1799 English cricket season

1799 was the 13th season of cricket in England since the foundation of Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC). Surrey again defeated All-England three times. As in the previous year, the number of matches may have declined due to the impact of the Napoleonic War. Fewer were reported but there was loose censorship in place. A cricket club was formed at Seringapatam in south India after the successful British siege.

1799 English cricket season

Matches

Date Match Title Venue Source Result
10–11 June (M-Tu) MCC v Thursday Club ^ Lord's (Dorset Square) SB252 Thursday Club won by 54 runs
17–18 June (M-Tu) Montpelier v Richmond & Brentford # Montpelier Gardens SB253 Montpelier won by 91 runs
24–26 June (M-W) MCC v Thursday Club ^ Lord's (Dorset Square) SB254 MCC won by 41 runs

^ The two MCC games against its own Thursday Club are important matches as the majority of players on each side are recognised. The Thursday Club was effectively Middlesex.

27–28 June (Th-F) Richmond & Brentford v Montpelier # Richmond Green SB254 Montpelier won by 148 runs

# The Montpelier v Richmond and Brentford games in S&B (p. 253-255) were important matches despite some "unknowns" in the Richmond & Brentford sides and the results went convincingly in favour of Montpelier. The match status dilemma is almost solved by MCC games against similar sides since 1797. Thus, if a good quality town club with given men or at any rate a full team of recognised players competes against a good quality MCC side (or against All-England or a recognised county team), that is an important match. If it is a case of two such town clubs playing each other without a good number of noted given men, the game is probably not important.

30 July - 1 Aug (Tu-Th) All-England v Surrey Lord's (Dorset Square) SB259 Surrey won by 8 wkts
1-3 Aug (Th-S) R Whitehead v Lord Yarmouth Lord's (Dorset Square) SB259 Yarmouth's XI won by 4 wkts

Evidently the Whitehead v Yarmouth game was arranged ad hoc on 1 Aug as the All-England v Surrey game finished on the same day (most of the players took part in both games)

13-16 Aug (Tu-F) All-England v Surrey Lord's (Dorset Square) SB262 Surrey won by 143 runs
16-17 Aug (F-S) All-England v Surrey Lord's (Dorset Square) SB263 Surrey won by innings & 117 runs

Another case of an extra game starting immediately that the first one finished. There is some doubt about the exact date of the second game which ACS have on the 15th as S&B states that the first game carried over to the 16th.

16-17 Sept (M-Tu) Waltham & Herts v Middlesex Waltham Abbey WDC drawn
23-24 Sept (M-Tu) Middlesex v Waltham & Herts Lord's (Dorset Square) FL18 Middlesex won by 3 runs

In both these two games, Waltham & Herts was a minor team. Herts played several games in late C18 but needed given men.

First mentions

Counties

Clubs and teams

    Players

    • Hockley (Surrey cricketer) (Surrey/Hampshire) played 8 matches from 1799 to 1805
    • Woodroffe (Surrey cricketer) (MCC and Surrey; amateur) played 4 matches in 1799 & 1800
    • Stephen Lushington (cricketer) (Surrey; amateur) played 3 matches in 1799

    Venues

      Leading batsmen

      Note that many scorecards in the 18th century are unknown or have missing details and so it is impossible to provide a complete analysis of batting performances: e.g., the missing not outs prevent computation of batting averages. The "runs scored" are in fact the runs known.

      With few matches being played, only six batsmen exceeded 150 runs:

      Tom Walker 239
      Jack Small 235
      John Wells 231
      Robert Robinson 227
      John Hammond 192
      William Beldham 179

      Leading bowlers

      Note that the wickets credited to an 18th-century bowler were only those where he bowled the batsman out. The bowler was not credited with the wickets of batsmen who were caught out, even if it was "caught and bowled". In addition, the runs conceded by each bowler were not recorded so no analyses or averages can be computed.

      The leading wicket-taker was Thomas Lord with 16

      Other top bowlers were John Wells 15; Thomas Boxall 13; Charles Cumberland 11; John Hammond 9

      Leading fielders

      Note that many scorecards in the 18th century are unknown or have missing details and so the totals are of the known catches and stumpings only. Stumpings were not always recorded as such and sometimes the name of the wicket-keeper was not given. Generally, a catch was given the same status as "bowled" with credit being awarded to the fielder only and not the bowler. There is never a record of "caught and bowled": the bowler would be credited with the catch, not with the wicket.

      John Wells with 10 ct, 5 st was the leading performer in the field

      Thomas Ray took 10 ct and other good fielders were Charles Warren 2 ct, 6 st; John Hammond 4 ct, 3 st; Thomas Burgoyne 7 ct; William Barton 7 ct

      References

        Bibliography

        • Buckley, G. B. (1935). Fresh Light on 18th Century Cricket. Cotterell.
        • Haygarth, Arthur (1862). Scores & Biographies, Volume 1 (1744–1826). Lillywhite.
        • Waghorn, H. T. (1906). The Dawn of Cricket. Electric Press.
        • Wilson, Martin (2005). An Index to Waghorn. Bodyline.

        Further reading

        • ACS (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). George Allen & Unwin.
        • Birley, Derek (1999). A Social History of English Cricket. Aurum.
        • Bowen, Rowland (1970). Cricket: A History of its Growth and Development. Eyre & Spottiswoode.
        • Britcher, Samuel, A list of all the principal Matches of Cricket that have been played (1790 to 1805), annual series
        • Buckley, G. B. (1937). Fresh Light on pre-Victorian Cricket. Cotterell.
        • McCann, Tim (2004). Sussex Cricket in the Eighteenth Century. Sussex Record Society.
        • Major, John (2007). More Than A Game. HarperCollins.
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