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History of English cricket (1726–1750)

In the years from 1726 to 1750, cricket became an established sport in London and the south-eastern counties of England. In 1726, it was already a thriving sport in the south east and, though limited by the constraints of travel at the time, it was slowly gaining adherents in other parts of England, its growth accelerating with references being found in many counties. Having been essentially a rural pastime for well over a century, cricket became a focus for wealthy patrons and gamblers whose interests funded its growth throughout the 18th century.

Patrons such as the 2nd Duke of Richmond sought to ensure order both on and off the field of play. The earliest known written rules were deployed in 1727 and the first code of laws was enacted in 1744. Ground enclosure began in 1731 and, later in the decade, admission fees were introduced. Media interest grew as the newspaper industry developed, a lead being taken by two new publications. London's Artillery Ground became the sport's showcase venue with top-class matches played in front of large crowds. The single wicket form enjoyed huge popularity in the 1740s and reached its zenith in 1748. Leading players of the time included Robert "Long Robin" Colchin of Bromley and Richard Newland of Slindon.

Continuing growth of cricket edit

Cricket was still a regional sport in England, albeit a very popular one, as the constraints of travel limited its introduction to the rest of the country. There are the earliest mentions of cricket being played in Gloucestershire in 1729,[1] Buckinghamshire in 1730,[2][3] and Hampshire in 1733.[4] Its focal point in the mid-18th century was the Artillery Ground at Finsbury in London. Around 1730, this succeeded Kennington Common as the preferred home venue of London Cricket Club and became the stage for numerous important matches, including lucrative single wicket contests.[citation needed] While London represented the metropolitan side of cricket, there were several famous rural clubs like Dartford, Chertsey and Croydon which could challenge London and provide the main strength in their respective county teams, Kent and Surrey. Middlesex and Sussex could also put strong teams into the field.[citation needed] Well-known venues of the time included the Artillery Ground, Dartford Brent, Kennington Common, Moulsey Hurst and Richmond Green.[citation needed]

Cricket thrived on the funds provided by patronage, gambling and large, enthusiastic crowds. As its popularity grew, it began to spread outwards from its south-eastern heartland.[5] The game had already reached the Americas and India as confirmed by references to the game being played overseas by English sailors and colonists in the first quarter of the 18th century.[6][7][8][9]

The most prominent patrons in the 1720s were Edwin Stead (Kent), the 2nd Duke of Richmond, Sir William Gage (both Sussex) and Alan Brodrick (Surrey). Gage and Richmond continued to support cricket through the 1730s when additional patrons were the Prince of Wales and Lord John Sackville. Among the few players whose names have been recorded in the 1730s were Thomas Waymark, Tim Coleman and John Bowra.[citation needed] Edwin Stead died on 28 August 1735.[10]

Some matches in the 1720s were arranged at places like Peper Harow and Penshurst Park which have long been horse racing locations; today, they both house point-to-point racecourses. There were strong gambling connections between cricket, racing and prizefighting throughout the 18th century with matches being staged at venues like Moulsey Hurst or, later, the Forest New Ground at Nottingham; and the fact that MCC and the Jockey Club were both founded by the "Noblemen's and Gentlemen's Club" which used to meet socially at the Star & Garter on Pall Mall in London.[citation needed]

Media coverage edit

No cricket had been reported in the infant newspaper industry before 1697 due to the Licensing of the Press Act 1662 which controlled the press until 1696, but reports were beginning to increase by the mid-1720s, though it would be a very long time indeed before coverage became anything like comprehensive.[citation needed] Early reports tended to be an advertisement for a scheduled match or else a brief discussion of the gambling odds rather than the actual play and it was not until 1726 that players were first mentioned by name in a newspaper report. There was a significant increase in the number of matches reported during the 1730 season with four single wicket contests and several 11-a-side games, many featuring the London Club which was by then well established as the sport's premier club and taking on county opposition from Kent and Surrey.[citation needed] Match reports were much more common in the 1730s and were beginning to present increased detail, sometimes including the names of patrons and players. There is, therefore, a considerably larger record of the 1730s than of the previous decades.[citation needed]

The London Evening Post was founded in 1726 and the Daily Advertiser began publication in 1730. Both carried a good many cricket notices until they ceased publication in 1797 and 1798 respectively.[citation needed] The growth of the newspaper industry was important contemporarily for giving the sport much needed publicity and historically for providing glimpses into a developing sport that had still not learned how to record itself for posterity.[citation needed]

The match between Kent and All England played at the Artillery ground on 18 June 1744 was described in Cricket: An Heroic Poem by James Love.[11] This was the first major piece of writing about cricket.[citation needed]

The Laws of Cricket edit

Articles of Agreement, 1727 edit

In 1727, the 2nd Duke of Richmond organised two matches against Alan Brodrick and they drew up articles of agreement between them to determine the rules that must apply in these contests.[12] This type of agreement seems to have been used throughout the period.[13] It is the earliest known instance of rules (or some part of the rules as in this case) being formally agreed, although rules as such definitely existed.[14] In early times, the rules would be agreed orally and subject to local variations so the articles of agreement were created to complement and clarify the rules.[15] Another reference to articles of agreement occurs in 1730 when London played Kent at a venue called Frog Lane in Islington. The report says: "but being obliged by their Articles to leave off at seven o'clock", they could not finish it.[16] London had a lead of 30 when play ended and there was a resumption on Kennington Common six days later.[16] The first formalised Laws of Cricket were written in 1744.[17]

 
The oldest cricket bat still in existence dates from 1729. The shape is more like that of a modern-day hockey stick than a modern-day cricket bat. It is kept in the Sandham Room in the Member's Pavilion at The Oval.

