Dates in Cricket History
1550 (approx) Evidence of cricket being played in Guildford,
Surrey.
1598 Cricket mentioned in Florio’s Italian–English dictionary.
1610 Reference to “cricketing” between Weald and Upland near
Chevening, Kent.
1611 Randle Cotgrave’s French–English dictionary translates
the French word “crosse” as a cricket staff. Two youths fined
for playing cricket at Sidlesham, Sussex.
1624 Jasper Vinall becomes first man known to be killed playing
cricket: hit by a bat while trying to catch the ball – at
Horsted Green, Sussex.
1676 First reference to cricket being played abroad, by British
residents in Aleppo, Syria.
1694 Two shillings and sixpence paid for a “wagger” (wager)
about a cricket match at Lewes.
1697 First reference to “a great match” with 11 players a side
for fifty guineas, in Sussex.
1700 Cricket match announced on Clapham Common.
1709 First recorded inter-county match: Kent v Surrey.
1710 First reference to cricket at Cambridge University.
1727 Articles of Agreement written governing the conduct of
matches between the teams of the Duke of Richmond and Mr
Brodrick of Peperharow, Surrey.
1729 Date of earliest surviving bat, belonging to John Chitty,
now in the pavilion at The Oval.
1730 First recorded match at the Artillery Ground, off City
Road, central London, still the cricketing home of the
Honourable Artillery Company.
1744 Kent beat All England by one wicket at the Artillery
Ground.
First known version of the Laws of Cricket, issued by the London
Club, formalising the pitch as 22 yards long.
1767 (approx) Foundation of the Hambledon Club in Hampshire, the
leading club in England for the next 30 years.
1769 First recorded century, by John Minshull for Duke of
Dorset’s XI v Wrotham.
1771 Width of bat limited to 4 1/4 inches, where it has remained
ever since.
1774 LBW law devised.
1776 Earliest known scorecards, at the Vine Club, Sevenoaks,
Kent.
1780 The first six-seamed cricket ball, manufactured by Dukes of
Penshurst, Kent.
1787 First match at Thomas Lord’s first ground, Dorset Square,
Marylebone – White Conduit Club v Middlesex. Formation of
Marylebone Cricket Club by members of the White Conduit
Club.1788 First revision of the Laws of Cricket by MCC.
1794 First recorded inter-schools match: Charterhouse v
Westminster.
1795 First recorded case of a dismissal “leg before wicket”.
1806 First Gentlemen v Players match at Lord’s.
1807 First mention of “straight-armed” (i.e. round-arm) bowling:
by John Willes of Kent.
1809 Thomas Lord’s second ground opened at North Bank, St John’s
Wood.
1811 First recorded women’s county match: Surrey v Hampshire at
Ball’s Pond, London.
1814 Lord’s third ground opened on its present site, also in St
John’s Wood.
1827 First Oxford v Cambridge match, at Lord’s. A draw.
1828 MCC authorise the bowler to raise his hand level with the
elbow.
1833 John Nyren publishes his classic Young Cricketer’s Tutor
and The Cricketers of My Time.
1836 First North v South match, for many years regarded as the
principal fixture of the season.
1836 (approx) Batting pads invented.
1841 General Lord Hill, commander-in-chief of the British Army,
orders that a cricket ground be made an adjunct of every
military barracks.
1844 First official international match: Canada v United States.
1845 First match played at The Oval.
1846 The All-England XI, organised by William Clarke, begins
playing matches, often against odds, throughout the country.
1849 First Yorkshire v Lancashire match.
1850 Wicket-keeping gloves first used.
1850 John Wisden bowls all ten batsmen in an innings for North v
South.
1853 First mention of a champion county: Nottinghamshire.
1858 First recorded instance of a hat being awarded to a bowler
taking three wickets with consecutive balls.
1859 First touring team to leave England, captained by George
Parr, draws enthusiastic crowds in the US and Canada.
1864 “Overhand bowling” authorised by MCC. John Wisden’s The
Cricketer’s Almanack first published.
1868 Team of Australian aborigines tour England.
1873 WG Grace becomes the first player to record 1,000 runs and
100 wickets in a season. First regulations restricting county
qualifications, often regarded as the official start of the
County Championship.
1877 First Test match: Australia beat England by 45 runs in
Melbourne.
1880 First Test in England: a five-wicket win against Australia
at The Oval.
1882 Following England’s first defeat by Australia in England,
an “obituary notice” to English cricket in the Sporting Times
leads to the tradition of The Ashes.
