“A better display of the art of cricket was never witnessed”: How Fuller Pilch became the best batter in the world

Fuller Pilch (Image: Wikimedia Commons)

In discussions of who might have been the greatest or most influential cricketers of all time, there is a tendency to favour more recent players. Most critics understandably nominate those who they have seen in person, although an exception is usually made for the inevitable Don Bradman, whose statistical dominance makes him a special case. Perhaps one or two players from earlier periods, for whom there is plenty of film available (preferably on Youtube), might warrant a mention but once discussion moves further back than living memory, former stars are usually neglected, usually accompanied by assertions that cricketers from so long ago cannot possibly have been as good as their modern counterparts. This phenomenon is intensified by the lack of statistical detail available for comparison, and a suspicion that — depending on the viewpoint of whoever is judging — it must have been easier to score runs or take wickets back in the dim and distant past. One or two aficionados might buck the trend and name older players such as Walter Hammond, Jack Hobbs or Victor Trumper, but for most cricket followers these are at best just names that they have heard. And then there is the case of someone like Ranjitsinhji, recorded by the history books as the inventor of the leg-glance (but who is perhaps even more interesting for his adventures off the field). Or what about W. G. Grace? To those familiar with cricket history, he might stand comparison with Bradman: the man who invented modern batting, combining forward play, back play, attack and defence. But if we go back even further, cricket was a very different game on (and off) the field, so that any hope of statistical comparison breaks down hopelessly. Which is unfortunate because if we continue backwards, we come across names that were legends for a century after their playing days were over.

Standing at the head of this semi-legendary list was Fuller Pilch, perhaps the most famous batter before the emergence of W. G. Grace. During his playing days, there was a general consensus that Pilch was the best batter in England — and therefore the world. While never achieving the statistical dominance of those who followed — for example Grace, Ranjitsinhji, Hobbs, Hammond — any impartial assessment has to place Pilch among those names because of what he achieved at a time when batting was often little more than a lottery. When Grace emerged, it was with Pilch that he was most often compared in trying to decide who was the greatest; and not everyone agreed that Grace was better than Pilch. And across the vast span of time between the end of Pilch’s career in 1854 and the modern day, one of his batting innovations has survived and continues to be one of the foundations of the game.

Before delving too deeply into Pilch’s story, it is worth establishing how very different cricket was when he was at his peak in the 1830s and 1840s. Cricket was played irregularly and few county teams even existed; there were no competitions or cups or championships and fixtures were arranged on an ad hoc basis with no real central authority to coordinate them. Test cricket was years away. Many games were played, especially at the major venues such as Lord’s, between what were little more than scratch teams. Part of the problem was that, at a time before the railway network had become fully established, transporting teams across the country was simply uneconomical. Single-wicket matches were still extremely popular, and followed closely by the press and public. While there were amateur and professional cricketers (Pilch was a professional), the distinction was less pronounced than it became; later generations of amateurs were more eager to keep professionals in their place, but in Pilch’s time the relationship was more benevolent. He described it: “Gentlemen were gentlemen, and players much in the same position as a nobleman and his head keeper maybe.” And the concept of what today would be called first-class cricket was largely unknown, although there was a sense that some matches were more important than others.

On the field, it was a similarly different game. When Pilch first played at Lord’s in 1820, the only legal form of bowling was underarm. Although “round-arm” bowling — in which the ball could be released from shoulder height — was widely used and became very effective, it was not officially permitted until 1835. Few, if any, batters used pads or gloves and on the field, long-stop was an essential position. The science of tending to pitches was almost unknown, and therefore the wickets were rough and untamed: the ball bounced unevenly (shooters were common) and could rise sharply if it struck the stones which were found in many playing surfaces. For bowlers who spun the ball, there was a huge amount of help from the pitch. Furthermore, games were generally played without a boundary — all hits were run out, with no fours or sixes. There might have been exceptions; during Pilch’s benefit match in 1839, wagons were used to enclose the ground, but we do not know if hits beyond this point counted as extra runs. But one contemporary critic said that “Pilch played cricket, W. G. plays boundary”. In these circumstances, run-scoring was incredibly challenging; reaching double figures was an achievement and scores of 20 were perhaps as valuable as a century in modern cricket. And the development of round-arm (which gradually metamorphosed into over-arm) bowling was even more of a challenge; the big scores that had begun to accumulate before 1820 against simply lob-bowling disappeared and did not reappear until the time of Grace. Cricket had become a low-scoring game, and the surviving statistics reflect this. Those who later championed the claims of Pilch as one of the best ever were quick to remind audiences how difficult it was to score back in the 1830s and 1840s.

This, therefore, was the cricket world into which Pilch emerged and established himself as the best; alongside Nicholas Felix and Alfred Mynn, he became one of the few household names who played the sport. How did he reach that peak?

