The Hestercombe archives are bursting at the seams with facts, pictures and accounts of the history of Hestercombe and those who lived and worked here. In this installment of Memories of Hestercombe - and with the Cricket World Cup coming to Taunton - we find out about the heritage of cricket on the Hestercombe estate.
Written by Kim Legate, Senior Archivist
Very little can be chronicled as to the antiquity of cricket in Somerset. It is true that in the annals of the well-known Landsdowne Club we read matches were played between the Western Counties and the M.C.C., but there was no organised attempt to form a county club until after the match played at Sidmouth between the Gentlemen of Devonshire and the Gentlemen of Somersetshire in August 1875.
The Hestercombe Cricket Club
When the Somerset County Gazette reported, in December 1895, that the president of the Hestercombe Cricket Club, the Hon. E. W. B. (‘Teddy’) Portman had ‘kindly had the ground in the park levelled and improved at great expense’, the sport of cricket had already become a full-blown Victorian passion. Hundreds of thousands of people from all walks of life and professions – bricklayers, bank-clerks, soldiers, postmen, stockbrokers, Q. C.’s, artists, archdeacons, archivists – were now flocking to county grounds across England to see the likes of A. E. Stoddart (Middlesex), the colourful right-handed South Shields batsman, dispatch little round Johnny Briggs’s (Lancs.) high-tossed slow ball over the striped awning, or to watch Sir Timothy O’Brien (Middlesex), the right-handed Irish powerhouse, coolly dispatch A. W. Hallam’s (Lancs.) best would-be Yorker into a jammed press gallery.
Teddy Portman was undoubtedly among the legions that attended the Somerset County Ground during the 1880s and 90s to admire the batting prowess of the county’s legendary trio of Lionel Charles Hamilton (L.C.H.) Palairet, Richard Cameron North Palairet, and Samuel Moses James Woods. The Palairet brothers had twice scored 100 during the same innings and, with the great ‘Sammy’ Woods, formed the nucleus of a formidable Somerset side that finished third overall in 1892. The Repton and Oxford trained Lionel Palairet [Fig. 1] played for the County from 1890 to 1909. Once described in the Times as ‘the most beautiful batsman of all time’, he was named one of Wisden’s five cricketers of the year in 1893, recorded a 292 against Hampshire in 1896 -- a record for a Somerset batsman that stood until 1948 -- and played Test cricket for England twice against Australia in 1902. Teddy was a close personal friend of the Dodhill dynamo, joining him on hunts organised by the Taunton Vale Foxhounds and entertaining L. C. H. at his home on many occasions. (Palairet was on the select guest list for the grand ball of January 1897, attended the Portman’s exclusive Christmas Eve ball a few weeks earlier and, in the company of his wife, Candice, was on hand for the baptism of his son, Henry Edward, in the Portman’s private chapel in June 1896.)
Always an avid sportsman, E. W. B. Portman had preferred first rowing (Eaton) and then polo (Christchurch, 1875-78) as a young man, but middle age seems to have engendered a renewed enthusiasm for cricket and he supported the Hestercombe Cricket Club almost from the day he took up permanent residence on the 776-acre (314-hectare) estate in 1894. Initially known as the Cheddon and District Cricket Club, the organisation had actually been established the year before ‘at a well-attended and successful meeting’ held on Wednesday 29 March 1893 in the Cheddon Fitzpaine Schoolroom (Rowford). F. T. Hussey was voted to the chair and the Club’s first officers were duly elected: President, F. T. Hussey; captain, Mr. R. Holman; sub captain, Mr. E. Musgrave; secretary, Mr. R. E. Wilson; treasurer, Mr. A. Erswell. A committee was then formed, consisting of Rev. G. F. Unwin, Mr. C. Harper, and Mr. J. Pleass and a pitch, which was expediently situated in Hestercombe Park, was provided courtesy of Mr. J. Blackmore. Practice nights for these aspiring wielders of the willow and whirlers of the leather were set for Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Frank Tooze Hussey (1845-98), a qualified architect and estate agent to the 1st Viscount Portman at London, lived comfortably with two servants at The Grove, Cheddon Fitzpaine, now Cheddon Corner. For many years Hussey served the parishioners of Cheddon Fitzpaine as school manager, churchwarden and chairman of the parish council. Alfred Erswell was clerk of works on the 1st Viscount Portman’s Somerset Estate ‘and also carried out various works in connection with the Hestercombe Estate’, and the Revd. Gerard Francis Unwin was a curate who lived at The Rectory, Cheddon Fitzpaine, where he assisted his father, the Rev. Samuel Hope Unwin, rector of the parish.