The 1727 articles of agreement stated that "the Duke of Richmond & Mr. Brodrick shall determine the Ball or Balls to be played with".[13] Similar rules applied through the period and there was no known attempt to standardise bat or ball size until much later. Batsmen defended a two-stump wicket using a bat shaped like a modern hockey stick against a ball that was bowled all along the ground, either by rolling or skimming. The oldest known surviving cricket bat is dated 1729. It is on display in The Oval pavilion and belonged to one John Chitty of Knaphill, Surrey.[18]

Pads, gloves and other forms of protective equipment were unknown. Umpires carried a stick, believed to be a bat, which the batsmen had to touch to complete a run.[citation needed] Scorers sat on a mound in the field and "notched" runs (then known as notches) on tally sticks.[citation needed] All runs had to be completed in full as boundaries were not recognised and there were no known rules concerning the care and maintenance of the wicket, although the leading bowler on the visiting team had the right to decide where the wickets would be pitched.[citation needed] The only early rule about pitch and wicket dimensions was re the length of the pitch at 23 yards in 1727; this became a chain (22 yards) by 1744.[13]

1744 code edit

The 1744 Laws were codified by members of the London club but not typeset until 1752 and not published until 1755.[citation needed] Among the provisions were pitch and wicket dimensions, balls per over and the roles and responsibilities of the umpires.[citation needed] Referring to the 1774 Laws, John Major says that regulation had hitherto been "rather informal" and believes that the 1744 rules were only a revision or codification of existing practice.[19] The dimensions of the wicket, two stumps topped by a single bail, were set at 22 inches high and six inches wide.[20]

Single wicket edit

The London Evening Post dated Saturday, 27 August 1726 carried an advertisement for a single wicket match between players called "the noted Perry" (of London) and "the famous Piper" (of Hampton), playing "for twenty pounds a side". The match was played at Moulsey Hurst, a multi-sport venue near Molesey in Surrey.[21]

This is the first time that players are known to have been named in a newspaper and the match itself is the earliest known to have been played under single wicket rules.[citation needed] Single wicket was a form of top-class cricket that had periods of great popularity in the 18th and 19th centuries, mainly for the opportunities it offered to gamblers. It became increasingly popular during the 1730s, with numerous big money events taking place at the Artillery Ground. This continued through the 1740s and single wicket reached a peak in the 1748 season.[citation needed]

There were four single wicket matches in the 1730 season, three of which involved four-man Kent teams led by Edwin Stead in matches against four of Brentford Cricket Club. The other game was between three of Surrey and three of Sussex. The stake was usually £50.[22] In August 1735, there was a three against four match (result unknown) on Kennington Common, all the players being members of the London club.[23]

The Artillery Ground edit

A London v Surrey match on 31 August 1730 took place at the Artillery Ground in Bunhill Fields, Finsbury, London. London won by 6 runs.[16] It is the earliest definite match at the venue which was referred to in contemporary reports as the "old" Artillery Ground, but that may be because it was used frequently for other forms of sport or entertainment.[16] It was generally used for matches involving the original London Club and also became the featured venue of all London cricket until the mid-1760s, after which the Hambledon Club increased its influence.[16]

Matches were recorded at the Artillery Ground until as late as 1778 but by then the London Club had disbanded, although its members continued their social and organisational existences and maintained their influence over the game as a whole.[citation needed]

The earliest known instances of ground enclosure occurred in 1731, the playing area on Kennington Common being roped off twice in an attempt to keep spectators off the field. Cricket is the first sport known to have enclosed its venues and it quickly became common practice with stakes and ropes being reported at the Artillery Ground in 1732.[24] It is not clear when admission fees were first introduced but there was certainly a two pence charge in place at the Artillery Ground by the early 1740s.[citation needed]

Schools and universities edit

In 1727, Horace Walpole commented that cricket was already "common" at Eton College. This is the earliest reference to cricket both at Eton and in the county of Berkshire.[1]

Controversies edit

Cricket had some brushes with the law in the first half of the century, including two court cases about unpaid gambling debts. The second of these followed a match in 1724 between Stead's XI and a Chingford team on Dartford Brent. Terminating Stead's lawsuit, Lord Chief Justice Pratt ordered the match to be completed in order that the stakes could be settled. The replay took place in September 1726.[25] In a letter written the same month, an Essex resident complained that a local Justice of the Peace had literally "read the Riot Act" to some people who were playing cricket.[26] With reference to Pratt's ruling, the issue raised was that it was apparently lawful to play cricket in Kent but not in Essex.[26]

Gambling was prevalent at cricket matches in Georgian England and many gambling- or alcohol-fuelled incidents occurred.[27] The issue was not addressed by the sport's ruling body until the 1770s and it remained a significant aspect through the 1730s and 1740s.[28] The other side of the coin was the reliance of cricket as a professional sport upon the investment accrued through gambling interests.[citation needed] The importance of gambling was illustrated in 1730 when a match between teams sponsored by Richmond and Gage was cancelled "on account of Waymark, the Duke's man, being ill".[citation needed] Waymark was the outstanding player of the day[according to whom?] and stakes would have been laid on his expected performance. Without his involvement, all bets were "off" and so the game was a non-starter.[citation needed]

