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Eric Hatfeild

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Full name
  
Charles Eric Hatfeild

1907–1909
  
Oxford University

Batting style
  
Left-handed

Bowling style
  
Slow left-arm orthodox

1910–1914
  
Kent

Born
  
11 March 1887 (
1887-03-11
)
Hartsdown, Margate, Kent

Died
  
21 September 1918, Cambrai, France

Charles Eric Hatfeild, MC (11 March 1887 – 21 September 1918), known as Eric Hatfeild, was an English cricketer who played first-class cricket for Oxford University and Kent County Cricket Club in the years before the First World War. Hatfeild was an officer in the Royal East Kent Yeomanry and the East Kent Regiment. He was decorated for gallantry during the war and was killed in action in September 1918 at Cambrai on the Western Front.

Contents

Early life and education

Hatfeild was born in Margate in Kent in 1887, the son of a captain in the 1st King's Dragoon Guards in a prominent local family. He was educated at Wellington House School and at Eton College where he was captain of the school's cricket First XI in 1906. He was a very promising bowler at school, taking 12 wickets against Harrow School in a match at Lord's in 1903 but later developed as more of a batsman. He went to New College, Oxford and played for Oxford University Cricket Club in 15 first-class cricket matches, gaining a cricket Blue in 1908.

After graduating from university Hatfeild attended Wye Agricultural College in 1910–11.

Cricket career

Hatfeild made his debut for Kent in June 1910 in a County Championship match against Derbyshire at the County Ground, Derby. He played only two matches in 1910 as Kent won the County Championship, before gaining a more regular place in the Kent side in the following seasons. He was described in his Wisden obituary as an "enthusiastic cricketer" who played "whenever he was wanted", making 15 appearances in 1912 and 12 in 1913 as Kent won the last of their four Championship titles of the years before the First World War. In total he made 45 appearances for the county as an all-rounder at a time when Kent were one of the dominant first-class counties and had a good supply of excellent players.

He toured Argentina with MCC in 1911–12 alongside his Kent colleague Lionel Troughton. He played in all three first-class matches on the tour, the first first-class matches played by the Argentina national cricket team, taking 16 first-class wickets on the tour including his best first-class bowling figures of five wickets for 48 runs.

Hatfeild made his final first-class appearance in July 1914 against Essex at Tunbridge Wells.

Military career and death

Hatfeild was commissioned as an officer in the Royal East Kent Yeomanry in 1912 and later transferred to the East Kent Regiment, serving in the 10th battalion. He served throughout the First World War, seeing action in the Gallipoli Campaign, Egypt, Palestine and on the Western Front in France. He rose to the rank of Captain and commanded a company. Hatfeild was killed in action on 21 September 1918 fighting near Cambrai in northern France during the Hundred Days Offensive. He was posthumously awarded the Military Cross for the "conspicuous gallantry" he had shown three days before his death leading his company in an attack at Templeux-le-Guérard during the offensive.

References

Eric Hatfeild Wikipedia