Friday, January 28, 2022

Lincolnshire County Cricket Double Dozen U11/13 League Week 3 & 4

 

Round 3 of U11 & U13 (North) Winter Indoor League results from Wednesday evening, proudly sponsored by Clixby Active Pro Sports Ltd. 2 very close games last night with the U13's going down to the last ball.

U11 Broughton Cricket Club (239) beat the hybrid U11 Haxey Cricket Club Newsfeed / Normanby Park Cricket Club(225) by 14 runs. Broughton are now the only unbeaten side. Haxey / Normanby batted first, with William Davis taking 3 wickets for 1 run in his 2 overs. Tyler Walmsley took his first match play wicket with an excellent caught and bowled. Thomas Clixby bowled his 2 overs without conceding a run. Thomas Clixby and Charley Kettle each scored 9 in the Broughton reply.

U13 Outcasts  Cricket  Club  (237) beat the hybrid U13 Haxey Cricket Club Newsfeed/ Normanby Park Cricket Club  (232) by 5 runs.  Outcasts are now the only unbeaten side.  Bowling first they restricted the opposition with tight bowling backed up by keen fielding, picking up just 2 wickets from Zach and Ethan.

When batting, the first 2 partnerships from Freddie & Ethan then Harry & Oliver were both unbeaten with sensible batting backed up by excellent running. We were in front when the last pair went into bat but the opposition still had their best bowlers with overs to go. 2 excellent catches were taken which put them back in front but Zach and Owen both scored vital runs in the last over to see there team home by 2 runs.

Round 4 of U11 & U13 (North) Winter Indoor League results from Wednesday evening, proudly sponsored by Clixby Active Pro Sports Ltd.

U11 hybrid Haxey Cricket Club Newsfeed & Normanby Park Cricket Club (248 gross) beat U11 Alkborough Cricket Club (241 gross) by 7 runs.

U13 Broughton Cricket Club (244 gross) beat U13 Alkborough Cricket Club (228 gross) by 16 runs. Alkborough batted first, William Davis, Thomas Clixby and Charlie Heath taking a wicket each with Ben Clixby, Thomas Clixby and Charlie Heath each taking a run out. In Broughton's reply the first pair Charley Kettle and Ben Clixby scored 25 with both players undefeated which went a long way to securing victory.

 

Trying to protect those wickets is the key.

Tuesday, January 25, 2022

The Formation of the Scunthorpe and District Cricket League

The Scunthorpe & District League was formed following a meeting in Scunthorpe on Saturday 20th January 1934. Thirteen teams took part in the inaugural League season split into two geographical divisions, very much along similar lines to the old Dinsdale Competition. Infact the trophy, donated to that competition some thirty years prior was put up once again for the final match of the season between the winners of the two divisions. These divisions were as follows;

DIVISION A
Elsham
Scawby
Hibaldstow
Barnetby
Thomas Firth and John Brown's (Firth Brown foundry)
Appleby-Frodingham 2nd XI (steelworks)
Ashby

DIVISION B
Whitton
Winteringham
Scunthorpe LNER (railway company)
Messingham
Scunthorpe Postal Staff
West Butterwick

Winteringham won the title in the inaugural season. The team were given Caps, Green with a Yellow ‘W’ on them. Crowle joined the league in its second season, the competition being won by Barnetby. In their ranks was a Yorkshireman who had moved over from Penistone to work on the railways, by the name of Harry Lawton. Harry played at Yorkshire Schoolboy level and acted as a professional for a number of years with Barnsley and Wakefield and he represented Lincolnshire, between 1937 and 1946, being the captain during his final year.

The images here show the 'batting order' for the speeches which accompanied the annual dinner held in October 1935 at Scunthorpe's Crosby Hotel, when the guest of honour was Herbert Sutcliffe, the famous England and Yorkshire batsman who played in 54 Tests for his country. The league's chairman back then was Ernest Plowright, who lived on Central Square, Brigg, in the late 1920s and early 1930s.


Editor of the Scunthorpe Star weekly newspaper, this well-known journalist was the father of famous actress Dame Joan Plowright (Lady Olivier) who is widely regarded as the most famous Brigg person of all time, having been born in Brigg in 1929. Ernest, who subsequently moved to Scunthorpe, proposed a toast to the King (George V) while Talbot Cliff proposed another to the Lincolnshire County Cricket Club. Talbot, who had played first class cricket for Worcestershire, was a member of the family which pioneered and developed ironmaking and then steelmaking in Scunthorpe in the latter decades of the 19th century, living in a mansion at Scawby (The Grove). He was a local magistrate.


Herbert Sutcliffe, speaking at this function, bemoaned the “doping of wickets to such an extent that even the best bowlers in England
can’t get life out of them.” He was talking about first class cricket; local pitches would have been rather different for batting! Herbert also mentioned the dropping of Larwood and Voce following the short-pitched 'Bodyline' tactics employed by England in a famous, or infamous, 1932-33 Test series in Australia. “No England team can be complete without them," Herbert said in his speech about Harold and Bill, two of the pace bowlers who played Down-Under for a touring side captained by Douglas Jardine.

