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Controversies in 1831

3 incidents documented

Mild

Death of Tom 'Old Everlasting' Walker — March 1831

n/a

1831-03-09

On 9 March 1831 Thomas 'Old Everlasting' Walker — the most famous defensive batter of the Hambledon school and one of the last surviving regulars of the great 1780s side — died at Churt, Surrey, in his early seventies. With Beldham still alive but long retired, Walker's death effectively closed the personal lineage of Hambledon cricket as a presence in the contemporary game.

#roundarm-era#early-victorian#tom-walker
Mild

Squire Osbaldeston's 200-Mile Horse Ride at Newmarket — November 1831

n/a

1831-11-05

On 5 November 1831 George Osbaldeston rode 200 miles on Newmarket Heath in 8 hours 42 minutes, using a string of relay horses, for a wager of 1,000 guineas. The ride was the most celebrated single sporting feat of the Regency era — repeating in equestrian form the 1818 pedestrian feat and confirming Osbaldeston as the most flamboyant amateur sportsman of his generation. He had been an MCC committee member since his 1828 reconciliation with Beauclerk.

#roundarm-era#early-victorian#george-osbaldeston
Mild

Earliest Documented Cricket at Christ's Hospital School — 1831

n/a

1831-06-25

The earliest documented cricket match at Christ's Hospital School — the historic 'Bluecoat' charity school in central London — was a house fixture played in the summer of 1831. Cricket had been informal at Christ's Hospital from the late eighteenth century; the 1831 match is the earliest preserved with a full account in the school's surviving records.

#roundarm-era#early-victorian#christs-hospital