss of his daughter Bessie in 1899, aged only 20, from typhoid. She had been his favourite child.[193] Then, in February 1905, his eldest son W. G. junior died of appendicitis at the age of 30.[194]

On 26 August 1914, in response to news of casualties at the Battle of Mons, Grace wrote a letter to The Sportsman in which he called for the immediate closure of the county cricket season and for all first-class cricketers to set an example and serve their country.[195] It was published next day but did not, as is often supposed, bring an immediate end to the cricket season as one further round of County Championship matches was played.[196] Grace was reportedly distressed by the war and was known to shake his fist and shout at the German Zeppelins floating over his home in South London. When H. D. G. Leveson-Gower remonstrated that he had not allowed fast bowlers to unsettle him, Grace retorted: "I could see those beggars; I can't see these".[197]

Grace died at Mottingham on 23 October 1915, aged 67, after suffering a heart attack.[197] His death "shook the nation almost as much as Winston Churchill's fifty years later".[132] He is buried in the family grave at Beckenham Cemetery, Kent.[198]

Legacy Edit

 
Grace pictured with the future King Edward VIII in 1911

MCC decided to commemorate Grace's life and career with a Memorial Biography, published in 1919. Its preface begins with this passage:

Never was such a band of cricketers gathered for any tour as has assembled to do honour to the greatest of all players in the present Memorial Biography. That such a volume should go forth under the auspices of the Committee of MCC is in itself unique in the history of the game, and that such an array of cricketers, critics and enthusiasts should pay tribute to its finest exponent has no parallel in any other branch of sport. In itself this presents a noble monument of what W. G. Grace was, a testimony to his prowess and to his personality.[199]

In 1923, the W. G. Grace Memorial Gates were erected at the St John's Wood Road entrance to Lord's.[200] They were designed by Sir Herbert Baker and the opening ceremony was performed by Sir Stanley Jackson, who had suggested the inclusion of the words The Great Cricketer in the dedication.[201] On 12 September 2009, Grace was posthumously inducted into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame at Lord's. Two of his direct descendants attended the ceremony: Dominic, his great-great-grandson; and George, Dominic's son.[202]

According to Mark Bonham-Carter, H. H. Asquith's grandson, Grace would have been one of the people to be appointed a peer had Asquith's plan to flood the House of Lords with Liberal peers come to fruition.[203] British commemorative postage stamps issued on 16 May 1973 for the County Cricket Centenary featured three sketches of W. G. Grace by Harry Furniss. The values were threepence (then first-class post); seven pence halfpenny; and ninepence.[204] Grace's fame has endured and his large beard in particular remains familiar; for example, Monty Python and the Holy Grail uses his image as "the face of God" during the sequence in which God sends the knights out on their quest for the grail.[205][206]

 
Grace's grave in Beckenham Cemetery

In many of the tributes paid to Grace, he was referred to as "The Great Cricketer". H S Altham, for one, described him as "the greatest of all cricketers".[46] John Arlott summarised him as "timeless" and "the greatest (cricketer) of them all".[207] The anti-establishment writer C. L. R. James, in his classic work Beyond a Boundary, included a section "W. G.: Pre-Eminent Victorian", containing four chapters and covering some sixty pages. He declared Grace "the best-known Englishman of his time" and aligned him with Thomas Arnold and Thomas Hughes as "the three most eminent Victorians". James wrote of cricket as "the game he (Grace) transformed into a national institution".[208] Simon Rae also commented upon Grace's eminence in Victorian England by saying that his public recognition was equalled only by Queen Victoria herself and William Ewart Gladstone.[178]

The inaugural edition of Playfair Cricket Annual in 1948 coincided with the centenary of Grace's birth and carried a tribute which spoke of Grace as "King in his own domain" and his "Olympian personality". Playfair went on to say how Grace had "pulverised fast bowling on chancy pitches" and had then "astonished the world" by his deeds during the 1895 "Indian Summer".[153] In the foreword of the same edition, C. B. Fry insisted that Grace would not have started the 1948 season with any notion of being beaten by that season's Australian touring team, for "he was sanguine" and would have put everything he could muster into the task of beating them with no acceptance of defeat "till after it happened".[209] As mentioned in Playfair, both MCC and Gloucestershire arranged special matches on Grace's birthday to commemorate his centenary.[153]

In the 1963 edition of Wisden Cricketers' Almanack, Grace was selected by Neville Cardus as one of the Six Giants of the Wisden Century.[210] This was a special commemorative selection requested by Wisden for its 100th edition. The other five players chosen were Sydney Barnes, Don Bradman, Jack Hobbs, Tom Richardson and Victor Trumper. To mark 150 years of the Cricketers' Almanack, Wisden named him in an all-time Test World XI.[211]

In the 1982 serial of Doctor Who titled Black Orchid, Grace was referred to in passing as "The Master" (to the confusion of the Doctor until Sir Robert explained that he was referring to Grace).

Derek Birley, who devoted whole passages of his book to criticism of Grace's gamesmanship and moneymaking, wrote that the "bleakness (of the war) was exemplified in November (sic) 1915 by the death of Grace, which seemed depressingly emblematic of the end of an era".[212] Rowland Bowen wrote that "many of Grace's achievements would be rated extremely good by our standards" but "by the standards of his day they were phenomenal: nothing like them had ever been done before".[213] David Frith summed up Grace's legacy to cricket by writing that "his influence lasted long after his final appearance in first-class cricket in 1908 and his death in 1915". "For decades", wrote Frith, "Grace had been arguably the most famous man in England", easily recognisable because of "his beard and his bulk", and revered because of "his batsmanship".[132] Frith added a view that even though Grace's records had been overtaken, "his pre-eminence" had not, and so Grace "remains the most famous cricketer of them all, the one who elevated the game in public esteem".[132]

He is buried at Beckenham Cemetery in Elmers End Road, Beckenham, Bromley, Kent.[214] A Public House named after Dr. Grace was built next to the cemetery.[215]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b As described in Grace's first-class career statistics, there have been different versions of Grace's career totals as a result of past disagreements among cricket statisticians regarding the status of some of the matches he played in. This is a statistical issue only and has little, if any, bearing on the historical aspects of Grace's career. In 2022 Wisden brought its statistical totals into line with other sources, reducing Grace's total number of first-class matches played by eight.[1] Only the now accepted statistics are displayed here.

References Edit

Online references using Cricinfo or Wisden may require free registration for access.
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  2. ^ a b Rae, p.16.
  3. ^ Rae, pp.9–11.
  4. ^ Rae, p.11.
  5. ^ Rae, pp.12–13.
  6. ^ Midwinter, pp.9–10.
  7. ^ Grace, Reminiscences, p.1.
  8. ^ Grace, Reminiscences, p.2.
  9. ^ a b c Midwinter, pp.11–12.
  10. ^ Midwinter, p.11.
  11. ^ a b c Rae, p.15.
  12. ^ a b Rae, p.21.
  13. ^ a b c Rae, pp.21–22.
  14. ^ Rae, p.38.
  15. ^ Rae, p.39.
  16. ^ Rae, p.63.
  17. ^ a b c d Rae, p.78.
  18. ^ a b c Rae, p.34.
  19. ^ a b Altham, p.124.
  20. ^ a b Grace, Reminiscences, pp.8–9.
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  81. ^ Webber, Playfair, p.90.
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  83. ^ Frith, The Golden Age of Cricket, ch.1.
  84. ^ Midwinter, p.129.
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  88. ^ "Gentlemen of Sussex v South Wales Cricket Club 1864". CricketArchive. Retrieved 16 October 2011.
  89. ^ Midwinter, p. 23.
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  95. ^ a b c d Altham, p.123.
  96. ^ Webber, Playfair, pp. 256–257.
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  99. ^ "Gentlemen v Players 1870". CricketArchive. Retrieved 27 November 2008.
  100. ^ "Gentlemen v Players 1899". CricketArchive. Retrieved 27 November 2008.
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  102. ^ Rae, p.79.
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  105. ^ Birley, p. 114.
  106. ^ Birley, p. 104.
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  108. ^ Webber, County Championship, pp. 14–20.
  109. ^ "Surrey v Gloucestershire 1870". CricketArchive. Retrieved 12 August 2010.
  110. ^ a b Midwinter, p.73.
  111. ^ a b c Birley, p. 111.
  112. ^ Birley, p. 132.
  113. ^ a b c d e Birley, p. 162.
  114. ^ a b Midwinter, p. 45.
  115. ^ Birley, p. 122.
  116. ^ Rae, pp. 110–129.
  117. ^ Rae, p. 110.
  118. ^ Rae, p. 149.
  119. ^ Rae, p. 188.
  120. ^ Rae, p. 189.
  121. ^ Rae, p. 190.
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  126. ^ "Test Match 1882". CricketArchive. Retrieved 27 November 2008.
  127. ^ Birley, p. 137.
  128. ^ "Test Match 1886". CricketArchive. Retrieved 27 November 2008.
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  131. ^ C. B. Fry, Life Worth Living, Trafalgar Square Publishing, 1939
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  133. ^ a b Barclays, pp. 181–182.
  134. ^ Gibson, p. 57.
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  137. ^ a b Midwinter, p. 146.
  138. ^ Midwinter, p.147.
  139. ^ Rae, p. 486.
  140. ^ Rae, p.17.
  141. ^ a b Rae, p.19.
  142. ^ Midwinter, p.68.
  143. ^ Major, p.341.
  144. ^ a b p. 136, Richard Whitington, Captains Outrageous, cricket in the seventies, Stanley Paul, 1972
  145. ^ James, pp. 236–237.
  146. ^ James, p. 237.
  147. ^ Birley, p. 167.
  148. ^ Arlott, p. 1.
  149. ^ Rae, p. 82.
  150. ^ Bowen, p. 140.
  151. ^ a b Rae, p. 20.
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  156. ^ a b c Bowen, p. 112.
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  158. ^ Birley, p.159.
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  160. ^ Midwinter, p. 74.
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  163. ^ a b c Rae, p. 103.
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  168. ^ a b c Rae, p. 497.
  169. ^ See also: Variations in first-class cricket statistics.
  170. ^ Rob Cavallini, The Wanderers F.C.: five time F.A. Cup winners, 2005, ISBN 978-0-9550496-0-6, p.37.
  171. ^ BBC World Service, Sportshour: The FA Cup's Harlem Globetrotters Retrieved 7 April 2016
  172. ^ "Bowls: W G scores another 100" Retrieved 9 October 2011
  173. ^ Parratt, Catriona (1989). "Athletic "Womanhood": Exploring Sources for Female Sport in Victorian and Edwardian England" (PDF). Journal of Sport History. 16 (2): 155. Retrieved 29 December 2016.
  174. ^ Midwinter, p.143.
  175. ^ Rae, p.478.
  176. ^ Darwin, p.106.
  177. ^ Darwin, pp.106–107.
  178. ^ a b Rae, p.1.
  179. ^ a b Rae, p.3.
  180. ^ Rae mentions on page 3 that Dr Henry Grace's medical qualifications were Licenciate of the Society of Apothecaries (LSA) in 1828 and Membership of the Royal College of Surgeons (MRCS) in 1830.
  181. ^ a b Midwinter, p.75.
  182. ^ Midwinter, pp.39–40.
  183. ^ a b Midwinter, p.54.
  184. ^ Midwinter, p.51.
  185. ^ www.bartsguild.org 10 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  186. ^ Midwinter, p.59.
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  189. ^ Rae, p.238.
  190. ^ "Plaques". Clifton & Hotwells Improvement Society. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
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  192. ^ a b Midwinter, p.86.
  193. ^ Midwinter, p.127.
  194. ^ Midwinter, p.140.
  195. ^ Midwinter, p. 149.
  196. ^ Rae, p. 487.
  197. ^ a b Rae, p. 490.
  198. ^ Midwinter, p. 153.
  199. ^ Gordon, p.v.
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  203. ^ "Grace worthy of high honour. 20 January 1998". CricInfo. Retrieved 25 September 2009.
  204. ^ Stanley Gibbons, Great Britain Concise Stamp Catalogue, 1997 edition, pp.96–97.
  205. ^ In the commentary track of the DVD release, Terry Gilliam and Terry Jones acknowledge the use of Grace's image.
  206. ^ "WATCH: Terry Gilliam's Grumpy Commentary for Lost Python Animations | BBC America". BBC America. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
  207. ^ Arlott, p.256.
  208. ^ James, ch.14.
  209. ^ C. B. Fry, Playfair Cricket Annual 1948, p.4.
  210. ^ Cardus, Neville (1963). "Six Giants of the Wisden Century". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. Retrieved 8 November 2008.
  211. ^ "WG Grace and Shane Warne in Wisden all-time World Test XI". BBC. 23 October 2013. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
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  213. ^ Bowen, p.108.
  214. ^ "Beckenham Cemetery". Dignity. 2014. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
  215. ^ "Beckenham Restaurants: Pubs and Bars". Beckenham.NET. Retrieved 7 September 2014.

