This
was my great great Uncle Arthur Shrewsbury . We are a mixed immigrant
group. There are the Jewish Spanish roots, The Welsh roots from Ynys
Mon, the Rutland Agricultural lot and the numerous others. You can see
my ears and my lack of hair from Arthur. Arthur was the organiser of the
first Rugby tour to Australia. He shot himself in 1903 but i do assure
you and my detractors you cant get rid of me like that..
Arthur Shrewsbury amassed 1,277 runs at 35.47 in 23 Tests © Getty Images
Arthur Shrewsbury, born April 11, 1856, was the premier professional
batsman of his generation and, from the mid-1880s to the mid-1890s
perhaps the best wielder of the willow in the world. Arunabha Sengupta
looks back at the life and career of the man who was the first to score
1,000 runs in Test cricket, was a promoter of cricket tours, ran a
thriving sports goods store and, later, took his own life.
Give Me Arthur
Did WG Grace really say those famed words: “Give me Arthur?”
As is the case of so many stories about Grace, we can never unravel the
authentic from the apocrypha. It was in the 1920s that this statement
first appeared in print, in an essay in The Cricketer Magazine by ‘A
Country Vicar’ — real name Rev RL Hodgson. When Hodgson’s book Cricket
Memories was published in 1930, this sentence made its way into
immortality. In this second version, it was Grace’s answer to the query
about his preferred partner to open the England innings.
This was
of course picked up by those writers best described by the curious
oxymoron — romantic historians. Neville Cardus and GD Martineau both
used the phrase prolifically. It went down to mean that the great WG,
when he took himself out of the equation, considered Arthur Shrewsbury
as the greatest batsman of England.
Grace might have indeed said
it. Or the statement might have been wrongly attributed to him. As in
the case of legends, the exact origin of the comment does not really
bother us. The essence of the sentiment remains unquestionable. From the
mid-1880s, for over a decade, Shrewsbury was the best batsman of
England, as also perhaps the entire cricket playing world. And that
remains true even if we take the bearded forefather of batsmanship into
account.
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As in any saga of greatness, Shrewsbury’s brilliance is borne out by
the numbers. In 1885 he topped the batting averages in England for the
first time. He remained there till 1892, topping in every year other
than 1888, which he did not play, and 1889 when he missed half the
season. Apart from Grace, only Wally Hammond has had such prolonged
dominance over the English First-Class scene across such a long period.Yet, there were many other aspects of Shrewsbury’s career and life that defined an extraordinary man.
Relentless Zeal
According to biographer Peter Wynne-Thomas, “Arthur possessed the gift
of patience and that, allied to his innate ability, produced the first
of the great modern professional batsmen. Shrewsbury, it seems to me,
must have realised as a teenager that he had the necessary gifts to be a
good batsman and by sheer unremitting practice in the nets and in the
local matches, set about developing the talent until he became the most
complete batsman in England, if not the world. Before Shrewsbury came on
the scene, batsmen, whether professional or amateur, allowed their
natural aptitude to determine the standard of their cricket. Shrewsbury
was not satisfied to let nature take its course. He developed
batsmanship in the same way that modern athletes have used the science
of training in the recent Olympics.”
Indeed, the relentless drive
for perfection of Shrewsbury is almost without parallel. A plain
hard-backed pocket notebook has passed on as one of his heirlooms. It
was his diary maintained through a year and four months. The entries
include details of Shrewsbury’s days spent at the indoor nets at Trent
Bridge. The descriptions read as follows:
“18 December
Self bowled by A Attewell when not looking.
W Marshall bowled by self if bails had been on, but stumped same ball.
W Marshall clean bowled by Gunn.
Self clean bowled Henson.
Present: A Shrewsbury, Henson, Marshall, J Gunn, A Attewell
Noddy was present but did not play.
Dark day, light very bad.”
Of course one can understand a young cricketer keeping detailed notes
of indoor practice in the winter. However, the date of the entry was
December 18, 1900. The diary was maintained from December 1900 to March
1902. By then Shrewsbury was in his mid-40s, with 25 years of
First-Class cricket behind him. All his contemporaries had long left the
game. However, he was still one of the very best batsmen of England.