For 1936, Elsham and the Scunthorpe Postal Staff departed the league for financial reasons. Travel was difficult, even in 1936. Winteringham completed a second triumph in the final of at the John Brown’s ground off Brumby Wood Lane. Barnetby were the opponents and they, present with Harry Lawton, were regarded as favourites. A young Alan Codling, later of Appfrod, Broughton and Brigg Sugar Factory bowled Lawton and Winteringham went on to complete a second triumph in two years.

Winteringham Cricket Club 1936  - Scunthorpe & District League Champions  

Back Row (L to R) John Dudding, Fred Hawkins, Bernard Sutton, Alan Codling, Len Parkinson, John Burbidge, Ralph Harrison, Umpire (Unknown). Front Row (L to R) Arthur Bee, Charlie Beacock, Lionel Burkill, Walt Chafer and Len Sutton. Commemorative Photo taken at Winteringham.



Friday, January 21, 2022

Cricket on the Map!

A good indicator on whether or not a cricket club was considered important in the early days would be whether or not their ground appears on the map. The Ordinance survey maps of the Edwardian period show a number of grounds in our area, including a surprise one.

 

Whilst not specifically a definite cricket ground we start by looking in Barton upon Humber. You can see on the map a former football ground, with a pavilion. This would likely of included a cricket pitch. In modern day Barton you can also see why the road nearby is called Marsh Lane, the site of the pitches today appear to be totally covered with water. They also operated in a field “off Butts Lane”, prior to securing a permanent home, this may well have been the current facility.


 

The only site still in use today for cricket is set in the grounds of Normanby Park. The cricket ground had been there, sponsored by Sir Berkley Sheffield since around the turn of the century. He had been entertaining teams himself on the ground with first class cricketers such as the Eton Ramblers right up until the commencment of the Great War. The last of these, scheduled for 8th August 1914 was indeed cancelled due to the hostitilities.


 

Moving South into the ever growing industrial villages of Scunthorpe we can see two sites on the same 1908 ordinance survey map. Firstly, just off Doncaster road, then known as Frodingham road, we can see a football ground. We know this to be the Old Show Ground, where the Scunthorpe Club played in the 1920’s and 30’s. This was very much a hybrid facility, used for football in the main, but cricket and shows during the summer months. To the North there is a field marked ‘showground’. This is likely to be the site of the facility Scunthorpe used when the show ground wasn’t available. Although this would need to be confirmed it is known that they did have a cricket ground in Crosby that they then sold in 1933.


 

Between Frodingham and New Brumby is the park that is opposite the Frodingham School. This is the site of the old Frodingham Cricket Ground. Cricket ceased being played on the site after the Great War. It was sold in 1939 after much debate, the people of Frodingham needed a play area. The local authority eventually negotiated an appropriate price.


 

The Sutton Nelthorpe Family were responsible for the earliest documented North Lincolnshire cricket club at Scawby. Henry Sutton Nelthorpe, the seventh baronet was an avid sportsman. Mainly racing, but cricket also. It was in the park at Scawby that a cricket ground stood for over 140 years. When the Scawby Club folded in the 1960’s the cricket ground went with it.


 

In neighbouring Brigg a cricket ground was established alongside the railway track just up Westrum Lane. Throughout the 1850’s and 60’s the club was looking for a ground. They occasionally found a home behind the Brocklesby Ox, but a new ground, in place since around 1880 was their home right up until beyond the Great War.

 

Land owners appear to be the theme if you want your cricket ground on the map. The Elwes family must have been linked to another cricket ground that disappeared in 1970. That of the Elsham club. A force to be reckoned with, post war, in the Grimsby League, particularly in the absense of a Brigg Cricket Club, this pretty ground operated just throught the trees off New street, in the grounds of Elsham Hall. It is now very much just a meadow.


 

Finally, further up the low villages we have a surprise cricket ground at Saxby All Saints in the grounds of Saxby Hall, with the Barton family for generations. Now Saxby occasionally played cricket. They certainly didn’t feature in any prominent competitions of the time, save for the 1894 season in the Richardson Cup. However in the early 1900’s they were seen to of played quite a number of fixtures against other teams in the low villages, as well as over the ancholme at Saxby Bridge to play against Appleby. There has been no mention of a Saxby Cricket Club after the Great War.


 

Suprising ommisions from the map would be Walcott Hall at Alkborough, where cricket was played on the Westcroft from the mid 19th century. Also Brumby Hall, where the Frodngham Cricket Club played prior to the use of their Rowland Road ground. It is understood that the forerunners to Scunthorpe United, Brumby Hall FC were playing football there in the late 19th century.


Some clubs had various agreements with local landowners, Broughton had an agreement to play in land adjacent to Vale Farm, where the current ground is situated as long ago as 1868. However, in between times they played at four or five other locations around the village including multiple fields owned by the same family. Many other local village clubs will have had similar agreements. 

Monday, January 17, 2022

The Formation of the Lincolnshire County Cricket League

 

On and off since 1906 there had been discussions about a County Cricket league. The County Cricket team had been in existence since then and always there had been debate about how the County club could field the strongest teams. Mainly selection came from the south of the county, sustained by the quality and exposure that came from the good private schools.