Fuller Pilch was born on 17th March 1804, at Horningtoft in Norfolk. He was the seventh (not the youngest as has often been claimed) child of Nathaniel Pilch (a tailor) and Frances Fuller (who was the widowed Nathaniel’s second wife). Records are scarce from so long ago — individuals were not recorded on the census until Pilch was 37 — and so there is much that we do not know. But Pilch’s later fame meant that some details were recorded; he and his two older brothers (the only three out of Nathaniel and Frances’ five sons to survive until adulthood) William and Nathanial followed their father’s trade, becoming tailors. However all three proved to be good cricketers as well. There are suggestions — based on one questionable newspaper report — that Pilch spent time working in Sheffield as a young man, and learned cricket there, but it is perhaps more likely that he played village cricket in Norfolk.

There are more plausible claims that Pilch was coached by William Fennex, one of the Hambledon stars from the period in the late eighteenth century when cricket’s popularity first exploded, and one of the first men to use what would today be known as forward play; Fennex himself claimed to have taught Pilch how to bat. The author Frederick Gale wrote in 1883: “Fennex, be it remembered that he inaugurated the free forward play, and taught it to Fuller Pilch, and Fuller Pilch taught the world; for I feel confident, in my own mind, that all the fine forward play which one sees now sometimes, is simply the reflex of what Fuller Pilch developed in a manner which has never been surpassed by any living man (except W. G. [Grace]), and that, too, in days when grounds were less true, and pads and gloves were unknown. And I say of my friend W. G., that he has simply perfected the art which Pilch taught, though Pilch was never such an all-round man as our present champion.” We shall return to Pilch’s pioneering forward play later.

As Pilch improved as a cricketer, he was selected to play for Norfolk — in reality at that time little more than the Holt Cricket Club — and he made his debut in “big cricket” when he played for Norfolk against the MCC at Lord’s in 1820. Pilch was just seventeen at the time, and played alongside his brothers Nathaniel and Francis. But the three fielded while William Ward scored 278 runs, the highest innings in what would today be called first-class cricket until W. G. Grace scored 344 in 1876. Pilch, at that time picked as much for his under-arm bowling as his batting, scored 0 and 2 as the MCC won by 417 runs. But for modern statisticians, this was his first-class debut, even though no-one would have had any notion of what that meant at the time.

Fuller Pilch in 1852 (Image: Wikimedia Commons)

The irregular and disorganised nature of cricket at this time mean that it is hard to track Pilch’s career in terms of statistical achievements. But he gradually became a more accomplished batter even though he did not play anything else recognised today as “first-class” until 1827. In 1823, he moved to Bury St Edmonds, and from 1825 to 1828, he played as a professional for Bury Cricket Club — his first century was scored for the club against Woodbridge in 1830 — and represented Suffolk. In this period he made some substantial scores and was selected for the Gentlemen v Players match for the first time in 1827. That year, he also played for a team styled “England” against Sussex in a series of three matches intended as a trial of the fairness of the new style of “round-arm” bowling (used by Sussex in those matches) and top-scored in the first game with 38. He did not stand out in the other games and, with several other “England” players threatened to pull out of the final game unless the Sussex bowlers reverted to underarm, before ultimately agreeing to play. But Pilch quickly learned to face the new style of bowling, adopted it himself, and when asked in later years about what it was like facing the old underarm style, replied: “Gentlemen, I think you might put me in on Monday morning and get me out by Saturday night”.

Pilch moved to Norwich in 1829, becoming the landlord of the Anchor of Hope Inn, and began to play for Norfolk, which was established on a more formal basis in 1827. Within a few years, it was one of the strongest teams in England, not least owing to Pilch’s batting. And in 1833, he became famous through two single-wicket matches against Tom Marsden, the “Champion” of England. Single-wicket was a highly popular form of the game at the time and was played under various rule. The main versions involved two players opposing each other without assistance in the field. Hits behind the wicket did not count, and batters had to run to the other end of the pitch and back to score a single run. Pilch comfortably won the two matches: in the first, played at Norwich, he won after dismissing Marsden for seven, hitting 73 runs himself and then bowling Marsden seventh ball for a duck, winning by an innings. In the return match at Sheffield, before 12,000 spectators, Pilch scored 78, to which Marsden could only reply with 25. Pilch hit 102 and facing an impossible task, Marsden was dismissed for 31. Just over ten years later, William Denison said of this game: “Pilch’s batting was of the finest description, and a better display of the art of cricket was never witnessed in any former match.” The contest was a huge attraction and received a great deal of press coverage. But for all his success, Pilch disliked single wicket matches and rarely took part: he turned down several opportunities (he and Alfred Mynn seem to have actively avoided facing each other in that format) and only seems to have played one other game (in 1845).

In other cricket, Pilch’s fame grew and there were hardly any big matches in which he did not feature. He played for Cambridge Town, “England”, the MCC, Norfolk, the Players, Suffolk and Surrey, and as a given man for the Gentlemen. He also featured in several of the “novelty” teams which were popular at the time, such as for the Single against the Married or the Right-handed against Left-handed. Perhaps his greatest year came in 1834. In two games for Norfolk against Yorkshire, he scored 87 not out, and 73 and 153 not out; he also scored 105 not out for England against Sussex and 60 for the Players against the Gentlemen. According to Gerald Howat (in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography), “his aggregate of 811 runs in major matches was not surpassed for twenty-seven years.” Such considerations were meaningless in 1834 — batting averages were not widely published, if at all — but his average of 43 in those games dwarfed the next best, which was only 18. And in matches retrospectively reckoned first-class, he scored 551 runs at 61.22. But perhaps more importantly he had reached three figures in “major matches” for the first time, in a period when such feats were a rarity.