In 1902, at the age of 46, he topped the season’s batting average,
pipping two batsmen whose names read Victor Trumper and KS Ranjitsinhji.
In the 1880s and 1890s, the verdict was almost unanimous. According to
Charles Pardon, editor of Wisden: “Arthur Shrewsbury may without the
least reservation be described as the greatest professional batsman of
the day.” The other major cricketing reference of the day was not far
behind. CW Alcock, editor of Lilywhite Annual, announced, “Arthur
Shrewsbury stands out in bold relief among the cricketers of today as
the professional batsman par excellence.”
AS IN ANY SAGA OF
GREATNESS, SHREWSBURY’S BRILLIANCE IS BORNE OUT BY THE NUMBERS. IN 1885
HE TOPPED THE BATTING AVERAGES IN ENGLAND FOR THE FIRST TIME. HE
REMAINED THERE TILL 1892, TOPPING IN EVERY YEAR OTHER THAN 1888, WHICH
HE DID NOT PLAY, AND 1889 WHEN HE MISSED HALF THE SEASON
Sitting in
our times, we can transliterate ‘professional’ to the current meaning of
the word and thereby succeed in making the sentences more accurate.
Shrewsbury was indeed one of a kind, the greatest of his era and one of
the best ever.
However, cricket was only a part of his active
life. Teaming up with fellow Nottinghamshire professional, the great
bowler Alfred Shaw, he set up a thriving sports goods manufacturing
business. Shaw and Shrewsbury produced cricket bats, tennis rackets,
boxing gloves, football and had contracts with firms across England and
Australia. Besides, the same Shaw and Shrewsbury duo was responsible for
several cricket tours to Australia, in that period when most of the
visits were privately organised.
Shrewsbury not only managed the
business of the tours, he was also the captain of England in seven
Tests, the last professional cricketer to lead the country before Len
Hutton was appointed in 1952. He also managed the first English Rugby
Union football tour to Australia, the reason why he was away from
England and did not play in the 1888 summer. Besides, the tours were
utilised to generate contacts and business partners in the sports goods
market.
And this complex character, in spite of all his sporting success and flourishing business, met a tragic end by his own hands.
The young Shrewsbury
Arthur Shrewsbury was born at the family home in Kyle Street, New
Lenton. He was the youngest among four brothers, and also had three
elder sisters. When he was eight, the family moved to a terraced house
in Wellington Square, Nottingham. His father William Shrewsbury was
employed as draughtsman-designer in the lace firm of JT Hovey in the
city.
The interest in cricket seems to have stemmed from grandfather
Joseph Shrewsbury, who played for the Beeston team in the 1820s. Some
of the maternal uncles of the Shrewsbury boys, with the family name
Wragg, also seem to have played for Lenton. At least, the surname Wragg
figures prominently in the Lenton team records of the 1840s.
As a
result, all four Shrewsbury brothers were keen on the game. Apart from
Arthur, Joseph and Edward played actively at school, while William made
it to the Nottinghamshire county team and played a handful of
First-Class matches.
It was in May 1867 that Arthur Shrewsbury’s
name made it into the newspaper for the first time for cricketing
reasons. He played alongside brother William for People’s College
against High Pavement School.
At the turn of the new decade, the
Shrewsburys started living in Queens Hotel, Nottingham. It was to be the
home of Shrewsbury for 32 years.
William and Arthur both became
members of the local cricket club, Meadow Imperial. Even in 1871,
Shrewsbury topped the batting averages of the club. The next year, he
joined the biggest local club of the day, Nottingham Commercial.
However, his first foray into the Trent Bridge County ground was during
an important game which may seem strange as we look back from the
current day. It was a match between Lace and Hosiery, played in June
1872 — a testimony to the key industry of Nottingham during that era.
Shrewsbury, an apprentice draughtsman in the lace trade, was part of the
Lace team. There were six county cricketers who featured in the game.
