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Somerset County Cricket Club in 1891
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In the 1891 English cricket season, Somerset County Cricket Club returned to first-class cricket after a five-year absence. They competed in the County Championship, which had been established the previous year, for the first time. Somerset began the season poorly, drawing one and losing two of their opening three fixtures, after which there were some comments in the press questioning whether the club deserved to be playing first-class cricket. A victory over Kent in their next game shifted opinion in their favour, and another win later in the season over Surrey, who won the County Championship in both 1890 and 1891, gained them further plaudits. Overall, Somerset won five, lost six and drew one of their County Championship matches, and finished fifth in the table, level with Kent.
Somerset County Cricket Club
1891 season
Somerset played their home matches at the County Ground, Taunton
Captain
Herbie Hewett
County Championship
5th (joint)
Most runs
Lionel Palairet (560)
Most wickets
Sammy Woods (72)
Most catches
Sammy Woods (10)
Most wicket-keeping dismissals
Archie Wickham (15)
← 1890
1892 →
The Somerset team predominantly consisted of amateur batsmen, supported by two professional bowlers. Lionel Palairet led Somerset's batting in terms of both runs and average during the County Championship season, scoring 560 runs at an average of 31.11, and was also the only Somerset player to score a century during 1891. Somerset's professional bowlers, George Nichols and Ted Tyler, along with an amateur all-rounder, Sammy Woods, did almost all of the bowling for the county; Woods led the bowling tables with 72 wickets at an average of 17.08.
Background
Somerset County Cricket Club was founded in 1875 but struggled to establish itself amongst the leading cricketing counties over the subsequent decade. For four seasons, from 1882 until 1885, the county side is considered by modern records to have been of first-class status, though contemporary publications were not unanimous in that classification.[1] Nonetheless, even those publications that had counted Somerset among the first-class counties agreed that the club no longer deserved it after 1885, due to a string of heavy losses and matches in which Somerset could not field a full team of eleven players.[2][3] Meetings were held at the club, and Henry Murray-Anderdon took over as secretary. Under his leadership, Somerset made significant improvements to their home ground, the County Ground, Taunton, until Murray-Anderdon was satisfied that "opponents will want to come here and play".[4] In addition to improving the ground, the secretary targeted university players to add talent to the team, such as the brothers Lionel and Richard Palairet, Vernon Hill and Sammy Woods, and added two professional bowlers, George Nichols and Ted Tyler.[5]
In 1890, Somerset played thirteen fixtures against other county sides, winning twelve and tying the other, against Middlesex. Nichols and Tyler claimed over 200 wickets between them, and Somerset won the 'Second-class County Championship'.[6] In August 1890, the County Cricket Council, which was responsible for the classification of county sides at the time, kept Somerset among the second-class counties for 1891. At the council's annual general meeting in December of that year, Herbie Hewett, the club captain, and Thomas Spencer, the joint secretary, were among the voices which led the County Cricket Council to dissolve, and allowed each county to arrange its fixtures.[7][8] The next day, a meeting of the county secretaries at Lord's unanimously voted for Somerset to be admitted to the first-class County Championship, and Somerset scheduled a twelve-match fixture list, consisting of home-and-away fixtures against six of the eight other first-class counties: Gloucestershire, Kent, Lancashire, Middlesex, Surrey and Yorkshire. During a subsequent gathering in Taunton, Spencer explained that the decision to restrict their fixture list to twelve matches, which meant they did not face either Nottinghamshire or Sussex, was primarily a financial decision.[9] In their preview of the season, Cricket: A Weekly Record of the Game described this as "a sufficiently heavy task", which was "onerous enough to try thoroughly their capacity to maintain a place in the front rank".[10]
Squad
Somerset were captained in 1891 by Herbie Hewett.