 

In 1933, a Mr AJ Hurford, the chair of the Lincolnshire Cricket Association stated in a local newspaper that he felt a Countywide cricket Association was necessary. A County cricket league desirable, that would create interest in the town. He was a Yorkshireman, he had considerable experience in the Bradford leagues. The correspondent countered with a suggestion that travel would always be an obstacle to a Countywide league. Yorkshire and Lancashire made it work because they could play professionals, paying fees enough to turn the heads of professional footballers of the time. Travelling distances were also sustainable for them.

 

Many big clubs were still outside of league cricket. Bourne, Grantham and Lindum were at this point still playing choice friendly matches. Lindum we’re attracting crowds of over 300 per game, he felt they could get towards 3000 if the cricket was competitive and created interest. Hurford suggested that they should be approached as they were considered big enough. The correspondent felt they would do better to just join a Lincoln League. The ‘Enclosed Grounds League’ had ran since 1900 and had appropriate Ground requirements to create a good paying spectacle. 

 

Mr HP Doughty, former Secretary of Rustons CC, did, a year later suggest the Grimsby and District league had gone as far as any other democratic organisation to bring about a County competition. Mr Standaloft of the Grimsby League stated that “if the County selection committee observed league games more keenly they would have a better team. I am afraid In this County we are confined to think that only cricketers only come from secondary schools.”

 

Feeling was running a high on this subject post war. A letter was sent into the Lincolnshire Echo, principally complaining about the lack of coaching. They blamed the lack of professional cricketer that were suitably qualified to so the job. They felt Lincoln were destined to see fifth and sixth grade cricket for ever, decidedly unimpressed with the standard in the Grimsby League. “Lindum should make an effort to join a real league, I suggest the Bassetlaw” said the irate onlooker.

 

In the Scunthorpe area the desire for a County League was also growing. The correspondent in the Scunthorpe Star in June 1947 whilst ‘sounding off’ about the lack of senior cricket fixtures every weekend (Appfrod and Scunthorpe Town seemed both to play away and at home on the same weekend, thus reducing each other’s gate, and leaving the alternate week without a strong level of cricket for the local spectator) enthused about a potential senior league, at least in the North of the County. “Someday the senior clubs may take the action that has been staring them in the face for some time." A league "properly arranged and well run. If the Scunthorpe Clubs took the initiative, the Grimsby clubs would follow.” This wasn’t a ‘dig’ generally at the Grimsby League. It was merely a self acknowledgment that Grimsby clubs had come to be reliant on their Scunthorpe counterparts for good competition as Scunthorpe had mutually.

 

On March 3rd 1958 many of the leading clubs in the county met at Lincoln to discuss the viability of a county league. Of course most of the top teams in the North were playing in the Grimsby League. Scunthorpe Town and Appleby Frodingham had by now departed to play in the Yorkshire Council. In the South the conundrum was demonstrated by the position of Grantham. Grantham had always made its fixtures with clubs near Nottingham or Leicester. They would have to withdraw from friendly fixtures against Stamford, Melton Mowbray and Oakham school. The proposal had fallen through by the autumn of 1958.

 

It was in the end the Grimsby and District Cricket League that took the initiative. Royce Frisby and Wilf Wilson jointly sent letters to the leading clubs in the county inviting them to attend a meeting held at Grimsby on 20th July 1962, Mr Frisby in the chair. The clubs represented in person at the meeting were Grimsby Borough Police, Clee Rovers, Grimsby British Railways, Grimsby Town, Paper Mills, Lincoln Bucyrus and Redbourn Works. Further correspondence had bee had with Gainsborough Roses Bros, Cleethorpes, Lindum, Hartsholme, Sleaford, Bourne, Skegness, Spalding, Boston, Woodall Spa and Appleby Frodingham. Notable absentees were Scunthorpe Town and Grantham. Scunthorpe were committed to the Yorkshire Council, whilst Grantham still couldn’t commit to the volume of  travel.




 A second meeting was called for October 1962, the outcome, the Lincolnshire County Cricket League. Appleby Frodingham decided against joining, preferring instead just to monitor the situation. Eleven teams started out in that inaugural season. Largely it was just a transfer of name and clubs from the Grimsby League top division, Scunthorpe Town entered their second team into the competition though, but until their withdrawal from the Yorkshire Council in the early 70s the Lincolnshire League was very much the inferior competition. Ross Group won the first competition in 1963, Lysaghts in 1964 and by the time Grimsby Town won in 1965 the league had welcomed Cleethorpes, Barton Town and Normanby Park to the group.



Leagues were calculated by percentage. Clubs arranged their own fixtures by choice, although a minimum of 14 had to be played to constitute a league season. So in 1965 Barton won 8 games outright compared to 11 won by Lincoln Claytons, but as Barton only played 14 and Claytons had played 20 the percentage rating meant Barton took second place ahead of Claytons by 2.71%. 