However, the match was dominated by the 16-year-old Shrewsbury who
scored 44 out of a total of 89.
By this time, Shrewsbury was playing
plenty of cricket for the clubs. Commercial and Lace aside, he also
turned out for Meadow Imperial and Castle-Gate. William was also active
in the cricketing scene. When the Robin Hood Rifles team played a few
matches, the scoreboard suddenly got enriched with the name of Privateer
Shrewsbury.
In 1873, Shrewsbury was accepted in the Notts Colts
team and the Nottingham Journal observed that he was the most promising
player. That winter, brothers Arthur, William and Edward also played for
the Meadow Imperial Football Club.
In 1874, Shrewsbury had a bad
attack of rheumatic fever and it kept him away from cricket. It was
probably this illness that made him prone to hypochondria throughout his
career. There is a theory that it was the subsequent fear of terrible
disease that led him to take his life later on.
First-Class cricketer
On a trip to North America in the late 1880s, a sports store called
‘Shaw and Shrewsbury’ was setup by Arthur Shrewsbury and his friend,
Alfred Shaw © Getty Images
However, when he recovered and came
back to the game in 1875, he made his First-Class debut. For the game
against Derbyshire at Whitsuntide, four of the regulars were engaged in
the North versus South game at Lord’s. Shrewsbury was drafted into the
side, alongside fellow debutants wicketkeeper Alfred Anthony, and his
former schoolmate from People’s College and later opening partner
William Scotton. Shrewsbury batted at No. 3 and made 17 and 10. The
very same year, William also made his debut for the Notts. An old 1875
photograph of the county side shows the two clean shaven brothers
flanking a hirsute squad of typical cricketers of the day.
By the
summer of 1876, Shrewsbury had a contract with Notts CCC. He scored 59
against MCC and followed it up with 118 against Yorkshire, sharing an
opening partnership of 183 with Richard Daft. These knocks got him
included in the Players side for the traditional fixture against the
Gentlemen, and he finished the season with 65 not out against Surrey.
The young man was already a force to reckon with.Shrewsbury was not
part of the England team under James Lillywhite that toured Australia
in 1876-77 and played the first ever Test match. However, the tour was
important for his subsequent career — it forged a strong friendship
between his two business associates in the next decade, Lillywhite and
Alfred Shaw.
When the next summer started, Shrewsbury made 119 at The Oval for the Players of the North against Gentlemen of the South.
If the scores of Shrewsbury were not spectacular during the late 1870s,
another aspect of his character was soon making its presence felt. He
was one of the first professional cricketers to stand up for his rights.
When Notts secretary Captain Henry Holden, the Chief Constable of
Nottinghamshire, asked him to apologise for batting at the nets for some
minutes more than the allotted time, Shrewsbury refused to apologise
and was left out for the games against Middlesex and Lancashire. From a
very early age, Shrewsbury was intensely aware that the public paid to
watch him bat, and he was entitled to respect both in public and in the
Notts Committee. After the suspension, when Holden patched things up by
driving him personally to Trent Bridge for the next match against
Yorkshire, Shrewsbury responded like a true professional by hitting a
flawless 60.
In September 1879, Shrewsbury went on a tour to
North America with a team led by Richard Daft. The voyage was terrible
for the young batsman, with seasickness dogging him throughout. The tour
also did not get him much success either, apart from a 66 in an odds
match against the XXII of Canada. However, foreign travel broadens the
mind. The commercial possibility of such tours was soon making an
impression on Shrewsbury.
It was also probably during this trip that
Shrewsbury and Shaw talked at length about the possibilities of setting
up a sports store. Thus in 1880 was set up ‘The Midland Cricket, Lawn
Tennis, Football and General Athletic Sports Depot’. In 1884 it was
shortened to a simpler ‘Shaw and Shrewsbury’, much to the relief of the
business associates corresponding by post.
The years 1880 and
1881 saw Shrewsbury the proud professional taking the stage yet again.
