Arthur Malkin Explained

Arthur Malkin
Country:England
Fullname:Arthur Thomas Malkin
Birth Date:1803
Birth Place:Hackney, London
Death Date:1888
Death Place:Inverness
Club1:Cambridge University
Year1:1826
Date:18 June
Year:2013
Source:https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/37/37255/37255.html CricketArchive

Arthur Thomas Malkin (1803 – 1888) was an English writer, alpinist and cricketer.

Life

The third son of Benjamin Heath Malkin and his wife Charlotte Williams, daughter of the Rev. Thomas Williams, headmaster of Cowbridge grammar school, he entered Trinity College, Cambridge in 1820, graduating B.A. in 1825, M.A, in 1828.[1] He is likely the "Malkin" elected to the Cambridge Apostles in 1826.[2]

A civil engineering partnership with Angier March Perkins and James Philip Roy was dissolved in 1829.[3] He purchased an estate at Corrybrough, Tomatin, Inverness-shire, where he became a Deputy Lieutenant; and also resided at 21 Wimpole Street, London.[4]

Sportsman

Malkin was associated with Cambridge University Cricket Club and was recorded in one first-class match in 1826, totalling 11 runs with a highest score of 11 not out and holding no catches.[5]

In 1827 he was one of a rowing eight that took a boat from Cambridge to King's Lynn, then across The Wash to Boston, Lincolnshire. Others in the crew were Kenelm Digby and John Mitchell Kemble.[6]

Works

Family

Malkin married:

  1. Mary Anne Carr, daughter of John Addison Carr, Rector of Hadstock, Essex, in 1833;
  2. Thomasine Gill, eldest daughter of Thomas Gill, M.P.

Notes and References

  1. 17885. G. Martin. Murphy. Malkin, Benjamin Heath.
  2. Book: Eric W. Nye. John Kemble's Gibraltar Journal: The Spanish Expedition of the Cambridge Apostles, 1830-1831. 23 January 2015. Palgrave Macmillan. 978-1-137-38447-8. 307 note 170.
  3. Book: The London Gazette. 1829. T. Neuman. 826.
  4. Book: E. Walford. The county families of the United Kingdom. 1882. Рипол Классик. 978-5-87194-361-8. 422.
  5. Web site: subscription . Arthur Malkin . CricketArchive . 18 June 2013.
  6. Web site: Fenland Notes & Queries. A quarterly antiquarian journal for the fenland, in the counties of Huntingdon, Cambridge, Lincoln, Northampton, Norfolk, and Suffolk. W. H. Bernard Saunders. 1. 1889–91. Internet Archive. 176–8. 26 August 2015.
  7. https://books.google.com/books?id=PY4MAAAAYAAJ Volltext
  8. Book: Arthur Thomas Malkin. Historical Parallels. 1831. v.