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Monday, March 27

Francis Alexander MacKinnon (1848-1947) Test Cap # 17

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Full name Francis Alexander MacKinnon
Born April 9, 1848, Paddington, London
Died February 27, 1947, Drumduan, Forres, Morayshire, Scotland (aged 98 years 324 days)
Major teams England, Cambridge University, Kent
Batting style Right-hand bat

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The MacKinnon of Mackinnon (35th Chief Of The Mackinnon Clan), the title to which Francis Alexander Mackinnon succeeded on the death of his father in 1903, passed away at his home, Drumduan, in Forres, Morayshire, on February 27. He would have been 99 years old on April 9. As it was he reached a greater age than attained by any other first-class cricketer, surpassing that of Herbert Jenner-Fust Cambridge captain in the first match with Oxford in 1827, who died in 1904 when his exact age was 98 years 5 months and 7 days. MacKinnon was within forty days of 99 years at his passing.

Alfred Perry Lucas (1857-1923) Test Cap # 16

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Full name Alfred Perry Lucas
Born February 20, 1857, Westminster, London
Died October 12, 1923, Great Waltham, Essex (aged 66 years 234 days)
Major teams England, Cambridge University, Essex, Middlesex, Surrey
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm slow

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Bunny Lucas had a reputation as an ultra-cautious opening batsman, but was regarded by contemporaries as anything but dull thanks to his exquisite footwork and textbook technique. He was also a useful round-arm slow bowler. Uppingham educated, he won Blues for four years for Cambridge, and in a first-class career which extended 33 years he played for three counties - Surrey, Middlesex and Essex.

Albert Neilson Hornby (1847-1925) Test Cap # 15

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Full name Albert Neilson Hornby
Born February 10, 1847, Brook House, Blackburn, Lancashire
Died December 17, 1925, Nantwich, Cheshire (aged 78 years 310 days)
Major teams England, Lancashire
Batting style Right-hand bat

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Albert Neilson Hornby, commonly designated A. N. Hornby, nicknamed Monkey Hornby (Blackburn, Lancashire, 10 February 1847 – 17 December 1925 in Nantwich, Cheshire) was one of the best known sportsmen in England during the nineteenth century excelling in both rugby and cricket. He was the first of only two men to captain the country at both rugby and cricket but is also remembered as the England cricket captain whose side lost the Test match which gave rise to the Ashes, at home against the Australians in 1882. Additionally, he played football for Blackburn Rovers.

He was the sixth son of William Henry Hornby, a cotton mill proprietor and director of the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway who was Member of Parliament (MP) for Blackburn from 1857 to 1865. His brothers, Edward and William, were also MPs for Blackburn from 1869 to 1874, and from 1886 to 1910 respectively. Edward and another brother Cecil also played first-class cricket. Albert attended Harrow School and from there returned to Lancashire to join the family business.

Whilst at Harrow, his family had moved to Shrewbridge Hall, Nantwich, Cheshire, and he first played cricket for that county in 1862 and played in 20 matches between then and 1876. His club cricket was for the East Lancashire Club, Blackburn and he was first tried for Lancashire County Cricket Club in 1867. It was with his county that he was to play his finest cricket. He went on to play for Lancashire for 33 years, 17 as captain (in 1879–1893 and 1897–1898). For many years he provided an ideal attacking foil to the careful defence of his opening partner,

Leland Hone (1853-1896) Test Cap # 14

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Full name Leland Hone
Born January 30, 1853, Dublin, Ireland
Died December 31, 1896, St Stephen's Green, Dublin, Ireland (aged 43 years 336 days)
Major teams England, Marylebone Cricket Club
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

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Leland Hone (30 January 1853 in Dublin, Ireland – 31 December 1896 in Dublin, Ireland was a cricketer who played for both England and Ireland, in addition to playing first-class cricket for the MCC.A right-handed batsman and wicket-keeper,Hone made his debut for Ireland in August 1875 playing against I Zingari. He played three more matches against I Zingari in August of each of the following three years, scoring 74 not out in 1877, his highest score for Ireland.In 1878, he made his first-class debut, playing for the MCC against Cambridge University. After one more game against Oxford University he was chosen to tour Australia under the captaincy of Lord Harris.