A controversial match took place on Monday, 23 August 1731, when Thomas Chambers' XI took on the Duke of Richmond's XI (i.e., effectively a Middlesex v. Sussex match) at Richmond Green in a return match played for 200 guineas.[29] It is notable in one sense as the earliest match of which the team scores are known: Richmond's XI 79, Chambers' XI 119; Richmond's XI 72, Chambers' XI 23–5 (approximately).[30][31] The game ended promptly at a pre-agreed time although Chambers' XI with "four or five more to have come in" and needing "about 8 to 10 notches" clearly had the upper hand.[30][31] The result caused a fracas among the crowd who were incensed by the prompt finish because the Duke of Richmond had arrived late and delayed the start of the game. The riot resulted in some of the Sussex players "having the shirts torn off their backs; and it was said a law suit would commence about the play".[32] On Wednesday, 8 September, the Daily Post Boy reported that "(on 6 September) 11 of Surrey beat the 11 who about a fortnight ago beat the Duke of Richmond's men".[32] This would suggest that the Duke of Richmond conceded his controversial game against Chambers' XI.[32][31] Middlesex patron Thomas Chambers was a probable forebear of Lord Frederick Beauclerk.[29]

A dispute arose over scheduled finishing time in the London v Middlesex match at the Artillery Ground on 13 September 1732. London, batting last, needed seven more runs to win with six wickets standing when a Middlesex player tried to terminate the game as a draw by claiming time was up. According to the scorer's watch, there were still several minutes to go. The newspaper report said that the London players intended legal action as over £100 was at stake.[33]

There were two controversies in 1734 around non-appearance by one of the teams. London and Sevenoaks were due to meet at Kennington Common on 8 July but Sevenoaks did not turn up and were obliged to forfeit their deposit.[33] In September, London issued a challenge "to play with any eleven men in England, with this exception only, that they will not admit of one from Croydon".[34] There was a dispute between the London and Croydon clubs after the latter failed to appear for an arranged match.[35] It is not known if the challenge match was played.

Other events edit

  • Section for collection of miscellaneous information from season articles being merged into this history

1726–1735 edit

There was an increasing use of county names in the 1720s. Teams called Kent and Surrey had been recorded as far back as 1709, though they were probably not representative of the whole counties.[36] In August 1726, a combined London and Surrey team hosted Edwin Stead's Kent XI on Kennington Common.[25] In 1728, a Middlesex team played London and then, in 1729, there was the first known use of Hampshire and Sussex in a team title, albeit not individually. In 1730, the first match took place between teams titled Surrey and Middlesex.[16]

In June 1728, the Swiss traveller César-François de Saussure noted in his journal the frequency with which he saw cricket being played while he was making his journeys across southern England. He referred to county matches as "a commonplace" and wrote that "everyone plays it, the common people and also men of rank".[37] If they were a commonplace, they were also keenly contested to the point where winning teams would proclaim their county's superiority. In August of the same year, a game at Penshurst Park (near Tonbridge) between Kent and Sussex was won by Kent. The teams were organised by Edwin Stead (Kent) and Sir William Gage (Sussex). Stead's team had earlier won two games against the 2nd Duke of Richmond's XI (also representing Sussex) and their victory over Gage's XI was reported as "the third time this summer that the Kent men have been too expert for those of Sussex".[38][39][40] In August 1729, there was a return match, again at Penshurst Park, between Stead's XI and Gage's XI – alternatively titled Kent (Stead's XI) v Sussex, Surrey & Hampshire (Gage's XI). This was won by Gage's team, apparently by the earliest known innings victory. A match report singled out Thomas Waymark of Sussex for special praise, saying that he "turned the scale of victory, which for some years past has been generally on the Kentish side".[40] Also in 1728, there was a match in Lewes (exact venue unknown) between the Duke of Richmond's XI and Sir William Gage's XI.[38][41]

Records have been found of six eleven-a-side matches played in 1729 including the Stead v Gage return in August. London and Dartford played each other twice – Dartford won one but the result of the other is unknown. A Kent county team played in three matches: one against Sussex, one against Surrey and one against a combined Hampshire, Surrey and Sussex team.[38][26][42][40] The earliest reference to cricket at the University of Oxford is dated 1673,[43] and the sport was being played there in the summer of 1729 on the testimony of Dr Samuel Johnson who was then a student. This was mentioned in James Boswell's Life of Samuel Johnson.[44]

Fifteen eleven-a-side matches were recorded in 1730 including ten which involved county teams.[38] It is the first season from which details of more than a handful of matches have survived. The brief report of a match between Kent and London refers to the "Kentish champions (losing) their honours", but the context is unclear and there was no county championship until well over a century later.[22]

Records of thirty eleven-a-side matches have been found for the 1731 season including one which ended in a riot (see Controversies section below).[45][46] Twelve games were recorded in 1732, eleven involving London. A newspaper report in September stated that London played 13 matches in all and were unbeaten.[32] This, however, is contradicted by a report in May stating that Croydon defeated London "by great odds".[32] In 1733, ten matches involved London and/or a county team.[33][45] Records have been found of seven matches in 1734, mostly involving London and Kent who played each other twice.[45][47][48] Of nine matches recorded in 1735, London played in seven.[45]

1736–1740 edit

In 1736, a total of 18 eleven-a-side games are on record with two single wicket ones. The earliest known tied match result occurred in one of the single wicket games when the teams, three of London and three of Surrey, aggregated 23 runs each.[49] The other single wicket game was two London players, named as Wakeland and George Oldner, against an unnamed pair from Richmond who were "esteemed the best two in England". One of the Richmond players suffered a serious facial injury when hit by the ball.[50]