For 1966 Appleby Frodingham had joined, the league was now a full 15 teams. But still no new South Lincs clubs. Boston joined in 1968 but this was only temporary, the South Lincs and Border League formed by the mid 1970's and this undermined the ambition of a full county set up.. The initial function of the league was achieved as in 1966 the Lincolnshire County Cricket Club secured a maiden Minor Counties League title. The majority of that side derived from the Lincolnshire League, in particular Grimsby and Cleethorpes. Further success was achieved by the entry and subsequent winning of the Rothmans Competition for Cricket leagues. The strength of cricket in the late 1960's evidently lay in the Grimsby region whilst the next few years we see growth come from the Scunthorpe Area. In an ideal world the Lincolnshire League would have grown to 24 teams, mainly from the South of the County but unfortunately that was not the case.

SM Cricket UK Lincoln Indoor League - Week 8

 7.00pm  Old Lincolnians beat Nettleham by 6 wickets.

Nettleham 55-2 from 10 overs.  Dec Binnington 25 (Retired).  Liam Townhill 1-11 from 2 overs.

Old Lincolnians 59-0 from 3.3 overs.   Will Carter 23 not out, Sam Naughtin 18 not out, 18 extras.

8.00pm  Hartsholme beat Nettleham by 35 runs.

Hartsholme 99-3 from 10 overs.   Michael Hale 30 (Retired), Jame Favill 19.  Martin Strawson 1-18 from 3 overs.

Nettleham 64-4 from 10 overs.   Dec Binnington 29 (Retired).   Harry Doyle 3-19 from 3 overs.

9.00pm   Hartsholme beat Cherry Willingham 2nds by 15 runs.

Hartsholme 107-3 from 10 overs.   Rob Thorpe 25 (3x4), Harry Doyle 23 (2x6 and 1x4), Michael Hale 22 (4x4), extras 25.   George Hunt 2-17 from 3 overs and Caleb Pipes-Goulsbra 1-22 from  3 overs.

Cherry Willingham 2nds  92-3 from 10 overs.   James Welbourne 26 not out (1x6 and 2x4), Caleb Pipes-Goulsbra 26 not out (2x6 and 3x4), Harry Doyle 2-5, Joe Birkett 1-15 from 3 overs plus 2 catches.

Hartsholme jump from 8th to 2nd in the league.

 LEAGUE TABLE AFTER WEEK 8:  AS EVER PLEASE CHECK AND CONTACT ME IF I HAVE MADE A MISTAKE:

1st -    Old Lincolnians                 P7,      W6,     L1,    18 points,    26 wickets taken

2nd -   Hartsholme                      P4,      W3,     L1       9 points,    14 wickets taken

3rd -   Cherry Willingham 1st       P3,      W3,     L0,      9 points,    12 wickets taken

4th -   Broughton                        P5,      W2,     L3,      6 points,    16 wickets taken

5th -   Revesby                           P5,      W2,     L3,      6 points,    17 wickets taken

6th -   Nettleham                        P4,      W2,     L2,      6 points,    13 wickets taken

7th -   Bracebridge Heath            P4,      W2,     L2,      6 points,     9 wickets taken

8th -   Cherry Willingham 2nds    P6,      W1,     L5,      3 points,     20 wickets taken

9th -   Reepham                         P4,      W0,     L4,      0 points,     12 wickets taken

 

NOTE:

 3 points for a win.

If teams level on points, league position is decided on head to head result.

If league position still level, league position decided on the amount of opposition wickets taken.

 

Hartsholme ahead of Cherry Willingham 1sts on taking more wickets. Both teams still to play each other.

Nettleham ahead of Bracebridge Heath on head to head win.

Broughton ahead of Revesby on head to head win.

Friday, January 14, 2022

Lincolnshire County Cricket Double Dozen U11/13 League - Week 1 & 2

 

Sponsored by Clixby Active Pro Sports Ltd

U11 & U13 (North) Winter Indoor League Round One

U11 Haxey Cricket Club Newsfeed & Normanby Park Cricket Club (282) won vs Alkborough Cricket Club (268) by 14 runs

U13 Outcasts  Cricket  Club (283) won vs Broughton Cricket Club (250) by 33 runs

Great to see the Junior players back & having fun 🏏🏏🏏🏏

U11 & U13 (North) Winter Indoor League Round Two

U11 Broughton Cricket Club (264) beat U11 Alkborough Cricket Club (224) by 40 runs.

All 3 of Broughton's pairs scored strong with partnerships of 31, 14 & 19. Oakley, Cooper & Scarlett sharing the 5 wickets for Alkborough, with 2 superb catches for Oakley.

In reply a solid 36 opening partnership by Alkborough got them off to a flyer, but excellent bowling from Will with 4 (nearly had a hattrick) & 3 from Thomas did the damage for Broughton.

U13 Haxey Cricket Club Newsfeed & Normanby Park Cricket Club (278) beat U13 Alkborough Cricket Club (243) by 35 runs.

Again 3 strong partnerships of 34, 24 & 20  & only 2 wickets conceded, helped the combined forces of Haxey & Normanby Park  to a tough total.

In reply 4 run outs cost Alkborough Cricket Club eager batters with their partnerships coming in at 2, 23 & 18.

After 2 rounds the league is proving a good base to hone their skills alongside their winter programs.

