Raleigh Chichester-Constable

Raleigh Chichester-Constable
Personal information
Full name Raleigh Charles Joseph Chichester-Constable
Born (1890-12-21)21 December 1890
Great Marlow, Buckinghamshire, England
Died 25 June 1963(1963-06-25) (aged 72)
Burton Constable, Yorkshire, England
Batting style Right-handed
Bowling style Right-arm fast
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1935 Minor Counties
19261927 Marylebone Cricket Club
1919 Yorkshire
Career statistics
Competition First-class
Matches 24
Runs scored 152
Batting average 8.94
100s/50s /
Top score 47*
Balls bowled 413
Wickets 4
Bowling average 60.75
5 wickets in innings
10 wickets in match
Best bowling 2/42
Catches/stumpings 7/
Source: Cricinfo, 20 March 2011

Raleigh Charles Joseph Chichester-Constable (21 December 1890 26 May 1963)[1] was an English first-class cricketer, who played for Yorkshire, MCC and the Minor Counties, in an intermittent career which spanned sixteen years from 1919 to 1935.

Career

Born in Great Marlow, Buckinghamshire, he changed his surname from Chichester to Chichester-Constable in January 1895.

A right-handed batsman and right arm fast bowler, he played in 24 first-class matches, scoring a total of 152 runs at 8.94, with a top score of 47 not out, and he took 4 wickets at 60.74. His only match for Yorkshire came in the game against Essex at The Circle, Kingston upon Hull, in July 1919. Batting at number 11 he scored a duck in Yorkshire's first innings of 241, and bowled four overs without success for six runs, as Essex were beaten by an innings and 58 runs.[1]

He played for the Army against the Navy in a first-class match in 1921, taking a career best 2 for 42 as the Army won by 10 wickets, and he took 1 for 35 for the Free Foresters against Cambridge University at Fenners two years later.

The bulk of his first class experience came on a five-month winter tour of India undertaken by the Marylebone Cricket Club. in 1926/27. Chichester-Constable played against the Muslims and Parsees, the Hindus and The Rest, The Europeans, Rawalpindi, the Army, Southern Punjab, Northern Punjab, Rajputana and Bombay Baroda & Central India Railways, the Europeans and Parsees, the Hindus and Muslims, Rangoon Gymkhana, Burma, an Indian XI, Madras, the Ceylonese, Aligarh University Past and Present and Patiala.

He reappeared for two more matches in 1935, playing for the Minor Counties against both Oxford University and Cambridge University.

He became a farmer and briefly entered politics as an Independent candidate at the Holderness by-election, 1939.

Chichester-Constable died in May 1963 in Burton Constable, East Riding of Yorkshire, England.

References

  1. 1 2 Warner, David (2011). The Yorkshire County Cricket Club: 2011 Yearbook (113th ed.). Ilkley, Yorkshire: Great Northern Books. p. 366. ISBN 978-1-905080-85-4.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.