In 1880 Shaw and he led a showdown with Captain Holden regarding
payments for the Notts match against the visiting Australians. When a
mutual agreement was reached, Shrewsbury batted out of his skin to help
the county side beat the visitors by one wicket in a thrilling match. He
was undefeated at the end and was chaired from the ground, borne on the
shoulders of teammates Fred Morley and Mordecai Sherwin.
In
1881, Shrewsbury and Shaw led the strike of the Nottinghamshire
professional players over an early season fixture with Yorkshire. This
meant just three First-Class matches for the season. Hence, while they
enjoyed the break, Shrewsbury, Shaw and Lillywhite put their heads
together to arrange a World Tour — covering North America, Australia and
New Zealand.
Afflicted with bronchitis, Shrewsbury missed the
American of the tour with. But, with the doctors voicing their approval
of the Australian climate, he sailed directly to Australia via Suez.
Perhaps the best game of the tour was against Victoria, when the
Englishmen followed on 105 behind and then lost 4 wickets for 73.
Shrewsbury scored an unbeaten 80 on a difficult wicket and the visitors
managed a thrilling win.
In the first Test match at Melbourne,
Shrewsbury made his debut and scored 11 and 16. He did not do anything
special in the second Test as well, but in the third match at Sydney he
top scored in both innings with 82 and 47. However, although he did not
blaze the turf of Australia with his bat, the matches at Sydney and
Melbourne ensured a profit of £700 for each of the three promoters.
The premier batsman
The next few years saw Shrewsbury slowly climb up the ladder to emerge as the best batsman of England.
In 1882 he hit 207 against Surrey in the August Bank Holiday encounter,
adding a record 289 for the second wicket with Billy Barnes. However,
he did not cross fifty again in the season. He made up for it during the
following year. The summer of 1883 saw the county games played on dry,
fast wickets. Shrewsbury passed 1,000 runs in the season for the first
time and Nottinghamshire won the top place in the championships.
In
1884, Shrewsbury and Scotton established themselves as a prolific
partnership at the top of the order. The highlight of their association
was the 119 run partnership against Sussex at Hove. In the same innings,
Shrewsbury and Gunn added 266 for the fifth wicket, notching up a new
world record. Shrewsbury went on to bat for six and a half hours and
piled 209. That summer he played all three Tests against the visiting
Australians, and excelled in his familiar role as a limpet on a sticky
wicket, scoring 43 out of 95 all out at Old Trafford.
In 1884-85,
the trio of Shrewsbury, Shaw and Lilywhite arranged their second tour to
Australia. This time, Shrewsbury went as the captain of the side.
As skipper, he opened the innings for England for the first time in the
first Test at Adelaide. He was not overly successful the first time, but
in the second Test at Melbourne he hit 72 in the first innings. After
winning the first two Tests, England lost a thriller at Sydney by six
runs. And in the fourth Test, a murderous innings by George Bonnor
clinched the match for the hosts.
With the series tied at 2-2,
Shrewsbury scored a superlative 105 not out in the fifth Test helping
England to a series winning innings victory. This was his maiden Test
hundred and he could not have chosen the occasion with more precision.
The leading Australian cricket writer Felix observed, “His play
throughout was a treat to look at, and that neat and effective stroke of
his between square-leg and mid-on is worth copying. He made a large
number of his 105 in this spot. His defence was splendid, his cutting
clean and telling, his timing could not well be excelled, and his care
and judgment in dealing with enticing balls to the off formed a lesson
which young cricketers, and indeed some old ones, could study and
profit. During his long stay at the wickets, Shrewsbury never once lost
his patience.”
England won the series 3-2, but due to the boycott
of several matches by Billy Murdoch and his allies, the promoters could
make only £150 from the tour. In the tours that followed, Shrewsbury
continued to have strained relations with Melbourne Cricket Club.
Now started the glory years of Shrewsbury. In 1885, he scored 1130 runs
at 56.50, with four hundreds, batting almost eight hours to score 224
not out against Middlesex. The next best in the averages was Walter
Read with 44.76. He was to remain the best bat in England for several
years. It may be argued that WG Grace was past his prime by now and had
been at the top of his game for 14 successive summers from 1868.
