1770 English cricket season

Only four match reports have been found from the 1770 English cricket season. Hambledon continued to be successful.

Matches

Date Match Title Venue Result
5 June (Tu) Brentford & Richmond v Essex [1] Richmond Green result unknown

Announced in the Whitehall Evening Post on Thursday 7 June but no match details were reported.

20 & 21 August (M-Tu) London & Middlesex v Surrey [2] Artillery Ground result unknown

No details are known.

11 September (Tu) Chertsey v Hampton [3] Moulsey Hurst result unknown

The General Evening Post on Sat 8 September announced: Mr Garrick has given two silver cups to be played for at Cricket between Chertsey and Hampton next Tuesday on Moulsey Hurst.

4 & 5 October (Th-F) Hambledon v Caterham [4] Broadhalfpenny Down Hambledon won by 57 runs

Hambledon scored 104 and 105; Caterham replied with 74 and 78. No other details are known.

Other events

Tues 26 June. The Middlesex Journal on Thurs 29 June reported the death of a Mr Johnson, who was a goldsmith at London Wall. His death was "occasioned by a blow which he received from a cricket ball on Thurs 21 June near Islington".[1]

There was a notice in the General Evening Post dated Tues 7 August that "His Majesty (i.e., George III) has given a silver cup to be played for at cricket on the 20th inst. on Richmond Green, on account of the Princes having been much pleased with a Cricket match there on Mon. last".[3] No details of either match have been found.

In the year of the so-called "Boston Massacre", which occurred on Mon 5 March, there was a report in the Middlesex Journal on Thurs 16 August that: "about three days before the meeting of Parliament, a grand Cricket Match will be played by 11 of the Ministry against 11 of the Patriots, when great sport is expected".[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 G B Buckley, Fresh Light on 18th Century Cricket, Cotterell, 1935
  2. Cricket Quarterly
  3. 1 2 G B Buckley, Fresh Light on Pre-Victorian Cricket, Cotterell, 1937
  4. The match details were recorded by Sussex lawyer John Baker, who was a spectator, in his diary.

Bibliography

Additional reading

External links

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