George Robert Canning Harris (1851-1932) Test Cap #13

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Full name George Robert Canning Harris
Born February 3, 1851, St Anne's, Trinidad
Died March 24, 1932, Belmont, Faversham, Kent (aged 81 years 50 days)
Major teams England, Kent, Oxford University
Batting style Right-hand bat

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© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Lord Harris was perhaps the single most influential man to have been involved in cricket, as a player and then more significantly as an administrator. He rebuilt Kent, led a side to the USA and Canada and then captained the fifth side to tour Australia in 1878-79. In 1880 he assembled and captained the England XI for the first Test in the country. He was governor of Bombay from 1890 to 1895, during which time he did much to lay down foundations for the expansion of the game in India. On his return he overshadowed the game, fighting on behalf of professionals and leading the campaign to stamp out throwing. He was also a stickler for the Laws and was particular obsessive about players qualifications for representing counties. Those who crossed him - and there were many - found him autocratic and intolerant, but there was no questioning his influence. Outside cricket he was a leading politician, serving as under-secretary of state for India and then under-secretary of state for War.

Charles Alfred Absolom (1846-1889) Test Cap #12

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Full name Charles Alfred Absolom
Born June 7, 1846, Blackheath, Kent
Died July 30, 1889, Port of Spain, Trinidad (aged 43 years 53 days)
Major teams England, Cambridge University, Kent
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

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Charles Alfred Absolom played cricket for Cambridge University, Kent and England in the period from 1866 to 1879.Absolom was born at Blackheath, Kent, the son of Edward Absolom. He was educated at a school in Calne, Wiltshire and at Trinity College, Cambridge and was awarded cricket and athletics Blues at Cambridge University.He was nicknamed "Cambridge Navvy", presumably because of his physique.In 18 matches for the university he took over 100 wickets, and played in the Varsity Match in 1866, 1867, 1868 and 1869. He took 27 wickets in the four matches and was on the winning Cambridge side in 1868 and 1869.

George Ulyett (1851-1898) Test Cap # 11

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Full name George Ulyett
Born October 21, 1851, Crabtree, Pitsmoor, Sheffield, Yorkshire
Died June 18, 1898, Pitsmoor, Sheffield, Yorkshire (aged 46 years 240 days)
Major teams England, Yorkshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast (roundarm)

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© Wisden Cricket Monthly
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George Ulyett died on Saturday evening, June 18th. He was only in his forty-seventh year, his last season in the Yorkshire eleven being 1893. His health had been failing for some time, but the immediate cause of death was an acute attack of pneumonia, contracted at Bramall Lane during the Yorkshire and Kent match. Yorkshire has always been rich in first-rate cricketers, but a finer player than Ulyett the county has never produced.

He was for years the best bat in the team, and even if he had not been able to get a run he would have been worth his place for his bowling and fielding. His career for the county extended over a period of twenty years, his first appearance in the eleven dating back to July, 1873. It was seen at once that a player of remarkable gifts had been discovered, and before very long he was at the top of the tree. To begin with, if one remembers rightly, he was played as much for his fast bowling as for his batting. One talent, however, developed to a much greater extent than the other, and in two or three seasons he was quite as good a bat as Ephraim Lockwood, who, when Ulyett came out, was the bright particular star of the Yorkshire eleven. Once having established his position Ulyett never looked back. There was no doubt his class as a batsman after his first visit to Australia with James Lillywhite's team in the winter of 1876-77, and from that time till 1891 he was always in the front rank. Of course, like other great batsmen, he did much better in some seasons than others, but he never lost his place as a representative cricketer.