Wednesday, January 12, 2022

The Earliest North Lincolnshire Cricket Clubs

The coming of the Railway by means of the Brigg/Grimsby Branch Line of the ‘Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway’ and the ‘Trent, Ancholme and Grimsby’ railway between 1846 and the mid 1860’s created an increase in travel between the coastal town of Grimsby and a growing industrial district now known as Scunthorpe. This created jobs in these towns which in the case of the Scunthorpe area was accelerated more so by the discovery of Ironstone in the area in 1865. Railway development was essential for the development of the game of cricket in Northern Lincolnshire. It allowed clubs to travel further for a strong competitive game. It is no coincidence that the strongest clubs were based on the railway lines.

Prior to this, Cricket, supposedly invented in the late 16th century, was relatively slow to reach the north of Lincolnshire. In the era of the landed gentry playing their neighbors, the game was confined to Kent or Hampshire. Stamford and Bourne had a cricket club by the late 18th century and Grantham in the first quarter of the 19th century. In 1822 Louth formed their cricket club, declaring themselves as the ‘Lincolnshire Cricket Club’. A few clubs however did begin to surface around this time and so we are able to use various articles from the period newspapers and the workings of local historians and journalists to learn about life at cricket clubs in our area in the early 19th century.

 

Here, I have taken the working of Dr Frank Henthorn, the former headmaster of Brigg Grammar School and noted local historian as well as my own findings to give a brief glimpse of the earliest North Lincolnshire Cricket Clubs, all of which seem to be based around Brigg.

 

Little in the way of organised games seemed to have existed in the early part of the century, even in the schools, largely because of the lack of playing fields and equipment. Even Brigg Grammar School field was then used by the headmaster for his sheep and cattle: the land was, indeed, intended to produce part of his income. In any case organised football as known today did not then exist. Cricket was a different matter, and it was owing to the fact that it was a reasonably disciplined sport that Sir Henry Nelthorpe allowed his park at Scawby to be used by a combined Scawby and Brigg Cricket club.

 

This club was established in 1824. Admission to membership was by ballot and the payment of 10 shillings, the subscription was five shillings a year. Games (or 'Meetings') took place on Friday, the wickets being pitched at noon. Every member had to attend every meeting, and failure to do so meant a forfeit of a shilling. Annual meetings were at Brigg. Such were some of the rules, there was only one by-law: 'If a Match shall be played, the Eleven Players shall be elected by the Club'. Honorary members formed a good proportion of the club. Sir Henry Nelthorpe, Captain Grantham, Joseph Goodwin, John Nicholson, and four parsons were some of those named on an early printed sheet.  Amongst the ordinary members were J. Goodwin, H. Grantham, Lieutenant Nicholson, J. Nicholson, C. Rudkin.

 

A match was played in Scawby Park at the end of July 1826 against Louth; families from Brigg and roundabout attended; a 'handsome cold collation was provided, for them and the players’ and Sir Henry supplied some of his choicest fruit. The club lost two matches against Louth that year. The gentlemen of Louth played a game in 1844 against Scawby and Brigg, the Louth eleven coming from the Louth club and their opponents from the separate clubs of Scawby and Brigg.  How long the Brigg club had been 'separate' is not known. It may have had a continuous existence from the 1840s as in August 1842 the Stamford Mercury reported that “Broughton Cricket Club, consisting of messrs Smart, Snell, Newby, Bucknall, Chapman, Roberts, Kennington, Hart, Hair, Hill, Hostead, Bannister and others, played a match in the field of the Brocklesby Ox Inn (see below), Brigg in first rate style. They were witnessed by a large concourse of spectators who came from every part of the neighbourhood to spend a few days at Brigg Fair. The general opinion was that the Broughton Cricket Club would soon be able to compete with Kent or any other crack club in the land.” The reader should bare in mind that Fuller Pilch (“The greatest batsmen ever known before WG Grace.”) was the Kent captain at the time. Perhaps that tells you how good the Broughton side were, or how good the local correspondents imagination was.

 



From the late 1840s the railways came, firstly to Kirton in Lindsey and Brigg in 1847, and later to Scunthorpe and Frodingham in the 1850s and 60s. Thereafter the teams of Frodingham and Brigg Town were the leading clubs in the area, pitting themselves against Grimsby Worsley and teams from already industrial Hull. With travel still light the surrounding villages best players travelled to Brigg for their higher quality cricket. The remainder just played 'Married' vs 'Single' amongst their own villagers until the 1860's where more clubs across the area started to arrange fixtures with neighbouring villages . Scawby will still of played matches amongst the local estates, perhaps with the Earl of Yarborough on the Brocklesby Park Estate.

