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Jemmy Dean

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Full name
  
James Dean

Role
  
Singer

Name
  
Jemmy Dean

1835–1861
  
Batting style
  
right-handed


Jemmy Dean Jimmy Dean Quotes QuotesGram

Born
  
1816
England

Bowling style
  
roundarm: right arm fast

Died
  
June 13, 2010, Varina, Virginia, United States

Spouse
  
Donna Meade (m. 1991–2010), Mary Sue Wittauer (m. 1950–1990)

Albums
  
Big Bad John and Other Fab, 20 Great Story Songs, Jimmy Dean's Greatest, Country Music Star, Country Boy and Country

James "Jemmy" Dean (born 4 January 1816 in Duncton, Sussex; died 25 December 1881 in Duncton) was an English first-class cricketer with professional status. Mainly associated with Sussex, he is recorded in 305 matches from 1835 to 1861 which are designated first-class by CricketArchive, totalling 5,115 runs at an average of 10.54 with a highest score of 99, holding 206 catches and taking 1,144 wickets with a best analysis of 9/34. Dean achieved 5 wickets in an innings 86 times and 10 wickets in a match 18 times. His nephews David and James, both played first-class cricket.

Jemmy Dean Jimmy Dean Country Singer and Sausage Maker Dies at 81

Career

Jemmy Dean Jimmy Dean obituary Music The Guardian

Dean was a right-handed batsman but was more notable as a bowler. He bowled right arm fast with a roundarm action. A good fielder, he occasionally played as a wicketkeeper. Although primarily a Sussex player, Dean played for numerous other teams but especially for the United All-England Eleven (UEE), from 1853 to 1858, of which he was the co-founder with his friend John Wisden. Formerly, from 1848 to 1852, he had represented the All-England Eleven (AEE).

Jemmy Dean Jimmy Dean New Music And Songs

In Scores & Biographies, Arthur Haygarth describes Dean as "very stout for a cricketer" because he weighed 12 stone though his height was only 5 foot 7 inches. Dean's pace, says Haygarth, was "always straight and ripping, his balls getting up remarkably quick". He was a sawyer by trade and nicknamed "by some" as "The Ploughboy". Dean was engaged by MCC as a bowler in 1837 and remained in situ till he resigned at the end of the 1861 season. Haygarth, a contemporary, recounts that Dean began the UEE in 1852 "in conjunction with Wisden" and that his likeness, by John Corbett Anderson (see graphic) has been published by Fred Lillywhite.

H. S. Altham mentions Dean's "splendid work" for Sussex, Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) and the AEE before (importantly to Altham) Dean was in 1862 engaged as a coach at Winchester College. Altham then relates that Dean and Wisden founded the UEE in 1852 as a result of "profound dissatisfaction" with William Clarke's management of the AEE. Several leading players such as Jem Grundy and John Lillywhite joined them and Dean and Wisden became the joint secretaries of the UEE. In his Phoenix History, Roy Webber says that interest in the AEE "dropped to reasonable proportions" after the initial sensation and offshoots began to appear, the first being Dean and Wisden's UEE in 1852 with "other sides to follow".

References

Jemmy Dean Wikipedia


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