James Southerton (1827-1880) Test Cap # 10

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Full name James Southerton
Born November 16, 1827, Petworth, Sussex
Died June 16, 1880, Mitcham, Surrey (aged 52 years 213 days)
Major teams England, Hampshire, Surrey, Sussex
Batting style Right-hand bat
Relation Son - SJ Southerton

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James Southerton played first-class cricket between 1854 and 1879.In 1876-77 he toured Australia as part of James Lillywhite's side. This led to him playing in the two first-ever Test matches. Southerton was 49 years 119 days old when he made his Test debut, making him the oldest ever Test debutant, a record unlikely to ever be beaten. In 1880, he also became the first Test cricketer to die. However, as the games were not designated as official Test matches till much later, Southerton never knew about any of his records.

Alfred Shaw (1842-1907) Test Cap No:Test Cap # 9

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Full name Alfred Shaw
Born August 29, 1842, Burton Joyce, Nottinghamshire
Died January 16, 1907, Gedling, Nottinghamshire (aged 64 years 140 days)
Major teams England, Nottinghamshire, Sussex
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm slow
Other Umpire

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© The Cricketer International
Alred Shaw, after a long illness, died at his home, Gedling, near Nottingham, on January 16th. In him there passed away one of the greatest figures in modern cricket. His connection with the game lasted more than forty years, only ending in 1905, when, despite shattered health, he managed somehow to get through his duties as one of the umpires in county matches. It was felt, however, that he no longer possessed the strength for the work, and when the county captains met at Lord's to select the umpires for the following season, his name was omitted from the list. Born at Burton Joyce on August 29th, 1842, Alfred Shaw played his first match at Lord's in 1864 for the Colts of England against the M. C. C. and Ground.

The Colts were beaten by ten runs, but Shaw did great things, taking thirteen wickets and dividing the honours of the game with the late William Oscroft, who,also appearing at Lord's for the first time, scored 51 and 76. Both men were at once given places in the Notts eleven, and in the following year Alfred Shaw had the distinction of being picked for Players against Gentlemen, both at Lord's and the Oval. In this early part of his career Shaw's bowling was faster than in later years, and he was essentially an all-round man. Indeed, so good was his batting that in the Gentlemen and Players' match at the Oval in 1866 he made a score of 70. His great days began about 1870 or 1871. With a decrease of speed he got far more spin and break on the ball, and from 1872 to 1880 he was, beyond all question, the best slow bowler in England. After his first trip to Australia he was laid aside in the season of 1877 by a severe attack of bronchitis, but otherwise his success was uninterrupted. After being on the M. C. C.'s ground staff from 1865 to 1867, inclusive, he had a year with the All Egland Eleven, but in 1870, he returned to Lord's, and for the M. C. C. and Notts most of his best work was done. His position as the leading bowler of his day once established he paid less regard to batting, contending that no bowler who wished to remain for any length of time at his best ought to get many runs. For his self-denial in this respect he was well rewarded, his form with the ball being uniformly good till he was close upon forty years of age

John Selby (1849-1894) Test Cap # 8

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Full name John Selby
Born July 1, 1849, Nottingham
Died March 11, 1894, Standard Hill, Nottingham (aged 44 years 253 days)
Major teams England, Nottinghamshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

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A middle-order batsman, John Selby played professionally for Nottinghamshire between 1870 and 1887 and in 1878 he heading the averages with 938 runs at average of 31.82. Selby toured Australia in 1876-77 and 1881-82, playing a total of six Test matches on those tours, including the first of all at Melbourne in March 1877, and he also toured North America in 1879. Like many contemporaries, he became a pub landlord on retirement, but his financial dealings were unsuccessful. He died after suffering a paralytic stroke.