WJ Monteith - Obituary

 Taken from Nigel Fishers 'Brigg Blog'

A former pupil of Brigg Grammar School who went on to organise events involving many famous international sportsmen has died. His funeral will be held next week.
Bill Monteith, who was 96, lived in Ashby for many years and was very well-known in local sport and across Lincolnshire.
He attended Crosby Infant and Junior Schools. Having passed the 11-plus examination, Bill was one of only three pupils from his junior school to gain a place at Brigg Grammar. Upon leaving BGS in 1942, he joined the workforce at Appleby-Frodingham steelworks in Scunthorpe, where he became a senior chemist, eventually retiring in 1980.
In the the 1970s and 1980s, he organised memorable cricket forums in Scunthorpe to which he invited England Test cricket stars who talked to the audience and answered questions.
Among famous players to grace these events were Colin Cowdrey, Derek Randall, Ray Illingworth, Ian Botham, Alan Knott, Dennis Amiss, John Hampshire and Basil D'Oliveria.
Bill arranged with the British Steel Corporation for some of the stars to be given guided tours of the giant complex, prior to speaking at his evening forums.
He organised these as fundraisers for his Scunthorpe club, Nuform, which played its home games at the Co-op Ground on Brumby Wood Lane and later at Foxhills off Ferry Road.
In addition to being a club official, Bill was very active in coaching - encouraging young players across the district.
He also helped to coach trainee coaches, and hosted a course at the Vale of Ancholme Sports Hall on Grammar School Road, Brigg, which we remember attending in the late 1970s or early 1980s. Among the other trainees was Neale Barry, the future Premier League football referee who was then a keen local cricketer.
Bill was a hard-working official of the Scunthorpe Colts Organisation which arranged various age group leagues in North Lincolnshire. He was also involved with the Broughton & District Evening League - being its president for some years - and was one of the driving forces behind the formation of the South Humberside Alliance circa 1980 which was aimed at encouraging young players to develop their skills with 2nd and 3rd XI club teams on good-standard grounds.
He was named secretary of the year by the Lincolnshire County Cricket League in 1979.
In the late 1980s he was instrumental in establishing a new cricket club in Bottesford, playing on a brand new ground off Ontario Road. Bill welcomed former England Test all-rounder Chris Old to view the site during its creation while Chris was cricket development officer for Humberside County Council. Bill later became the club's groundsman.
Bill was a VIP guest at a famous match played on Appleby-Frodingham's Brumby Hall ground in Scunthorpe during the mid-1970s when Minor Counties North (including some Lincolnshire players) hosted Yorkshire in a Benson & Hedges Cup zonal fixture. Yorkshire's side included Geoff Boycott, Chris Old and John Hampshire.
We were then working for Steel News, the British Steel Corporation's weekly newspaper, which took pictures of Bill chatting to players in the Brumby Hall pavilion during this game.
He was a qualified cricket umpire and also umpired hockey matches involving Appleby-Frodingham Ladies for some seasons.
In his younger days he played football for a team in the Appleby-Frodingham Inter-Departmental League.
All-rounder Bill started in club cricket with Appleby-Frodingham, then spent 30 years with Nuform before joining Bottesford.
He donned his whites for the final time aged 68.
Bill enjoyed three overseas tours as a coach with under-15 sides, visiting Pakistan, the West Indies and South Africa.
We were very sorry to hear of his passing. At 96 he had a good innings, to use a cricketing phrase.
We have forwarded some of our recollections to Bill's family, and we thank them for the pictures of him seen above.
He worked in the central laboratories at the steelworks while we were based in nearby offices with the public relations department in the mid and late 1970s.
Bill would often pop in to discuss cricket and pass on details of the forums he arranged, which we featured in Steel News.
We also printed pictures of Bill accompanying England cricketers during their tours of the works.
While we were on the Scunthorpe Evening Telegraph sports desk, an important job during the Saturday morning shift was to assign photographer(s) to take action pictures of matches that afternoon.
One Saturday in either late April or early May we instructed the duty photographer to call at Foxhills for Nuform's first cricket fixture of the season.
He came back with a very impressive but unexpected picture of Bill - in his playing 'whites' - leaving the field... during a heavy snow shower!
Bill's funeral will take place on Friday, January 21, from 12 noon, at St Bernadette’s Roman Catholic Church, Ashby, and then Woodlands Crematorium, off Brumby Wood Lane, Scunthorpe, at 1.20pm.

Monday, January 10, 2022

The Formation of the Scunthorpe Cricket Colts Association

A Mr P Elliott, of the Scunthorpe Borough Youth Service attended a Scunthorpe Intermediate League AGM on Wednesday January 19th 1972 in the Brumby Hall Pavilion. He intimated that by a subtle change of name, the league, or the team that played in the Joe Lumb Cup competition would be eligible to obtain Youth Service Grants. Bill Monteith, who sadly passed away on Christmas Day last year (2021), led further discussion on the pros and cons of this, necessitating an adjournment of the AGM to February 2nd. 

At the adjourned AGM Mr Geoff Neal, the father of England team manager of the early 2000's and first class cricketer with Worcestershire, Phil Neal, proposed that the name of the Joe Lumb team be changed to ‘Scunthorpe and District Cricket Colts’, the management of which would be under the same as the Scunthorpe and District Intermediate Cricket League. The Secretary, Mr Ian Robinson, was also instructed to write to the Wrigleys Foundation Trust to see if a grant could be obtained for the coming season. A donation of £25 was passed from the league to the Colts in order to get finances off the ground. 

 

An inaugural meeting of the colts was set up, a fortnight or so later, upon which both the Chair and Secretary were officially elected as per the Intermediate league appointments. A member from each club, plus Geoff Neal, a Mr R Johnson and a representative of the Borough Education Office joined them to form the management committee. Arnold Cooksley, the former Lysaghts professional and Normanby Park Works representative acted as President. The Secretary was asked to write to all clubs in the district, asking them to send any boys along. Unfortunately this was 1972, the minute does just say 'boys'. The co-op ground in Scunthorpe was used for outdoor nets. 