Seven eleven-a-side games are known from 1737, all involving London.[45] Some of the teams were sponsored by the Prince of Wales.[51] There was crowd trouble at one match on Kennington Common between Kent and a combined London/Surrey team. Missiles were thrown and a man died a week later after being struck by a stone.[52][53] The fixture was repeated twice in 1738 – Kent won one and the other is an unknown result.[45][52] There are seven known matches in 1739 including the first to involve a team representing the Rest of England. It was billed as between "eleven gentlemen (of Kent) and eleven gentlemen from any part of England, exclusive of Kent".[54] Kent won that game and a return match soon afterwards was drawn.[55][56]

Generally agreed to be the "first modern representation of cricket", a series of engravings, The Game of Cricket, was made by Hubert-François Gravelot in 1739. The six engravings show groups of children playing cricket,[57] with a wicket of the "low stool" shape, probably 2-foot (0.61 m) wide by 1-foot (0.30 m) tall, with two stumps and a single bail. The engravings were used on porcelain.[57] Gravelot helped to establish the French Rococo style in English publishing and was one of the most celebrated illustrators of the time.[58]

The earliest known mention of Slindon Cricket Club is in a letter dated 30 July 1740 from the Duke of Richmond to Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle, a future prime minister.[59] Eight matches are on record in 1740, all involving London.[45][60]

1741–1743 edit

1744 edit

1745–1747 edit

1748–1750 edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Bowen 1970, p. 262.
  2. ^ Waghorn 1899, p. 3.
  3. ^ Maun 2009, p. 46.
  4. ^ Maun 2009, p. 59.
  5. ^ Waghorn 1906, p. 27.
  6. ^ Haygarth 1862, p. vi.
  7. ^ Bowen 1970, p. 50.
  8. ^ Worrall, Simon (October 2006). "The History of Cricket in the United States". Smithsonian Magazine. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  9. ^ Byrd, William (1941). The Secret Diary of William Byrd of Westover. Richmond, Virginia: Dietz Publishing. pp. 144–146. ISBN 978-04-05033-04-9.
  10. ^ Buckley 1935, p. 12.
  11. ^ Altham 1962, p. 32.
  12. ^ Marshall 1961, pp. 47–48.
  13. ^ a b c Maun 2009, pp. 213–214.
  14. ^ McCann 2004, pp. 6–7.
  15. ^ Birley 1999, p. 18.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Maun 2009, p. 44.
  17. ^ Altham 1962, p. 25.
  18. ^ Altham, H. S. (1978). "Dates in Cricket History". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. London: John Wisden & Co. Ltd. Retrieved 11 March 2021.
  19. ^ Major 2007, p. 104.
  20. ^ Major 2007, p. 93.
  21. ^ Maun 2009, p. 33.
  22. ^ a b Buckley 1935, p. 4.
  23. ^ Buckley 1935, p. 11.
  24. ^ Buckley 1935, p. 7.
  25. ^ a b Waghorn 1906, p. 6.
  26. ^ a b c Buckley 1935, p. 3.
  27. ^ Malcolm 2013, p. 27.
  28. ^ Malcolm 2013, p. 20.
  29. ^ a b Major 2007, p. 56.
  30. ^ a b Waghorn 1899, p. 4.
  31. ^ a b c Maun 2009, pp. 51–52.
  32. ^ a b c d e Buckley 1935, p. 6.
  33. ^ a b c Buckley 1935, p. 8.
  34. ^ Waghorn 1899, p. 7.
  35. ^ Maun 2009, pp. 65–66.
  36. ^ Buckley 1937, p. 1.
  37. ^ de Saussure, César-François (1902). "Letter XII". In van Muyden, Anne (ed.). A Foreign View of England in the Reigns of George I and George II. The Letters of Monsieur César de Saussure to his Family. London: John Mussay.
  38. ^ a b c d ACS 1981, p. 19.
  39. ^ Maun 2009, p. 37.
  40. ^ a b c Waghorn 1906, p. 7.
  41. ^ McCann 2004, p. 8.
  42. ^ Maun 2009, pp. 38–39.
  43. ^ Maun 2009, p. 15.
  44. ^ Maun 2009, p. 38.
  45. ^ a b c d e f g ACS 1981, p. 20.
  46. ^ "Other Matches in England in 1731". CricketArchive. Retrieved 10 July 2021.
  47. ^ Buckley 1935, p. 9.
  48. ^ Waghorn 1899, pp. 6–7.
  49. ^ Buckley 1935, p. 13.
  50. ^ Waghorn 1899, pp. 13–14.
  51. ^ Buckley 1935, p. 14.
  52. ^ a b Maun 2009, p. 86.
  53. ^ Waghorn 1899, p. 19.
  54. ^ Waghorn 1899, pp. 22–23.
  55. ^ Maun 2009, pp. 95–96.
  56. ^ Waghorn 1899, p. 23.
  57. ^ a b Lot 49 – Hubert-François Gravelot 11 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine. Christie's. Retrieved 11 January 2019.
  58. ^ Major 2007, pp. 95, 299.
  59. ^ Maun 2009, p. 99.
  60. ^ Maun 2009, pp. 98–100.