Bibliography Edit

Further reading Edit

  • Allen, David Rayvern (1990). Cricket with Grace: Illustrated Anthology on "W. G.". ISBN 978-0-04-440478-1.
  • Bax, Clifford (1952). W. G. Grace.
  • Frith, David (1975). The Fast Men. TransWorld Publishing. ISBN 0-552-10435-3.
  • Furniss, Harry (1896). How's that? including "A century of Grace". Bristol: Arrowsmith.
  • Grace, W. G. (1888). Modern Batting (article in The Magazine of Sport, July 1888). London: Iliffe & Son.
  • Grace, W. G. (1895). The History of a Hundred Centuries. Ghost-written by William Yardley.
  • Grace, W. G. (1909). W. G.'s Little Book. Newnes. Ghost-written by E.H.D. Sewell.
  • Low, Robert (2004). W. G. Grace: An Intimate Biography. Metro Books. ISBN 1-84358-095-0.
  • Pearce, Brian (2004). Cricket at the Crystal Palace: W. G. Grace and the London County Cricket Club. Crystal Palace Foundation. ISBN 978-1-897754-09-2.
  • Thomson, A. A. (1968) [1957]. The Great Cricketer. The Cricketer; Hutchinson. ISBN 0-09087-310-6.
  • Wright, Graeme (2005). Wisden at Lord's. John Wisden & Co. Ltd. ISBN 0-947766-93-6.

External links Edit

  • W. G. Grace at ESPNcricinfo
  • Manchester Guardian – obituary
  • Wisden Cricketers' Almanack – memorial tribute (1916)
  • Wisden Cricketers' Almanack – W. G. Grace centenary
  • CricInfo – Bearded Giant by E. W. Swanton, 18 July 1998
  • CricInfo – "Amazing Grace" by David Frith, 2 Aug 2010
  • Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, 2004 – W. G. Grace
  • BBC Radio 4 Great Lives on W. G. Grace – listen online: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00glw73
Sporting positions
Preceded by English national cricket captain
1888
Succeeded by
Preceded by English national cricket captain
1890-1891/2
Succeeded by
Preceded by English national cricket captain
1893
Succeeded by
Preceded by English national cricket captain
1896
Succeeded by
Records
Preceded by Highest individual score in first-class cricket
344 MCC v Kent at Canterbury 1876
Succeeded by

