Full name Iain Parry Campbell 1946 Kent Batting style Right-handed | Role Wicket-keeper 1949 – 1951 Oxford University | |
Died 31 May 2015, Taupo, New Zealand |
Iain Parry Campbell (5 February 1928 – 31 May 2015) was an English cricketer and schoolteacher.
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Cricket career
Campbell was educated at Canford School and Trinity College, Oxford. At Canford he excelled at rugby union, hockey, squash, tennis, athletics and cricket, captaining the school first team in all six sports. As captain of the cricket team in 1946, his final year, he scored 1277 runs at an average of 116, including an innings of 222 not out in 150 minutes and another of 237 in 106 minutes. Writing in Wisden on that year's schools cricket, E. M. Wellings said:
Campbell had methods all of his own, rough and ready by precise standards but very effective for all that. ... He has so far avoided text-book dogmas, and he has it in him to become a fine slogger. His eye seemingly allows him to hook without moving the right foot across the wicket, to cut the ball very near the off stump, to drive cross-batted and to hit across the line of the ball. A good eye, confidence and exceptional power of strike are natural assets which add up to a large sum.
He was unable to repeat his schoolboy success at first-class level. In one match for Kent in 1946, and 18 matches for Oxford University between 1949 and 1951, he played chiefly as a wicket-keeper. He hit his highest score in 1951 against Leicestershire, when he scored 60 not out between going to the wicket with the score at 54 for 6 and the fall of the last wicket at 142. He toured Canada with MCC in 1951, playing in the first-class match against Canada.
Teaching career
Campbell became a schoolteacher. He taught at King's School, Worcester, Rugby and Cranleigh in England, and Peterhouse in Rhodesia before becoming headmaster of St Stephen's College in Rhodesia from 1968 to 1973. He was headmaster of King's College, Auckland, from 1973 until 1987, when he retired. He was a uniting and moderating headmaster of King's after a relatively authoritarian era under the previous headmaster, and introduced co-education to the school in 1980.
He later lived in Taupo, New Zealand, and died at home on 31 May 2015. He and his wife Anne were married for 62 years.