Select bibliography edit

history, english, cricket, 1726, 1750, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, history, english, cricket, 17. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources History of English cricket 1726 1750 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the years from 1726 to 1750 cricket became an established sport in London and the south eastern counties of England In 1726 it was already a thriving sport in the south east and though limited by the constraints of travel at the time it was slowly gaining adherents in other parts of England its growth accelerating with references being found in many counties Having been essentially a rural pastime for well over a century cricket became a focus for wealthy patrons and gamblers whose interests funded its growth throughout the 18th century Patrons such as the 2nd Duke of Richmond sought to ensure order both on and off the field of play The earliest known written rules were deployed in 1727 and the first code of laws was enacted in 1744 Ground enclosure began in 1731 and later in the decade admission fees were introduced Media interest grew as the newspaper industry developed a lead being taken by two new publications London s Artillery Ground became the sport s showcase venue with top class matches played in front of large crowds The single wicket form enjoyed huge popularity in the 1740s and reached its zenith in 1748 Leading players of the time included Robert Long Robin Colchin of Bromley and Richard Newland of Slindon Contents 1 Continuing growth of cricket 2 Media coverage 3 The Laws of Cricket 3 1 Articles of Agreement 1727 3 2 1744 code 4 Single wicket 5 The Artillery Ground 6 Schools and universities 7 Controversies 8 Other events 8 1 1726 1735 8 2 1736 1740 8 3 1741 1743 8 4 1744 8 5 1745 1747 8 6 1748 1750 9 References 10 Select bibliographyContinuing growth of cricket editCricket was still a regional sport in England albeit a very popular one as the constraints of travel limited its introduction to the rest of the country There are the earliest mentions of cricket being played in Gloucestershire in 1729 1 Buckinghamshire in 1730 2 3 and Hampshire in 1733 4 Its focal point in the mid 18th century was the Artillery Ground at Finsbury in London Around 1730 this succeeded Kennington Common as the preferred home venue of London Cricket Club and became the stage for numerous important matches including lucrative single wicket contests citation needed While London represented the metropolitan side of cricket there were several famous rural clubs like Dartford Chertsey and Croydon which could challenge London and provide the main strength in their respective county teams Kent and Surrey Middlesex and Sussex could also put strong teams into the field citation needed Well known venues of the time included the Artillery Ground Dartford Brent Kennington Common Moulsey Hurst and Richmond Green citation needed Cricket thrived on the funds provided by patronage gambling and large enthusiastic crowds As its popularity grew it began to spread outwards from its south eastern heartland 5 The game had already reached the Americas and India as confirmed by references to the game being played overseas by English sailors and colonists in the first quarter of the 18th century 6 7 8 9 The most prominent patrons in the 1720s were Edwin Stead Kent the 2nd Duke of Richmond Sir William Gage both Sussex and Alan Brodrick Surrey Gage and Richmond continued to support cricket through the 1730s when additional patrons were the Prince of Wales and Lord John Sackville Among the few players whose names have been recorded in the 1730s were Thomas Waymark Tim Coleman and John Bowra citation needed Edwin Stead died on 28 August 1735 10 Some matches in the 1720s were arranged at places like Peper Harow and Penshurst Park which have long been horse racing locations today they both house point to point racecourses There were strong gambling connections between cricket racing and prizefighting throughout the 18th century with matches being staged at venues like Moulsey Hurst or later the Forest New Ground at Nottingham and the fact that MCC and the Jockey Club were both founded by the Noblemen s and Gentlemen s Club which used to meet socially at the Star amp Garter on Pall Mall in London citation needed Media coverage editNo cricket had been reported in the infant newspaper industry before 1697 due to the Licensing of the Press Act 1662 which controlled the press until 1696 but reports were beginning to increase by the mid 1720s though it would be a very long time indeed before coverage became anything like comprehensive citation needed Early reports tended to be an advertisement for a scheduled match or else a brief discussion of the gambling odds rather than the actual play and it was not until 1726 that players were first mentioned by name in a newspaper report There was a significant increase in the number of matches reported during the 1730 season with four single wicket contests and several 11 a side games many featuring the London Club which was by then well established as the sport s premier club and taking on county opposition from Kent and Surrey citation needed Match reports were much more common in the 1730s and were beginning to present increased detail sometimes including the names of patrons and players There is therefore a considerably larger record of the 1730s than of the previous decades citation needed The London Evening Post was founded in 1726 and the Daily Advertiser began publication in 1730 Both carried a good many cricket notices until they ceased publication in 1797 and 1798 respectively citation needed The growth of the newspaper industry was important contemporarily for giving the sport much needed publicity and historically for providing glimpses into a developing sport that had still not learned how to record itself for posterity citation needed The match between Kent and All England played at the Artillery ground on 18 June 1744 was described in Cricket An Heroic Poem by James Love 11 This was the first major piece of writing about cricket citation needed The Laws of Cricket editMain articles Articles of Agreement cricket and Laws of Cricket Articles of Agreement 1727 edit In 1727 the 2nd Duke of Richmond organised two matches against Alan Brodrick and they drew up articles of agreement between them to determine the rules that must apply in these contests 12 This