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Christopher Hurst (cricketer)

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Role
  
Batsman

1908–27
  
Kent

1906–09
  
Oxford University

Batting style
  
Right-handed

Full name
  
Christopher Salkeld Hurst

Born
  
20 July 1886 (
1886-07-20
)
Beckenham, Kent, England

First-class debut
  
14 May 1906 Oxford University v H. D. G. Leveson Gower's XI

Last First-class
  
10 June 1927 Kent v Northamptonshire

Died
  
18 December 1963, Dorking, United Kingdom

Christopher Salkeld Hurst (20 July 1886 – 18 December 1963) was an English cricketer who played first-class cricket for Oxford University, Kent and various amateur teams between 1906 and 1927. In his working life, he was a civil servant whose main work was concerned with the rationalisation and reorganisation of the UK coal industry to the point where the industry could be nationalised after the Second World War. He was born at Beckenham, Kent and died at Dorking, Surrey.

Hurst was educated at Uppingham School where he was captain of the cricket team, and at Exeter College, Oxford. As a cricketer, he was a right-handed middle-order batsman and an occasional bowler, and though he took some time to establish himself as a cricketer at Oxford University, he played in the University Match against Cambridge University from 1907 to 1909, captaining the Oxford team in his final year. From 1908, he also played occasional matches for Kent, and that continued for the next 20 years, though he played in only 19 games for the county team in all. He also appeared in matches for Gentlemen of England, Marylebone Cricket Club, Free Foresters and other scratch amateur teams. His only period of significant cricketing success came in 1922, when in five games for Kent, the most he played in any single season, he scored the only three centuries of his career, the highest being an innings of 124, made in two hours with 14 fours, in the game against Lancashire.

Hurst was called to the Bar in 1910 but then entered the UK civil service, serving in the Public Trustee Office from 1911, before transferring to the Ministry of Munitions during the First World War. At the end of the war, he moved to the Ministry of Labour and it was as a labour relations expert that he was drawn into the controversies of the UK coal-mining industry, serving as the secretary of the Royal Commission that attempted to bring warring owners and unions together in the period leading up to the General Strike of 1926, and then to the Coal Mines Reorganization Commission which was charged by the UK government with creating larger units within a highly fragmented industry but proved ineffective. Finally, from 1938, he was secretary to the Coal Commission which, with the imminence and then the reality of the Second World War, had the necessary power to reshape the industry and pave the way for state ownership as the National Coal Board in 1947. Hurst was offered a post within the nationalised industry, but chose instead to retire. He was awarded the Companion of the Order of the Bath and the Officer of the Order of the British Empire honours for his public service.

References

Christopher Hurst (cricketer) Wikipedia