1803 English cricket season explained
Previous Year: | 1802 |
Previous Tournament: | 1802 English cricket season |
Next Year: | 1804 |
Next Tournament: | 1804 English cricket season |
1803 was the 17th season of cricket in England since the foundation of Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC). Thomas Howard made his debut in important matches.
Honours
Events
- Prime Minister William Pitt referred to cricket when introducing his Defence Bill.[2]
- With the Napoleonic War continuing, loss of investment and manpower impacted cricket and only three first-class matches have been recorded in 1803:
- Another match that has sometimes been regarded as important is H. C. Woolridge's XI v W. R. Capel's XI at Clifford's Park, Rickmansworth, on Friday 26 August. It was originally classified as an important match by the ACS (and thus with first-class status), but the ACS subsequently downgraded its status because of the weak standard of Capel's XI (only three players are known to have played in other first-class matches) and it was possibly scheduled for only one day.
Debutants
1803 debutants included:
Bibliography
- Book: Haygarth, Arthur . Arthur Haygarth . Scores & Biographies, Volume 1 (1744–1826) . 1862 . Lillywhite .
Further reading
- Book: ACS . Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians . A Guide to Important Cricket Matches Played in the British Isles 1709 – 1863 . 1981 . ACS . Nottingham .
- Book: Altham, H. S. . Harry Altham . A History of Cricket, Volume 1 (to 1914) . 1962 . George Allen & Unwin .
- Book: Birley, Derek . Derek Birley . A Social History of English Cricket . 1999 . Aurum .
- Book: Bowen, Rowland . Rowland Bowen . Cricket: A History of its Growth and Development . 1970 . Eyre & Spottiswoode .
- Britcher, Samuel, A list of all the principal Matches of Cricket that have been played (1790 to 1805), annual series
- Book: Major, John . John Major . More Than A Game . 2007 . HarperCollins .
Notes and References
- Note that scorecards created in the first quarter of the 19th century are not necessarily accurate or complete; therefore any summary of runs, wickets or catches can only represent the known totals and computation of averages is ineffectual.
- Bowen, p.268.
- Haygarth, p.305.
- Haygarth, p.307.