Farmer Edward Musgrave lived at Rowford Cottage, Charles Harper was the tenant on the 138-acre (56-hectare) Manor Farm at Upper Cheddon, and John Pleass of Cheddon Street was the parish clerk, sexton and organist. Pleass was also a carpenter and builder of some repute, erecting, in partnership with Kingston St Mary builder, Arthur Leach, several new buildings on Volis Farm in 1895 (barn, wagon shed, animal 'hospital'). This was at the behest of Teddy Portman who was then in the early stages of a far-reaching programme of building and improvement to the Hestercombe Estate. R. Holman, occupation unknown, resided at Gotton Cottage, West Monkton, and John Blackmore was the tenant on the 327-acre (132 hectare) Volis Farm, Kingston St Mary, where he bred Dorset Horn Sheep and Devon Cattle until Volis was taken in hand by E. W. B. Portman in late 1894. The Cricket Club pitch was probably situated, at least initially, on Volis land which extended well into the southern reaches of the Hestercombe Estate.
Taken as a whole the clubs show that the enthusiasm in cricket in Somerset is not by any means abated from that attained last year, and it even points to a still upward movement. In nearly every case is the prospect encouraging, but Wiveliscombe in particular, who were beyond doubt one of the strongest clubs in the county last season, will have to fight hard to maintain that supremacy, or even to keep on level terms with some neighbouring combinations . . .
The 1894 Cricket Season
According to the Somerset County Gazette, the second season of Cheddon and District Cricket Club (1894) promised to be ‘a very busy and successful one’. The newspaper’s annual pre season review of the Somerset cricket scene appeared on the 21st of April under the customary headline of ‘Sporting Intelligence: The Coming Cricket Season and the Somerset Clubs’. Apart from a partial list of matches and a directory of the various clubs and their officers, there were updates on the general prospects of the individual clubs, including that of the Cheddon and District Cricket Club. At ‘Cheddon’ it was reported that Mr. R. Holman had retained the captaincy, that the fledgling club was beginning the year in a ‘highly satisfactory’ cash position (£4-19-8!) – probably due to a concert held the previous November in aid of the Club at the parish schoolroom, Rowford -- and that consideration was being given to developing a second Eleven, ‘with the idea of bringing forward the younger members of the club, and to give them a chance of playing in matches, which will be arranged for them’. A one day match was planned for Whit-Monday on the Cheddon pitch in Hestercombe Park and two subsequent matches were confirmed with each of the village clubs of Norton Fitzwarren, and Ruishton/Stoke St. Mary. Among the other ‘leading teams in the district’ that would come to fear the pluck and verve of the Cheddon batsmen were Bridgwater, Chard, Combe Florey, Burham, Castle Carey, North Curry, Yeovill, Uphill, Stogursey, Ilchester, Ilminster, Glastonbury, Clatworthy, Frome, Mark, Martock, Lydeard St. Lawrence, North Petherton, Wiveliscombe and Cheddar. Taunton alone was to field five cricket clubs in 1894: Pool Wall Mills (Jarvis’ Field), Holy Trinity (Poor Grounds), United Cricket Club (Roughmoor), Wilton Cricket Club (Cutcliffe Farm, Sherford) and Huish School (Portland Street).
The Hestercombe club will probably be a little stronger than last year. A list from 14 to 20 matches will be played, and it is hoped to have a successful season.
the president of the [Hestercombe Cricket] club (Hon. E. W. B. Portman) has kindly had the ground in the park levelled and improved at a great expense. The ground next season will be one of the best country cricket grounds in the county, the position being quite unique and the view perfect.
