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#1825

4 incidents tagged

Serious

Thomas Lord Sells the Ground — William Ward Saves Lord's, July 1825

n/a

1825-07-28

In 1825 Thomas Lord, the founder of the ground that bears his name, decided that property development would pay him better than cricket and obtained planning permission to build housing across most of the playing field. The MCC member William Ward MP, a Bank of England director and noted batsman, bought him out for £5,000 to save the ground. Weeks later, on the night of 28 July 1825, the pavilion burned to the ground after a Winchester v Harrow match, destroying the club's records.

#thomas-lord#william-ward#lord-s
Mild

Ned Wenman Debuts for Kent — A Wicket-Keeping Career Begins, 1825

Kent vs Sussex

1825-08-01

Edward 'Ned' Wenman, the carpenter and wheelwright from Benenden in Kent, made his important-match debut in a Kent v Sussex fixture in 1825 at the age of 22. He would go on to keep wicket — barehanded, without pads — to Alfred Mynn's express bowling for the great Kent eleven of the 1830s and 1840s, ending his career with 118 catches and 87 stumpings in 146 important matches.

#ned-wenman#kent#1825
Serious

William Ward Saves Lord's — The £5,000 Cheque That Kept Cricket at St John's Wood, 1825

n/a

1825-05-15

When Thomas Lord obtained planning permission in 1825 to redevelop most of his cricket ground for housing, the MCC member William Ward — a Bank of England director and the man who had scored 278 at the same ground five years earlier — wrote a personal cheque for £5,000 to buy out Lord's interest. The transaction preserved Lord's as a cricket ground and is the single most consequential financial act in nineteenth-century cricket.

#william-ward#thomas-lord#1825
Mild

Winchester v Harrow at Lord's — The Match Before the Pavilion Burned, July 1825

Winchester vs Harrow

1825-07-28

The first cricket match between Winchester and Harrow schools was completed at Lord's on 28 July 1825. Hours after the players had left, the pavilion caught fire and burned to the ground, taking with it the MCC's archive of scorebooks and records. The combination — first match of a new fixture, last night of the original pavilion — gave the day a peculiar place in cricket's institutional memory.

#winchester#harrow#1825