Richmond Cricket Club, Surrey

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Richmond Cricket Club
Founded: 1862
Home ground: Old Deer Park
Official website: www.richmondcricketclub.com

Richmond Cricket Club was based in Richmond (historically part of Surrey and now in London) and was a leading club during the 18th century. Its home venue was at Richmond Green. The current Richmond club was founded in 1862 and now plays in the Middlesex County Cricket League as one of London's largest and most successful amateur clubs. Its home venue is in the Old Deer Park at Richmond.[1]

Earliest mentions

Richmond is first recorded as a major team in July 1720. In June 1736, two of its players challenged a London duo in a single wicket contest. The two Richmond players were unnamed in the newspaper report but were nevertheless "esteemed the best two in England" and so one of them is believed to have been William Sawyer.[2][3]

1740s

In 1740, a combined Richmond and Moulsey team played two matches against London. The first was incomplete due to rain and the second was won by London.[4][5] In 1742, Richmond played London at the Artillery Ground "for a considerable sum" but the result is unknown.[6]

The poet James Love, well known in cricket circles for his Cricket: An Heroic Poem (1744), was a playing member of the Richmond club but probably the greatest ever Richmond player was his team-mate, the innkeeper William Sawyer. He had by this time established himself as "one of the best six players in England" and was a regular choice for big single wicket contests such as the one in 1743 between Three of Kent and Three of All-England.[7] In the same year, there were two more single wicket contests between Five of Richmond and Five of London, one game on Richmond Green and the return at the Artillery Ground.[8] In July 1743, Richmond twice played London in first-class fixtures and were beaten each time, but London needed to have the great Kent player Robert Colchin as a given man.

Richmond played London in a first-class match on Kennington Common in July 1744 but the result is unknown.[9] Richmond evidently declined in the latter half of the 1740s as there are no further references to the club apart from one match in 1749 when a Richmond & Ripley XI played London at the Artillery Ground, but again the result is unknown.[10] By 1751, Richmond was playing minor matches only.[11]

Turn of century revival

The club continued to play inter-parish matches until the end of the 18th century and saw something of a revival between 1799 and 1805 when it had a team of near first-class standard that played matches against clubs like Montpelier Cricket Club and Homerton Cricket Club.[12]

The original Richmond club went out of existence sometime in the 19th century, possibly during the Napoleonic Wars as there is no record of it after 1805.

References

  1. Richmond CC website. Retrieved on 14 July 2009.
  2. Waghorn, p.20.
  3. From Lads to Lord's – 1736. Retrieved 14 July 2009.
  4. Waghorn, p.24.
  5. Buckley, p.16.
  6. Ashley-Cooper, 1742
  7. From Lads to Lord's – 1743. Retrieved 14 July 2009.
  8. Ashley-Cooper, 1743
  9. Buckley, p.19.
  10. Ashley-Cooper, 1749
  11. From Lads to Lord's – 1751. Retrieved 14 July 2009.
  12. Arthur Haygarth, Scores & Biographies, Volume 1 (1744–1826), Lillywhite, 1862

Bibliography

  • F. S. Ashley-Cooper, At the Sign of the Wicket: Cricket 1742-1751, Cricket Magazine, 1900
  • G. B. Buckley, Fresh Light on 18th Century Cricket, Cotterell, 1935
  • H. T. Waghorn, Cricket Scores, Notes, etc. (1730-1773), Blackwood, 1899

External links