By then probably the best batter in the world, Pilch was in considerable demand and Norfolk could not hold on to him. A Kent county team — the second such attempt — was founded in Town Malling by a pair of lawyers called Thomas Selby and Silas Norton. After the 1835 season, they persuaded Pilch to move to Town Malling in return for £100 per year, for which he would play for Kent and manage the cricket ground. He made his Kent debut in 1836 and remained with the county until 1854, during which period he was a key figure in making it the strongest team in England. Perhaps its most powerful opposition came from another of Pilch’s teams: William Clarke’s professional touring side, the All-England Eleven. Clarke’s team made a huge impact on English cricket, and Pilch was a founding member, playing for the Eleven from 1846 until 1852. He played at least 65 matches for the Clarke’s Eleven, usually in games played “against the odds” (i.e. against teams featuring more than eleven players, to make the game competitive), and scored four half-centuries. But Pilch was not limited to playing for these teams. At a time when county cricket was an unregulated free-for-all, Pilch also made appearances for Hampshire, Surrey and Sussex. He was also a dominant figure in club cricket; he named his innings of 160 for Town Malling against Reigate in 1837 as one of his best.

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A scorecard showing Pilch’s innings of 60 for All-England against Nottingham in 1842

While Pilch was an undoubted success on the pitch — for example, he was the Kent’s leading scorer in twelve out of nineteen seasons — he did not play regularly because Kent, like all county teams in this period, only rarely took the field. And his statistical achievements have been utterly dwarfed by the inflation in scores that took place in the later part of the nineteenth century; to a modern audience, his average looks poor but at the time, given the challenges of batting, it was a different story. His record surpassed that of any of his contemporaries. He scored eleven fifties for Kent in 84 matches today reckoned first-class, with a highest score of 98, and his average of 19.61 was very good for the time. Of these matches, 36 were played against a team styled as England, which contained many of the best players: in these games, he scored four fifties and averaged 18.15. And in the Gentlemen v Players match, which was the highest form of representative cricket in England in the days before Test matches, he played 23 matches — 21 for the Players (the professional team) and two as a “given man” for the Gentlemen (the amateur team) to make the match more competitive — and averaged 14.90. As a point of contrast, he was easily the dominant batter for Kent in this period. Of his contemporaries to score 1,000 runs for the county, none approached his average: Tom Adams had 2,291 runs at 12.58; Nicholas Felix scored 1,528 runs at 16.79; and Ned Wenman had 1,063 runs at 10.42.

Hidden among the fragmented and hard-to-process figures, Pilch was remarkably consistent. It was a matter of some note that in 1836, he reached double figures in 13 innings (five of which surpassed 20); and in 1841 he reached double figures 16 times (not all of which are today judged as first-class) within which were two scores in the 20s, two in the 30s, three in the 40s and one in the 60s. In his Sketches of the Players (1844), William Denison listed many of these achievements, and wrote of Pilch: “But there are other seasons wherein Pilch has outshone all his competitors, and were they to be enumerated, it would be be to extend this publication to a size far beyond that of a ‘sketch’.” He also stated: “As a bat, [Pilch] has been one of the brightest luminaries of the cricket world, during the last 20 years.” In short, there was little doubt of Pilch’s class and superiority; he was quite simply the best batter who had played until then.

This was a precarious time for county clubs and several teams flitted in and out of existence. Kent was no exception: the Town Malling incarnation of the club struggled financially and collapsed in 1841. But Pilch maintained his Kent contention. When the brothers John and William Baker, the founders of the Beverley Club at Canterbury, took over the organisation of Kent teams in 1842 (when their club effectively assumed the role of the county team), they appointed Pilch as the manager of the Beverley Ground. When the proto-Kent team moved to the St Lawrence Ground in 1847, Pilch again moved with them, taking charge of that ground too. There are a few other traces of his life around this time. Despite claims by Denison, there is little evidence that Pilch ran a public house in Town Malling. Instead, he seems to have worked as a tailor in cricket’s off-season; this was the occupation recorded on the 1841 census (which was taken when he and the Kent team were staying at The Bear in Lewes, during a match against Sussex).

For all of Pilch’s later claims — such as the Kent team being a “eleven brothers’, or that “as soon as a man had been 12 months among the cherry orchards, hop gardens and pretty girls, he could not help becoming Kentish to the backbone” — his loyalty to Kent perhaps owed more to finance than emotion. After being awarded a benefit match — the lucrative Kent v England game in 1839 — he accepted an offer (“too good to refuse”) from Sussex to move county; it required the intervention of some of Kent’s wealthier patrons to persuade Pilch to remain where he was.

Pilch played on until 1855, when he was 52 — he later admitted that he and several of his team-mates kept going too long, meaning that Kent declined in the 1850s — having spent 35 years playing at what then was the top level. In terms of what is today judged as first-class games, Pilch scored 7,147 runs at 18.61, including three centuries and 24 fifties. He also took 142 wickets (although analyses do not survive for most of these). But it was noted at the time that he had scored ten centuries in total, a remarkable number for the time; he was also reckoned to have appeared 103 times at Lord’s.