Inaugural season success
The club’s inaugural season as the Hestercombe Cricket Club (1895) exceeded expectations -- won 9; drawn 2; lost 4 -- and a second concert and fundraiser, again presided over by F. T. Hussey, was held in the schoolroom at Rowford on the 28th of November ‘with several journeying a distance of two miles or more on this occasion to attend’. An appreciative audience filled to capacity the ‘prettily decorated’ room, celebrating the prowess of the Hestercombe Eleven against a multi-coloured backdrop carefully arranged under the expert direction of Miss Ascott -- the letters ‘H.C.C.’ were spelled out in watercolours and the seasons results were ‘artistically worked’ amidst an array of ornaments. Refreshments (cider?) were served in abundance by Mrs. E. Musgrave of Rowford Cottage and a complete line-up of musical entertainment was presented. Miss Ferris impressed with a pianoforte solo, Miss French set pulses racing with ‘two solos in good style’, Miss Barnicott tested the structural soundness of the school with a spirited soprano rendition of ‘Comin thro the Rye’, and J. G. Loveday ratcheted up the laughter meter with a selection of ‘humorous songs in capital style’. Not to be outdone, Mr. T. J. Bunston tickled funny bones with a reading of ‘Oysters’ and Mr. R. Holman added to the comedic hijinks with ‘I’m an Inspector’ and ‘The Jap’, both of which were ‘enthusiastically encored’.
The full programme was as follows:
Part 1 –
• Pianoforte solo, ‘Polonaise in A’ (Chopin), Miss M. L. French;
• song, ‘My bonnie barque’ (G. Marks), Mr. L. Pleass;
• song, ‘In story land’ (W. J. Hammett), Miss Barnicott);
• comic song, ‘I’m an inspector’ (Little Tich), Mr. R. Holman;
• song, ‘The kissing bridge’ (M. Watson), Miss M. Pleass;
• vocal duet, ‘The wild man of Borneo’ (The Two Macs), Messrs R. Holman & L. Pleass;
• humorous song, ‘The merry monk’, Mr. J. G. Loveday;
• glee, ‘The jolly cricket ball’ (S. G. Monk), the Cheddon glee singers.
Part 2 –
• Pianoforte solo, ‘La Fileuse’ (Raff), Miss M. L. French;
• song in the Somerset dialect, ‘The turmit hoer’, (W. R. Wheatley), Mr. D. Pleass;
• song, ‘Voices of the woods’ (from Rubenstein), Miss Barnicott;
• humorous song, ‘Jan’s courtship’, Mr. J. G. Loveday;
• pianoforte solo, ‘De Bravoure’ (J. Wehl), Miss Ferris;
• reading, ‘Oysters’, Mr. T. J. Bunston;
• character song, ‘The Jap’ (Dan Leno), Mr. R. Holman;
• song, ‘Just like the men’ (F. N. Lohr), Miss M. Pleass;
• God save the Queen.
By 1896 the formidable force of mainly tenant farmers and Estate workers [Fig. 2] that constituted the Hestercombe Cricket Club included the dapper 26-year-old William Duppa Miller, Teddy Portman’s private secretary (extreme right) and William Thomas White (second from right, back row) shepherd and great uncle to Philip White, chief executive officer of the Hestercombe Gardens Trust. The second annual meeting of the Club was held in January of that year. The secretary’s and treasurer’s reports read, the officers were unanimously re-elected, viz., president, Hon. E.W.B. Portman; vice president, Mr. F. T. Hussey; captain, R. Holman; sub captain, L. Pleass; treasurer, A. Erswell and honorary secretary, R. Holman. L. Pleass was Launcelot Pleass, the 26-year-old carpenter son of John Pleass, the Cheddon Fitzpaine builder mentioned earlier in connection with Volis Farm. The annual meeting concluded with the rousing news that a new pavilion would be erected before the ensuing season -- ‘if possible’ -- and it was decided to hold another concert to raise money for this venture.
