Denton Cricket Club ( 1824- 1999) - The First 175 years (13 May 1999)
As the players of Denton Cricket Club take to the field during this 1999 season, whether at first
13-May-1999
13 May 1999
Denton Cricket Club ( 1824- 1999) - The First 175 years
by John Gwynne for League Cricket Review
As the players of Denton Cricket Club take to the field during
this 1999 season, whether at first. second, third or any of the
junior levels, they will first and foremost be setting out to
enjoy the day - or evening - to the full. Enjoyment enhanced, of
course, all the more by attaining the desired victory. That is as
it should be.
During the course of the year, though, they and the general club
membership, as well as the public in Denton at large, will become
all too aware of the magnificent efforts of those down the years
who have worked hard and made no small sacrifice to ensure the
well-being of Denton Cricket Club.
Celebrating its 175th anniversary since its formation back in
1824, the club has provided cricket for players and spectators to
enjoy for all but a few of those years. Wartime has intervened to
deny an unbroken spell of play. Hardship too. Yet the club is
still very much alive.
On its expansive Egerton Park ground, the club's fifth 'home', it
has facilities second to none in local terms. Apart from the fine
playing area which the club enjoys, there are first-class
changing rooms, a spacious lounge bar and a comfortable function
room in which numerous social events take place.
It would be false to suggest that the club is prospering to the
extent that it is rich. It is true to say, however, that Denton
Cricket Club has seen harder times. In looking back over the past
one-and-threequarter centuries this will become evident. It
will also become clear that the club has meant much to many over
the years.
In tracing Denton Cricket Club's history, it has not always been
possible to find authoritative testimony. That which does exist,
however, has been utilised. Here, then, is the first part of
broadcaster John Gwynne's meander through the first 175 years of
Denton Cricket Club, for whom he played in the 70's and 80's.
It would appear that Denton might have been one of the first
places to form a team on an organised basis in the north of
England. Like most other villages (for that is all Denton would
have been) cricket would have been played on the green or some
other available and appropriate place, like most sport, for small
and often not-so-small stakes!
No doubt spurred on by local and civic pride, ambitious men were
determined that Denton's cricket team should be organised
formally and fixtures against neighbouring teams to be played.
One can imagine that up and down the land there was a
fermentation of such enthusiasm as the game of cricket took on a
much more competitive guise. Village against village; town
against town.
It was the village schoolmaster, John Hyde Beeley, who encouraged
the cricket lovers of Denton to form a side, with their
headquarters at the Angel Inn, Broom Lane - still there but on
the renamed Hyde Road, they formed the Victoria Club.
William IV was on the throne at the time but Princess Victoria,
the only child of Edward, Duke of Kent, who died when she was
only one year old, was soon to become heiress. By 1824, it must
have been common for Victoria's name to be used for such
ventures. The five year old would have been the talk of the town!
Vacant ground at the back of the Angel Inn was used for matches
and quickly the team's reputation spread. John Hyde Beeley must
have devoted much of his spare time in the running of the club.
He died in 1830 but by that time the team was up and running.
Indeed, it continued to grow in stature over the following decade
and, in 1837 - the year of Queen Victoria's accession, Denton
took on a Stockport Eleven in a money match. Nobody quite knows
what the outcome was but one can imagine that a sizeable amount
of cash changed hands, not always willingly!
Such was the attraction of the Denton Club by 1840 that the great
Tom Marsden, one of the best cricketers in the north - and
probably the whole of England - came to play for the Angel Field
men. A Sheffield man, Marsden must have commanded a substantial
fee. He must have had somewhere to stay, the Angel Inn more than
likely, since the trans-pennine journey, though little more than
thirty miles, would have taken several hours. A left-hand batsman
and left-arm medium bowler, Tom Marsden had a reputation wherever
the game was played for his fierce competitiveness. He achieved
only the second double-century in 1826 whilst playing for
Sheffield against Nottingham, and went on to make several
appearances in the annual Gentlemen v Players match at Lord's.
Needless to say, he was not considered by the authorities as a
'Gentleman'.
He had failed in his bid to become the unofficial 'Best Cricketer
in England' when, having challenged the great Fuller Pilch to a
£100 single wicket contest in 1833, he lost. It was in 1840, and
doubtless because of Marsden's connections that Denton played the
famous Sheffield Wednesday Club - today best known, of course,
for its soccer exploits - on the Hyde Park ground in Sheffield.
It was June 29th, it lasted the whole day and each side batted
twice.
The Sheffield Wednesday Club contained the finest of Yorkshire's
cricketers, and matches between Sheffield and Denton continued
for a number of years. Joe Wainwright, an observer and scribe at
the time, recalls the match at the Angel Ground in 1847;
"It was during Denton Wakes and it seemed as though all Denton
folk were there. One side of the path through the field was
exclusive to those wishing to watch".
Names such as Jim Knowles, Joe Knoll, Old Barnes and Matt Jackson
mean little or nothing to us today, but in 1847 they were the
local heroes of the day.
Jim Redfern, a feared fast bowler, joined the club around this
time. George Parr, one of the finest batsmen and shrewdest of
men, was bowled for only a five by Redfern in a match at
Ashton-Under-Lyne. Parr was captain of All-England at the time
and his demise on this occasion greatly enhanced Redfern's
reputation. He played for Denton for many years, still plying his
trade with the ball in the 1860's, by which time the club had
moved on to pastures new.
When the owner of the Angel Inn, a Mr Taylor, died in 1860 his
widow, Anne Taylor, decided to move, and the club found itself
without a ground. The site of the old field is occupied by houses
and the M67 motorway, but Cricket Street stands as a reminder
that many a happy day was spent in the vicinity during the
nineteenth century by cricket players and spectators alike.
For reasons unknown there was an attempt by the local authority -
Denton Parish Council, possibly - to change the name of Cricket
Street to Florence Street, but this was vehemently opposed by the
general public that things stayed as they were. When one
considers that this was 1907, 47 years after the move from the
Angel ground, one appreciates the feeling there must have been
for Denton's first cricket ground.
Records are sketchy but some results are known of matches played
where the Cricket Street site is. On June 26th 1858 Denton scored
84 and dismissed a Stockport side for 46. Six weeks later, on
August 7 - and no doubt in front of a big holiday crowd - Denton
only mustered 39 in reply to Salford Sunnyside's 89.
Between 1861 and 1865, the club played on vacant ground behind
Wilson's Hat Factory, known as the Lad's Club Field. How many
games were played at 'home' isn't clear, but it may well be that
most of the team's matches during this five year period were as
visitors. Two local 'derbies' played in 1861 saw Denton beat
Openshaw Wellington by 14 runs and, two days later, get the
better of Haughton Green Victoria by eight runs.
It was in 1866 that a more permanent move was made to a ground at
the back of where Denton Labour Club now stands, near Lake Road.
Indeed, the Old Oddfellows pub stood where the Labour Club is. It
would certainly have been the team's new headquarters.
Such was the quality of the ground - it had obviously been
prepared for the very best cricket - that well-renowned and
established clubs like Manchester, Nelson, Todmorden, Ramsbottom
and others would visit. The Manchester Club played at Old
Trafford, which became the headquarters of the Lancashire County
Club when it was formed in 1864.
Source:: League Cricket Review
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