free counters

Tuesday, January 13

John McIlwraith (1857-1938) Test Cap # 43

© scotch.vic.edu.au
Full name John McIlwraith
Born September 7, 1857, Collingwood, Melbourne, Victoria
Died July 5, 1938, Camberwell, Melbourne, Victoria (aged 80 years 301 days)
Major teams Australia, Victoria
Batting style Right-hand bat

Profile
Born at Collingwood on 7 September 1857 (cricket records), 5 October 1857 (Scotch records) or 7 October 1857 (birth notice), he entered Scotch on 14 July 1873. When he left is unknown. He played one Test, on 12–14 August 1886 at The Oval. With fellow Old Scotch Collegian William Bruce, he scored two runs as a right-hander batting at six in a team total of just 68 in the first innings, and opened in the follow-on, scoring seven out of 149. In the same match the legendary W G Grace scored a then English record Test score of 170, with McIlwraith dropping a difficult chance at slip with Grace on 93.

Francis Henry Walters (1860-1922) Test Cap # 42

Full name Francis Henry Walters
Born February 9, 1860, East Melbourne, Victoria
Died June 1, 1922, at sea off Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra, India (aged 62 years 112 days)
Major teams Australia, New South Wales, Victoria
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
Francis Henry (Frank) Walters (9 February 1860 – 1 June 1922) was an Australian cricketer.
Walters was born in East Melbourne. He played in 1 Test in 1885 and later died in Mumbai.

Only Test Australia v England at Melbourne, Mar 21-25, 1885
First-class span 1880-1896

Patrick George McShane (1858-1903) Test Cap # 41

© records.ancestry.com
Full name Patrick George McShane
Born April 18, 1858, Keilor, Victoria
Died December 11, 1903, Kew, Melbourne, Victoria (aged 45 years 237 days)
Major teams Australia, Victoria
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Left-arm medium

Profile
Patrick George McShane (born 18 April 1858 at Keilor, Victoria; died 11 December 1903 at Kew, Victoria) was an Australian cricketer who played in 3 Test matches between 1885 and 1888.George McShane was a more than capable batsman and exceedingly accurate left-arm bowler who played three Tests against England, one each in 1884-85, 1886-87 and 1887-88, without any success.

John Worrall (1860-1937) Test Cap # 40

© Getty image

Full name John Worrall
Born June 20, 1861, Chinaman's Flat, Maryborough, Victoria
Died November 17, 1937, Fairfield Park, Melbourne, Victoria (aged 77 years 150 days)
Major teams Australia, Victoria
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm slow (roundarm)

Profile

© carlton.vic.cricket.com.au

John Jack Worrall was an Australian rules footballer for Fitzroy in the VFA and a test cricketer, a coach of both sports and a sporting journalist.A small, nuggety man with broad shoulders, pink complexion and intense brown eyes, Worrall was one of Australia's great all-round sports people of the nineteenth century, and was involved in Australian football and cricket at the elite level for many decades. After his retirement, he coached both sports, and is considered the "father" of Australian football coaching. Worrall had an extended career as a sporting journalist, and he was a highly respected member of the press box right up until his death in 1937. He was no stranger to conflict, and his forthright manner embroiled him in a number of sporting controversies throughout his lifetime.

Born on the Victorian Goldfields at Chinaman's Flat (now in the locality of Snake Valley near Maryborough, Worrall was the seventh child of Irish-born parents, Joseph and Ann. He attended state school in Maryborough, but moved to Ballarat in his early twenties. There, he came under notice playing cricket against the touring English team, which led to his selection for Victoria in 1883. Joining the South Ballarat Football Club, Worrall showed excellent potential and he was persuaded to move to Melbourne and play for the fledging Fitzroy club in 1884. At this stage, Fitzroy had just secured admission to the game's elite competition, the Victorian Football Association (VFA). Worrall became a major factor in the emergence of Fitzroy as a powerful team. During summer, he turned out for the Fitzroy Cricket Club.

John William Trumble (1863-1944) Test Cap # 39

© en.wikipedia.org
Full name John William Trumble
Born September 16, 1863, Collingwood, Melbourne, Victoria
Died August 17, 1944, Brighton, Melbourne, Victoria (aged 80 years 336 days)
Major teams Australia, Gentlemen of England, Victoria
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Profile
John William Trumble (16 September 1863 – 17 August 1944) was an Australian cricketer who played in 7 Tests between 1885 and 1886.He was the brother of Hugh Trumble.While never reaching the lofty standards of his brother he was a good off break bowler for Victoria and handy with the bat. He produced some useful performances in his seven Tests for Australia but nothing outstanding. He continued to be a good servant of Victorian cricket bowling some fine spells in domestic cricket.John studied law at the University of Melbourne and founded the firm of Trumble and Palmer at Nhill in country Victoria. The firm still exists. His cricket career was short as he chose to focus on his legal career.John married Susan Davies - they had 7 children.