grace, william, gilbert, grace, mrcs, lrcp, july, 1848, october, 1915, english, amateur, cricketer, important, development, sport, widely, considered, greatest, players, nominally, amateur, cricketer, said, have, made, more, money, from, cricketing, activities. William Gilbert Grace MRCS LRCP 18 July 1848 23 October 1915 was an English amateur cricketer who was important in the development of the sport and is widely considered one of its greatest players He was nominally amateur as a cricketer but he is said to have made more money from his cricketing activities than any professional cricketer He was an extremely competitive player and although he was one of the most famous men in England he was also one of the most controversial on account of his gamesmanship and moneymaking W G GraceGrace photographed by George Beldam c 1902Personal informationFull nameWilliam Gilbert GraceBorn 1848 07 18 18 July 1848Downend near Bristol EnglandDied23 October 1915 1915 10 23 aged 67 Mottingham Kent EnglandNicknameW G The Doctor The Champion The Big Un The Old ManBattingRight handedBowlingRight arm mediumRoleAll rounderRelationsGeorge Pocock grandfather E M Grace brother Fred Grace brother George Gilbert cousin Walter Gilbert cousin William Gilbert Rees cousin William Lee Rees cousin International informationNational sideEnglandTest debut cap 24 6 September 1880 v AustraliaLast Test1 June 1899 v AustraliaDomestic team informationYearsTeam1869 1904MCC1870 1899Gloucestershire1900 1904London CountyCareer statisticsCompetition Test First class a Matches 22 870Runs scored 1 098 54 211Batting average 32 29 39 45100s 50s 2 5 124 251Top score 170 344Balls bowled 666 124 833Wickets 9 2 809Bowling average 26 22 18 145 wickets in innings 0 24010 wickets in match 0 64Best bowling 2 12 10 49Catches stumpings 39 876 5Source CricInfo 28 May 2022 a He played first class cricket for a record equalling 44 seasons from 1865 to 1908 during which he captained England Gloucestershire the Gentlemen Marylebone Cricket Club MCC the United South of England Eleven USEE and several other teams Right handed as both batsman and bowler Grace dominated the sport during his career His technical innovations and enormous influence left a lasting legacy An outstanding all rounder he excelled at all the essential skills of batting bowling and fielding but it is for his batting that he is most renowned He is held to have invented modern batsmanship Usually opening the innings he was particularly admired for his mastery of all strokes and his level of expertise was said by contemporary reviewers to be unique He generally captained the teams he played for at all levels because of his skill and tactical acumen Grace came from a cricketing family E M Grace was one of his elder brothers and Fred Grace his younger brother In 1880 they were members of the same England team the first time three brothers played together in Test cricket Grace took part in other sports also he was a champion 440 yard hurdler as a young man and played football for the Wanderers In later life he developed enthusiasm for golf lawn bowls and curling He qualified as a medical practitioner in 1879 Contents 1 Early years 1 1 Childhood 1 2 Education 1 3 Development as a cricketer 2 Cricket career 1864 1914 2 1 First class career summary 2 1 1 1864 to 1870 2 1 2 1871 2 1 3 1872 to 1873 2 1 4 1874 to 1875 2 1 5 1876 to 1877 2 1 6 1878 2 1 7 1879 to 1882 2 1 8 1883 to 1886 2 1 9 1887 to 1891 2 1 10 1892 to 1894 2 1 11 1895 2 1 12 1896 to 1899 2 1 13 1900 to 1908 2 2 Gentlemen v Players 2 3 Marylebone Cricket Club MCC 2 4 Gloucestershire 2 5 United South of England Eleven USEE 2 6 Overseas tours 2 7 Test career 2 8 London County 2 9 Later years 3 Style and technique 3 1 Approach to cricket 3 2 Batting 3 3 Bowling 3 4 Fielding 4 Amateur status 5 First class career statistics 6 Other sports 7 Personal life and medical career 7 1 Importance of family 7 2 Married life and medical career 7 3 Personal tragedies 8 Legacy 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly years EditChildhood Edit Main article Grace family W G Grace was born in Downend near Bristol on 18 July 1848 at his parents home Downend House and was baptised at the local church on 8 August 2 He was called Gilbert in the family circle except by his mother who apparently called him Willie 2 but otherwise as W G he was universally known by his initials His parents were Henry Mills Grace and Martha nee Pocock who were married in Bristol on Thursday 3 November 1831 and lived out their lives at Downend where Henry Grace was the local GP 3 Downend is near Mangotsfield and although it is now a suburb of Bristol it was then a distinct village surrounded by countryside and about four miles from Bristol 4 Henry and Martha Grace had nine children in all the same number as Victoria and Albert and in every respect they were the typical Victorian family 5 Grace was the eighth child in the family he had three older brothers including E M Grace always known as E M and four older sisters The ninth child was his younger brother Fred Grace born in 1850 6 Grace began his Cricketing Reminiscences 1899 by answering a question he had frequently been asked i e was he born a cricketer His answer was in the negative because he believed that cricketers are made by coaching and practice though he adds that if he was not born a cricketer he was born in the atmosphere of cricket 7 His father and mother were full of enthusiasm for the game and it was a common theme of conversation at home 8 In 1850 when W G was two and Fred was expected the family moved to a nearby house called The Chesnuts which had a sizeable orchard and Henry Grace organised clearance of this to establish a practice pitch 9 All nine children in the Grace family including the four daughters were encouraged to play cricket although the girls along with the dogs were required for fielding only 10 Grace claimed that he first handled a cricket bat at the age of two 9 It was in the Downend orchard and as members of their local cricket clubs that he and his brothers developed their skills mainly under the tutelage of his uncle Alfred Pocock who was an exceptional coach 11 Apart from his cricket and his schooling Grace lived the life of a country boy and roamed freely with the other village boys One of his regular activities was stone throwing at birds in the fields and he later claimed that this was the source of his eventual skill as an outfielder 12 Education Edit Grace was notoriously unscholarly 13 His first schooling was with a Miss Trotman in Downend village and then with a Mr Curtis of Winterbourne 13 He subsequently attended a day school called Ridgway House run by a Mr Malpas until he was fourteen One of his schoolmasters David Bernard later married Grace s sister Alice 13 In 1863 Grace was taken seriously ill with pneumonia and his father removed him from Ridgway House After this illness Grace grew rapidly to his full height of 6 ft 2 in 1 88 m 14 He continued his education at home where one of his tutors was the Reverend John Dann who was the Downend parish church curate like Mr Bernard before him Mr Dann became Grace s brother in law marrying Blanche Grace in 1869 15 Grace never went to university because his father wanted him to pursue a medical career But Grace was approached by both Oxford University Cricket Club and Cambridge University Cricket Club In 1866 when he played a match at Oxford one of the Oxford players Edmund Carter tried to interest him in becoming an undergraduate 16 Then in 1868 Grace received overtures from Caius College Cambridge which had a long medical tradition 17 Grace said he would have gone to either Oxford or Cambridge if his father had allowed it 17 Instead he enrolled at Bristol Medical School in October 1868 when he was 20 17 Development as a cricketer Edit Henry Grace founded Mangotsfield Cricket Club in 1845 to represent several neighbouring villages including Downend 9 In 1846 this club merged with the West Gloucestershire Cricket Club whose name was adopted until 1867 11 It has been said that the Grace family ran the West Gloucestershire almost as a private club 11 Henry Grace managed to organise matches against Lansdown Cricket Club in Bath which was the premier West Country club West Gloucestershire fared poorly in these games and sometime in the 1850s Henry and Alfred Pocock decided to join Lansdown although they continued to run the West Gloucestershire and this remained their primary club 18 Alfred Pocock was especially instrumental in coaching the Grace brothers and spent long hours with them on the practice pitch at Downend 19 E M who was seven years older than W G had always played with a full size bat and so developed a tendency that he never lost to hit across the line the bat being too big for him to play straight Pocock recognised this problem and determined that W G and his youngest brother Fred should not follow suit He therefore fashioned smaller bats for them to suit their sizes and they were taught to play straight and learn defence with the left shoulder well forward before attempting to hit 19 Grace recorded in his Reminiscences that he saw his first great cricket match in 1854 when he was barely six years old the occasion being a game between William Clarke s All England Eleven the AEE and twenty two of West Gloucestershire He says he himself played for the West Gloucestershire club as early as 1857 when he was nine years old and had 11 innings in 1859 20 The earliest match in CricketArchive which involved Grace was in 1859 only a few days after his eleventh birthday when he played for Clifton Cricket Club against the South Wales Cricket Club at Durdham Down his team winning by 114 runs Several members of the Grace family including his elder brother E M were involved in the match Grace batted at number 11 and scored 0 and 0 not out 21 The first time he made a substantial score was in July 1860 when he scored 51 for West Gloucestershire against Clifton he wrote that none of his great innings gave him more pleasure 20 It was through E M that the family name first became famous His mother Martha wrote the following in a letter to William Clarke s successor George Parr in 1860 or 1861 22 I am writing to ask you to consider the inclusion of my son E M Grace a splendid hitter and most excellent catch in your England XI I am sure he would play very well and do the team much credit It may interest you to learn that I have another son now twelve years of age who will in time be a much better player than his brother because his back stroke is sounder and he always plays with a straight bat Grace was just short of his thirteenth birthday when on 5 July 1861 he made his debut for Lansdown and played two matches that month 18 E M had made his debut in 1857 aged sixteen 18 In August 1862 aged 14 Grace played for West Gloucestershire against a Devonshire team 23 A year later following his bout of pneumonia which had left him bed ridden for several weeks he scored 52 not out and took 5 wickets against a Somerset XI 23 24 Soon afterwards he was one of four family members who played for Bristol and Didcot XVIII against the All England Eleven 25 He bowled well and scored 32 off the bowling of John Jackson George Tarrant and Cris Tinley E M took ten wickets in the match which Bristol and Didcot won by an innings and as a result E M was invited to tour Australia a few months later with George Parr s England team 26 E M did not return from Australia until July 1864 and his absence presented Grace with an opportunity to appear on cricket s greatest stages 27 He and his elder brother Henry were invited to play for the South Wales Club which had arranged a series of matches in London and Sussex though Grace wondered humorously how they were qualified to represent South Wales 27 It was the first time that Grace left the West Country and he made his debut appearances at both The Oval and Lord s 28 It was in the match against Gentleman of Sussex played just before his 16th birthday that he scored his first ever century making 170 including a stand of 188 for the second wicket with his captain John Lloyd political reformer 29 Cricket career 1864 1914 EditFirst class career summary Edit Although there is controversy among cricket statisticians about the details of Grace s first class career it is generally agreed that its span was 44 seasons from 1865 to 1908 and one source lists 29 teams the England national team and 28 domestic teams represented by Grace in important or first class matches 30 Most of these were ad hoc or guest appearances In minor cricket Grace represented upwards of forty teams Besides playing for England in Test cricket 1880 1899 the key teams in Grace s first class career were the Gentlemen 1865 1906 All England aka England i e non international 1865 1899 Marylebone Cricket Club MCC 1869 1904 Gloucestershire 1870 1899 the United South of England Eleven USEE 1870 1876 and London County 1900 1904 Apart from the London County venture in his later years Grace had firmly committed himself to all of these by the end of the 1870 season when he was 22 31 1864 to 1870 Edit Main article W G Grace s cricket career 1864 to 1870 Cricket in the 1860s underwent a revolution with the legalisation of overarm bowling in June 1864 and Grace himself said it was no exaggeration to say that between 1860 and 1870 English cricket passed through its most critical period with the game in transition and it was quite a revolutionary period so far as its rules were concerned 32 Grace was still 15 when the 1864 season began and had turned 20 when the 1868 season ended and he began his medical career by enrolling at Bristol Medical School on 7 October 1868 33 In the interim specifically in 1866 he became