The Saracen’s Head in Canterbury, photographed around 1945; the building was demolished in 1969 (Image: Dover Kent Archives)

Pilch continued to play minor cricket for one more season, appearing for the Beverley Club in Canterbury, and then from 1856 until 1866 concentrated on umpiring: in this period, he stood in 28 matches today reckoned first-class, almost all of which were played in Canterbury (although he had no great reputation as an umpire). He also had other cricketing interests. He began to work as a bat manufacturer — his occupation as given on the 1851 census — and continued as what would today be termed the head groundsman of the St Lawrence Ground until 1867. This was not the only ground with which he was associated. In 1849–50, he went into partnership with Edward Martin, another Kent cricketer, and developed the Prince of Wales Ground in Oxford, where he undertook winter coaching. This business partnership ended in 1855, at which point Pilch began another partnership with his nephew William Pilch, in whose house he was living in 1851. The pair became joint licensees of a Canterbury public house called the Saracen’s Head. It is not quite clear how the responsibility was split: the proprietors were often given as “F. and W. Pilch”, but William was sometimes named alone, and was listed as the head of the household on the 1861 census. From the little evidence that survives, William looks to have been the primary licensee. For example, on the 1861 census when Pilch was living at the Saracen’s Head with his nephew, William was listed as an innkeeper employing three male and three female servants; Pilch by contrast gave his occupation as a cricketer.

This particular business scheme was destined to end badly. William continued to run the Saracen’s Head for most of the 1860s but drifted into growing financial strife. Part of the problem was the new railway station that had been built in Canterbury; whereas the Pilches had previously enjoyed the custom of people (such as farmers) who would stay overnight in their establishment, the growth of the railways made this unnecessary as journeys could be made more quickly with no need for overnight accommodation. As a result, the Saracen’s Head lost valuable business. But there was also something of a financial crisis at the time that affected many small businesses after a leading bank in London collapsed. It was probably a combination of these factors that led to William’s ruin: in 1868 he was imprisoned for debt and declared bankrupt the following year, owing his creditors almost £700. By then, Pilch’s health was bad and he had been forced to give up his work as groundsman. His friends seemed to think that the problems over money with the Saracen’s Head had a negative effect on him; more than one report stated that it had been Pilch himself who had been declared bankrupt. Frederick Gale for example wrote in The Game of Cricket (1888): “The last time I saw Fuller Pilch was a few months before his bankruptcy, which, I believe, killed him. The world did not prosper with him as it ought, and he was out of spirits, and got so excited about the old times that I had to drop the subject.”

Pilch’s failing health — he was suffering from rheumatism — forced him to give up work and money became a struggle, especially with the problems faced by his nephew. Some Kent supporters arranged a subscription which it was hoped would provide him with a pension, but it fell short of expectations; some wealthy patrons had to top up the fund to provide him with an income of one pound per week. In April 1870, Pilch’s health took a turn for the worse. On 1 May 1870, he died at William’s home on Lower Bridge Street in Canterbury from what was then known as dropsy but would today be called fluid retention (or oedema); the actual cause was perhaps most likely to be heart failure. As a mark of the respect in which Pilch was held, a collection was taken among the public, the proceeds of which were used for a memorial. An obelisk was placed over his grave at St Gregory’s Church, which was moved to the St Lawrence ground in 1978 after the church had fallen into disuse. In 2008, Pilch returned to the news when plans by Christ Church University to redevelop the site of St Gregory’s were paused after it became clear that no-one was sure where Pilch was buried. An old photograph of the memorial eventually cleared up the mystery, and work went ahead; a new headstone was placed to mark the approximate location of Pilch’s grave.

The original memorial to Pilch in St Gregory’s churchyard, Canterbury, in the 1950s (Image: Kent Online)

So much for the facts. It is perhaps not as complete a story as we would like, nor could it ever be as detailed as a biography of Grace or Ranjitsinhji or Hobbs because it was plainly a very different world for cricketers of Pilch’s time. It is not possible to simply go through each season and note his scores in the biggest games or reel off impressive aggregates and averages. And yet there was no doubt among Pilch’s contemporaries that he was the best of all. As it happens, it is possible to get a glimpse of what might have made Pilch so good. But that is not the only way in which his legend continued. His reputation endured so that when W. G. Grace came along, Pilch was still for many the point of comparison. For some who remembered him, Pilch’s success must have been more meretricious simply because batting was more difficult back then. And so, more than 30 years after his death and over half a century since he last took to a cricket field, Pilch’s name became embroiled in a debate that has never been settled: was cricket a sport that continually improved, or one that was in a permanent state of decline? Were those who played in the past better than those seen in contemporary cricket? Or were the current players the best of all time?