During the 1891 season, twenty-two players appeared for Somerset across the club's twelve County Championship matches. Three players appeared in all twelve matches: the captain, Hewett, and the two professional bowlers, Nichols and Tyler.[11] Although the county were able to field eleven players in all their matches, they still missed some of their better players occasionally, generally due to business or university commitments. Such a situation led to the joint secretary, Spencer, making his first-class debut against Yorkshire in July.[8] Team selection was decided by a six-member panel consisting of the captain, both secretaries and three appointed members from the club's general committee. This sometimes made it difficult when last-minute team changes were necessary due to player unavailability, as it was not always possible to reconvene the whole selection committee.[12]
Somerset's bowling resources were limited; only Nichols, Tyler and Woods were recognised bowlers,[13] and between them claimed 169 of the county's 179 wickets.[14] Recognising the reliance Somerset placed on him, Woods bowled slower than he had done earlier in his career. Ron Roberts, the author of a history of Somerset cricket, praised the variation this provided in Woods' bowling,[13] as Woods finished the season as the club's leading bowler by both wickets taken, 72, and bowling average, 17.08.[14] In their summary of the season, the Taunton Courier noted that none of Nichols, Tyler and Woods particularly shone, blaming their heavy workload: "This is not surprising, for the other five men tried with the ball only delivered a hundred overs between them."[15] Despite only playing 10 of the 12 County Championship matches, Lionel Palairet was the club's leading run-scorer by over 200 runs, getting 560 runs at an average of 31.11, and was the only player to score a century for Somerset in 1891.[11]
Hewett and Woods also played in representative cricket in 1891; both appeared for the Gentlemen of England and toured North America as part of Lord Hawke's XI at the end of the season, while Woods also played two matches for the Gentlemen in the Gentlemen v Players fixture, and appeared for the South of England cricket team.[16][17]
The following players made at least one appearance for Somerset in the County Championship. Age given is at the start of Somerset's first match of the season (18 May 1891).
Somerset players in 1891[11][14]
Name
Age
Batting stance
Bowling style[a]
Status[18]
Apps
John Challen
28
Right-handed
—
Amateur
9
Albert Clapp
24
Right-handed
—
Professional
2
Ernest Evans
29
Unknown
—
Amateur
1
Gerald Fowler
24
Right-handed
Right arm fast-medium
Amateur
6
Herbert Fox
32
Right-handed
—
Amateur
1
Joseph Gibbs
23
Right-handed
—
Amateur
1
Herbie Hewett (captain)
26
Left-handed
—
Amateur
12
Vernon Hill
20
Left-handed
Right arm fast-medium
Amateur
9
Edward Lock
22
Unknown
—
Amateur
1
Arthur Newton (WK)
28
Right-handed
—
Amateur
6
George Nichols
28
Right-handed
Right arm fast-medium
Professional
12
Lionel Palairet
20
Right-handed
Right arm medium pace / slow (underarm)
Amateur
10
Richard Palairet
19
Right-handed
—
Amateur
10
Frederick Poynton
21
Right-handed
Unknown
Amateur
2
Crescens Robinson
26
Right-handed
—
Amateur
11
Bill Roe
30
Right-handed
Right arm off break / medium pace
Amateur
7
Hamilton Ross
41
Right-handed
—
Amateur
1
Thomas Spencer
40
Unknown
—
Amateur
1
Ted Tyler
26
Left-handed
Left-arm orthodox spin
Professional
12
Archie Wickham (WK)
35
Right-handed
—
Amateur
6
Sammy Woods
24
Right-handed
Right arm fast-medium
Amateur
11
Wilfrid Young
23
Right-handed
—
Amateur
1
County Championship
Main article: 1891 County Championship
Lionel Palairet led Somerset's batting averages in the County Championship, scoring 560 runs at 31.11.