widely recognised as the finest cricketer in England Just after his eighteenth birthday in July 1866 Grace confirmed his potential with an innings of 224 not out for All England against Surrey at The Oval 34 It was his maiden first class century and according to Harry Altham he was thenceforward the biggest name in cricket and the main spectator attraction with the successes coming thick and fast 23 In 1868 Grace scored two centuries in a match only the second time in cricket history that this is known to have been done following William Lambert in 1817 35 Summarising the 1868 season Simon Rae wrote that Grace was now indisputably the cricketer of the age the Champion 17 In 1869 Grace was made a member of MCC and scored four centuries in July including an innings of 180 at The Oval which was achieved during the highest wicket partnership involving Grace in his entire career he shared 283 runs for the first wicket with Bransby Cooper 36 Later in the month Grace scored 122 out of 173 in difficult batting conditions during the North v South match at Bramall Lane prompting the laconic Tom Emmett to call him a nonsuch and declare He ought to be made to play with a littler bat 37 Grace had another outstanding season in 1870 during which Gloucestershire acquired first class status and Derek Birley records that scorning the puny modern fashion of moustaches he grew the enormous black beard that made him so recognisable 38 In addition his ample girth had developed for he weighed 15 stone 95 kg in his early twenties 39 Grace was a non smoker but he enjoyed good food and wine many years later when discussing the overheads incurred during Lord Sheffield s profitless tour of Australia in 1891 92 Arthur Shrewsbury commented I told you what wine would be drunk by the amateurs Grace himself would drink enough to swim a ship 40 1871 Edit Main article W G Grace in the 1871 English cricket season According to Harry Altham 1871 was Grace s annus mirabilis except that he produced another outstanding year in 1895 41 In all first class matches in 1871 a total of 17 centuries were scored and Grace accounted for 10 of them including the first century in a first class match at Trent Bridge 42 He averaged 78 25 and the next best average by a batsman playing more than a single innings was 39 57 barely more than half his figure His aggregate for the season was 2 739 runs and this was the first time that anyone had scored 2 000 first class runs in a season Harry Jupp was next best with 1 068 43 Grace produced his season s highlight in the South v North match at The Oval when he made his highest career score to date of 268 having been dismissed by Jem Shaw for nought in the first innings It was to no avail as the match was drawn 44 But the occasion produced a memorable and oft quoted comment by Jem Shaw who ruefully said I puts the ball where I likes and he puts it where he likes 45 Grace had numerous nicknames during his career including The Doctor after he achieved his medical qualification and The Old Man as he reached the veteran stage He was most auspiciously nicknamed The Champion 46 47 He was first acclaimed as the Champion Cricketer by Lillywhite s Companion in recognition of his exploits in 1871 48 However Grace s great year was marred by the death of his father in December 49 1872 to 1873 Edit nbsp Picture of Grace taken in 1872 by Elliott amp FryMain article W G Grace s cricket career 1872 to 1873 Grace and his younger brother Fred still lived with their mother at Downend Their father had left just enough to maintain the family home but the onus was now on the brothers to increase their earnings from cricket to pay for their medical studies Fred started his in the autumn of 1872 They achieved this through their involvement as match organisers of the United South of England Eleven which played six matches in the 1872 season including games in Edinburgh and Glasgow Grace s first visit to Scotland 50 1872 was a wet summer and Grace ended his season in early August so that he could join the tour of North America 51 Grace became the first batsman to score a century before lunch in a first class match when he made 134 for Gentlemen of the South versus Players of the South at The Oval in 1873 52 53 In the same season he became the first player ever to complete the double of 1 000 runs and 100 wickets in a season 52 He went on to do the double eight times in all 54 1873 2 139 runs and 106 wickets 1874 1 664 runs and 140 wickets 1875 1 498 runs and 191 wickets 1876 2 622 runs and 129 wickets 1877 1 474 runs and 179 wickets 1878 1 151 runs and 152 wickets 1885 1 688 runs and 117 wickets 1886 1 846 runs and 122 wickets1873 was the year that some semblance of organisation was brought into county cricket with the introduction of a residence qualification This was aimed principally at England s outstanding bowler James Southerton who had been playing for both Surrey and Sussex having been born in one county and living in the other Southerton chose to play for his county of residence Surrey from then on but remained the country s top bowler The counties agreed on residence but not on a means of deciding a County Championship and so the title known as Champion County remained an unofficial award until 1889 Grace s Gloucestershire had a very strong claim to this unofficial title in 1873 but consensus was that they shared it with Nottinghamshire These two did not play each other and both were unbeaten in six matches but Nottinghamshire won five and Gloucestershire won four 55 1874 to 1875 Edit nbsp Grace pictured in 1874 with Harry JuppMain article W G Grace s cricket career 1874 to 1875 Having toured Australia in the winter of 1873 74 Grace arrived in England on 18 May 1874 and was quickly back into domestic cricket The 1874 season was very successful for him as he completed a second successive double Gloucestershire again had a strong claim to the Champion County title although some sources have awarded it to Derbyshire and Grace himself said that it should have gone to Yorkshire 56 Another good season followed in 1875 when he again completed the double with 1 498 runs and 191 wickets 57 This was his most successful season as a bowler 1876 to 1877 Edit Main article W G Grace s cricket career 1876 to 1877 nbsp An 1877 illustration of Grace by Leslie Ward emphasises his trademark beard and MCC capOne of the most outstanding phases of Grace s career occurred in the 1876 season beginning with his career highest score of 344 for Marylebone Cricket Club MCC v Kent at the St Lawrence Ground Canterbury in August 58 Two days after his innings at Canterbury he made 177 for Gloucestershire v Nottinghamshire 59 and two days after that 318 not out for Gloucestershire v Yorkshire 60 these two innings against counties with exceptionally strong bowling attacks Thus in three consecutive innings Grace scored 839 runs and was only out twice His innings of 344 was the first triple century scored in first class cricket and broke the record for the highest individual score in all classes of cricket previously held by William Ward who scored 278 in 1820 Ward s record had stood for 56 years and within a week Grace bettered it twice 61 In 1877 Gloucestershire won the unofficial championship for the third and to date final time largely thanks to another outstanding season by Grace who scored 1 474 runs and took 179 wickets 62 1878 Edit Main article W G Grace in the 1878 English cricket season There was speculation that Grace intended to retire before the 1878 season to concentrate on his medical career but he decided to continue playing cricket and may have been influenced by the arrival of the first Australian team to tour England in May At Lord s on 27 May the Australians defeated a strong MCC team including Grace by nine wickets in a single day s play 63 According to Chris Harte news of the match spread like wildfire and created a sensation in London and throughout England 64 The satirical magazine Punch responded to it by publishing a parody of Byron s poem The Destruction of Sennacherib 65 including a wry commentary on Grace s contribution 66 The Australians came down like a wolf on the fold The Mary bone Cracks for a trifle were bowled Our Grace before dinner was very soon done And Grace after dinner did not get a run There was bad feeling between Grace and some of the 1878 Australians especially their manager John Conway this came to a head on 20 June in a row over the services of Grace s friend Billy Midwinter an Australian who had played for Gloucestershire in 1877 Midwinter was already in England before the main Australian party arrived and had joined them for their first match in May On 20 June Midwinter was at Lord s where he was due to play for the Australians against Middlesex On the same day the Gloucestershire team was at The Oval to play Surrey but arrived a man short As a result a group of Gloucestershire players led by W G and E M Grace went to Lord s and persuaded Midwinter to accompany them back to The Oval to make up their numbers 67 They were pursued by three of the Australians who caught them at The Oval gates where a furious altercation ensued in front of bystanders At one point Grace called the Australians a damned lot of sneaks he later apologised In the end Grace got his way and Midwinter stayed with Gloucestershire for the rest of the season although he did not play for the county against the Australians 68 Afterwards the row was patched up and Gloucestershire invited the Australians to play the county team minus Midwinter at Clifton College 69 The Australians took a measure of revenge and won easily by 10 wickets with Fred Spofforth taking 12 wickets and making the top score 70 It was Gloucestershire s first ever home defeat 71 The events at The Oval had a postscript during the following winter when W G and E M were called to account by the Gloucestershire membership because of the expenses they had claimed from Surrey for that match and which Surrey had refused to authorise 72 Despite his troubles in 1878 it was another good season for Grace on the field as he completed a sixth successive double 62 He made 24 first class appearances in the season scoring 1 151 runs with a highest score of 116 at an average of 28 77 with 1 century and 5 half centuries In the field he held 42 catches and took 152 wickets with a best analysis of 8 23 His bowling average was 14 50 he had 5 wickets in an innings 12 times and 10 wickets in a match 6 times 62 1879 to 1882 Edit Main article W G Grace s cricket career 1879 to 1882 Grace missed a large part of the 1879 season because he was doing the final practical for his medical qualification and for the first time since 1869 he did not complete 1 000 runs though he did take 105 wickets 62 Having qualified as a doctor in November 1879 he had to give priority to his new practice in Bristol for the next five years As a result his cricket sometimes had to be set aside He had other troubles including a serious bout of mumps in 1882 He never topped the seasonal batting averages in the 1880s and from 1879 to 1882 he did not complete 1 000 runs in the season 73 Grace was badly upset by the death of his brother Fred in 1880 soon after all three brothers played for England against Australia in what is retrospectively recognised as the inaugural Test match in England Fred s death has been seen as a major factor in the subsequent decline of the Gloucestershire team Grace made only 13 appearances in 1881 In 1882 he was in the England team that lost the Ashes Match at The Oval 1883 to 1886 Edit nbsp Grace in 1885 nbsp Portrait of Grace by Herbert Rose Barraud c late 1880sMain article W G Grace s cricket career 1883 to 1886 In 1883 Grace s medical priorities caused him to miss a Gentlemen v Players match for the first time since 1867 Injury problems restricted his appearances in 1884 Grace achieved his career best bowling analysis of 10 49 when playing for MCC against Oxford University at The Parks in 1886 and he scored 104 in his only innings to complete a rare match double 74 1886 was the last time he took 100 wickets in a season 62 1887 to 1891 Edit Main article W G Grace s cricket career 1887 to 1891 In 1888 Grace scored two centuries in one match v Yorkshire 148 and 153 and labelled this my champion match 75 He had reduced his bowling somewhat in the last few seasons and he became an occasional bowler only from 1889 Injury problems particularly a bad knee took their toll in the early 1890s and Grace had his worst season in 1891 when he scored no centuries and could only average 19 76 62 Despite this few doubted that he should lead the England team on its 1891 92 tour of Australia Australia led by Jack Blackham won the three match series 2 1 76 1892 to 1894 Edit Main article W G Grace s cricket career 1892 to 1894 Following his injury problems and loss of form in 1890 and 1891 Grace rallied somewhat during the next three seasons and reached 1 000 runs each time 1895 Edit Main article W G Grace in the 1895 English cricket season Against all expectation Grace produced in 1895 a season that has been called his Indian Summer 77 He completed his hundredth century playing for Gloucestershire against Somerset in May 78 Charles Townsend his batting partner when he reached the milestone said that as he approached his hundred This was the one and only time I ever saw him flustered Eventually Sammy Woods bowled a full toss which Grace drove for four to reach his century 79 He then went on to score 1 000 runs in the month the first time this had ever been done with scores of 13 103 18 25 288 52 257 73 not out 18 and 169 totalling 1 016 runs between 9 and 30 May 80 His aggregate for the whole season was 2 346 at an average of 51 00 with nine centuries 81 He was aged forty