John Nyren: Difference between revisions
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{{Image|John Nyren (The Hambledon Men).jpg|right|300px|John Nyren, from a copy made by Francis Grehan in 1844, of a drawing from life by Edward Novello. This is a scanned image from the book "The Hambledon Men".}} | {{Image|John Nyren (The Hambledon Men).jpg|right|300px|John Nyren, from a copy made by Francis Grehan in 1844, of a drawing from life by Edward Novello. This is a scanned image from the book "The Hambledon Men".<ref name=THM>}} | ||
John Nyren (born 15 December 1764 at Hambledon, Hampshire; died 30 June 1837 in Bromley-by-Bow, London) was an English [[cricket (sport)|cricket]]er turned author. He was the son of [[Richard Nyren]], the captain of the [[Hambledon Club]] in its "Glory Days", and was brought up in the legendary <i>Bat and Ball Inn</i>, where his father was the landlord, immediately opposite [[Broadhalfpenny Down]]. | John Nyren (born 15 December 1764 at Hambledon, Hampshire; died 30 June 1837 in Bromley-by-Bow, London) was an English [[cricket (sport)|cricket]]er turned author. He was the son of [[Richard Nyren]], the captain of the [[Hambledon Club]] in its "Glory Days", and was brought up in the legendary <i>Bat and Ball Inn</i>, where his father was the landlord, immediately opposite [[Broadhalfpenny Down]]. | ||
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In 1832, Nyren aged 67 was living in London and he began a collaboration with [[Charles Cowden Clarke]] (1787–1877), who recorded Nyren's reminiscences of the Hambledon era and published them serially in a periodical called <i>The Town</i>. The following year, the series of articles appeared in book form as <i>[[The Cricketers of My Time]]</i>, which became a major source for the history and personalities of Georgian cricket and also came to be regarded as the first classic in cricket's now rich literary history. | In 1832, Nyren aged 67 was living in London and he began a collaboration with [[Charles Cowden Clarke]] (1787–1877), who recorded Nyren's reminiscences of the Hambledon era and published them serially in a periodical called <i>The Town</i>. The following year, the series of articles appeared in book form as <i>[[The Cricketers of My Time]]</i>, which became a major source for the history and personalities of Georgian cricket and also came to be regarded as the first classic in cricket's now rich literary history. | ||
==Notes== | |||
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[https://archive.org/details/hambledonmenbein00nyreiala The Hambledon Men] by Nyren, John; Lucas, E. V. (Edward Verrall); full text available at the Internet Archive. | |||
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Revision as of 07:02, 15 May 2023
{{Image|John Nyren (The Hambledon Men).jpg|right|300px|John Nyren, from a copy made by Francis Grehan in 1844, of a drawing from life by Edward Novello. This is a scanned image from the book "The Hambledon Men".Cite error: Closing </ref>
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