Somerset began their County Championship campaign with a trip to London to face Middlesex in a match heavily affected by rain. There was no play on the first and last days of the three-day game and just under five hours on the other. Somerset's opening batsmen, Hewett and Gerald Fowler, scored some quick runs, but ultimately with so much time lost the match was drawn.[19] Two weeks later, Somerset returned to London to face Surrey, the 1890 county champions. Somerset were missing some key players, including Woods and both Palairet brothers.[20] Surrey batted first and scored 449 runs on the first day; Tyler bowled 80 overs, while Nichols bowled 71.3. Somerset collapsed twice in response, scoring 37 runs in each innings and losing the match by an innings and 375 runs.[b][21] As of 2023, the defeat remains Somerset's fourth-largest innings loss.[22] Somerset hosted Lancashire for their third match of the season. The visitors won the toss and batted first, accruing 210 runs. Somerset then scored 128 runs in their first innings, led by a score of 37 from Lionel Palairet. Their low total meant that for the second successive match, they had to follow-on.[c][24] Batting again on day two, The Manchester Guardian reported that "at no time did [Somerset] look like escaping a severe beating." Some attacking batting from Woods helped Somerset to a total of 132, a lead of 50 runs. Lancashire scored the requisite runs in under 45 minutes to win by nine wickets.[d][25] The Times remarked that Somerset's play in their opening three matches was disappointing, given their success the previous year,[26] while The Sportsman was less kind, saying after Somerset's loss to Surrey that they were "first-class in classification ... at least for the remainder of the season".[27]
In mid-July, Somerset travelled to Kent and achieved their first win of 1891. Strong bowling performances from Woods, who took five wickets, and Nichols, who bowled 17 maiden overs, helped limit Kent to 106 runs in their first innings.[28] Lionel Palairet scored 79 runs in Somerset's response, while Challen batted for almost two-and-a-half hours to score 41 runs. Somerset reached 218 runs in the first innings and then bowled Kent out once more for 160 runs, during which Tyler took five wickets. Somerset lost five wickets in their second innings chasing down the target but secured both their first win, and Kent's first loss, of the season.[29] Later that month against Gloucestershire, Somerset again managed to dismiss their opponents for a low total; Woods took six wickets as Gloucestershire were restricted to 94 runs. Three Somerset batsmen then scored half-centuries in their first innings—Lionel Palairet scored 53, Richard Palairet 74, and Tyler 62—to help Somerset to a total of 236.[30] In Gloucestershire's second innings, Nichols bowled economically and claimed five wickets for 33 runs as the visiting team could only level the scores, leaving Lionel Palairet to score one run in the fourth innings of the match to win it for Somerset.[31] During their sixth match of the season, against Yorkshire, Somerset lost the toss for the fifth consecutive game. Yorkshire batted first and scored 291; Woods and Tyler took four wickets each.[32] In reply, Somerset's opening pair of Hewett and Lionel Palairet started well, sharing a partnership of 56, but they ended up as the county's top scorers with 39 and 76 runs respectively, and Somerset finished on 220, 71 runs in arrears. Yorkshire scored even more runs in their second innings, thanks to a century from George Ulyett, and left Somerset requiring 387 runs to win. No Somerset batsmen managed to establish themselves; Hill was the highest scorer in the innings with 30 runs, and Yorkshire won the match by 262 runs.[33]
Having played all six of their season's opponents once, Somerset held a record of two wins, three losses and a draw, and began their return fixtures at home against Kent on 30 July. The wicket had been affected by heavy rain in the twenty-four hours before the match, which made batting difficult for both sides in the first innings. Somerset scored 101; only the Palairet brothers and Nichols made double-figure scores, while Kent scored 96. Somerset then added another 189 runs in the second innings; Crescens Robinson scored a half-century to help the county recover from being 100 for eight.[e] Kent subsequently reached their target of 198 runs to beat Somerset by four wickets.