A substantial half-timbered building with stage, hall, and kitchen, was eventually built adjacent to the Club’s cricket ground on the site of the modern-day dwelling, Lyndons (by the current entrance to the Estate), but not until much later. Designed by Edwin Lutyens between 1903 and 1913 (possibly in parallel, or following on, his creation of the Formal Garden 1904-08), the ‘Hestercombe Hall’, better known as the Reading Room, was eventually featured in the book, Village Halls and Clubs (1920) by Country Life editor, Lawrence Weaver. [Figs. 3, 5] Initially intended for the recreation of the Portmans, their estate workers and families, the Reading Room ultimately evolved into the village hall for Cheddon Fitzpaine, hosting pantomines, plays, flower shows and charity fetes until it was superseded by the Cheddon Fitzpaine Memorial Hall in nearby Sandilands, completed 1955.
Mr Holman in his letter says: -- . . . The team, it is probable, will be much the same as last season, but all with a determination to have a still more successful season to record. There will be a good list of matches played, and we hope won.
The 1896 season was to be ‘no walk in the park’ and a demanding regime of thrice weekly practices was instituted, beginning promptly at 6:00 pm on Easter Monday (6 April), the traditional date for the commencement of the season. Monday was thereafter reserved for net practice; Tuesdays and Thursdays for field training. The Club’s ‘determination’ was further galvanized through the provision of material incentives -- ‘It is proposed to again offer a bat and ball for the best batting and bowling averages respectively, and the captain offers a bat, as in former seasons, for the best all-round improvement of any member’. Equipment was of the highest quality ‘as the club was becoming such an important one’ and smart custom-made woollen caps with piping and the H.C. monogram embroidered prominently on the front were soon in evidence. The Club secretary, R. Holman, stressed in no uncertain terms that members must take ‘proper and sufficient care of them’.
The list of village clubs with which the Hestercombe Cricket Club could now arrange fixtures was longer than ever as ‘there is hardly a rural district where a club has not been formed’. In 1897, for example, matches were arranged with North Curry, Taunton Wesleyans, St. Andrew’s Taunton, Staplegrove and Corfe, to name but a few. The Pleass family of Cheddon Fitzpaine continued to play a prominent role in the Club’s fortunes, fielding up to four players at a time for several matches. There was George (batsman), John Samuel (batsman), Donald (bowler & batsman), and William (bowler & batsman). George and John Samuel Pleass were the sons of John Pleass, the builder responsible for the Volis additions of 1895, and were aged 24 and 19 years of age respectively. Donald and William Pleass were 25 and 21 in 1897, the sons of William Pleass, a deceased carpenter and joiner and, it would also seem, a close relation of John Pleass. Donald was a printer and William a solicitor’s clerk. Donald ‘bowled well’ against the Taunton Wesleyans on the 17th of July, but the Hestercombe side still fell by a disappointing 49 runs. Redemption was achieved in the return match a week later, albeit by the slim margin of only 8 runs. Donald Pleass was once again singled out in the local press coverage, on this occasion for making ‘useful scores’. In an even more monumental clash with Corfe on the 14th of August, the Hestercombe Cricket Club triumphed by a decisive 61 runs. Once again, the Pleass boys came to the fore: ‘W. (William) Pleass was the top scorer with a well-played 39, and J. Giles, J, Crispin and G. and D. Pleass made useful scores. D. and W. Pleass shared the bowling honours.’ The Humphris family, with a long tradition of working first with horses, and later with motorcars on the Estate, also played a part in the 1897 season, enabling the Hestercombe Cricket Club to fill two positions. Northleach, Gloucestershire-born William John Humphris, aged 20, would one day become the Portman's chauffeur, but was currently employed as a groom. His nephew, 14-year-old Fred Humphris [Fig. 7], only son of Hestercombe stud groom, Edward Humphris (1856-1924), was already helping his father with the horses.
At 5:53 eight wickets were down for 41, and the bowling was deadly. The excitement was intense, each side making an effort to secure the victory. The visitors [Hestercombe] lost no time in encasing and proceeding to the wickets, some returning in a short time, but all going and returning at the trot. The home team [North Curry] did not keep them waiting and the fun was fast and furious.