six at the start of the season Following his Indian Summer Grace was the sole recipient of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year award for 1896 the first of only three times that Wisden has restricted the award to a single player there being normally five recipients 82 1896 to 1899 Edit Main article W G Grace s cricket career 1896 to 1899 By the time of his fiftieth birthday in July 1898 Grace had developed a somewhat corpulent figure and had lost his former agility which meant he was no longer a capable fielder He remained a very good batsman and at need a useful slow bowler but he was clearly entering the twilight of his career and was now generally referred to as The Old Man 83 As a special occasion the MCC committee arranged the 1898 Gentlemen v Players match to coincide with his fiftieth birthday and he celebrated the event by scoring 43 and 31 not out though handicapped by lameness and an injured hand 84 He terminated his association with both England and Gloucestershire in 1899 and relocated to South London where he joined the new London County club 1900 to 1908 Edit Main article W G Grace s cricket career 1900 to 1908 With the demise in 1904 of London County as a first class team the number of Grace s appearances dwindled over the next four seasons until he called it a day in 1908 His final appearance for the Gentlemen versus the Players was in July 1906 at The Oval 85 Grace made his final first class appearance on 20 22 April 1908 for the Gentlemen of England v Surrey at The Oval where opening the innings he scored 15 and 25 62 86 87 Gentlemen v Players Edit In 1864 having scored 5 and 38 for the South Wales club in his first match at The Oval 27 Grace was outstanding in the next match and scored 170 and 56 not out against the Gentlemen of Sussex at the Royal Brunswick Ground in Hove 88 His innings of 170 was his first ever century in a serious match 89 The third match against Marylebone Cricket Club MCC was Grace s debut at Lord s and he was joined by E M who had just disembarked from his voyage 90 Grace scored 50 in the first innings only three days after his sixteenth birthday 91 His name now well known in cricketing circles Grace played for Gentlemen of the South v Players of the South in June 1865 92 when he was still only 16 but already 6 ft 2 in 1 88 m tall and weighing 11 st 70 kg 93 This match is regarded by CricketArchive as his first class debut 94 He bowled extremely well and had match figures of 13 for 84 It was this performance that earned him his first selection for the prestigious Gentlemen v Players fixture 23 nbsp Gentlemen captained by W G Grace versus Players Lords 1899During this period before the start of Test cricket in 1877 Gentlemen v Players was the most prestigious fixture in which a player could take part This is apart from North v South which was technically a fixture of higher quality given that the amateur Gentlemen were usually until Grace took a hand outclassed by the professional Players Grace represented the Gentlemen in their matches against the Players from 1865 to 1906 It was he who enabled the amateurs to meet the paid professionals on level terms and to defeat them more often than not His ability to master fast bowling was the key factor 95 Before Grace s debut in the fixture the Gentlemen had lost 19 consecutive games of the next 39 games they won 27 and lost only 4 95 In consecutive innings against the Players from 1871 to 1873 Grace scored 217 77 and 112 117 163 158 and 70 95 In his whole career he scored a record 15 centuries in the fixture 96 Grace s 1865 debut in the fixture did not turn the tide as the Players won at The Oval by 118 runs He played quite well and took seven wickets in the match but could only score 23 and 12 not out 97 In the second 1865 match this time at Lord s the Gentlemen finally ended their losing streak and won by 8 wickets but it was E M Grace not W G who was the key factor with 11 wickets in the match Even so Grace made his mark by scoring 34 out of 77 2 in the second innings to steer the Gentlemen to victory 98 In 1870 Grace scored 215 for the Gentlemen which was the first double century achieved in the Gentlemen v Players fixture 99 Grace last played at Lord s for the Gentlemen in 1899 though he continued to represent the team at other venues until 1906 100 Marylebone Cricket Club MCC Edit Grace became a member of Marylebone Cricket Club MCC in 1869 after being proposed by the treasurer Thomas Burgoyne and seconded by the secretary Robert Allan Fitzgerald 101 Given an ongoing rift in the sport during the 1860s between the northern professionals and Surrey MCC feared the loss of its authority should Grace throw in his lot with the professionals so it was considered vital for them and their interests to get him onside As it happens the dispute was nearly over but it has been said that MCC regained its authority over the game by hanging onto W G s shirt tails 102 Grace wore MCC colours for the rest of his career playing for them on an irregular basis until 1904 and their red and yellow hooped cap became as synonymous with him as his large black beard 38 He played for MCC on an expenses only basis but any hopes that the premier club had of keeping him firmly within the amateur ranks would soon be disappointed for his services were much in demand 38 Grace a medical student at the time was first on the scene when George Summers received the blow on the head that caused his death four days later This was in the MCC v Nottinghamshire match at Lord s in June 1870 103 Grace was fielding nearby when Summers was struck and took his pulse Summers recovered consciousness and Grace advised him to leave the field Summers did not go to hospital but it transpired later that his skull had been fractured 104 The Lord s pitch had a poor reputation for being rough uneven and unpredictable all through the 19th century and many players including Grace considered it dangerous 105 Gloucestershire Edit nbsp Gloucestershire County Cricket Club in 1880 shortly before Fred Grace s untimely death W G Grace is seated front left centre Fred hooped cap is third left in rear group Billy Midwinter directly behind W G is fourth left in rear E M Grace bearded is sixth left in rear It is generally understood that Gloucestershire County Cricket Club was formally constituted in 1870 having developed from Dr Henry Grace s West Gloucestershire club 106 Gloucestershire acquired first class status when its team played against Surrey at Durdham Down near Bristol on 2 3 and 4 June 1870 107 With Grace and his brothers E M and Fred playing Gloucestershire won that game by 51 runs and quickly became one of the best teams in England The club was unanimously rated Champion County in 1876 and 1877 as well as sharing the unofficial title in 1873 and staking a claim for it in 1874 108 Surrey and Gloucestershire played a return match at The Oval in July 1870 and Gloucestershire won this by an innings and 129 runs Grace scored 143 sharing a second wicket partnership with Frank Townsend 89 of 234 109 The Grace family ran the show at Gloucestershire and E M was chosen as secretary which as Birley points out put him in charge of expenses a source of scandal that was to surface before the end of the decade 38 W G though aged only 21 was from the start the team captain and Birley puts this down to his commercial drawing power 38 In 1878 Gloucestershire made its first visit to Old Trafford Cricket Ground in July to play Lancashire and this was the match immortalised by Francis Thompson in his idyllic poem At Lord s 110 In a match against Surrey at Clifton the ball lodged in Grace s shirt after he had played it and he seized the opportunity to complete several runs before the fielders forced him to stop He disingenuously claimed that he would have been out handled the ball if he had removed it and following a discussion it was agreed that three runs should be awarded 111 In the 1880s Gloucestershire declined following its heady success in the 1870s One of the reasons was the early death of W G s younger brother Fred from pneumonia in 1880 there being a view that the county was never quite the same without him 112 Apart from W G himself the only players of Fred Grace s calibre at this time were the leading professionals Unlike the south east and northern counties Gloucestershire had neither the large home gates nor the necessary funds that could have secured the services of good quality professionals This was at a time when a new generation of professionals was appearing with the likes of Billy Gunn Maurice Read and Arthur Shrewsbury As a result Gloucestershire fell away in county competition and could no longer match Nottinghamshire Surrey and Lancashire who had the strongest sides in the 1880s 73 Grace had received an invitation from the Crystal Palace Company in London to help them form the London County Cricket Club 113 Grace accepted the offer and became the club s secretary manager and captain with an annual salary of 600 113 As a result he severed his connection with Gloucestershire during the 1899 season 113 United South of England Eleven USEE Edit The United South of England Eleven USEE had been formed by Edgar Willsher in 1865 but the heyday of the travelling teams was over and their organisers were desperate to feature new attractions Grace had played for the USEE previously and he formally joined the club in 1870 as its match organiser for which he received payment but he played for expenses only 38 Overseas tours Edit Grace made three overseas tours during his career The first was to the United States and Canada with RA Fitzgerald s team in August and September 1872 114 The expenses of this tour were paid by the Montreal Club who had written to Fitzgerald the previous winter and invited him to form a team Grace and his all amateur colleagues made short work of the weak teams they faced 115 The team included two other future England captains in A N Hornby who became a rival of Grace in future years and the Honourable George Harris the future Lord Harris who became a very close friend and a most useful ally The team met in Liverpool on 8 August and sailed on the SS Sarmatian docking at Quebec on 17 August Simon Rae recounts that the bond between Grace and Harris was forged by their mutual sea sickness Matches were played in Montreal Ottawa Toronto London New York Philadelphia and Boston The team sailed back from Quebec on 27 September and arrived at Liverpool on 8 October 116 The tour was a high point of Grace s early years and he retained fond memories of it for the rest of his life calling it a prolonged and happy picnic in his ghost written Reminiscences 117 Grace visited Australia in 1873 74 as captain of W G Grace s XI On the morning of the team s departure from Southampton Grace responded to well wishers by saying that his team had a duty to perform to maintain the honour of English cricket and to uphold the high character of English cricketers 118 But both his and the team s performance fell well short of this goal The tour was not a success and the only positive outcome was the fact of the tour having taken place ten years after the previous one as it gave Australian cricket a much needed fillip 119 Most of the problems lay with Grace himself and his overbearing personality which quickly exhausted all personal goodwill towards him 120 There was also bad feeling within the team itself because Grace who normally got on well with professional players enforced the class divide throughout the tour 121 In terms of results the team fared reasonably well following a poor start in which they were beaten by both Victoria and New South Wales They played 15 matches in all but none are recognised as first class 122 Despite his injury problems in 1891 few doubted that Grace should captain England in Australia the following winter when he led Lord Sheffield s team to Australia in 1891 92 Australia led by Jack Blackham won the three match series 2 1 76 Test career Edit Although the early matches were recognised retrospectively Test cricket began in 1877 when Grace was already 28 and he made his debut in 1880 scoring England s first ever Test century 123 against Australia 124 He played for England in 22 Tests through the 1880s and 1890s all of them against Australia and was an automatic selection for England at home but his only Test playing tour of Australia was that of 1891 92 125 nbsp England s team in W G Grace s final Test at Trent Bridge in 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 Grace s most significant Test was England v Australia in 1882 at The Oval 126 Thanks to Spofforth who took 14 wickets in the match Australia won by 7 runs and the legend of The Ashes was born immediately afterwards Grace scored only 4 and 32 but he has been held responsible for firing up Spofforth This came about through a typical piece of gamesmanship by Grace when he effected an unsporting albeit legal run out of Sammy Jones 127 The highest Test wicket partnership involving Grace was at The Oval in 1886 when he and William Scotton scored 170 for the first wicket against Australia Grace s own score was also 170 and was the highest in his Test career 128 An oft repeated story about Grace is that in 1896 the Australian pace bowler Ernie Jones bowled a short pitched delivery so close to his face that it appeared to go through his beard Grace reportedly reacted by demanding of Australian captain Harry Trott Here what s all this Trott said to Jones Steady Jonah Jones replied Sorry doctor she slipped There are multiple variations of the story and although some sources have recorded that the incident happened in a Test match there is little doubt that the game in question was the tour opener at Sheffield Park 129 This