[34] In their next match, Somerset visited Yorkshire. The hosts batted first, and started poorly, losing three batsmen for the addition of just 13 runs. One of these, Robert Frank, had to retire hurt after being hit in the hand by a high full toss bowled by Woods and took no further part in the match. Woods ultimately took five wickets in the first innings to help limit Yorkshire to 175 runs;[35] he was also key to Somerset's first-innings batting, being one of two players, along with Lionel Palairet, to score half-centuries as the visitors scored 201. Woods was again prolific in Yorkshire's second innings, taking six more wickets to finish the match with eleven in total,[36] one of two ten-wicket hauls taken by Somerset bowlers that season.[14] Yorkshire were dismissed for 116 runs, and Somerset then scored 91 runs to win by six wickets.[36] Travelling to Manchester to face Lancashire, Somerset had the worst of the batting conditions; stormy weather delayed the start of the match and made batting difficult in Somerset's first innings, though the report in Cricket: A Weekly Record of the Game praised their score of 156 as "a creditable achievement" given the conditions. Tyler took five wickets in Lancashire's response, as the hosts scored 215. Somerset struggled at the start of their second innings, losing four wickets for 44 runs before another rain shower stopped play. Batting again the next morning on a difficult pitch, Somerset collapsed to 92 all out, and Lancashire scored the 31 runs they needed to win by eight wickets.[37]
The day after completing their match against Lancashire in Manchester, Somerset returned to Taunton to face Surrey. To that point in the 1891 season, Surrey were undefeated in first-class matches and were considered champions-elect. Somerset's County Ground was full, with an estimated 3,500 people present on the first day. Somerset batted first, and on a good surface put on 194 runs for the first innings, of which Hewett got the highest score with 55.[38][39] Surrey only scored 154 on their first attempt, but did avoid having to follow-on, which had looked likely at one stage. In Somerset's second innings they scored 331, based on a good team batting performance; nine of the ten players who batted hit double figures, led by Challen's 89 and Lionel Palairet's 60.[40] Surrey needed 372 runs to win, but there were only five hours left in the match, so they batted defensively, playing for a draw.[41] Surrey's top order batsmen played stoically, and Surrey had five wickets remaining with half an hour left to play; Walter Read scored 94 runs for the visitors. Woods and Tyler then took three wickets in short order and with eight minutes to go Woods bowled out Read.[39] Woods then collected his fifth wicket of the innings in either the final or penultimate over of the day's play and Somerset won by 130 runs.[39][40] Somerset's victory was roundly praised in the national media, typified by a comment in The Standard that the victory "finally settled any doubt which may have remained as to their right to stand in the first rank."[42] Somerset's gate receipts for the match were by a wide margin the largest of the season; they collected over £233 (equivalent to £30,000 in 2021)[43] against Surrey, while their next highest total was £87, against Yorkshire.[12]
In their penultimate County Championship match of the season, Somerset batted first in wet conditions and scored 255,[44] including the team's only century of the season;[11] Lionel Palairet scored exactly 100 runs. Woods and Tyler then bowled unchanged for just over 14 overs to bowl Gloucestershire out for 25, which was their lowest first-class total to that point. Batting again in the follow-on, Gloucestershire could not surpass Somerset's first-innings total. Tyler claimed ten wickets in the match, and Somerset won by an innings and 130 runs.[44] Somerset's final game of the season was at home to Middlesex, who batted first and scored 254. In reply, Somerset could not avoid the follow-on: despite a quick 65 runs from Hewett, they fell three runs short with 172 and had to bat again.[c] On a drying wicket which favoured the bowlers, Somerset were dismissed again for 124 runs. After a rain delay, Middlesex scored the necessary runs to win by nine wickets.[45] Somerset finished the County Championship season with five wins, six losses and a draw, placing them joint-fifth in the table with Kent. Team batting and bowling tables compiled by Cricket: A Weekly Record of the Game showed the overall weakness of Somerset's bowling attack; while they ranked fourth in the batting table, they were second-from-last (eighth) in the bowling averages. In the same summary, they noted that Somerset recorded a statistical quirk, as both the largest and smallest innings totals in that year's competition were scored against them: Surrey's 449 and Gloucestershire's 25.[46]