 

Coaching in 1973 was by R Simpson (probably a representative of the Burton Stather Cricket Club), in 1974 it was Jack Hampshire (Yorkshire CCC), numbers varied between 20 and 30 in terms of attendance. Facilities across the town were improved. West Common had cricket nets already, now High Ridge had some installed. From the coaching, teams were selected to represent Scunthorpe in the Joe Lumb Competition playing against clubs in West Yorkshire of similar stock.

 

The first incarnation of an Under 13 competition was born from these early meetings. Initially the colts decided to enter a Borough wide team in the National Competition, six weeks of coaching were arranged on Sunday mornings and Bill Monteith (pictured below in the early 1980s) organised a cricket weekend. Grant aid was sought from the Lords Taverners fund. Although initially support was limited at this age group, all members were asked to support by providing a couple of boys each. Although only 1 match was played, a loss against Boston, it proved to be the start of Under 13s cricket in the area which led to league cricket being played at that age group by the clubs.




The biggest impact that the Scunthorpe Cricket Colts organisation had on local cricket was the natural growth of the Intermediate league in the area and the consistency of entry into the league by clubs. Pre 1972 the league had been floundering. Many village clubs had dipped in and out. Alkborough, Burton Stather, Scotter and Messingham had all had a go over the previous decade as well as the defunct Foxhills Old Boys. John Leggott and North Lindsey Colleges had entered previously, likewise St Bernadettes School but they relied on teachers/lecturers to help run teams. They were not always interested in cricket. The steelworks clubs were regulars, as were Scunthorpe Town, although the Redbourn Works Amalgamation with Appleby Frodingham had cost the league a team. In 1972 the league was just 4 teams. 

 

Firstly, Broughton Cricket Club joined for 1973, Bryan Simpson started a 44 year association with the league, although Burton Stather had resigned. Normanby Park joined in 1974, Scotter and Nuform Sports in 1975, though Normanby Park resigned. Then Messingham in 1976, Alkborough and Barton Town in 1978, with a resignation from Scotter, Brigg Town in 1980  and Outcasts of Crowle in 1981. The membership remained 8 to 10 clubs for around 20 years, with very consistent entrants throughout those decades. For that we have these meetings, 1972 through 1974 to thank. 

 

Under this association all of our local clubs have been able to sustain themselves by developing and encouraging younger players thus preserving our great game in this area.

Sunday, January 9, 2022

North Lindsey League - January Meeting

As decided at the EGM on Wednesday 5th January 2022 the format for the 2022 season will be 

Division 1

1.       Appleby Frodingham 2nd XI

2.       Haxey 3rd XI

3.       Luddington Dons

4.       Messingham 3rd XI

5.       Scunthorpe Town Development XI

The 5 teams will play each other 3 times giving each club 12 league Games

Division 2

1.       Alkborough 3rd XI

2.       Broughton 3rd XI

3.       Hibaldstow 2nd XI

4.       Normanby Park 2nd XI

5.       Outcasts 3rd XI

6.       Scunthorpe Town 4th XI

The 6 teams will play each other twice giving each club 10 games

The cup competition will this year take part through the season with 1 Sunday each month designated for cup games.

Teas – It was decided that the default option is that no teas will be offered for all North Lindsey league games. If your club wishes to do teas for the whole season please let the league know before as soon as possible. If you wish to do teas on a match-by-match basis please let the club you are playing that Sunday know.

Fixtures - will be out in February. Can all clubs please send Glen your ground and fixture availability ASAP so Glen has time to sort the fixtures out. The league will aim to get a handbook done for the start of the season, if you have not sent over your contact details please can you send this ASAP.

Play Cricket – In a slight change to previous years we ask that clubs post the results of games on play cricket by midnight of the day of the game. This is to get results out as quickly as possible and also helps with tables and end of season averages. Previous years we asked clubs to notify Glen by midnight of the day of the game.

Saturday, January 8, 2022

Richardson Challenge Cup

In 1892, organized by a Mr E Smith from Barton, a competition was formed to play for a cup given by Mr John Maunsell Richardson with an aim of "giving impetus to and increasing the popularity of the game in the North Lindsey area of the county". Richardson was a Cambridge ‘Blue’ and first class cricketer with both the University and the Marylebone Cricket Club. When he made his debut in 1866, a 17 year old WG Grace played in the opposition. He was also a jockey who rode in the Grand National, winning twice in the 1870's and won the Brigg MP seat in an 1894 Bi - election only to relinquish it the following year at the general election. He married the wife of his friend Charles Anderson, 3rd Earl of Yarborough, who had died young and at the time of this competition was residing at Healing Manor, in front of which all subsequent Richardson Cup finals were played.

The competition was open to all clubs within the Brigg, Lindsey Parliamentary division. He did present two further trophies, one for local football clubs to compete for and also there was a trophy for an annual horse racing meet. The trophies were manufactured by Charles J Hill, a goldsmith and jeweller from Oxford Street, London and was described as “altogether above the usual challenge cup both in terms of weight of silver and importance of appearance”. An artists impression of it is provided.