type of agreement seems to have been used throughout the period 13 It is the earliest known instance of rules or some part of the rules as in this case being formally agreed although rules as such definitely existed 14 In early times the rules would be agreed orally and subject to local variations so the articles of agreement were created to complement and clarify the rules 15 Another reference to articles of agreement occurs in 1730 when London played Kent at a venue called Frog Lane in Islington The report says but being obliged by their Articles to leave off at seven o clock they could not finish it 16 London had a lead of 30 when play ended and there was a resumption on Kennington Common six days later 16 The first formalised Laws of Cricket were written in 1744 17 nbsp The oldest cricket bat still in existence dates from 1729 The shape is more like that of a modern day hockey stick than a modern day cricket bat It is kept in the Sandham Room in the Member s Pavilion at The Oval The 1727 articles of agreement stated that the Duke of Richmond amp Mr Brodrick shall determine the Ball or Balls to be played with 13 Similar rules applied through the period and there was no known attempt to standardise bat or ball size until much later Batsmen defended a two stump wicket using a bat shaped like a modern hockey stick against a ball that was bowled all along the ground either by rolling or skimming The oldest known surviving cricket bat is dated 1729 It is on display in The Oval pavilion and belonged to one John Chitty of Knaphill Surrey 18 Pads gloves and other forms of protective equipment were unknown Umpires carried a stick believed to be a bat which the batsmen had to touch to complete a run citation needed Scorers sat on a mound in the field and notched runs then known as notches on tally sticks citation needed All runs had to be completed in full as boundaries were not recognised and there were no known rules concerning the care and maintenance of the wicket although the leading bowler on the visiting team had the right to decide where the wickets would be pitched citation needed The only early rule about pitch and wicket dimensions was re the length of the pitch at 23 yards in 1727 this became a chain 22 yards by 1744 13 1744 code edit Further information 1744 English cricket season The 1744 Laws were codified by members of the London club but not typeset until 1752 and not published until 1755 citation needed Among the provisions were pitch and wicket dimensions balls per over and the roles and responsibilities of the umpires citation needed Referring to the 1774 Laws John Major says that regulation had hitherto been rather informal and believes that the 1744 rules were only a revision or codification of existing practice 19 The dimensions of the wicket two stumps topped by a single bail were set at 22 inches high and six inches wide 20 Single wicket editThe London Evening Post dated Saturday 27 August 1726 carried an advertisement for a single wicket match between players called the noted Perry of London and the famous Piper of Hampton playing for twenty pounds a side The match was played at Moulsey Hurst a multi sport venue near Molesey in Surrey 21 This is the first time that players are known to have been named in a newspaper and the match itself is the earliest known to have been played under single wicket rules citation needed Single wicket was a form of top class cricket that had periods of great popularity in the 18th and 19th centuries mainly for the opportunities it offered to gamblers It became increasingly popular during the 1730s with numerous big money events taking place at the Artillery Ground This continued through the 1740s and single wicket reached a peak in the 1748 season citation needed There were four single wicket matches in the 1730 season three of which involved four man Kent teams led by Edwin Stead in matches against four of Brentford Cricket Club The other game was between three of Surrey and three of Sussex The stake was usually 50 22 In August 1735 there was a three against four match result unknown on Kennington Common all the players being members of the London club 23 The Artillery Ground editA London v Surrey match on 31 August 1730 took place at the Artillery Ground in Bunhill Fields Finsbury London London won by 6 runs 16 It is the earliest definite match at the venue which was referred to in contemporary reports as the old Artillery Ground but that may be because it was used frequently for other forms of sport or entertainment 16 It was generally used for matches involving the original London Club and also became the featured venue of all London cricket until the mid 1760s after which the Hambledon Club increased its influence 16 Matches were recorded at the Artillery Ground until as late as 1778 but by then the London Club had disbanded although its members continued their social and organisational existences and maintained their influence over the game as a whole citation needed The earliest known instances of ground enclosure occurred in 1731 the playing area on Kennington Common being roped off twice in an attempt to keep spectators off the field Cricket is the first sport known to have enclosed its venues and it quickly became common practice with stakes and ropes being reported at the Artillery Ground in 1732 24 It is not clear when admission fees were first introduced but there was certainly a two pence charge in place at the Artillery Ground by the early 1740s citation needed Schools and universities editIn 1727 Horace Walpole commented that cricket was already common at Eton College This is the earliest reference to cricket both at Eton and in the county of Berkshire 1 Controversies editCricket had some brushes with the law in the first half of the century including two court cases about unpaid gambling debts The second of these followed a match in 1724 between Stead s XI and a Chingford team on Dartford Brent Terminating Stead s lawsuit Lord Chief Justice Pratt ordered the match to be completed in order that the stakes could be settled The replay took place in September 1726 25 In a letter written the same month an Essex resident complained that a local Justice of the Peace had literally read the Riot Act to some people who were playing cricket 26 With reference to Pratt s ruling the issue raised was that it was apparently lawful to play cricket in Kent but not in Essex 26 Gambling was prevalent at