Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Douglas Freeman

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Full name
  
Douglas Percy Freeman

Name
  
Douglas Freeman

Batting style
  
Left-handed

Role
  
Historian

1937
  
Kent

Spouse
  
Inez Goddin (m. 1914)

1934–1948
  
Dorset


Douglas Freeman httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
21 July 1916
Sherborne, Dorset, England

Relations
  
Edward Freeman (father) Edward Freeman (grandfather) Thomas Russell (great-uncle)

Died
  
June 13, 1953, Richmond, Virginia, United States

Children
  
Mary Tyler Freeman, Anne Ballard Freeman, James Douglas Freeman

Parents
  
Walker Burford Freeman, Bettie Allen Hamner

Education
  
Johns Hopkins University (1908), University of Richmond

Books
  
Lee's Lieutenants: A Study i, R E Lee: A Biography, The South to Posterity: An Introd, Lees Lieutenants Volume 3, Douglas Southall Freeman

Douglas Percy Freeman (21 July 1916 – 3 April 2013) was an English cricketer. Freeman was a left-handed batsman who played for Dorset County Cricket Club and Kent County Cricket Club. He was born at Sherborne in Dorset in 1916.

Freeman made his debut for Dorset in the 1934 Minor Counties Championship against Cornwall. He played Minor counties cricket for Dorset from 1934 to 1948, making 32 Minor Counties Championship appearances for the county with a highest score of 89 runs, made in 1935 against Devon.

After playing for Kent Second XI in 1936, Freeman made eight appearances for the county Second XI in the 1937 Minor Counties Championship and played in one first-class cricket match against Somerset in the 1937 County Championship. He made a total of ten runs in the match in a "crushing defeat" for the county. He played for Somerset Second XI in 1939 before returning to play for Dorset after the Second World War.

Freeman's father, Edward, his grandfather, also called Edward, and his great-uncle Thomas Russell, all played first-class cricket and his brother, another Edward, also played for Dorset. His uncle was Tich Freeman who played for Kent between 1914 and 1936 and is the county's leading wicket-taker. When Freeman died at the age of 96 in 2013 at Westbury on Trym in Bristol he was Kent's oldest surviving player and the last surviving player who had played for the county before World War II.

References

Douglas Freeman Wikipedia