However, it is fair to say that Shrewsbury was the best in England in
spite of the presence of the Grand Old Man.
As if to prove the
point, Shrewsbury carried his bat against Gloucestershire the following
season, scoring 227 not out against WG Grace and his men, adding 261 for
the second wicket with Gunn. That summer of 1886 also saw three Test
matches against Australia. Shrewsbury played a hand in each of the three
victorious Tests, but the best was reserved for the second match at
Lord’s.
On a rain affected wicket against a bowling attack including
Fred Spofforth, Joey Palmer, Tom Garrett and George Giffen, Shrewsbury
batted seven hours and was the last out for 164. The editorial note in
Cricket observed, “Arthur Shrewsbury’s magnificent innings this week is
eminently gratifying to those who believe in the survival of the
fittest. Shrewsbury has been for the last two years undoubtedly the best
professional batsman in the Country, and therefore his brilliant
achievement in the great contest of the season, and against the
Australian bowling, cannot fail to be particularly satisfactory to all
who value the maintenance of our reputation on the cricket field.”
Shrewsbury scored 1,404 runs that summer and once again Nottinghamshire retained the title.
The Nottinghamshire professional led the team to Australia once again
in 1886-87, winning the two low-scoring Tests. He also scored 236 for
the Anglo-Australian combined Non-Smokers against the Smokers in a match
played at Melbourne, adding 311 with William Gunn. Financially, though,
the tour was a failure.
The year 1887 was the crowning glory of
this great batsman. He scored 1653 runs with eight hundreds at 78.71. It
was the best ever average in a English season till then, beating WG
Grace’s 78.25 set in 1871. In this particular summer, Grace was the
second best in England with an average of 54.26. The gap between
Shrewsbury and the next was really striking by now. During the season he
enjoyed a sequence that ran 119, 152, 81, 130 and 111, and finally he
finished the season with his highest First-Class score of 267 against
Middlesex.
Cricket and Football Ventures
Shrewsbury toured Australia again in 1887-88. This time, however, it was a total disaster from the financial point of view.
The Melbourne Club was financing their own rival England team led by
Walter Read and did not play their main cricketers against Shrewsbury’s
side. The Victoria team contained only four frontline cricketers, and
lost by an innings and 456 runs. Shrewsbury got 232 in the match, the
first Englishman to score a double hundred in Australia.
The two
English teams on tour combined to play a Test against the hosts at
Sydney. England were led by Walter Read and won a low scoring game.
Shrewsbury characteristically top-scored with 44.
On the tour,
Shrewsbury scored 721 runs, 500 more than the next man. His average,
too, was in the 60s. However, the numbers associated with the monetary
losses were even more imposing. To try and recover some financial
ground, Shrewsbury stayed back in Australia and managed an English rugby
team.
The team, although not thoroughly representative, was a
strong one. It was led by RL Seddon of Lancashire and Swinton. But, in a
tragic accident, Seddon drowned while sculling on the river Hunter at
Maitland. The captaincy was assumed by AE Stoddart, Shrewsbury’s fellow
cricketer, and, later on, another suicide victim. The football team
played 34 matches in Australia and 19 in New Zealand. However, the tour
added to the losses, ending in a £800 deficit to add to the £2,400 lost
incurred on cricket.
The last years
Back home, Shrewsbury
continued to score mountains of runs in the English seasons, and was
chosen a Wisden Cricketer of 1890 — in the second year after the
inception of the award. To perhaps celebrate the occasion, he hammered
267 against Sussex, equalling his best score and sharing a stand of 398
with Gunn — a second wicket record for the Notts that stands till this
day.
He failed in the Tests against Australia, but Lord Sheffield
offered him a place in the side for the 1891-92 tour of Australia.
Shrewsbury declined, opting to stay back and manage his business,
specifically because Shaw was travelling as manager of the team.