“Adventurous by nature”: The Legendary Hitting of C. I. Thornton

An illustration of Charles Thornton (Image: Cricket, 21 April 1887)

The modern era has seen a huge increase in the number of sixes. At the time of writing, there were 40 men to have hit at least 50 sixes in Test cricket, but only six of these played the entirety of their careers before 2000. Similarly, only two men who retired before 1980 reached thirty sixes in their Test career. There are various reasons for the increase in six-hitting: a change in mind-set, alterations in technique, advances in equipment. But the idea that six-hitting is a modern phenomenon is a little misleading: it might be more accurate to say that big-hitting fell out of fashion as cricket — especially at Test level — became more serious and batters preferred a safety-first approach of keeping the ball on the ground. In the nineteenth century, there were specialists “sloggers”, such as the Australian George Bonnor, whose aim was simply to hit the ball as far as possible. One of the biggest hitters of all was Charles Thornton, who played first-class cricket from 1866 until 1897. In 1960, Gerald Brodribb wrote in Hit for Six, his book about big-hitting batters: “[Thornton] was considered by all who saw him bat to have hit a cricket ball harder, higher, and farther than any other batsmen the game has ever seen.” However, he conceded: “Since his career ended over sixty years ago, we are dealing with another era and the dangers of legend.”

Charles Inglis Thornton was born on 20 March 1850 at Llanwarne, a village in Herefordshire. He was the youngest of the three children of Watson Joseph Thornton and Frances Anne Webb. His father was the rector of Llanwarne and held several administrative positions in the Church of England, as well as being a magistrate and serving on the Board of Guardians that ran workhouses in Hereford. But Thornton never really knew his parents; both died within the space of a few months in 1855, his father after a brief illness. A few weeks later, the entire contents of the rectory were sold at an auction.

It isn’t obvious what arrangements were made for the children, who must have been badly affected by their loss. The 1861 census records all three in different places: the eldest, the 18-year-old Frances Marianne Thornton, lived with her aunt Marianne in Clapham; Henry Sykes Thornton was a visitor at the house of John Rogers, a barrister and magistrate, in Sevenoaks; Charles lived with his aunt Isabella and her husband, Benjamin Harrison, the Archdeacon of Maidstone, in Canterbury. Writing about his life for The Cricketer in 1921, Thornton said that both he and his brother were adopted by the Archdeacon.

Around this time, Thornton attended Eton. Lord Harris, one of his contemporaries at the school, later recalled:

“His home during his Eton days was with his uncle and aunt — the venerable Archdeacon of Canterbury and Mrs Harrison — in the Precincts. Consequently he and I, as soon as we became acquainted, about 1866, saw much of each other and became very close friends. We played much local cricket together at Canterbury, and at various country houses, and he was a regular member of my Eleven at Belmont. We did a lot of hunting and shooting together. He was a very bold and hard rider on not very good — certainly not expensive — horses.”

Thornton’s Wisden obituary recorded: “He went to Eton in 1861, to the Rev. G. R. Dupuis’s house, and was in the [cricket] Eleven in 1866, 1867, and 1868, being captain in his last year. He also played in Oppidan and Mixed Wall and Field XI’s [teams which play the Eton Wall Game], won the School Fives [a game where a ball is hit against a wall with the hand] and was Keeper [effectively a captain in the Eton Wall Game] in 1867 and 1868, and won the Double Rackets and Putting the Weight in 1863, and Throwing the Cricket Ball in 1867.” Without going into the obscure and parochial nature of games at Eton, it is enough to say that he must have been good at sport. Away from the playing fields, Thornton became a King’s Scholar and a member of Pop (the Eton debating society), so he was far from just a sportsman. But any fame he had then and later was connected almost entirely with cricket.

His reminiscences for The Cricketer state that he first played cricket in the garden of his uncle and aunt and the nearby bowling green owned by the Archdeacon. He wrote: “I used to take on all the neighbouring boys at single wicket.” His first organised match came in 1861 when he scored 22 not out in a match at Great Mongeham, and took a catch. At Eton, his hitting attracted notice of the “Upper Club boys” and he “was summoned to Upper Club” (a cricket team for the boys in Upper School). He recalled that he was held back because the professional coach Fred Bell disapproved of him hitting the ball into the trees during practices; he wrote of Bell that “our ideas did not coincide”. In the same article, he was disparaging of coaching methods and the way that natural batting was discouraged.

But Andy Carter, a sports historian who has studied life at Eton in this period, suggests that Bell is unlikely to have held any influence over selection as he had been hired by one of the schoolboy captains of the team; moreover, professional coaches were reluctant to criticise the technique of boys who were far above them in the social hierarchy. Selection in 1865 — when Thornton was probably too young to have had a realistic prospect of being chosen — was in the hands of the captain George Lyttleton; the boys strongly resisted the involvement of any adults in running the team. Matters changed in 1866 with the appointment of R. A. H. Mitchell as master; he took charge of cricket and considerably improved the fortunes of the Eton team. Carter suggests that Thornton may have mistakenly believed that Bell had a similarly influential role.

Lord Harris later wrote about an incident when Thornton was given a trial by the Upper Club. When Thornton was fielding at long-leg, near the road, someone passed by carrying some food. As a wicket had fallen, and there was a lull in play, Thornton bought a bun and jam which he began eating. According to Harris’ foggy recollection: “It lasted long enough for play to be resumed. A high catch was hit to him, which I fancy he caught. What happened to the bun I never heard for certain. Some say he swallowed it, others again that he crammed it, jam and all, into his trousers pocket.” For the rest of his life, Thornton was known by the nickname “Buns”. A slightly different version was in circulation earlier — for example in the Bognor Regis Observer on 10 June 1896 — which said that the jam left a stain in his cricket trousers noted by the other players.