James Lillywhite junior (1842-1929) Test Cap # 7

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Full name James Lillywhite junior
Born February 23, 1842, Westhampnett, Sussex
Died October 25, 1929, Westerton, Chichester, Sussex (aged 87 years 244 days)
Major teams England, Sussex
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox
Other Umpire

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© guardian.co.uk
Jim Lillywhite was a slow left-armer with a high and accurate delivery, a hard-hitting lower-order batsman and a sound fielder. He came from a notable cricketing family - five close relations had played for Sussex - and between 1862 and 1881 he appeared in all of Sussex's matches. He toured Australia six times, captaining England in the inaugural Test of 1876-77 (he was the last survivor of that match and outlived the rest of his team by seven years). He also toured America in 1868 and for some years was secretary of the United South of England XI as well as being a more than capable umpire.Jim Lillywhite Junior, born at West Hampnett, Sussex, on February 23, 1842, died at Westerton, Chichester, on October 25,aged 87. He was the last survivor of the team which, under his captaincy, went to Australia in the winter of 1876-77, and played what is now known as the first Test Match against Australia. There had been previous combinations to tour that country, but not until March, 1877, did the Australians regard themselves as strong enough to engage an English eleven on level terms. That their faith in themselves was justified is proved by the fact that they won by 45 runs, but in the return match played just afterwards England, who on the previous occasion had been compelled to take the field without a regular wicket-keeper, were successful by four wickets. Of the twenty-two men who took part in that historic game there are now only three left, and they are all in Australia--Charles Bannerman, J. McCarthy Blackham, and Tom Garrett.

Henry Jupp (1841-1889) Test Cap # 6

 

Full name Henry Jupp
Born November 19, 1841, Dorking, Surrey
Died April 8, 1889, Bermondsey, London (aged 47 years 140 days)
Major teams England, Surrey
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

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© ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Harry Jupp was a broad-shouldered opening batsman for Surrey whose strong defensive technique earned him the sobriquet of 'Young Stonewaller.' He opened the batting in the first two Tests, in 1876-77, and top-scored for England with 63 in the first innings at Melbourne. A reliable fielder in the outfield or a cover point, he turned out for Surrey for 19 years before retiring at the end of 1881.

Allen Hill (1843-1910) Test Cap # 5


The Yorkshire team in 1875 was captained by Joseph Rowbotham. Back row: G. Martin (umpire), John Thewlis. Middle row: George Pinder, George Ulyett, Tom Armitage, Joseph Rowbotham, Allen Hill, Andrew Greenwood. Front row: Tom Emmett, John Hicks, Ephraim Lockwood, Charlie Ullathorne.
© En.wikipedia.org

Full name Allen Hill

Born November 14, 1843, Newton, Kirkheaton, Huddersfield, Yorkshire
Died August 28, 1910, Leyland, Lancashire (aged 66 years 287 days)
Major teams England, Yorkshire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast (roundarm)

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A very fine right-arm fast bowler whose career was beset by injuries, Allen Hill bowled with an action close to round-arm - despite debuting well after the change in the laws that permitted over-arm bowling. His action was described by Wisden as "one of the best of its kind that can be recalled", and he bowled quite fast from a short run up. He came to prominence for Yorkshire in 1871, when he took 12 Surrey wickets for only 53 runs at The Oval. He was probably at his best in 1874, when halfway through the season he met with an accident that caused him to miss the rest of the season - but not before performing the hat-trick for the Players against the Gentlemen.

In 1876-77 he toured Australia, playing in the first Test of all. Opening the bowling for England, Hill took the first-ever Test wicket when he bowled Thomson. He followed this by making 35* in the England first innings, but when promoted to open as England chased 154, he made a duck. He then made 49 and 17*, and thus finished his Test career with a somewhat flattering Test average of over 50 - his batting was somewhat unpredictable. In 1879 his knee gave way whilst bowling, and his career ended in 1883 when he suffered a broken collar-bone. A kindly and gentle man, he was popular amongst his fellow players, and in retirement turned to umpiring, officiating in a Test in 1890.

Test debut Australia v England at Melbourne, Mar 15-19, 1877 
Last Test Australia v England at Melbourne, Mar 31-Apr 4, 1877 
First-class span 1871-1883