cricket matches in Georgian England and many gambling or alcohol fuelled incidents occurred 27 The issue was not addressed by the sport s ruling body until the 1770s and it remained a significant aspect through the 1730s and 1740s 28 The other side of the coin was the reliance of cricket as a professional sport upon the investment accrued through gambling interests citation needed The importance of gambling was illustrated in 1730 when a match between teams sponsored by Richmond and Gage was cancelled on account of Waymark the Duke s man being ill citation needed Waymark was the outstanding player of the day according to whom and stakes would have been laid on his expected performance Without his involvement all bets were off and so the game was a non starter citation needed A controversial match took place on Monday 23 August 1731 when Thomas Chambers XI took on the Duke of Richmond s XI i e effectively a Middlesex v Sussex match at Richmond Green in a return match played for 200 guineas 29 It is notable in one sense as the earliest match of which the team scores are known Richmond s XI 79 Chambers XI 119 Richmond s XI 72 Chambers XI 23 5 approximately 30 31 The game ended promptly at a pre agreed time although Chambers XI with four or five more to have come in and needing about 8 to 10 notches clearly had the upper hand 30 31 The result caused a fracas among the crowd who were incensed by the prompt finish because the Duke of Richmond had arrived late and delayed the start of the game The riot resulted in some of the Sussex players having the shirts torn off their backs and it was said a law suit would commence about the play 32 On Wednesday 8 September the Daily Post Boy reported that on 6 September 11 of Surrey beat the 11 who about a fortnight ago beat the Duke of Richmond s men 32 This would suggest that the Duke of Richmond conceded his controversial game against Chambers XI 32 31 Middlesex patron Thomas Chambers was a probable forebear of Lord Frederick Beauclerk 29 A dispute arose over scheduled finishing time in the London v Middlesex match at the Artillery Ground on 13 September 1732 London batting last needed seven more runs to win with six wickets standing when a Middlesex player tried to terminate the game as a draw by claiming time was up According to the scorer s watch there were still several minutes to go The newspaper report said that the London players intended legal action as over 100 was at stake 33 There were two controversies in 1734 around non appearance by one of the teams London and Sevenoaks were due to meet at Kennington Common on 8 July but Sevenoaks did not turn up and were obliged to forfeit their deposit 33 In September London issued a challenge to play with any eleven men in England with this exception only that they will not admit of one from Croydon 34 There was a dispute between the London and Croydon clubs after the latter failed to appear for an arranged match 35 It is not known if the challenge match was played Other events editSection for collection of miscellaneous information from season articles being merged into this history1726 1735 edit There was an increasing use of county names in the 1720s Teams called Kent and Surrey had been recorded as far back as 1709 though they were probably not representative of the whole counties 36 In August 1726 a combined London and Surrey team hosted Edwin Stead s Kent XI on Kennington Common 25 In 1728 a Middlesex team played London and then in 1729 there was the first known use of Hampshire and Sussex in a team title albeit not individually In 1730 the first match took place between teams titled Surrey and Middlesex 16 In June 1728 the Swiss traveller Cesar Francois de Saussure noted in his journal the frequency with which he saw cricket being played while he was making his journeys across southern England He referred to county matches as a commonplace and wrote that everyone plays it the common people and also men of rank 37 If they were a commonplace they were also keenly contested to the point where winning teams would proclaim their county s superiority In August of the same year a game at Penshurst Park near Tonbridge between Kent and Sussex was won by Kent The teams were organised by Edwin Stead Kent and Sir William Gage Sussex Stead s team had earlier won two games against the 2nd Duke of Richmond s XI also representing Sussex and their victory over Gage s XI was reported as the third time this summer that the Kent men have been too expert for those of Sussex 38 39 40 In August 1729 there was a return match again at Penshurst Park between Stead s XI and Gage s XI alternatively titled Kent Stead s XI v Sussex Surrey amp Hampshire Gage s XI This was won by Gage s team apparently by the earliest known innings victory A match report singled out Thomas Waymark of Sussex for special praise saying that he turned the scale of victory which for some years past has been generally on the Kentish side 40 Also in 1728 there was a match in Lewes exact venue unknown between the Duke of Richmond s XI and Sir William Gage s XI 38 41 Records have been found of six eleven a side matches played in 1729 including the Stead v Gage return in August London and Dartford played each other twice Dartford won one but the result of the other is unknown A Kent county team played in three matches one against Sussex one against Surrey and one against a combined Hampshire Surrey and Sussex team 38 26 42 40 The earliest reference to cricket at the University of Oxford is dated 1673 43 and the sport was being played there in the summer of 1729 on the testimony of Dr Samuel Johnson who was then a student This was mentioned in James Boswell s Life of Samuel Johnson 44 Fifteen eleven a side matches were recorded in 1730 including ten which involved county teams 38 It is the first season from which details of more than a handful of matches have survived The brief report of a match between Kent and London refers to the Kentish champions losing their honours but the context is unclear and there was no county championship until well over a century later 22 Records of thirty eleven a side matches have been found for the 1731 season including one which ended in a riot see Controversies section below 45 46 Twelve games were recorded in 1732 eleven involving London A newspaper report in September stated that London played 13 matches in all and were unbeaten 32 This however is contradicted by a report in May stating