is separately confirmed by C B Fry and Stanley Jackson who were both playing in the match Jackson batting with Grace at the time 130 131 Grace captained England in the First Test of the 1899 series against Australia at Trent Bridge when he was 51 By this time his bulk had made him a liability in the field and afterwards realising his limitations all too clearly he decided to stand down and surrendered both his place and the captaincy to Archie MacLaren 114 It is evident that Grace plotted his own omission from the England team by asking C B Fry another selector who had arrived late for their meeting if he thought that MacLaren should play in the Second Test Fry answered Yes I do That settles it said Grace and he promptly retired from international cricket 132 Explaining his decision later Grace ruefully admitted of his diminished fielding skills that the ground was getting a bit too far away 133 London County Edit nbsp Grace left with former Australian Test captain Billy Murdoch when both played for London County Having ended his international career in 1899 Grace then began the last phase of his overall first class career when he joined the new London County Cricket Club based at Crystal Palace Park which played first class matches between 1900 and 1904 134 135 Grace s presence initially attracted other leading players into the team including C B Fry Ranjitsinhji and Johnny Douglas but the increased importance of the County Championship combined with Grace s inevitable decline in form and the lack of a competitive element in London s matches led to reduced attendances and consequently the club lost money 136 Nevertheless Grace remained an attraction and could still produce good performances As late as 1902 though aged 54 by the end of the season he scored 1 187 runs in first class cricket with two centuries at an average of 37 09 62 London s final first class matches were played in 1904 and the enterprise folded in 1908 137 Later years Edit Despite his age and bulk Grace continued to play minor cricket for several years after his retirement from the first class version His penultimate match and the last in which he batted was for Eltham Cricket Club at Grove Park on 25 July 1914 a week after his 66th birthday He contributed an undefeated 69 to a total of 155 6 declared having begun his innings when they were 31 4 Grove Park made 99 8 in reply 138 The last match of any kind that Grace played in though he neither batted nor bowled was for Eltham v Northbrook on 8 August a few days after the outbreak of the First World War 139 Style and technique EditApproach to cricket Edit Grace himself had much to say about how to play cricket in his two books Cricket 1891 and Reminiscences 1899 both of which were ghost written His fundamental opinion was that cricketers are not born but must be nurtured to develop their skills through coaching and practice in his own case he had achieved his skill through constant practice as a boy at home under the tutelage of his uncle Alfred Pocock 140 Although the work ethic was of prime importance in his development Grace insisted that cricket must also be enjoyable and freely admitted that his family all played in a way that was noisy and boisterous with much chaff a Victorian term for teasing 141 W G and E M in particular were noted throughout their careers for being noisy and boisterous on the field They were extremely competitive and always playing to win Sometimes this went to extremes for example on one occasion at school E M was so upset about a decision going against him that he went home and took the stumps with him and it developed into the gamesmanship for which E M and W G were always controversial 141 We in Australia did not take kindly to W G For so big a man he is surprisingly tenacious on very small points We thought him too apt to wrangle in the spirit of a duo decimo lawyer over small points of the game Report in an Australian local newspaper 1874 111 Because of gamesmanship and insistence on his rights as he saw them Grace never enjoyed good relations with Australians in general though he had personal friends like Billy Midwinter and Billy Murdoch 142 In 1874 an Australian newspaper wrote We in Australia did not take kindly to W G For so big a man he is surprisingly tenacious on very small points We thought him too apt to wrangle in the spirit of a duo decimo lawyer over small points of the game 111 He was just the same in England and even his old friend Lord Harris agreed that his gamesmanship added to the fund of stories about him 143 The point was that Grace approached cricket as if he were fighting a small war and he was out to win at all costs 68 The Australians understood this twenty years later when Joe Darling touring England for the first time in 1896 said We were all told not to trust the Old Man as he was out to win every time and was a great bluffer 113 Batting Edit nbsp W G Grace taking guard W G was a very correct batsman His left shoulder pointed to the bowler He held his bat straight and brought it straight through to the ball His beard hung right over the ball as he stroked it the ball I mean not his beard He was the most powerful straight driver I have ever seen When he drove at a ball I was mighty glad I was behind the stumps 144 Colonel Frank Crozier The Man Who Played With Grace With regard to Grace s batsmanship C L R James held that the best analysis of his style and technique was written by another top class batsman K S Ranjitsinhji in his Jubilee Book of Cricket co written with C B Fry 145 Ranjitsinhji wrote that by his extraordinary skills Grace revolutionised cricket and developed most of the techniques of modern batting and was the bible of batsmanship 144 Before him batsmen would play either forward or back and make a speciality of a certain stroke Grace made utility the criterion of style and incorporated both forward and back play into his repertoire of strokes favouring only that which was appropriate to the ball being delivered at the moment In an oft quoted phrase Ranjitsinhji said of Grace that he turned the old one stringed instrument i e the cricket bat into a many chorded lyre and that the theory of modern batting is in all essentials the result of W G s thinking and working on the game 146 Ranjitsinhji summarised Grace s importance to the development of cricket by writing I hold him to be not only the finest player born or unborn but the maker of modern batting 147 Cricket writer and broadcaster John Arlott writing in 1975 supported this view by holding that Grace created modern cricket 148 But Grace s extraordinary skill had already been recognised very early in his career especially by the professional bowlers A very prescient comment was made by the laconic Yorkshire and England fast bowler Tom Emmett who after playing against Grace for the first time in 1869 called him a nonsuch without equal who ought to be made to play with a littler bat 149 H S Altham pointed out that for most of Grace s career he played on pitches that the modern schoolboy would consider unfit for a house match and on grounds without boundaries where every hit including those into the country had to be run in full 95 Rowland Bowen records that 1895 the year of Grace s Indian Summer was the season in which marl was first used as a binding agent in the composition of English pitches its benefit being to ensure good lasting wickets 150 It was through Alfred Pocock s perseverance that Grace had learned to play straight and to develop a sound defence so that he would stop or leave the good deliveries and score off the poor ones 151 This contrasted him with E M who was always a hitter and whose basic defence was not as sound 151 However as Grace s skills developed he became a very powerful hitter himself with a full range of shots and at his best would score runs freely Despite being an all rounder Grace was also an opening batsman Bowling Edit As a bowler Grace belonged to what Altham calls the high home and easy school of a much earlier day 133 Using a roundarm action Grace was adept at varying both his pace and the arc of his slower deliveries which worked in from the leg side of the pitch The chief feature of his bowling was the excellent length which he consistently maintained He originally bowled at a consistently fast medium pace but in the 1870s he increasingly adopted his slower style which utilised a leg break 152 He called his leg break a leg tweeker but he put very little break on the ball just enough to bring it across from the batsman s legs to the wicket and he invariably posted a fielder in a strategic position on the square leg boundary a trap which brought occasional success 152 153 He was unusual in persisting with his roundarm action throughout his career when almost all other bowlers adopted the new overarm style 154 Fielding Edit In his prime Grace was noted for his outstanding fielding and was a very strong thrower of the ball he was once credited with throwing the cricket ball 122 yards during an athletics event at Eastbourne 155 He attributed this skill to his country bred childhood in which stone throwing at crows was a daily exercise In later life Grace commented upon a decline in English fielding standards and blamed it on the falling numbers of country bred boys who strengthen their arms by throwing stones at birds in the fields 12 Much of Grace s success as a bowler was due to his magnificent fielding to his own bowling as soon as he had delivered the ball he covered so much ground to the left that he made himself into an extra mid off and he took some extraordinary catches in this way 152 In his early career Grace generally fielded at long leg or cover point later he was usually at point see Fielding positions in cricket 152 In his prime he was a fine thrower a fast runner and a safe catcher 152 Amateur status EditThe expenses enquiry at Gloucestershire took place in January 1879 W G and E M were forced to answer charges that they had claimed exorbitant expenses one of the few times that their money making activity was seriously challenged 72 The claim had been submitted to Surrey regarding the controversial 1878 match in which Billy Midwinter was brought in as a late replacement but Surrey refused to pay it and this provoked the enquiry The Graces managed to survive a protracted and stormy meeting with E M retaining his key post as club secretary although he was forced to liaise in future with a new finance committee and abide by stricter rules 72 The incident highlighted an ongoing issue about the nominal amateur status of the Grace brothers The amateur was by definition not paid and the dictum of the amateur dominated Marylebone Cricket Club was that a gentleman ought not to make any profit from playing cricket 156 Like all amateur players they claimed expenses for travel and accommodation to and from cricket matches but there is plenty of evidence that the Graces made more money from playing than reimbursement of actual expenses and W G in particular made more than any professional 157 In his later years he had to pay for a locum tenens to run his medical practice while he was playing cricket he had a reputation for treating his poorer patients without charging a fee 156 He was paid a salary for his roles as secretary and manager of the London County club 113 He was the recipient of two national testimonials The first was presented to him by Lord Fitzhardinge at Lord s on 22 July 1879 in the form of a marble clock two bronze ornaments and a cheque for 1 458 equivalent to 157 700 in 2021 72 The second collected by MCC the county of Gloucestershire The Daily Telegraph and The Sportsman amounted to 9 703 equivalent to 1 194 500 in 2021 and was presented to him in 1896 in appreciation of his Indian Summer season of 1895 158 nbsp Entr acte cartoon Bobby Abel to W G Grace Look here we players intend to be sufficiently paid as well as the so called gentlemen Whatever criticisms may be made of Grace for making money for himself out of cricket he was punctilious in his aid when professional players were the beneficiaries 159 For example when Alfred Shaw s benefit match in 1879 was ruined by rain Grace insisted on donating to Shaw the proceeds of another match that had been arranged to support Grace s own testimonial fund After the same thing happened to Edgar Willsher s benefit match Grace took a select team to play Kent a few days later the proceeds all going to Willsher On another occasion he altered the date of a Gloucestershire match so that he could travel to Sheffield and take part in a Yorkshire player s benefit match knowing full well the impact that his appearance would have on the gate 160 John Arlott recorded it was no uncommon sight to see outside a cricket ground 161 CRICKET MATCHAdmission 6dIf W G Grace playsAdmission 1 Grace and his brother Fred faced financial difficulty after their father died in December 1871 as they were still living with their mother who had been left just enough to retain the family home 162 As medical students they faced considerable outlay in addition to their living expenses and it became imperative for them to make what they could out of cricket especially the United South of England Eleven 162 Grace as its match organiser had to find gaps in the first class fixture list and then pull together a team to visit a location where a suitable profit could be made 163 It has been estimated that the standard fee paid to the USEE was 100 for a three day match equivalent to 28 500 in 2021 with 5 500 each going to the nine professionals in the team and the other 45 4300 to W G and Fred 163 Otherwise Grace played for expenses but these were loaded as for example he is known to have claimed 15 per appearance for Gloucestershire and 20 for