In the inaugural season Grimsby Worsley CC, Frodingham CC and Brigg Town CC had been presented with a list of players barred from playing. These clubs being the premier clubs in the district, their engagement of professional cricketers presumably being the main reasoning for this rule. In the interest of fairness and bearing in mind that some of the clubs who had entered were just village clubs this ruling was accepted, reluctantly, by those aforementioned clubs.

 The list of missing players was as follows:-

Brigg – PH Cave, C Cave, Richmond Flowers, FD Hodgson, HM Jackson and Ike Rowbottom.

Frodingham – JW Hanby, Walter Maw, Dr Rollinson and G Frost.

Grimsby Worsley – JT Hamblin, R Williams, GW Goulding, J Brelsford, F Atter and CS Hall.

A further proposition by George Fairbank (Brigg Town) that four Barton Town CC players be barred was defeated 4 votes to 5.

There was also a request by Brigg Grammar School ‘Past and Present’ to enter a team although they were later rejected by the executive, presumably with Richmond Flowers, Headteacher at the Grammar School and he being one of the to Brigg players stopped from playing might educate as to why this was the case.

There were 16 clubs entered including Richardson’s own club Healing. Frodingham were the only club from the Scunthorpe region, whilst there were 4 Grimsby based clubs and representative teams from New Holland, Barrow upon Humber, Barton, Limber, Brocklesby, Kirmington and Caistor. Broughton and Winterton were village clubs from the North Lincolnshire region but it was Brigg Town, one of the most senior clubs in the district that won the cup in its first season.

Come the 1893 season, Mr Smith (Barton Town) had become the Secretary and the meeting was presided over by Rev E Loft (Kirmington). Prophetically a decision to appoint a management committee took place at the February meeting. A Swindells (New Holland) and C Sissons (Brocklesby) joined the already very influential Brigg and Frodingham secretaries, Messrs Fairbank and Woodley to form a sub-committee to deal with any ‘protests and objections over the course of the competition’.

The competition was still played on a Knock-out basis, 19 teams entering to take part, with a number of preliminary round matches, followed by three rounds and a final. Brigg won, but Frodingham, the beaten finalists lodged a complaint, claiming that one of the Brigg players was a 'non resident'. The player in question being Mr A Field, son of the vicar of Bigby. The match was ordered to be replayed. When Brigg refused to return the cup or the winners medals, they were disqualified and Frodingham declared the winners.

Brigg were expelled for the 1894 season, despite a winter of talks with league and club committees they were not included for the next edition. In fact, Frodingham didn’t play either, the competition was reduced to just 8 teams split in an Eastern and Western Division. Perhaps this was the fall out of a very public and vocal disagreement between two of the leading clubs leading to only half of the previous field entering. The competition was played in a league format with teams playing each other twice. The final was contested between a Winterton and District XI and a Caistor XI - Caistor winning thanks to bowling Winterton out for 17 in the second innings.


For 1895, the competition reverted back to a straight Knock Out system where Broughton (semi-finalists in 1892), had entered a combined side with neighbours Scawby CC in an attempt to win the competition. Thanks to players like AS Johnson (school teacher at Brigg Grammar and Scawby's best batsmen), the former chairman of the competition George Spillman (farmer and auctioneer from Broughton Vale), Major Chichester and Broughton allrounder Elwood 'Nepper' Parish the side reached the final against Healing. In the end the Combined Broughton and Scawby side lost by an innings and 39 runs.

In a newspaper article later that year Richardson was quoted as saying "as long as he will be at Healing he hopes to keep a football field and cricket ground and that the Healing Club will go on to win more cups like the one won this summer". 

In 1896, with the competition reverting back again to a league system, Healing beat Brigg by 4 wickets on second innings to secure their second successive cup success. Again the competition was split into two regionalized divisions with six teams in the Southern section including a Scawby side now going it alone without their neighbours on board. The Grimsby section just had the Healing Club and three Grimsby based teams, including the Civil Service which competed for the first time this season. The previous incarnation of a divisional based system was largely very local to the Scunthorpe area, for 1896 it was very much split for travel purposes. All clubs were based within half a mile of a train station which potentially explains the drop off in participants from Broughton and Caistor especially. In the southern section each club played 10 fixtures before the final decider.

We know there was a competition played in 1897. But very little of this is covered in the local newspapers. There is a list of fixtures played in the Southern Section with Barnetby dropping out and Brigg putting their Wednesday side into the competition. Healing played Elsham on Saturday 21st August which it is believed resulted in a Healing victory and thus they retained the cup for a third successive season and so it was theirs to keep outright.

The competition wasn't played again, not even with a different trophy. Efforts were made in 1908 to form a Grimsby League, this passed through to the Great War, but very much involved only Grimsby clubs. In the Scunthorpe area the Dinsdale Cricket League started up in 1904 and ever since, except for the Great War there has always been a competitive cricket league in the North of Lincolnshire.

 
List of Winners

1892 – Brigg Town

1893 – Frodingham (by default)

1894 – Caistor

1895 – Healing and District

1896 – Healing and District

1897 – Healing and District

Lincolnshire County Cricket League Report - May 14th 2022 - Glen Sands

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