Season standings
1891 County Championship table[47]
Pos
Team
Pld
W
L
D
A
Pts
1
Surrey
16
12
2
2
0
10
2
Lancashire
16
8
4
3
1
4
3
Middlesex
16
8
5
3
0
3
4
Nottinghamshire
14
5
4
5
0
1
5
Kent
16
4
5
6
1
–1
Somerset
12
5
6
1
0
–1
7
Sussex
14
4
7
3
0
–3
8
Yorkshire
16
5
10
1
0
–5
9
Gloucestershire
16
2
10
4
0
–8
Match log and statistics
Date
Opponents
Venue
Result
Ref
18–20 May
Middlesex (A)
Lord's, London
Drawn
[48]
1–2 June
Surrey (A)
The Oval, London
Lost by an innings and 375 runs
[49]
9–10 July
Lancashire (H)
County Ground, Taunton
Lost by 9 wickets
[50]
13–14 July
Kent (A)
Mote Park, Maidstone
Won by 5 wickets
[51]
20–22 July
Gloucestershire (H)
County Ground, Taunton
Won by 10 wickets
[52]
23–25 July
Yorkshire (H)
County Ground, Taunton
Lost by 262 runs
[53]
30–31 July
Kent (H)
County Ground, Taunton
Lost by 4 wickets
[54]
6–7 August
Yorkshire (A)
Park Avenue, Bradford
Won by 6 wickets
[55]
10–12 August
Lancashire (A)
Old Trafford, Manchester
Lost by 8 wickets
[56]
13–15 August
Surrey (H)
County Ground, Taunton
Won by 130 runs
[57]
17–18 August
Gloucestershire (A)
College Ground, Cheltenham
Won by an innings and 130 runs
[58]
24–26 August
Middlesex (H)
County Ground, Taunton
Lost by 9 wickets
[59]
Batting averages[f]
Player
Matches
Innings
Runs
Average
HS
100s
50s
Lionel Palairet
10
19
560
31.11
100
1
5
John Challen
9
16
354
25.28
89
0
2
Richard Palairet
10
17
266
19.00
74
0
1
Herbie Hewett
12
22
388
18.47
65
0
2
Sammy Woods
11
19
330
18.33
50
0
1
Bowling averages[g]
Player
Matches
Deliveries
Wickets
Average
BBI
5wi
10wm
Sammy Woods
11
2,329
72
17.08
6/49
7
1
George Nichols
12
2,614
49
18.16
5/33
1
0
Ted Tyler
12
2,182
48
22.31
5/10
4
1
Other first-class
Match log
In addition to their County Championship fixtures, Somerset played one other first-class fixture, against the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC). The side sent by the MCC was described as "a very moderate side" by Cricket: A Weekly Record of the Game, while Somerset were missing Woods.[60] Somerset batted first and scored 228, led by Fowler with 51 runs. The MCC then batted twice in a row, after being forced to follow-on, and scored 114 and 140. Tyler took nine wickets between the two innings, while Fowler took six in the second innings. Somerset won the match by six wickets after scoring the additional 28 runs needed in their second innings.[61]
Date
Opponents
Venue
Result
Ref
21–22 August
Marylebone Cricket Club (H)
County Ground, Taunton
Won by 6 wickets
[62]
Aftermath
At the end-of-season annual general meeting, the Somerset committee expressed their pleasure at both the playing and financial results for the season; both subscriptions and gate receipts had increased, combining to over £1,000 (equivalent to £120,000 in 2021).[43] Their performance over the season was praised in the press; the Yorkshire Herald said Somerset "have fully justified their fit inclusion in the first-class ranks",[63] while similar sentiments were expressed in the Coventry Evening Telegraph and, more locally, the Bath Chronicle.[64][65] In his book A History of Cricket, H. S. Altham writes that: "From the moment they appeared in the competition, Somerset won popularity as a sporting and attractive side."[66]
All the players except for Wilfrid Young, who was travelling abroad, were expected to be available the following year.[67] They noted the need for another professional bowler to support Nichols, Tyler and Woods,[12] and although they did not secure another such a professional, they did add Coote Hedley, an amateur all-rounder with genuine bowling ability.[68] In 1892, Somerset played a full fixture list against all of the other eight first-class counties, and finished the season with eight wins and five losses, placing third in the Championship table, a position they would not equal again until 1958.[69]
Notes, references and sources
Notes
A dash indicates that the player in question did not bowl for Somerset in 1891
Cricket results are presented in various ways, depending on the circumstances. When the team bowling last wins the game, and has only batted one innings compared to its opponent's two, then it is described as winning by an innings and however many more runs they scored than their opponents. See Scoring (cricket) for more information.