William Roderick Robertson (1861-1938) Test Cap # 38

 

Full name William Roderick Robertson
Born October 6, 1861, Deniliquin, New South Wales
Died June 24, 1938, Brighton, Victoria (aged 76 years 261 days)
Major teams Australia, Victoria
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak

Profile
William Roderick Robertson was an Australian cricketer who played in one Test from 1 January to 5 January 1885.A native of the New South Wales town of Deniliquin, near the Victoria border, Digger Robertson was a right-handed batsman with a leg break bowling style. He made his first-class debut for Victoria against the English touring team in November 1884, taking 3 for 36 and 5 for 46.After the Australian team for the First Test in December refused to play in the Second Test, Robertson was one of eight Test debutants selected. However, he took no wickets, Australia lost, and along with four of the other debutants, he played no further Test cricket.

Roland James Pope (1864-1952) Test Cap # 37

© stats.cricketscotland.com

Full name Roland James Pope
Born February 18, 1864, Ashfield, Sydney, New South Wales
Died July 27, 1952, Manly, Sydney, New South Wales (aged 88 years 160 days)
Major teams Australia, Marylebone Cricket Club, New South Wales
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm slow (underarm)
Fielding position Occasional wicketkeeper

Profile
Roland James "Rowley" Pope was an Australian cricketer best known for representing the Australian national cricket team in one Test match in 1885, and later also known as an ophthalmologist and philanthropist. From Sydney, New South Wales, he was selected for the Test as the result of a player strike during the English tour of Australia during the 1884–85 season, and made three runs across his two innings. Having studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh, Pope was head of the ophthalmology section of Sydney Hospital for a period of 17 years, and was later involved in the establishment of the library and art gallery of the City of Newcastle.

Pope was born in Ashfield, a suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, on 18 February 1864, and educated at The Hutchins School in Hobart, Tasmania.His first recorded cricket matches were played for Sydney University's cricket team against Melbourne University in 1879 and 1881, though it is unknown if he actually attended the school.Partly as a result of scoring 170 not out for a Melbourne I Zingari team against the Richmond Cricket Club, Pope was selected to make his first-class debut for New South Wales against Victoria in late December 1884 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, and made what was to be his highest first-class score, 47 runs, in New South Wales' first innings.The English cricket team was touring the Australian colonies at the time, and the second Test match of the series was scheduled to be held in Melbourne beginning on 1 January 1885, two days after the conclusion of the New South Wales–Victoria game. A number of leading New South Wales players, including Jack Blackham, Harry Boyle, George Bonnor, and Percy McDonnell objected to the payment arrangements for the tour, and boycotted the first and second Tests in protest at what they perceived at unfair treatment. The Victorian Cricket Association was forced to choose a team comprising nine debutants (including Pope) for the Test, with Tom Horan as captain.In the match, Pope batted at number six in both innings, making a duck in the first innings and three runs in the second innings of what was to be his only Test.

Henry Alfred Musgrove (1858-1931) Test Cap # 36

Full name Henry Alfred Musgrove
Born November 27, 1858, Surbiton, Surrey, England
Died November 2, 1931, Darlinghurst, Sydney, New South Wales (aged 72 years 340 days)
Major teams Australia, Victoria
Batting style Right-hand bat

Profile
Henry Alfred Musgrove was an Australian theatrical manager and cricketer who played in one Test in 1885.Harry Musgrove was born in England, and his family moved to Australia when he was a small boy.He grew up in Geelong. His father was an accountant, but his mother came from a theatrical background.He and his brothers established a theatrical management firm in Melbourne. They amalgamated with the J. C. Williamson company after a cricket match between the two companies in the 1880s.

Musgrove played with the East Melbourne Cricket Club from 1879 to 1892, scoring 2899 runs at an average of 28, including several centuries.He was an elegant batsman. The journalist and former Test cricketer Tom Horan described one of his innings as "an admirable, fantastic, faultless exhibition of batting. Looking at Musgrove hitting a fiver, it seems the simplest thing in the world to go and do likewise, his manner of making the stroke is so easy, so devoid of anything like exercise of strength."

His theatrical work prevented his playing much first-class cricket.He played a match for Victoria in 1881–82; then, when he was in Ballarat on theatrical business in December 1884, he was selected to play for the local team against the touring English team. He scored 109, and when a few days later most of the Australian Test players withdrew from the Second Test in a dispute with the authorities over pay, he was selected as one of the replacements. He was not successful.He was one of the five Australians for whom this match would be their only Test.

Harry Musgrove, centre of back row, manager of the 1896 Australian cricket team He was the successful manager of the Australian team in England in 1896, "where his tact and courtesy contributed significantly to a harmonious tour".He also managed the Australian baseball team that toured America in 1897.Musgrove managed the major Melbourne theatres the Theatre Royal and the Princess Theatre. He managed the Australian and New Zealand tours of Nellie Stewart.

