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Controversies in 1841

3 incidents documented

Mild

Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club Constituted — William Clarke's Role, 1841

Nottinghamshire cricket establishment

1841-03-01

The Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club was formally constituted in 1841, initially under the management of William Clarke who had developed Trent Bridge as a first-class ground after marrying its landlady in 1838. Clarke's entrepreneurial energy turned Nottingham's cricket infrastructure into one of the strongest in the provinces, though his founding of the All-England Eleven five years later would divert his attention from county to national cricket.

#roundarm-era#early-victorian#1840s
🔥Moderate

MCC Cracks Down on Gambling at Lord's — The Stakes Rule Tightened, 1841

MCC Committee

1841-05-01

The MCC committee in 1841 further tightened the maximum-stakes rule introduced in 1807, responding to renewed concerns that bookmakers operating at the Lord's ground were corrupting the conduct of matches. The committee's minutes record a formal resolution to exclude known betting men from the ground and to forbid players from receiving money from outside parties during matches — an early attempt to codify what would later become cricket's anti-corruption framework.

#roundarm-era#early-victorian#1840s
Mild

Fuller Pilch's 153 Not Out for Kent v England — Town Malling, August 1841

Kent vs England

1841-08-23

Fuller Pilch, by general agreement the leading batsman in England, scored 153 not out for Kent against an England eleven at Town Malling in August 1841. It was the highest individual score made in a major fixture for several years and confirmed Pilch as the dominant batsman of the pre-Grace generation.

#fuller-pilch#kent#town-malling