Cricket: A Weekly Record of the Game

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Cricket: A Weekly Record of the Game
Cricket: A Weekly Record of the Game
Front Page Banner
Cricket Editors
The World of
Cricket
Editors
FrequencyWeekly
FormatA4
First issueMay 10, 1882; 141 years ago (1882-05-10)
Final issue
Number
October 14, 1914 (1914-10-14)
Vol. 32, no. 949

Cricket: A Weekly Record of the Game was a British cricket magazine, published in London, which ran from 1882 to 1913.[1]: 102  It has often been referenced as just Cricket.

Publication

In most years, the magazine was published monthly from January until March, had 24 weekly parts from April to September, and was monthly again from October to December, giving a total of 30 issues. Exceptions were Volume I which only started on 10 May 1882 and had just 22 issues, and Volume II (1883) which had 27 issues. In all, Cricket ran to 949 issues in 32 annual volumes. Issues were generally of 16 pages, approximately 27 cm by 21 cm.

Cricket was briefly superseded by The World of Cricket which ran for 23 issues in 1914.[1]: 107  World War I put an end to its run, its last issue being on 14 November 1914. The idea of a weekly cricket periodical was continued after the war by Pelham Warner who founded The Cricketer, which began publication in 1921.[1]: 103 

Online, there is a complete run of the magazine from 1882 to 1914 by the Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians (the ACS).[2] Appended to it is an extensive list of the obituaries it published.[3]

Features

One of the regular features from the first issue onwards was "Pavilion Gossip" in which the editor presented short news items, often gleaned from other publications around the world.[4] There was considerable statistical output in the form of match scorecards, batting averages, bowling averages and the like. There would tend to be a feature about a particular county club each time and the front page often showcased a cricketing personality. The magazine would sometimes serialise a work about cricket: for example, Volume I republished The Cricketers of My Time by John Nyren over several issues.[5] Another was At the Sign of the Wicket by F. S. Ashley-Cooper, a history of cricket from 1742 to 1751, serialised through several issues of Volume XIX in 1900.[6]

Editors

Cricket had just three editors in its 32 years of publication.[1]

The World of Cricket (1914) was edited by Archie MacLaren and J. N. Pentelow.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e E. W. Padwick, editor (1984) A Bibliography of Cricket, 2nd Ed., Library Association in association with J. W. McKenzie (Bookseller) on behalf of The Cricket Society, London ISBN 978-0-85365-902-0
  2. ^ "Cricket 1882–1914". Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians. Retrieved 7 September 2022.
  3. ^ Defriez, Philip. "Cricket Magazine: Index of Obituaries" (PDF). Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians. Retrieved 7 September 2022.
  4. ^ "Pavilion Gossip" Cricket, issue 1, 10 May 1882, p. 7.
  5. ^ "Cricket Fifty Years Ago" Cricket, issue 1, 10 May 1882, p. 2.
  6. ^ "At the Sign of the Wicket" Cricket, issue 530, 25 January 1900, p. 4.

Bibliography

  • Cricket: A Weekly Record of the Game (1882–1913). Cricket Magazine Offices, London OCLC 28863559