One of the most ‘pleasant, interesting and exciting’ matches to be played in 1897 was described at some length in the Somerset County Gazette on the 12th of June. The opposition was North Curry, the date Whit-Monday (7 June), and the situation ‘a hard and fiery wicket’ opposite the North Curry Assembly-rooms. The captivating contest commenced at 11:30 and did not conclude until late when ‘the winning stroke was made for the visitors (Hestercombe) when down went the ninth wicket and the church clock immediately struck six’. In the interim the bowling of the brothers Hussey (R. and P.) was deemed exceptional, Robert Roger Mead of Maidenbrook Farm produced fielding ‘worthy of mention’, J. W. Standfast and George Pleass batted with sterling results -- producing no less than 38 runs between them -- and R. R. Holman and H. S. Salter bowled brilliantly, the former going 4 for 12 and the latter 5 for 22. Yet, as the opposing teams sat down to lunch at 1:30 the outcome of the match still hung in the balance. Following the resumption of play, however, it appeared that the tide had turned in favour of the home side -- the midday feast had apparently ‘accounted for the downfall of the remainder of the Cheddon wickets, or else the sun was overpowering’. Sensing the opposition’s post pudding sluggishness, North Curry quickly moved in front, although their total only reached 44 with only one double-figure innings. Fortunately, after tea was served new resolve appeared in the metal of the visiting side which made 46 in 45 minutes to win an ‘intensely exciting game which was full of many incidents’. A spent Hestercombe Eleven then proceeded to the pub for a post mortem victorious by one wicket and three runs.
By 1907 the Pleass, Hussey, and the Humphris dynasties had yielded to fresh talent. Among those who were new to the Hestercombe Cricket Club roster that year were Charles Henry Butters, Head Keeper, who is shown in the team photo of that year in dark clothes and W. C. Burn, Foreman of the Walled Gardens, who resplendent in keeper’s attire (gloves, leg guards), is striking a particularly jaunty pose in the back row, extreme left [Fig. 8]. The Hon E. W. B. Portman is seated middle with a flower in his buttonhole and Mr. William Duppa Millar, moustache carefully coiffed as always, is on his right. Claude Bradbury, then valet to E. W. B, later butler to Mrs. Portman 1911-51, is not shown but was the team captain that year. Walter Charles Burn worked under Mr. A. Hubbard as the Foreman of the Hestercombe Walled Gardens 1903-07, having previously worked at Gaunts House, Dorset; Buckminster Park, Lincolnshire; and Rhode Hill, Lyme Regis. Burn, who lived in the Bothy initially, took up residence at No. 1 Park Gate subsequent to his marriage in 1905. Mr. Hubbard considered him an ‘honest, sober, and industrious man’ who was ‘well up in all branches appertaining to a well kept garden & a good manager of men’. Twenty-nine year old Charles Henry Butters was a native of Great Barton, Suffolk. In 1907 he lived in Combe Cottage, now Combe House, with his first wife, Cissy, and their two young daughters, Kathleen (b. 1902) and Violet (b. 1904). William Duppa Millar was now thirty-eight years of age and still a bachelor. His birthplace was Hereford City, Hereford, and he lived with his sister, Agatha, in Cheddon House, Cheddon Fitzpaine, along with two servants, a cook and a house and parlour maid. Miller became close to the Portman family, as evidenced by his appearance in many family photographs of the period [Figs. 9 & 10]. He seemingly commanded almost as much respect from the Estate staff as the Portmans did. In an interview, conducted shortly before her death in 2005, Mary Butters (b.1910), Charles Butters’ third daughter, clearly remembered having to curtsey to Miller in her youth.