Another story recalled by Harris — who was clearly fond of Thornton — involved them going on a wild duck hunt near Sittingbourne during one very cold winter while they were at school. Thornton, despite the snow and ice, wore a nightgown for the hunt, borrowed from the housekeeper of Harris’ father, to everyone’s amusement.

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The Eton cricket team in 1866. Back three: T. H. W. Pelham, H. Gilliat and W. H. Walrond. Middle row: W. C. Higgins, R. N. R. Ferguson, C. I. Thornton, E. Lubbock, W. B. Barrington and J. W. Foley. Front row: H. M. Walter and J. C. Reiby.

For all his escapades off the field (or on the boundary), Thornton was clearly a talented cricketer, and although he made an impression more through the power of his hitting than the weight of his scores, he averaged 38 for Eton. Only a few innings stood out numerically: 42 against the Old Etonians, 47 against Winchester, 46 not out against Harrow (all in 1866); 76 against Christ Church Oxford, 118 against Windsor Garrison (1867); 44 against Harrow (1868). These were interspersed with lower scores and failures. But even his briefer innings could take the breath away. In his last game against Harrow — played, as always in those years, at Lord’s — he hit a ball over the pavilion (not the current structure).

Lord Harris later described the shot in his book A Few Short Runs (1921): “Thornton had just hit one ball against the old armoury which occupied the site of the members luncheon room, and had put one over Block D, when he followed these big hits — very big for a boy — by an astounding drive over the pavilion. He was bowled by a shooter next ball for a score of 44.”

While still at Eton, Thornton played several matches which are today recognised as first-class. Given his privileged background, he was only ever going to be an amateur. His first appearance was for the “Gentlemen of Kent” against the MCC at Canterbury in August 1866 — at the age of 16 — when he scored 26 and 24 in a low-scoring game. He played two similar games in 1867 — for the “South of the Thames” against the “North of the Thames”, and for Kent against the “Gentlemen of the MCC” — and two in 1868 — against for Kent against the MCC Gentlemen and also for Kent against Surrey. All of these games were part of the Canterbury Cricket Week, which took place at the beginning of every August, and Thornton was most likely chosen through a combination of his social connections (via his aunt) and his celebrity as a member of the Eton first eleven. The games were not especially competitive, and his highest score was just 36.

Thornton left Eton in 1868 and attended Trinity College, Cambridge. Inevitably, he was chosen for the University cricket team, and played in the eleven in each of his four seasons at Trinity (from 1869 until 1872). The most important fixture was the annual match against Oxford at Lord’s; Thornton was on the winning side in three games out of four. In his final year, when he was captain, he led Cambridge to an innings win. He continued to play for Kent when he was available.

Given the way he played, Thornton’s batting record at Cambridge was patchy (he scored 674 runs at an average of 18.72), but he had some big successes. Although the number of deliveries he faced was not recorded, nor in most cases how long he batted, it is a safe assumption that these large innings were scored quickly. In his first University match, he hit 50 and 36. Later that season, playing for Kent against Sussex, he scored his maiden first-class century; his final score of 124 included a four and nine sixes. Under the Laws of Cricket as they stood at the time, a hit over the boundary rope would only count as four; to score six, the ball had to go out of the ground, not just the playing field. Thornton also scored 76 out of a total of 114 against Nottinghamshire and 110 opening the batting against Surrey.

He was less successful in 1870. His best score was 75 for Cambridge against the Gentlemen of England, but he scored 48 and 41 not out for the South against the North in the Canterbury Cricket Week. In 1871, he scored 74 for Cambridge against the Gentlemen of England, two other fifties, and 111 for Kent against Surrey (in 93 minutes with 18 fours). But in the year of his captaincy, he failed with the bat for his university, and his highest score for Kent was 63 against Surrey.

Over the following seasons, Thornton played quite regularly, but not too often in county games. He appeared for the MCC, for various “England XI” teams or other scratch sides, and in the Canterbury Festival. In 1875, he began to play for Middlesex, having begun to work in London and qualified for the county by residence.

Charles Thornton from a photograph printed in 1893 (Image: Wikipedia)

But after 1871, his only first-class centuries were scored for the Gentlemen of England against I Zingari at Scarborough in 1886 and 1887. In 1886, he scored 107 not out in 70 minutes out of 133 runs scored. This included eight sixes (which, remember, had to be hit out of the ground) and twelve fours; one of the sixes apparently went through the open window of a house opposite the ground in Trafalgar Square, just missing the resident old lady, and a second went over that house and into the Square on the other side. This was later measured at 138 yards, but was reckoned notable because of the height it achieved. His 1887 century was scored in 70 minutes with three sixes and 17 fours.

Thornton’s overall first-class average in 217 games was 19.35 (which was slightly better than it sounds given that he played in a low-scoring period, but not especially good). In fact, the only seasons in which he averaged over 25 having played five or more games were 1869 and 1886. However, his average in the 18 matches he played for Kent was 29.06, which very high for the time.