At the time, the follow-on rule made it compulsory for a team batting second to have to immediately bat again if they were 80 or more runs behind their opponents. Manipulation of this rule meant that in 1900 it was changed to make the follow-on optional, at the choice of the bowling side, while the number of runs at which it applies has been adjusted several times.[23]
Cricket results are presented in various ways, depending on the circumstances. When the team batting last wins the game, then it wins by the number of wickets it had remaining when it passed the other team's total. See Scoring (cricket) for more information.
"100 for eight" is cricket notation which could also be written 100/8, and signifies that the batting team has scored 100 runs, and has lost eight of its ten wickets. See Scoring (cricket) for more information.
Qualification: 250 runs. Source: CricketArchive[11]
Qualification: 10 wickets. Source: CricketArchive[14]
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Foot 1986, p. 23.
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Roberts 1952, p. 14.
Hill 2016, p. 127.
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"Somerset v Surrey". CricketArchive. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 25 August 2010.
"Gloucestershire v Somerset". CricketArchive. Archived from the original on 4 November 2012. Retrieved 25 August 2010.
"Somerset v Middlesex". CricketArchive. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 25 August 2010.
"M.C.C. & Ground v Somersetshire". Cricket: A Weekly Record of the Game. 27 August 1891. p. 373. Archived from the original on 25 January 2024. Retrieved 30 October 2023 – via The Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians.
"Somerset v Marylebone C.C. and Ground". Western Daily Press. 24 August 1891. p. 6. Archived from the original on 30 October 2023. Retrieved 30 October 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
"Somerset v Marylebone Cricket Club". CricketArchive. Archived from the original on 4 June 2011. Retrieved 25 August 2010.
"Review of First-class County Cricket in 1891". Yorkshire Herald. 5 September 1891. p. 8. Archived from the original on 2 November 2023. Retrieved 2 November 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
"Cricket chat". Coventry Evening Telegraph. 1 September 1891. p. 2. Archived from the original on 2 November 2023. Retrieved 2 November 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
"County Cricket in 1891". Bath Chronicle. 3 September 1891. p. 2. Archived from the original on 2 November 2023. Retrieved 2 November 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
Altham & Swanton 1938, p. 205.
"Somersetshire County Club". Cricket: A Weekly Record of the Game. 26 November 1891. p. 482. Archived from the original on 12 November 2023. Retrieved 19 October 2023 – via The Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians.
Hill 2016, p. 137.
Roebuck 1991, p. 411.
Sources
Altham, H. S.; Swanton, E. W. (1938) [1926]. A History of Cricket. London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd. OCLC 10246496.
Brodribb, Gerald (1985). Next Man In: A Survey of Cricket Laws and Customs. London: Pelham Books. ISBN 0-7207-1585-7.
Foot, David (1986). Sunshine, Sixes and Cider: The History of Somerset Cricket. Newton Abbot, Devon: David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-8890-8.
Hill, Stephen (2016). Somerset Cricketers 1882–1914. Wellington, Somerset: Halsgrove. ISBN 978-0-85704-291-0.
Roberts, Ron (1952). Sixty Years of Somerset Cricket. London: Westaway Books. OCLC 30202143.
Roebuck, Peter (1991). From Sammy to Jimmy: The Official History of Somerset County Cricket Club. London: Partridge Press. ISBN 1-85225-085-2.
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San Pedro is a composite volcano in northern Chile and one of the tallest active volcanoes in the world. It is part of the Andean Volcanic Belt and, like other Andean volcanoes, was formed by the subduction of the Nazca Plate beneath the South America Plate. San Pedro is formed of two separate edifices, the Old Cone and the Young Cone, and is adjoined to a neighbouring volcano, San Pablo. The Old Cone was active over one hundred thousand years ago and was eventually truncated by a giant landslide that removed its northwestern side. Within the landslide scar lava flows and pyroclastic flows constructed the Young Cone as well as the lateral centre La Poruña. Some eruptions have been reported during historical time, and presently the volcano is fumarolically active. This photograph shows San Pedro in the foreground, with San Pablo visible behind it to the right.
Photograph credit: Diego Delso