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Sixty Years of Canadian Cricket - by John Hall and Robert McCulloch
A Retrospective review by John Liverman
Originally contributed to the Canadian Cricketer
This handsome volume, published in Toronto in 1895, was given to
me twenty years ago by a friend who had acquired it in a second
hand book shop in that city. Its brown cloth binding, embossed
in gold with the title, a bat and ball, and a spray of maple
leaves, encloses 572 ages: most of them reprint the full scores
of hundreds of matches played in Canada - and by Canadian teams
abroad - during the previous sixty years: club, provincial and
international.
The fly leaf is inscribed "To Mr. John Davidson with the
authors' complements - Toronto, June 24th, 1895", and the book
is "Entered according to Act of Parliament of Canada in the
office of the Minister of Agriculture."
Apart from the scores, the book consists of reprints of press
reports of the matches, and a number of reminiscent essays by
varied contributors collected with a light editorial hand. Some
sing the praises of the manly game, others advise how Canadian
cricket can be improved, or dwell on the hospitality rather than
on the cricket, or favour us with their views on the game - some
of which now appear somewhat eccentric; Mr. Frederick Gale
deplores the new and degenerate practice of scoring boundaries
instead of having to run every hit.
The first Canadian records date from 1829, and by 1840 clubs
were formed in Toronto, Guelph, Kingston, Woodstock, Montreal
and Hamilton. The first match for which the score-card exists
was between Toronto and Guelph in August 1835: it was played at
Hamilton, Guelph won by 10 wickets, and after the match there
was a "sumptuous dinner" at Burley's Hotel, where "the most
perfect harmony and good feeling prevailed". the year 1836 saw
the youth of Canada at cricket, when Upper Canada College formed
a club, and the young cricketers "anxious to flash their maiden
weapons, challenged the Toronto Club on condition that White (a
Sussex man) should be one of their eleven". with White's
assistance, Toronto were skittled for 19 and 25, and the College
won by an innings. In a return match Toronto were again
defeated, this time because "some of the eleven left the ground
before the game was over."
In 1840 Canada was visited by the first time by a foreign team,
the St. George's Club of New York, who beat Toronto by ten
wickets before sitting down to a dinner at Ontario House at
which six toasts were drunk with the result that "every
unpleasant felling was eradicated, hospitality and good feeling
having drawn the sting of disappointment'. Matches with American
teams (New York, Chicago, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia) became a
regular feature, and between 1844 and 1894 there were twenty six
contests between the United States and Canada, the US winning
16, Canada 8 with 2 drawn. The US victories included the
unfortunate 1846 match which was "lost to Canada, as our eleven
refused to play, after a dispute in which they were entirely in
the wrong, the umpires rightly awarding the match to the US
team". After this dispute, no matches were played until 1853!
Canada had a run of three victories in the 1880's but in the
nineties the Untied States established a clear superiority,
winning by an innings and 222 runs in 1892 when their team
included the redoubtable J.B. King of Philadelphia, thought to
be one of the best bowlers in the world, and dismissed Canada
for scores of 65 in each innings.
Meanwhile, cricket was spreading throughout Canada, though the
vast distances and difficulties of travel continued to restrict
the choice of opponents. British military garrisons played a
prominent art from the 1830's onwards. In the 1880's Dr. Ogden
raised a team of medical men from Ontario, who played several
matches under the banner of the Sawbones Cricket Club. Winnipeg
toured Eastern Canada in 1882, beating Toronto, London, Port
Hope, Ottawa, and Montreal. Manitoba and the North West
undertook an ambitious tour of Eastern Canada and the United
States in 1890, with a fair measure of success, though the
outstanding individual feat of the tour was the eight wickets
for one run by C.Ellis for New Jersey in an innings of 61 by
Manitoba.
The first English team to visit Canada was the professional All
England XI, led by the celebrated George Parr, who played 5
matches in the month beginning 24th September, 1859. Parr
brought with him the most illustrious professional cricketers of
mid-19th century England: Wisden, Lillywhite, Tom Hayward
(senior), Caffyn, Stephenson, and the curiously named Julius
Caesar. They played teams of 22 from Canada, Lower Canada, and a
mixed Canadian and United States team, and won all their matches
by an innings or 10 wickets. John Wisden, who managed the team
jointly with George Parr, took 14 wickets in one innings, 6 for
33 in another, and 29 wickets in another match.
In 1872 there was a tour by an English team led by R.A.
Fitzgerald and including W.G. Grace and the famous A.N. Hornby
of Lancashire. The visitors met teams of 22 from Montreal,
Ottawa, and Toronto, and won every match by an innings. not
surprisingly, the games were dominated by W.G. Grace, then in
the prime of his youth. Grace's scores were 81 out of 255, 73
out of 201 and 142 out of 319. In 1878 a powerful Australian
team, including Bannerman, Blackham, Murdoch and Spofforth,
defeated 22 of Ontario and 22 of Montreal and District with
equal ease: Spofforth the "demon bowler" taking 17 for 60
against Ontario, and 8 for 39 against Montreal.
In 1879 another professional team from England came to Canada,
if anything stronger than George Parr's. This team was led by
Richard Daft, the finest batsman in England before the arrival
of W.G. Grace, and included Ulyett, Lockwood, Arthur Shrewsbury
the celebrated stonewaller, George Emmett, Fred Morley, and
Alfred Shaw "the greatest slow bowler in the world". Shaw lived
up to his reputation, taking 178 wickets for 426 runs. Matches
against 22 of Canada, 22 of Ontario, 22 of Western Ontario, and
17 of Hamilton were all won by an innings.
In 1887, the "Canadian Gentlemen" toured England under the
captaincy of Dr. E.R. Ogden. After games in Ireland and
Scotland, the Canadians undertook an amazingly energetic
sequence of matches through the length and breadth of England,
culminating in a contest against the M.C.C at Lord's. The M.C.C
team was virtually of Test standard, the first five batsmen
being A.J. Webbe, I.D. Walker, A.E. Stoddart, C.I. Thornton, and
T.C O'Brien. Canada did well to hold the M.C.C. to a draw. In
all Canada won 5 matches on the tour, lost 5 and drew 9.
The international catalogue, apart from continuing matches
against US teams, concludes with a brief visit in 1893 by a
distinguished Australian Eleven, captained by Blackham and
including Bannerman, George Giffen, Trott and Trumble. For the
first time they played on equal terms, and the Canadians did
well to score 110 and 118 against 298 by the visitors.
The book ends with a list of all centuries scored by Canadian
batsmen, from the 106 hit by the Hon. M.B. Daly for Halifax in
1858 to the record 238 not out made by Geo.S. Lyon for Rosedale
in 1894. The Rev. F.W. Terry, with six hundreds to his name, was
the most prolific scorer of centuries.
The book is liberally illustrated with photographs of Canadian
teams and individual cricketer - all in static poses, as it
would be a few years before action photos, pioneered by G.W.
Beldham, came into common use. The pictures are an added
attraction to a true collector's item.
John Liverman
(24, Graces Mews, Camberwell, London SE5 8JF England)
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