that Croydon defeated London by great odds 32 In 1733 ten matches involved London and or a county team 33 45 Records have been found of seven matches in 1734 mostly involving London and Kent who played each other twice 45 47 48 Of nine matches recorded in 1735 London played in seven 45 1736 1740 edit In 1736 a total of 18 eleven a side games are on record with two single wicket ones The earliest known tied match result occurred in one of the single wicket games when the teams three of London and three of Surrey aggregated 23 runs each 49 The other single wicket game was two London players named as Wakeland and George Oldner against an unnamed pair from Richmond who were esteemed the best two in England One of the Richmond players suffered a serious facial injury when hit by the ball 50 Seven eleven a side games are known from 1737 all involving London 45 Some of the teams were sponsored by the Prince of Wales 51 There was crowd trouble at one match on Kennington Common between Kent and a combined London Surrey team Missiles were thrown and a man died a week later after being struck by a stone 52 53 The fixture was repeated twice in 1738 Kent won one and the other is an unknown result 45 52 There are seven known matches in 1739 including the first to involve a team representing the Rest of England It was billed as between eleven gentlemen of Kent and eleven gentlemen from any part of England exclusive of Kent 54 Kent won that game and a return match soon afterwards was drawn 55 56 Generally agreed to be the first modern representation of cricket a series of engravings The Game of Cricket was made by Hubert Francois Gravelot in 1739 The six engravings show groups of children playing cricket 57 with a wicket of the low stool shape probably 2 foot 0 61 m wide by 1 foot 0 30 m tall with two stumps and a single bail The engravings were used on porcelain 57 Gravelot helped to establish the French Rococo style in English publishing and was one of the most celebrated illustrators of the time 58 The earliest known mention of Slindon Cricket Club is in a letter dated 30 July 1740 from the Duke of Richmond to Thomas Pelham Holles 1st Duke of Newcastle a future prime minister 59 Eight matches are on record in 1740 all involving London 45 60 1741 1743 edit Main articles 1741 English cricket season 1742 English cricket season and 1743 English cricket season 1744 edit Main article 1744 English cricket season 1745 1747 edit Main articles 1745 English cricket season 1746 English cricket season and 1747 English cricket season 1748 1750 edit Main articles 1748 English cricket season 1749 English cricket season and 1750 English cricket seasonReferences edit a b Bowen 1970 p 262 Waghorn 1899 p 3 Maun 2009 p 46 Maun 2009 p 59 Waghorn 1906 p 27 Haygarth 1862 p vi Bowen 1970 p 50 Worrall Simon October 2006 The History of Cricket in the United States Smithsonian Magazine Washington DC Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 10 March 2021 Byrd William 1941 The Secret Diary of William Byrd of Westover Richmond Virginia Dietz Publishing pp 144 146 ISBN 978 04 05033 04 9 Buckley 1935 p 12 Altham 1962 p 32 Marshall 1961 pp 47 48 a b c Maun 2009 pp 213 214 McCann 2004 pp 6 7 Birley 1999 p 18 a b c d e f Maun 2009 p 44 Altham 1962 p 25 Altham H S 1978 Dates in Cricket History Wisden Cricketers Almanack London John Wisden amp Co Ltd Retrieved 11 March 2021 Major 2007 p 104 Major 2007 p 93 Maun 2009 p 33 a b Buckley 1935 p 4 Buckley 1935 p 11 Buckley 1935 p 7 a b Waghorn 1906 p 6 a b c Buckley 1935 p 3 Malcolm 2013 p 27 Malcolm 2013 p 20 a b Major 2007 p 56 a b Waghorn 1899 p 4 a b c Maun 2009 pp 51 52 a b c d e Buckley 1935 p 6 a b c Buckley 1935 p 8 Waghorn 1899 p 7 Maun 2009 pp 65 66 Buckley 1937 p 1 de Saussure Cesar Francois 1902 Letter XII In van Muyden Anne ed A Foreign View of England in the Reigns of George I and George II The Letters of Monsieur Cesar de Saussure to his Family London John Mussay a b c d ACS 1981 p 19 Maun 2009 p 37 a b c Waghorn 1906 p 7 McCann 2004 p 8 Maun 2009 pp 38 39 Maun 2009 p 15 Maun 2009 p 38 a b c d e f g ACS 1981 p 20 Other Matches in England in 1731 CricketArchive Retrieved 10 July 2021 Buckley 1935 p 9 Waghorn 1899 pp 6 7 Buckley 1935 p 13 Waghorn 1899 pp 13 14 Buckley 1935 p 14 a b Maun 2009 p 86 Waghorn 1899 p 19 Waghorn 1899 pp 22 23 Maun 2009 pp 95 96 Waghorn 1899 p 23 a b Lot 49 Hubert Francois Gravelot Archived 11 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine Christie s Retrieved 11 January 2019 Major 2007 pp 95 299 Maun 2009 p 99 Maun 2009 pp 98 100 Select bibliography editACS 1981 A Guide to Important Cricket Matches Played in the British Isles 1709 1863 Nottingham ACS Altham H S 1962 A History of Cricket Volume 1 to 1914 London George Allen amp Unwin ASIN B0014QE7HQ Ashley Cooper F S 1900 At the Sign of the Wicket Cricket 1742 1751 London Cricket Magazine OCLC 28863559 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Birley Derek 1999 A Social History of English Cricket London Aurum Press Ltd ISBN 978 18 54107 10 7 Bowen Rowland 1970 Cricket A History of its Growth and Development London Eyre amp Spottiswoode ISBN 978 04 13278 60 9 Buckley G B 1935 Fresh Light on 18th Century Cricket Birmingham Cotterell amp Co ISBN 978 19 00592 48 2 Buckley G B 1937 Fresh Light on pre Victorian Cricket Birmingham Cotterell amp Co ISBN 978 19 00592 49 9 Haygarth Arthur 1862 Frederick Lillywhite s Cricket Scores amp Biographies Volume 1 1744 1826 London Frederick Lillywhite Major John 2007 More Than A Game London HarperCollins ISBN 978 00 07183 64 7 Malcolm Dominic 2013 Globalizing Cricket London Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 18 49665 27 8 Marshall John 1961 The Duke who was Cricket London Frederick Muller Ltd ISBN 978 72 70010 74 8 Maun Ian 2009 From Commons to Lord s Volume One 1700 to 1750 Cambridge Roger Heavens ISBN 978 19 00592 52 9 McCann Tim 2004 Sussex Cricket in the Eighteenth Century Lewes Sussex Record Society ISBN 978 08 54450 55 8 Underdown David 2000 Start of Play Westminster Allen Lane ISBN 978 07 13993 30 1 Waghorn H T 1906 The Dawn of Cricket London Electric Press ISBN 978 09 47821 17 3 Waghorn H T 1899 Cricket Scores Notes amp c From 1730 1773 Edinburgh Blackwood ISBN 978 09 47821 17 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of English cricket 1726 1750 amp oldid 1160601747, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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