1889 South Africa’s first Test match. Declarations first
authorised, but only on the third day, or in a one-day match.
1890 County Championship officially constituted. Present Lord’s
pavilion opened.
1895 WG Grace scores 1,000 runs in May, and reaches his 100th
hundred.
1899 AEJ Collins scores 628 not out in a junior house match at
Clifton College, the highest individual score in any match.
Selectors choose England team for home Tests, instead of host
club issuing invitations.
1900 Six-ball over becomes the norm, instead of five.
1909 Imperial Cricket Conference (ICC – now the International
Cricket Council) set up, with England, Australia and South
Africa the original members.
1910 Six runs given for any hit over the boundary, instead of
only for a hit out of the ground.
1912 First and only triangular Test series played in England,
involving England, Australia and South Africa.
1915 WG Grace dies, aged 67.
1926 Victoria score 1,107 v New South Wales at Melbourne, the
record total for a first-class innings.
1928 West Indies’ first Test match. AP "Tich" Freeman of Kent
and England becomes the only player to take more than 300
first-class wickets in a season: 304.
1930 New Zealand’s first Test match. Donald Bradman’s first tour
of England: he scores 974 runs in the five Ashes Tests, still a
record for any Test series.
1931 Stumps made higher (28 inches not 27) and wider (nine
inches not eight – this was optional until 1947).
1932 India’s first Test match. Hedley Verity of Yorkshire takes
ten wickets for ten runs v Nottinghamshire, the best innings
analysis in first-class cricket.
1932-33 The Bodyline tour of Australia in which England bowl at
batsmen’s bodies with a packed leg-side field to neutralise
Bradman’s scoring.
1934 Jack Hobbs retires, with 197 centuries and 61,237 runs,
both records. First women’s Test: Australia v England at
Brisbane.
1935 MCC condemn and outlaw Bodyline.
1947 Denis Compton of Middlesex and England scores a record
3,816 runs in an English season.
1948 First five-day Tests in England. Bradman concludes Test
career with a second-ball duck at The Oval and a batting average
of 99.94 – four runs short of 100.
1952 Pakistan’s first Test match.
1953 England regain the Ashes after a 19-year gap, the longest
ever.
1956 Jim Laker of England takes 19 wickets for 90 v Australia at
Manchester, the best match analysis in first-class cricket.
1957 Declarations authorised at any time.
1960 First tied Test, Australia v West Indies at Brisbane.
1963 Distinction between amateur and professional cricketers
abolished in English cricket. The first major one-day tournament
begins in England: the Gillette Cup.
1969 Limited-over Sunday league inaugurated for first-class
counties.
1970 Proposed South African tour of England cancelled: South
Africa excluded from international cricket because of their
government’s apartheid policies.
1971 First one-day international: Australia v England at
Melbourne.
1975 First World Cup: West Indies beat Australia in final at
Lord’s.
1976 First women’s match at Lord’s, England v Australia.
1977 Centenary Test at Melbourne, with identical result to the
first match: Australia beat England by 45 runs. Australian media
tycoon Kerry Packer, signs 51 of the world’s leading players in
defiance of the cricketing authorities.
1978 Graham Yallop of Australia wears a protective helmet to
bat in a Test match, the first player to do so.
1979 Packer and official cricket agree peace deal.
1980 Eight-ball over abolished in Australia, making the six-ball
over universal.
1981 England beat Australia in Leeds Test, after following on
with bookmakers offering odds of 500 to 1 against them winning.
1982 Sri Lanka’s first Test match.
1991 South Africa return, with a one-day international in India.
1992 Zimbabwe’s first Test match. Durham become the first county
since Glamorgan in 1921 to attain firstclass status.
1993 The ICC ceases to be administered by MCC, becoming an
independent organisation with its own chief executive.
1994 Brian Lara of Warwickshire becomes the only player to pass
500 in a firstclass innings: 501 not out v Durham.
2000 South Africa’s captain Hansie Cronje banned from cricket
for life after admitting receiving bribes from bookmakers in
match-fixing scandal.
Bangladesh’s first Test match. County Championship split into
two divisions, with promotion and relegation. The Laws of
Cricket revised and rewritten.
2001 Sir Donald Bradman dies, aged 92.
2003 Twenty20 Cup, a 20-over-per-side evening tournament,
inaugurated in England.
2004 Lara becomes the first man to score 400 in a Test innings,
against England.
2005 England regain the 'Ashes' after a gripping Test series
(but later lose 2-0 in Pakistan).