What seems to have made his reputation was a series of cameos, not dissimilar to modern T20 innings, in which he blazed away to play some spectacular shots and then got out. His Wisden obituary records:

“Adventurous by nature, he felt that in cricket he could indulge this spirit to the full … Individual in style, he jumped quickly to the ball in making his magnificent drives … In his brilliant career he put together many scores of a hundred in remarkable time, and the length of some of his drives was enormous. It is on record, for instance, that in the North v. South match at Canterbury in 1871, he hit a ball from N. V. M. Rose strictly measured 152 yards, while at the practice nets at Hove the same year he sent it 168 yards 2 feet and 162 yards. Playing against Harrow at Lord’s in 1868, he drove the ball over the old Pavilion, and at the Oval he accomplished the same feat, while it is noted that at Canterbury he hit V. E. Walker out of the ground each ball of an over. The over then consisted of four balls.”

Gerald Brodribb analysed some of these supposed huge shots in Hit for Six, and notes that there are more long distances recorded for Thornton than anyone else: “His big hits were so frequent that people were ready to leap out with tape-measures and make an instant note of them.” Brodribb also mentions a quote by the cricketer W. J. Ford: “It may safely be stated that Thornton seldom scored 50 runs in an innings without hitting at least one ball to a distance of 140 yards to the pitch, and his off-driving, even if not high in the air, was terrific. One had only to stand on the boundary to realise the tremendous pace he got on the ball.”

Thornton was not muscular, and his power seems to have come from a swing of the hips, a fast bat-swing and his habit — unusual for a hitter at the time — of running to the pitch of the ball. Contemporaries said, somewhat unconvincingly, that Thornton was so fast with bat swing and footwork that if he missed the ball he could get back to his crease without being stumped (although he was stumped 30 times in 374 innings, which was well above average for the time). His speed may have been assisted by a refusal to wear normal batting pads (he wore shin-pads like those used in football) and he only began wearing a glove (only on his left hand) late in his career.

Among his more notable feats — impressive even today — Brodribb lists several: hitting David Buchanan (for Cambridge against the Gentlemen of England) for 6446 in one (four-ball) over at Fenner’s in 1871; for his own “C. I. Thornton’s XI” against Cambridge in 1885, he drove T. Lindley over the wall of the Fenner’s ground and over the tennis courts (an eyewitness claimed a distance of around 150 yards, which would be roughly accurate according to google maps) during his innings of 56. He hit V. E. Walker four times “out of the ground” when Kent played the MCC at Canterbury in 1869; Thornton scored 44 (caught W. G. Grace, bowled Walker). Lord Harris wrote of this in his tribute to Thornton:

“I see it is related of him that he hit V. E. Walker out of the Canterbury ground four times in one over. I saw the over, and I can see him now jumping in and the ball sailing away, but I doubt each ball going out of the ground — one or two perhaps, and all over the ring, but out of the ground I doubt. He was hitting them towards the Pavilion, but his biggest hit at Canterbury I should say was on another occasion from the other end out of the ground – a very long carry.”

Brodribb states that all the hits were fours (remembering that hits over the boundary only counted as four unless they went out of the ground), but that another hit in that innings landed in a field near the entrance gate. And he lists two measurements taken from Thornton’s hits at Canterbury: an on-drive into a nearby field off F. C. Cobden which was measured at 132 yards in a Kent v MCC game in 1870. In the equivalent fixture for 1871, he scored 19 in eight minutes (46144, though there is no indication that this was from successive deliveries). The six supposedly went into the road outside the ground, and was measured at 152 yards.

Of his innings of 111 against Surrey at Canterbury in 1871, Thornton later remembered hitting James Southerton into a tree twelve times (which only counted as four under the rules of the time), presumably the famous lime tree at the ground. In the first innings of that match (when he scored 44), he scored 16 runs (6442) from one over by Southerton. Other famous achievements also involved big distances. W. G. Grace recalled Thornton at the Oval hitting sixes out ground on three of its sides, and once sending three balls in a row over the grandstand next to the pavilion.

The supposed biggest hit of all came at Hove in 1876, while he was practising in front of the pavillion. He hit a ball from G. L. King which went into the road outside the ground, where it landed in front of James Pycroft, who noted the spot and measured it: 168 yards and two feet (the figure most commonly given). Brodribb later investigated the hit in some depth and wrote about it in The Cricketer. He discovered that the hit came from a gentle lob bowled in the practice area, and the recording of the distance varied greatly over the years — from 140 yards to the 168 yards generally cited. It also seems that Pycroft may not actually have seen the ball land, so despite the supposed accuracy implied by the precise figure of 168 yards and two feet, the distance was no more than an estimate.

Among his other hitting achievements, Thornton struck F. M. Buckland four sixes in one over in 1876, while at Twickenham in 1878, he made a hit from the bowling of Harry Boyle for the Orleans Club against the Australians which was measured at 152 yards.

It is hard to know what to make of these distances. It seems unlikely that any measurements were made with an accuracy that would be acceptable today, but at the same time it is even less likely that they would be wrong by 10 yards or more (unless the distance included how far the ball travelled after pitching). Yet hits over 140 yards (128 metres) seem unlikely with old equipment, given this is longer than almost all sixes recorded more verifiably by players with modern bats, and physiques more adept at power-hitting. An article by Charles Davis in 2016 casts justifiable skepticism on the claims made for Thornton, but it seems even if some figures may be questionable, he was an extraordinary hitter who cleared the ground on a remarkable number of occasions.