representing the Gentlemen 163 Although the money he was paid is small beer compared with 21st century sports stars there is no doubt he had a comfortable living out of cricket and made far more money than any contemporary professional To put it in context a domestic servant earned less than 50 a year 164 First class career statistics EditSee also List of first class cricket centuries by W G Grace and Variations in published cricket statistics According to the statistical record used by CricketArchive Grace s final first class appearance in 1908 was his 870th and concluded a first class career that had lasted 44 seasons from 1865 to 1908 equalling the record for the longest career span held by John Sherman who played from 1809 to 1852 165 But according to an older version of Grace s career record published by Wisden in 1916 Grace played in 878 first class matches over the same span 62 and other sources list Grace as playing 880 first class matches Grace himself regarded the South Wales matches in 1864 as first class fixtures and refers to them in his Cricketing Reminiscences as really big games 166 He was supported in his view by Lillywhite s Guide to Cricketers 1865 edition which included his innings at Hove in a list called Scores of 100 or more made since 1850 in first class matches Grace s score was one of only six that exceeded 150 167 Despite Grace s own views on the matter his first class career record was effectively confirmed by F S Ashley Cooper who produced a list of season by season figures to supplement Grace s obituary in the 1916 edition of Wisden Cricketers Almanack 168 These figures came to be known as Grace s traditional career record and granted him 126 first class centuries a total that remained a record until it was broken by Jack Hobbs in 1925 it was not until Roy Webber s research in the 1950s that Ashley Cooper s list was challenged 168 Following further research by the Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians ACS in the 1970s and 1980s an amended career record was published which reduced Grace s total of centuries to 124 This was challenged for historical reasons by Wisden in 1983 and the current situation regarding this controversy is that both sides generally accept each other s views For example Rae points out that the statisticians are right to criticise Victorian compilers for including minor matches to enable Grace to reach certain milestones but he also respects the view of Grace s contemporaries that any match in which he played was elevated in status by his very presence 168 169 In May 2022 Wisden updated its records and deleted ten matches from Grace s statistics that did not have first class status bringing it in line with the ACS 1 Other sports EditGrace was an outstanding athlete as a young man and won the 440 yards 400 m hurdling title at the National Olympian Games at Crystal Palace in August 1866 23 In addition to running he was an excellent thrower as evidenced when he threw a cricket ball 122 yards 112 m during an athletics event at Eastbourne 155 Grace played football for the Wanderers although he did not feature in any of their FA Cup winning teams 170 171 In later life after his family moved to Mottingham Kent he became very interested in lawn bowls He founded the English Bowling Association in 1903 and became its first president 172 He helped found an international competition with Scotland Ireland and Wales captaining England from the inaugural international at Crystal Palace in 1903 until 1908 He supported the pioneering all female Womanhood Bowling Club at Crystal Palace by obtaining the use of a club pavilion for them in 1902 173 He was also keen on curling 174 175 176 His interest in golf brought him into intimate contact with one of his biographers Bernard Darwin who said that Grace played golf with a mixture of keen seriousness and cheerful noisiness He could drive straight and sometimes putt well but for reasons that Darwin could not understand he never could play an iron shot well 177 Personal life and medical career EditImportance of family Edit nbsp Grace with his wife c 1900Despite living in London for many years Grace never lost his Gloucestershire accent 178 His entire life including his cricket and medical careers is inseparable from his close knit family background which was strongly influenced by his father Henry Grace who set great store by qualifications and was determined to succeed 179 180 He passed this attitude on to each of his five sons 179 Therefore like his father and his brothers Grace chose a professional career in medicine though because of his cricketing commitments he did not complete his qualification as a doctor until 1879 when he was 31 years old 181 Married life and medical career Edit Grace was married on 9 October 1873 to Agnes Nicholls Day 1853 1930 who was the daughter of his first cousin William Day Two weeks later they began their honeymoon by taking ship to Australia for Grace s 1873 74 tour 182 They returned from the tour in May 1874 with Agnes six months pregnant Their eldest son William Gilbert junior 1874 1905 was born on 6 July 183 Grace had to catch up with his studies at Bristol Medical School and he and his wife and son lived at Downend until February 1875 with his mother brother Fred and sister Fanny 184 nbsp Grace on his 66th birthday 1914The Graces moved to London in February 1875 when W G was assigned to St Bartholomew s Hospital 185 and lived at Earl s Court about five miles from the City 183 Their second son Henry Edgar 1876 1937 was born in London in July 1876 186 A ward in the Queen Elizabeth II Wing at St Bartholomew s Hospital used to bear the name W G Grace Ward caring for patients recovering from neurosurgery until demolition of the Queen Elizabeth II building 187 In the autumn of 1877 the family moved back to Gloucestershire where they lived with Grace s elder brother Henry who was a general practitioner Grace s studies had reached a crucial point with a theoretical backlog to catch up followed by his final practical session Agnes became pregnant again at this time and their third child Bessie 1878 98 was born in May 1878 188 Following the 1878 season Grace was assigned to Westminster Hospital Medical School for his final year of medical practice and this curtailed his cricket for a time as he did not play in the 1879 season until June The family moved back to London and lived at Acton 110 But the upheaval was worthwhile because in November 1879 Grace finally received his diploma from the University of Edinburgh having qualified as a Licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians LRCP and became a Member of the Royal College of Surgeons MRCS 181 After qualifying he worked both in his own practice at Thrissle Lodge 61 Stapleton Road in Easton a largely poor district of Bristol employing two locums during the cricket season He was the local Public Vaccinator and had additional duties as the Medical Officer to the Barton Regis Union which involved tending patients in the workhouse 189 nbsp 15 Victoria Square Clifton Grace s home from 1894 to 1896 190 There are many testimonies from his patients that he was a good doctor for example Poor families knew that they did not need to worry about calling him in as the bills would never arrive 156 The family lived at four different addresses close to the practice over the next twenty years and their fourth and last child Charles Butler 1882 1938 was born 191 After leaving Gloucestershire in 1900 the Graces lived in Mottingham a south east London suburb not far from the Crystal Palace where he played for London County or from Eltham where he played club cricket in his sixties A blue plaque marks their residence Fairmount in Mottingham Lane 137 Personal tragedies Edit Grace endured a number of tragedies in his life beginning with the death of his father in December 1871 49 He was badly upset by the early death of his younger brother Fred in 1880 only two weeks after he W G and E M had all played in a Test for England against Australia 192 In July 1884 Grace s rival A N Hornby stopped play in a Lancashire v Gloucestershire match at Old Trafford so that E M and W G could return home on receipt of a cable reporting the death of Mrs Martha Grace at the age of 72 192 The greatest tragedy of Grace s life was the loss of his daughter Bessie in 1899 aged only 20 from typhoid She had been his favourite child 193 Then in February 1905 his eldest son W G junior died of appendicitis at the age of 30 194 On 26 August 1914 in response to news of casualties at the Battle of Mons Grace wrote a letter to The Sportsman in which he called for the immediate closure of the county cricket season and for all first class cricketers to set an example and serve their country 195 It was published next day but did not as is often supposed bring an immediate end to the cricket season as one further round of County Championship matches was played 196 Grace was reportedly distressed by the war and was known to shake his fist and shout at the German Zeppelins floating over his home in South London When H D G Leveson Gower remonstrated that he had not allowed fast bowlers to unsettle him Grace retorted I could see those beggars I can t see these 197 Grace died at Mottingham on 23 October 1915 aged 67 after suffering a heart attack 197 His death shook the nation almost as much as Winston Churchill s fifty years later 132 He is buried in the family grave at Beckenham Cemetery Kent 198 Legacy Edit nbsp Grace pictured with the future King Edward VIII in 1911MCC decided to commemorate Grace s life and career with a Memorial Biography published in 1919 Its preface begins with this passage Never was such a band of cricketers gathered for any tour as has assembled to do honour to the greatest of all players in the present Memorial Biography That such a volume should go forth under the auspices of the Committee of MCC is in itself unique in the history of the game and that such an array of cricketers critics and enthusiasts should pay tribute to its finest exponent has no parallel in any other branch of sport In itself this presents a noble monument of what W G Grace was a testimony to his prowess and to his personality 199 In 1923 the W G Grace Memorial Gates were erected at the St John s Wood Road entrance to Lord s 200 They were designed by Sir Herbert Baker and the opening ceremony was performed by Sir Stanley Jackson who had suggested the inclusion of the words The Great Cricketer in the dedication 201 On 12 September 2009 Grace was posthumously inducted into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame at Lord s Two of his direct descendants attended the ceremony Dominic his great great grandson and George Dominic s son 202 According to Mark Bonham Carter H H Asquith s grandson Grace would have been one of the people to be appointed a peer had Asquith s plan to flood the House of Lords with Liberal peers come to fruition 203 British commemorative postage stamps issued on 16 May 1973 for the County Cricket Centenary featured three sketches of W G Grace by Harry Furniss The values were threepence then first class post seven pence halfpenny and ninepence 204 Grace s fame has endured and his large beard in particular remains familiar for example Monty Python and the Holy Grail uses his image as the face of God during the sequence in which God sends the knights out on their quest for the grail 205 206 nbsp Grace s grave in Beckenham CemeteryIn many of the tributes paid to Grace he was referred to as The Great Cricketer H S Altham for one described him as the greatest of all cricketers 46 John Arlott summarised him as timeless and the greatest cricketer of them all 207 The anti establishment writer C L R James in his classic work Beyond a Boundary included a section W G Pre Eminent Victorian containing four chapters and covering some sixty pages He declared Grace the best known Englishman of his time and aligned him with Thomas Arnold and Thomas Hughes as the three most eminent Victorians James wrote of cricket as the game he Grace transformed into a national institution 208 Simon Rae also commented upon Grace s eminence in Victorian England by saying that his public recognition was equalled only by Queen Victoria herself and William Ewart Gladstone 178 The inaugural edition of Playfair Cricket Annual in 1948 coincided with the centenary of Grace s birth and carried a tribute which spoke of Grace as King in his own domain and his Olympian personality Playfair went on to say how Grace had pulverised fast bowling on chancy pitches and had then astonished the world by his deeds during the 1895 Indian Summer 153 In the foreword of the same edition C B Fry insisted that Grace would not have started the 1948 season with any notion of being beaten by that season s Australian touring team for he was sanguine and would have put everything he could muster into the task of beating them with no acceptance of defeat till after it happened 209 As mentioned in Playfair both MCC and Gloucestershire arranged special matches on Grace s birthday to commemorate his centenary 153 In the 1963 edition of Wisden Cricketers Almanack Grace was selected by Neville Cardus as one of the Six Giants of the Wisden Century 210 This was a special commemorative selection requested by Wisden for its 100th edition The other five players chosen were Sydney Barnes Don Bradman Jack Hobbs Tom Richardson and Victor Trumper To mark 150 years of the Cricketers Almanack Wisden named him in an all time Test World XI 211 In the 1982 serial of Doctor Who titled Black Orchid Grace was referred to in passing as The Master to the confusion of the Doctor until Sir Robert explained that he was referring to Grace Derek Birley who devoted whole passages of