By 1907 the Pleass, Hussey, and the Humphris dynasties had yielded to fresh talent. Among those who were new to the Hestercombe Cricket Club roster that year were Charles Henry Butters, Head Keeper, who is shown in the team photo of that year in dark clothes and W. C. Burn, Foreman of the Walled Gardens, who resplendent in keeper’s attire (gloves, leg guards), is striking a particularly jaunty pose in the back row, extreme left [Fig. 8]. The Hon E. W. B. Portman is seated middle with a flower in his buttonhole and Mr. William Duppa Millar, moustache carefully coiffed as always, is on his right. Claude Bradbury, then valet to E. W. B, later butler to Mrs. Portman 1911-51, is not shown but was the team captain that year. Walter Charles Burn worked under Mr. A. Hubbard as the Foreman of the Hestercombe Walled Gardens 1903-07, having previously worked at Gaunts House, Dorset; Buckminster Park, Lincolnshire; and Rhode Hill, Lyme Regis. Burn, who lived in the Bothy initially, took up residence at No. 1 Park Gate subsequent to his marriage in 1905. Mr. Hubbard considered him an ‘honest, sober, and industrious man’ who was ‘well up in all branches appertaining to a well kept garden & a good manager of men’. Twenty-nine year old Charles Henry Butters was a native of Great Barton, Suffolk. In 1907 he lived in Combe Cottage, now Combe House, with his first wife, Cissy, and their two young daughters, Kathleen (b. 1902) and Violet (b. 1904). William Duppa Millar was now thirty-eight years of age and still a bachelor. His birthplace was Hereford City, Hereford, and he lived with his sister, Agatha, in Cheddon House, Cheddon Fitzpaine, along with two servants, a cook and a house and parlour maid. Miller became close to the Portman family, as evidenced by his appearance in many family photographs of the period [Figs. 9 & 10]. He seemingly commanded almost as much respect from the Estate staff as the Portmans did. In an interview, conducted shortly before her death in 2005, Mary Butters (b.1910), Charles Butters’ third daughter, clearly remembered having to curtsey to Miller in her youth.
During the final season before E. W. B. Portman’s untimely death on the 27th of April 1911, the Hestercombe Cricket Club fielded a team that included many familiar names (e.g., Claude Bradbury, W. D. Miller, R. Holman, W. Humphris) as well as several new ones, most notably that of the Hon. Osbert Eustace Vesey (1884-1957) [Figs. 9 & 11], the second of Teddy Portman’s three stepsons with Constance Mary Lawley. Osbert would go on to forge a successful career as a much-decorated professional soldier, eventually attaining the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. He was educated first at Eaton College, Windsor, then at Royal Military College, Sandhurst, and fought in both the First & Second World Wars. Although he joined his father’s old regiment, the 9th Queen's Royal Lancers, in the former, he spent World War I with the Royal East Kent Yeomanry and the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) in Egypt, France and Flanders. Osbert was mentioned in dispatches three times and decorated with the Legion of Honour. Other distinctions followed, continuing almost up until his death in 1957: -- Commander, Order of the British Empire (1919), Gentlemen-at-Ams (1922), Companion, Order of St. Michael and St. George (1950), Commander, Royal Victorian Order (1953), and Knight Commander, Royal Victorian Order (1956). Osbert’s younger brother, Thomas (1885-1946) [Fig. 11], who also distinguished himself whilst serving in the British army, was a keen cricketer as well. His diary for 1902, written when he was 17 years old and attending Eton, contains numerous references to enjoying the sport at both home and school. Of the former, he wrote:
We all played silly cricket on the lawn except osbert who had gone.
played Cricket after Lunch & took Mother & Bath for a drive in Tomasina cart to Kingston [St. Mary]. had a cricket practise in the evening
played cricket on the lawn. the Waltons came to tea & we played Silly cricket after with them & Chloe & Mrs Potter (the Portman’s cook). went Shooting with mother, got nothing
Thomas later became a Captain in the Irish Guards (1913), rising to the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel. Wounded twice in World War I, he was awarded the French Croix de Guerre (Cross of War) in recognition of acts of bravery in the face of the enemy.
Without the direct and active support of Teddy Portman, the Hestercombe Cricket Club appears to have been left largely to its own devices. Following his death, and well into the 1930s, the Club played under its original designation of the ‘Cheddon Fitzpaine Cricket Club’, albeit with the continuing support of some Estate staff. In the 1920s these included Claude Bradbury (butler) and Wilfrid Aish (blacksmith). Hestercombe Park continued to serve as the venue for many fixtures, but the great era of Portman sponsorship had ended. The Second World War interrupted play once more, although according to respected local historian, Audrey Mead, the Hestercombe pitch was used again for a few years in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Following the death of Mrs. Portman in 1951 it fell into disrepair and was eventually abandoned. It now lies quiet, forgotten, and at one with the adjoining fields.
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