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Controversies in 1856

5 incidents documented

📋Moderate

The Overarm Bowling Debate — Professionals Push the Law's Limits Through the 1850s

MCC vs Professionals

1856-01-01

Through the 1850s, as the leading English professionals pushed their bowling arms steadily higher than the shoulder, the distinction between legal roundarm and illegal overarm became increasingly unenforceable. The MCC observed, debated and repeatedly declined to act, leaving umpires in an impossible position and creating a decade of informal overarm bowling that made the law a dead letter before it was formally repealed in 1864.

#roundarm-era#early-victorian#1850s
Mild

George Parr Takes Command of the All-England Eleven After Clarke's Death — 1856

All-England Eleven

1856-08-26

When William Clarke died on 25 August 1856, George Parr of Nottinghamshire — already England's leading batsman — took over effective leadership of the All-England Eleven. Parr's first act was to end Clarke's boycott of United All-England Eleven players, reuniting the two professional bodies and arranging the annual AEE v UAEE fixture that from 1857 drew the largest crowds in English cricket.

#roundarm-era#early-victorian#1850s
Mild

Cricket in Western Australia — The Swan River Colony and Early Perth Matches, 1850s

Perth garrison and civilian clubs

1856-01-01

Cricket arrived in Western Australia with the Swan River Colony's foundation in 1829 and by the 1850s was being played regularly by garrison and civilian clubs in Perth. The arrival of convict labour from 1850 brought additional English-born men to the colony, some of them cricketers, and by the late 1850s organised inter-club cricket was taking place on the Perth Esplanade. Western Australia would not play first-class cricket until 1892, but the club tradition of the 1850s was its foundation.

#roundarm-era#early-victorian#1850s
Mild

Victoria v New South Wales — The First Inter-Colonial Match at the MCG, March 1856

Victoria vs New South Wales

1856-03-26

On 26-27 March 1856 the Melbourne Cricket Ground hosted its first inter-colonial fixture, between Victoria and New South Wales. NSW won by three wickets in front of a crowd of around 5,000 — among them many gold-rush emigrants. The match opened the Vic-NSW rivalry that would, with the Sheffield Shield from 1892-93, become the spine of Australian first-class cricket.

#intercolonial#victoria#new-south-wales
Moderate

William Clarke's Death — End of the Founder of the All-England Eleven, 25 August 1856

n/a

1856-08-25

William Clarke, the Nottinghamshire slow underarm bowler who founded the All-England Eleven in 1846 and turned professional touring cricket into a paying business, died on 25 August 1856 at Priory Lodge, Wandsworth Road, London, of paraplegia. He was 57. His death ended the four-year boycott of the United All-England Eleven and opened the way for the AEE v UAEE annual match that would shape the next decade of English cricket.

#william-clarke#all-england-eleven#death