his book to criticism of Grace s gamesmanship and moneymaking wrote that the bleakness of the war was exemplified in November sic 1915 by the death of Grace which seemed depressingly emblematic of the end of an era 212 Rowland Bowen wrote that many of Grace s achievements would be rated extremely good by our standards but by the standards of his day they were phenomenal nothing like them had ever been done before 213 David Frith summed up Grace s legacy to cricket by writing that his influence lasted long after his final appearance in first class cricket in 1908 and his death in 1915 For decades wrote Frith Grace had been arguably the most famous man in England easily recognisable because of his beard and his bulk and revered because of his batsmanship 132 Frith added a view that even though Grace s records had been overtaken his pre eminence had not and so Grace remains the most famous cricketer of them all the one who elevated the game in public esteem 132 He is buried at Beckenham Cemetery in Elmers End Road Beckenham Bromley Kent 214 A Public House named after Dr Grace was built next to the cemetery 215 Notes Edit a b As described in Grace s first class career statistics there have been different versions of Grace s career totals as a result of past disagreements among cricket statisticians regarding the status of some of the matches he played in This is a statistical issue only and has little if any bearing on the historical aspects of Grace s career In 2022 Wisden brought its statistical totals into line with other sources reducing Grace s total number of first class matches played by eight 1 Only the now accepted statistics are displayed here References EditOnline references using Cricinfo or Wisden may require free registration for access a b WG Grace Cricket legend has 10 matches wiped from iconic first class record BBC Sport Retrieved 3 May 2022 a b Rae p 16 Rae pp 9 11 Rae p 11 Rae pp 12 13 Midwinter pp 9 10 Grace Reminiscences p 1 Grace Reminiscences p 2 a b c Midwinter pp 11 12 Midwinter p 11 a b c Rae p 15 a b Rae p 21 a b c Rae pp 21 22 Rae p 38 Rae p 39 Rae p 63 a b c d Rae p 78 a b c Rae p 34 a b Altham p 124 a b Grace Reminiscences pp 8 9 Clifton v South Wales Cricket Club 1859 CricketArchive Retrieved 17 November 2011 Rae p 42 a b c d e Altham p 125 Gentlemen of Somerset v Gentlemen of Gloucestershire in 1863 CricketArchive Retrieved 19 November 2011 Bristol and Didcot XVIII v All England Eleven in 1863 CricketArchive Retrieved 19 November 2011 Midwinter pp 21 22 a b c Grace p 15 Rae pp 50 51 CricketArchive Teams that W G Grace played for CricketArchive Retrieved 13 July 2013 W G Grace CricketArchive Retrieved 13 July 2013 Grace p 19 Darwin p 39 All England v Surrey 1866 CricketArchive Retrieved 11 November 2008 Rae p 77 Rae p 80 Darwin p 40 a b c d e f Birley p 105 Midwinter p 31 Birley p 148 Altham p 126 Rae p 99 1871 batting averages CricketArchive Retrieved 11 November 2008 South v North 1871 CricketArchive Retrieved 11 July 2010 Rae p 96 a b Altham p 122 In the poem At Lord s by Francis Thompson Grace was hailed as The Champion of the Centuries Midwinter p 34 a b Midwinter p 35 Rae pp 102 105 Rae p 105 a b Bowen p 284 GS v PS 1873 CricketArchive Retrieved 29 November 2008 Webber Playfair pp 181 182 Webber County Championship pp 12 18 Webber County Championship p 18 Webber Playfair p 133 Kent v MCC 1876 CricketArchive Retrieved 25 November 2008 Gloucestershire v Nottinghamshire 1876 CricketArchive Retrieved 25 November 2008 Gloucestershire v Yorkshire 1876 CricketArchive Retrieved 25 November 2008 Webber Playfair pp 40 41 a b c d e f g h i Rae pp 495 496 MCC v Aus 1878 CricketArchive Retrieved 26 November 2008 Harte p 102 The Destruction of Sennacherib englishhistory net Archived from the original on 10 July 2013 Retrieved 6 December 2008 Altham p 135 Bowen p 130 says that Midwinter was still under a contractual obligation to Gloucestershire and that the Australian press had reported this before the team embarked a b Birley pp 111 112 Midwinter pp 70 72 Gloucestershire v Aus 1878 CricketArchive Retrieved 27 November 2008 Midwinter p 72 a b c d Birley p 127 a b Midwinter p 79 OUCC v MCC 1886 CricketArchive Retrieved 27 November 2008 Midwinter p 89 a b Tour itinerary CricketArchive Archived from the original on 12 October 2008 Retrieved 28 November 2008 Midwinter p 123 Somerset v Gloucestershire 1895 CricketArchive Retrieved 25 November 2008 Rae p 384 Webber Playfair pp 100 101 Webber Playfair p 90 W G Grace Wisden 1896 Wisden Cricketers Almanack 1896 Retrieved 9 November 2008 Frith The Golden Age of Cricket ch 1 Midwinter p 129 Gentlemen v Players 1906 CricketArchive Retrieved 27 November 2008 List of matches played by W G Grace CricketArchive Retrieved 25 November 2008 Gentlemen v Surrey 1908 CricketArchive Retrieved 25 November 2008 Gentlemen of Sussex v South Wales Cricket Club 1864 CricketArchive Retrieved 16 October 2011 Midwinter p 23 Rae p 54 MCC v South Wales Cricket Club 1864 CricketArchive Retrieved 16 October 2011 GS v PS 1865 CricketArchive Retrieved 11 November 2008 Ford William Justice 1911 Grace William Gilbert Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 12 11th ed p 308 309 First class matches played by W G Grace CricketArchive Retrieved 16 October 2011 a b c d Altham p 123 Webber Playfair pp 256 257 Gentlemen v Players 1865 CricketArchive Retrieved 25 November 2008 Gentlemen v Players 1865 CricketArchive Retrieved 25 November 2008 Gentlemen v Players 1870 CricketArchive Retrieved 27 November 2008 Gentlemen v Players 1899 CricketArchive Retrieved 27 November 2008 Rae pp 78 79 Rae p 79 MCC v Nottinghamshire 1870 CricketArchive Retrieved 11 July 2010 Rae p 92 Birley p 114 Birley p 104 Gloucestershire v Surrey 1870 CricketArchive Retrieved 24 November 2008 Webber County Championship pp 14 20 Surrey v Gloucestershire 1870 CricketArchive Retrieved 12 August 2010 a b Midwinter p 73 a b c Birley p 111 Birley p 132 a b c d e Birley p 162 a b Midwinter p 45 Birley p 122 Rae pp 110 129 Rae p 110 Rae p 149 Rae p 188 Rae p 189 Rae p 190 WG Grace s XI in Australia 1873 74 CricketArchive Retrieved 27 October 2015 Cricket s pioneers a look at England s firsts International Cricket Council Retrieved 31 July 2018 Test Match 1880 CricketArchive Retrieved 15 August 2009 Test matches played by W G Grace CricketArchive Retrieved 28 November 2008 Test Match 1882 CricketArchive Retrieved 27 November 2008 Birley p 137 Test Match 1886 CricketArchive Retrieved 27 November 2008 LS v Aus 1896 CricketArchive Retrieved 28 November 2008 Wisden Cricketers Almanack 1944 edition Stanley Jackson s reminiscences C B Fry Life Worth Living Trafalgar Square Publishing 1939 a b c d Frith pp 14 15 a b Barclays pp 181 182 Gibson p 57 Christopher Martin Jenkins The Wisden Book of County Cricket 1981 p 441 Midwinter pp 144 146 a b Midwinter p 146 Midwinter p 147 Rae p 486 Rae p 17 a b Rae p 19 Midwinter p 68 Major p 341 a b p 136 Richard Whitington Captains Outrageous cricket in the seventies Stanley Paul 1972 James pp 236 237 James p 237 Birley p 167 Arlott p 1 Rae p 82 Bowen p 140 a b Rae p 20 a b c d e W G Grace s obituary Wisden Cricketers Almanack 1916 Retrieved 11 November 2008 a b c Playfair Cricket Annual 1948 p 10 Birley p 110 a b Rae p 69 a b c Bowen p 112 Birley p 108 Birley p 159 Midwinter pp 73 74 Midwinter p 74 Arlott p 6 a b Rae p 102 a b c Rae p 103 Rae p 104 John Sherman s career record CricketArchive Retrieved 27 November 2008 Grace pp 15 16 Rae p 52 a b c Rae p 497 See also Variations in first class cricket statistics Rob Cavallini The Wanderers F C five time F A Cup winners 2005 ISBN 978 0 9550496 0 6 p 37 BBC World Service Sportshour The FA Cup s Harlem Globetrotters Retrieved 7 April 2016 Bowls W G scores another 100 Retrieved 9 October 2011 Parratt Catriona 1989 Athletic Womanhood Exploring Sources for Female Sport in Victorian and Edwardian England PDF Journal of Sport History 16 2 155 Retrieved 29 December 2016 Midwinter p 143 Rae p 478 Darwin p 106 Darwin pp 106 107 a b Rae p 1 a b Rae p 3 Rae mentions on page 3 that Dr Henry Grace s medical qualifications were Licenciate of the Society of Apothecaries LSA in 1828 and Membership of the Royal College of Surgeons MRCS in 1830 a b Midwinter p 75 Midwinter pp 39 40 a b Midwinter p 54 Midwinter p 51 www bartsguild org Archived 10 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine Midwinter p 59 List of wards at St Bartholomew s Hospital bartshealth nhs uk Archived from the original on 15 June 2013 Retrieved 20 March 2013 Midwinter p 67 Rae p 238 Plaques Clifton amp Hotwells Improvement Society Retrieved 26 May 2020 Midwinter p 77 a b Midwinter p 86 Midwinter p 127 Midwinter p 140 Midwinter p 149 Rae p 487 a b Rae p 490 Midwinter p 153 Gordon p v Lord s milestones 1923 MCC Archived from the original on 2 October 2008 Retrieved 9 November 2008 Midwinter p 154 W G Grace inducted into Cricket Hall of Fame www thesportscampus com Retrieved 25 September 2009 Grace worthy of high honour 20 January 1998 CricInfo Retrieved 25 September 2009 Stanley Gibbons Great Britain Concise Stamp Catalogue 1997 edition pp 96 97 In the commentary track of the DVD release Terry Gilliam and Terry Jones acknowledge the use of Grace s image WATCH Terry Gilliam s Grumpy Commentary for Lost Python Animations BBC America BBC America Retrieved 6 December 2017 Arlott p 256 James ch 14 C B Fry Playfair Cricket Annual 1948 p 4 Cardus Neville 1963 Six Giants of the Wisden Century Wisden Cricketers Almanack Retrieved 8 November 2008 WG Grace and Shane Warne in Wisden all time World Test XI BBC 23 October 2013 Retrieved 26 July 2019 Birley p 208 Bowen p 108 Beckenham Cemetery Dignity 2014 Retrieved 7 September 2014 Beckenham Restaurants Pubs and Bars Beckenham NET Retrieved 7 September 2014 Bibliography EditAltham H S 1962 A History of Cricket Volume 1 to 1914 George Allen amp Unwin Arlott John 1984 Arlott on Cricket Collins ISBN 0 563 16115 9 Barclays World of Cricket 3rd edition ed E W Swanton Willow Books 1986 Article on W G Grace written by H S Altham Birley Derek 1999 A Social History of English Cricket Aurum ISBN 1 85410 941 3 Bowen Rowland 1970 Cricket A History of its Growth and Development Eyre amp Spottiswoode Darwin Bernard 1934 W G Grace Great Lives Series Frith David 1978 The Golden Age of Cricket Lutterworth Press ISBN 0 7188 7022 0 Gibson Alan 1989 The Cricket Captains of England Grace W G 1891 Cricket Ghost written by W Methven Brownlee J W Arrowsmith via Wikisource scan nbsp Grace W G 1899 Cricketing Reminiscences and Personal Recollections James Bowden Ghost written by Arthur Porritt Harte Chris 1993 A History of Australian Cricket Andre Deutsch ISBN 0 233 98825 4 James C L R 1963 Beyond A Boundary Hutchinson ISBN 0 8223 1383 9 Marylebone Cricket Club 1919 The Memorial Biography of Dr W G Grace London Constable Major John 2007 More Than a Game HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 00 718364 7 Midwinter Eric 1981 W G Grace His Life and Times George Allen and Unwin ISBN 978 0 04 796054 3 Playfair Cricket Annual 1948 edition Playfair Books Ltd Rae Simon 1998 W G Grace A Life ISBN 978 0 571 17855 1 Webber Roy 1958 The County Cricket Championship Sportsman s Book Club Webber Roy 1951 The Playfair Book of Cricket Records Playfair Books Wisden 1984 Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co Ltd ISBN 0 356 10239 4 Ford William Justice 1911 Grace William Gilbert In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 12 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 308 309 Further reading EditAllen David Rayvern 1990 Cricket with Grace Illustrated Anthology on W G ISBN 978 0 04 440478 1 Bax Clifford 1952 W G Grace Frith David 1975 The Fast Men TransWorld Publishing ISBN 0 552 10435 3 Furniss Harry 1896 How s that including A century of Grace Bristol Arrowsmith Grace W G 1888 Modern Batting article in The Magazine of Sport July 1888 London Iliffe amp Son Grace W G 1895 The History of a Hundred Centuries Ghost written by William Yardley Grace W G 1909 W G s Little Book Newnes Ghost written by E H D Sewell Low Robert 2004 W G Grace An Intimate Biography Metro Books ISBN 1 84358 095 0 Pearce Brian 2004 Cricket at the Crystal Palace W G Grace and the London County Cricket Club Crystal Palace Foundation ISBN 978 1 897754 09 2 Thomson A A 1968 1957 The Great Cricketer The Cricketer Hutchinson ISBN 0 09087 310 6 Wright Graeme 2005 Wisden at Lord s John Wisden amp Co Ltd ISBN 0 947766 93 6 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to WG Grace nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about W G Grace W G Grace at ESPNcricinfo Manchester Guardian obituary Wisden Cricketers Almanack memorial tribute 1916 Wisden Cricketers Almanack W G Grace centenary CricInfo Bearded Giant by E W Swanton 18 July 1998 CricInfo Amazing Grace by David Frith 2 Aug 2010 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2004 W G Grace Mark Steel Lecture on W G First Broadcast 16 April 1999 BBC Radio 4 Great Lives on W G Grace listen online http www bbc co uk programmes p00glw73Sporting positionsPreceded byWalter Read English national cricket captain1888 Succeeded byAubrey SmithPreceded byAubrey Smith English national cricket captain1890 1891 2 Succeeded byWalter ReadPreceded byWalter Read English national cricket captain1893 Succeeded byAndrew StoddartPreceded byLord Hawke English national cricket captain1896 Succeeded byAndrew StoddartRecordsPreceded byWilliam Ward Highest individual score in first class cricket344 MCC v Kent at Canterbury 1876 Succeeded byArchie MacLaren Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title W G Grace amp oldid 1165170705, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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