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William Armitstead

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Batting style
  
Right-hand bat

Role
  
Cricket Player

Name
  
William Armitstead

1853-1857
  
Oxford University

Bowling style
  
Unknown


Full name
  
William George Armitstead

Born
  
22 March 1833 (
1833-03-22
)
Holmes Chapel, Cheshire, England

Died
  
<12 March 1907(1907-03-12) (aged 73) Goostrey, Cheshire, England

1864
  
Marylebone Cricket Club

William George Armitstead (22 March 1833 – 12 March 1907) was an English cricketer. A right-handed batsman, Armitstead was a member of a cricketing family: his brother Henry played first class cricket, while brothers John and Robert, and nephew William, all played school cricket. Armitstead played fourteen first class matches between 1853 and 1862, the majority for Oxford University with solitary appearances for the Gentlemen of the North, Manchester Cricket Club, and the Marylebone Cricket Club.

Armitstead was also a founding member of the Free Foresters Cricket Club, along with his brother Henry. It was during a match between a United England XI and the Free Foresters in 1861 that he is credited with the introduction of the white coat for cricket umpires. Armitstead requested that the umpires wear something white in colour, as their existing garments were causing him to lose sight of the ball and the bowlers hand during their delivery.

Armitstead had a modest batting record, scoring only 293 runs in twenty-five innings at a batting average of 12.20. 249 of these runs were made for Oxford, for whom he made eleven appearances. His best was a score of 38, made opening the batting against the Marylebone Cricket Club on 3 June 1853. He took six catches, and is noted as having bowled however his bowling style or statistics are not recorded.

Armitstead was educated at Westminster School and Christ Church, Oxford. After graduating at Oxford he was ordained as a Church of England priest and was vicar of Goostrey, Cheshire, from 1862 until his death there in 1907.

References

William Armitstead Wikipedia