Musgrove wrote a series of memoirs for the Melbourne weekly Table Talk that appeared between 12 August 1926 and 25 November 1926 with the title "Stage Secrets". While mostly concerned with his theatrical career, they also covered his cricketing days as player and manager. Musgrove died at his home in the Sydney suburb of Darlinghurst in November 1931. His wife predeceased him, but he was survived by two sons and a daughter.

Only Test Australia v England at Melbourne, Jan 1-5, 1885
First-class span 1881-1888

Samuel Morris (1855-1931) Test Cap # 35

© australiancricketsociety.com
Full name Samuel Morris
Born June 22, 1855, Hobart, Tasmania
Died September 20, 1931, Albert Park, Melbourne, Victoria (aged 76 years 90 days)
Major teams Australia, Victoria
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
Sam Morris was the first black Test cricketer and the only one to play for Australia. He was born in Tasmania, according to some reports the son of West Indian parents attracted by the gold-rush, became recognised as a wicket-keeper there and moved into first-class cricket as a batsman and medium-paced bowler after becoming appointed curator at the St Kilda ground in Melbourne. He played his only Test, at Melbourne in 1884-85, after the entire team from the previous Test had pulled out after a row about their share of the gate money. The team was predictably beaten buf Morris dismissed two of England's top three and opened the batting in the first innings, when he was out for four. He remained a regular player for Victoria for the next eight years. He was curator at South Melbourne for 30 years from 1887, giving up only when he lost his sight.

Only Test Australia v England at Melbourne, Jan 1-5, 1885
First-class span 1881-1893

Alfred Percy Marr (1862-1940) Test Cap # 34

Full name Alfred Percy Marr
Born March 28, 1862, Pyrmont, Sydney, New South Wales
Died March 15, 1940, Arncliffe, New South Wales (aged 77 years 353 days)
Major teams Australia, New South Wales
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
Alfred Marr, who died at Sydney in March, aged 77, played for the Combined XI of Australia in one of four such matches against Arthur Shrewsbury's side in 1885. A useful batsman and bowler for New South Wales, he was chosen three times to come to England, but was never able to accept the invitation. So well did he maintain his ability that when 67 years of age, in grade competition match at Sydney, he scored 101.

Only Test Australia v England at Melbourne, Jan 1-5, 1885
First-class span 1882-1891

Arthur Harwood Jarvis (1860-1933) Test Cap # 33

© En.wikipedia.org
Full name Arthur Harwood Jarvis
Born October 19, 1860, Hindmarsh, Adelaide, South Australia
Died November 15, 1933, Hindmarsh, Adelaide, South Australia (aged 73 years 27 days)
Major teams Australia, South Australia
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

Profile
Arthur Harwood ("Affie") Jarvis (19 October 1860 in Hindmarsh, South Australia – 15 November 1933 in Hindmarsh, South Australia) was an Australian wicket-keeper who played for Australia and South Australia.His Test cricket debut was against England at the MCG on 15 January 1885 and his last Test was also against England at the same ground on 1 March 1895.

Jarvis is most unlucky that his time clashed with Jack Blackham The Prince of Wicketkeepers, who held down the spot in the Australian Test Team that Jarvis would probably otherwise have had.Nonetheless Jarvis had a fantastic career as the wicketkeeper for South Australia, and despite the presence of Blackham still played 11 Tests for Australia and toured England.

Test debut Australia v England at Melbourne, Jan 1-5, 1885
Last Test Australia v England at Melbourne, Mar 1-6, 1895
First-class span 1877-1901

William Bruce (1864-1925) Test Cap # 32

© En.wikipedia.org
Full name William Bruce
Born May 22, 1864, South Yarra, Melbourne, Victoria
Died August 3, 1925, Elwood, St Kilda, Melbourne, Victoria (aged 61 years 73 days)
Major teams Australia, Victoria
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Left-arm medium

Profile
The 1893 Australian team to England, © Getty Images
William Bruce (24 May 1864 in South Yarra, Victoria – 3 August 1925 in Elwood, Victoria) was an Australian cricketer who played in 14 Tests between 1885 and 1895.

He made his debut in the second match of 1884/85 series when 10 of the Australian players went on strike. Bruce a gifted left-hander from Victoria had a very good Test average of 29 for his era and while never making a Test century he established himself a reputation as a batsman of note.

William Bruce was the first Australian southpaw to tour England. Whether opening or in the middle order, he was a real dasher, but his uncertain defence left him vulnerable. He played some fine innings, though, most notably a delightful 80 at Adelaide in 1894-95. He was also a useful medium-pacer, and seven of his 12 Test victims were out bowled. He later became a solicitor. Bruce was found drowned in his native Melbourne in 1925.

Test debut Australia v England at Melbourne, Jan 1-5, 1885
Last Test Australia v England at Melbourne, Mar 1-6, 1895
First-class span 1882-1904