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Charles McCausland

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National side
  
Ireland

Name
  
Charles McCausland

Charles McCausland LIEUTENANT GENERAL CHARLES MCCAUSLAND US Air Force Biography


Batting style
  
Right-handed batsman

Bowling style
  
Right-arm fast-medium

Charles Edward McCausland (4 October 1898 in Dublin, Ireland – 12 November 1965 in Folkestone, Kent, England) was an Irish cricketer. A right-handed batsman and right-arm fast-medium bowler, he played four times for the Ireland cricket team in the 1920s, including two first-class matches against Scotland. He also played first-class cricket for Dublin University.

He made his first-class debut playing for Dublin University against Essex in July 1922. His Ireland debut followed later the same month when he played against Scotland in a first-class match. Almost two years later, he again played first-class cricket for Dublin University, this time against Northamptonshire. This was followed the next month by a match for Ireland against Scotland.

He played two non first-class matches for Ireland in August 1924, both against the MCC. He played one final first-class match for Dublin University, again against Northamptonshire, in 1925, a match that also featured the Irish playwright Samuel Beckett.

Personal life

McCausland was born into a family with a long medical tradition. The 1901 Census records his address as 79 Merrion Square, a prestigious address in the heart of Georgian Dublin. His father, Richard Bolton McCausland was a well known surgeon at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland. His mother, Charlotte Maria McCausland, was the daughter of the influential French Neurologist Charles-Édouard Brown-Séquard.

McCausland was called up to the Western Front in 1918. His mother Charlotte later wrote:

We have left Ireland since 1923, life was no longer possible for the Loyalists. Our lives were threatened, especially because our only son, who had trained at Sandhurst Military School, joined the Irish Guards and had taken part in the last battles against the Germans, his heart being all for France.

References

Charles McCausland Wikipedia