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The Scarborough Festival around 1913

Aside from his record hits, Thornton’s most lasting fame came through his association with the Scarborough Festival. The first such event there was held in 1876, and Thornton was involved from the beginning. The idea was developed after the success of a game, sponsored by Lord Londesborough, between the MCC (under the captaincy of Thornton) and Yorkshire at Scarborough. When Londesborough became the MCC President the following year, a whole programme was organised, extending over nine days.

But if Londesborough technically began the traditional festival, which continues in to be held annually, Thornton did more than anyone to make it a success, perhaps influenced by his experiences at the Canterbury Week. His Wisden obituary said:

“To him more than to anybody else was due the success of the annual Scarborough Festival. He was largely instrumental in starting it, and although he had long given up cricket he never lost his interest in the famous Week, even until last season. To mark the esteem in which he was held and to recognise his services to the Scarborough Festival, which had then been in existence a quarter of a century, he was, in 1894, presented with a silver loving-cup subscribed for by the members of the Scarborough Cricket Club. He received another presentation in 1921 and was also given the freedom of the borough.”

His long association with Scarborough extended far beyond his playing career, which ended in 1897. Almost every Test side that toured England between 1890 and 1929 faced a team selected by Thornton (“C. I. Thornton’s XI”) as part of the Scarborough Festival (the only exceptions being in 1909 and 1912 when the tourists played “Lord Londesborough’s XI” and when the 1928 West Indies team — like their non-Test counterparts in 1923 — played “H. D. G. Leveson Gower’s XI”).

What of his life away from cricket? The 1871 census records him living on Harley Street with his sister Frances, who had married a doctor called Reginald Southey. After that, he is hard to locate. He was probably overseas at the time of later censuses; he was certainly rich enough and enjoyed travelling abroad. Someone called Charles Thornton was living in the area of St George Hanover Square at the time of the 1891 census, “living on his own means” and married to a woman called Frances, seven years his junior. This man was listed as being born in Wales — our C. I. Thornton was born close to Wales, but not in it — but there is no other trace of this Thornton, nor of his marriage to this Frances. However, there may be more to this, as we shall see, because in 1902 our Thornton did marry someone of this name: Frances Jane Clements, who was a few years older than him. She had divorced her first husband, who had left her for another woman, the previous year.

As for the rest of his life away from cricket, his Wisden obituary spelt matters out plainly:

“In business Thornton was in the timber trade for 35 years [he was a partner in the firm Raffety, Thornton & Co Ltd], and retired in 1912. A keen motorist, he was also extremely fond of travelling, having been all through Japan, Siberia, and Russia. When the [First World] War broke out he was in Berlin, and was very nearly caught. In his book, East and West and Home Again, he described a trip round the world. He had been a member of the MCC and of the Orleans Club for fifty years. He married Fanny, daughter of Mr. Charles Dowell, of Croydon, but left no children.”

But there are just a couple of hints that he was perhaps more interesting than history suggests. The first came in a court case held at the Old Bailey in 1907 when Samuel Gurney Massey, the director of a company called the Economic Bank, was on trial for fraud. Thornton was a witness, speaking in favour of Massey; the court records state that Thornton, identified as a “merchant in the city”, said that “he had known prisoner for 33 years; prisoner had always borne the character of a thoroughly respectable honest man.” Nevertheless, Massey was found guilty and sentenced to twelve months imprisonment.

Thornton was also involved in a bizarre libel case in 1916. Thornton prosecuted a man called John Augustus Rawlinson, a former bicycling instructor whom Thornton had previously employed to give lessons to his wife but who at the time was working as an electrician. Although the details were kept deliberately vague in the trial, Rawlinson was apparently preparing to send libellous letters to prominent people that accused Thornton of adultery as part of a blackmail scheme. The accusations were not read out but appeared connected with Frances Thornton and her earlier marriage. It is not impossible that Thornton had been living with Frances before her divorce — maybe it was him on the 1891 census — which would doubtless have affected her divorce settlement had her first husband known.

One part of the letter examined in court said that Thornton was “unfit and unworthy to associate with decent men”. Rawlinson — who had previously abandoned his wife, been found guilty of bigamy, and driven the owner of a house in which he was boarding to close her premises after he became a nuisance — pleaded guilty to libel and was sentenced to nine months imprisonment. The Recorder who heard the case confessed that he did not understand the letter, and the whole affair seems very strange; before being cut off by the Recorder (who realised he was about to make more accusations), Rawlinson said that the incident with Thornton had a “long and pathetic history”.

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Charles Thornton (left) with the England captain Percy Chapman (centre) and H. D. G. Leveson Gower (right) at Scarborough in 1928

Thornton died on 10 December 1929, and so famous had he been that even the New York Times had an obituary. But as he had never played Test cricket, his name faded over time until today he is hardly known at all, despite being the biggest hitter of his day and a batter who might have fitted perfectly into modern cricket.