The 1741 English cricket season was the 45th cricket season since the earliest recorded eleven-a-side match was played. Details have survived of nine significant matches, including the first known appearance of Slindon Cricket Club. The earliest known tie in an eleven-a-side match occurred.
Recorded matches
Records have survived of nine significant matches:[1][2]
The earliest known match involving Slindon Cricket Club which came to prominence in the coming years. The Duke of Richmond in a letter said that "above 5,000 people" were present.[5]
Scores are not recorded but the result was "a Tye, which occasioned the Betts to be drawn on both Sides". It is the earliest known instance of an eleven-a-side game being tied, a single wicket match was tied in 1736 between the same two teams.
The Duke of Richmond in a letter to his friend the Duke of Newcastle before the match spoke of "poor little Slyndon against almost your whole county of Surrey". Next day he wrote again, saying that "wee have beat Surrey almost in one innings".
The Duchess of Richmond wrote to her husband on 9 September, and said she "wish’d..... that the Sussex mobb had thrash'd the Surrey mob". She had "a grudge to those fellows ever since they mob'd you" (apparently a reference to the Richmond Green fiasco in August 1731). She then said she wished the Duke "had won more of their moneys".
Waghorn's source pre-announced the match and gave the start time as: "wickets to be pitched at half an hour past 11 o'clock".
A single-wicket match was played on 8 June between five players of London and five of Surrey at the Artillery Ground for £20 a side. The result is unknown.[7]
Among the main primary sources for the events of the 1741 season are letters written by Charles Lennox, 2nd Duke of Richmond and his wife Duchess Sarah. The Duchess took a keen interest in all the Duke's doings including his cricket. Several references and letters written by her, including some financial accounts, have survived.[13][14] In other letters to Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle, the Duke spoke about a game on 28 July which resulted in a brawl with "hearty blows" and "broken heads." The game was at Portslade between Slindon and unnamed opponents.[15]