However, his lordship picked his brains for the financial estimates of
the tour and Shrewsbury sent him detailed calculations. He also
cautioned the peer that all such figures would go for a toss if amateurs
were included in the team. “I was told when in Australia that the
expense of each amateur member of Lord Harris’s team was more than
double of any one of the professionals …. Should Dr WG Grace go out, I
should imagine, looking at the matter in a purely pecuniary point of
view, that his presence would make at the very least £1,500 or £2,000
difference in the takings. It is probable it would exceed this amount.”
In the end Shaw informed Shrewsbury that the costs were much in excess
of the estimates. The batsman retorted, “I didn’t know that Lord
Sheffield had to pay for Grace’s wife and family expenses in Australia.”
That year, Shrewsbury coached at Edgbaston, and among his wards was
Dick Lilley, later wicketkeeper-batsman of Warwickshire and England.
Lilley later recalled the excellence of Shrewsbury as coach, as well as
his insistence on travelling back to Nottingham each night. He hated to
sleep anywhere but in his bed at the Queen’s Hotel. This gives us some
vital insight into Shrewsbury’s character as well.
In 1892,
Shrewsbury scored the tenth and final double century of his career
against Middlesex. He scored four more hundreds that season and carried
the bat for 151 for the Players against the Gentlemen.
The following
year, 1893, saw him engage in another huge partnership with Gunn, 274
against Sussex at Hove. And after Tom Richardson’s pace had unsettled
him against Surrey, and the pace had suggested that he was getting too
old to play
fast bowling, he responded with 148 against Arthur Mold of Lancashire.
When Australia visited that season, Shrewsbury scored 106 at Lord’s
against Charlie Turner. Wisden reported: “Shrewsbury’s batting was
marked by extreme patience, unfailing judgment, and a mastery over the
difficulties of the ground, of which probably no other batsman would
have been capable.” It was during this innings that Shrewsbury became
the first Test cricketer to score 1000 runs. He added 81 in the second
innings for good measure. He followed this up 66 at The Oval and ended
his final Test series with 284 runs at an average of 71.
Shrewsbury
missed the 1894 season because of health problems, but when he came back
in 1895 he was once again on top of the country averages. And in 1896,
he passed 1000 runs again, scoring two more hundreds He continued to
make runs, egging on his ageing body with relentless practice. In he
added 391 for the first wicket with young Arthur Jones, a county record
that stood for 101 years.
And at the age of 46, Shrewsbury topped
the season’s batting averages again in 1902, scoring four hundreds,
including two in the same match. According to Wisden: “His batting was
marked by all its old qualities, and except that he is, perhaps, less at
home on a really sticky wicket than he used to be, there is little or
no change to be noticed in his play. He was as patient and watchful as
ever, and once or twice when runs had to be made in a hurry he surprised
everybody by the freedom and vigour of his hitting.”
The Nottinghamshire Committee raised donations of £177 14s for the veteran in recognition of his batting performance.
That was the last season that he played. He finished with 26,505 runs
from 498 matches at 36.65 with 59 hundreds. In 23 Tests, he scored 1,277
runs at 35.47 with 3 hundreds. At the time of his final Test, no one
had more runs or a better average in the short history of Test cricket.
The style…
EHD Sewell, who knew Shrewsbury during the last few years of his life,
observed: “Little by little, this little man playing a quite different
kind of cricket to any of the other Big Noises of his time, perfected
his own chosen method: never heeding anything in the shape of advice or
an adviser, until he became a kind of legend.” This ‘method’ was
Shrewsbury’s celebrated back-play. While most of the batsmen of the
1870s and 1880s scored off the front foot, Shrewsbury concentrated on
playing back, keenly following the ball till the last moment. This
allowed him to master the very poor wickets still prevalent in county
grounds. According to old Surrey cricketer William Caffyn, “Shrwesbury
has always been the master of the grand secret of playing a totally
different game when on a hard wicket to when on a soft and sticky one.”
This ability, according to Caffyn, was the hallmark of a really great
batsman
Never very well built, Shrewsbury confessed that he did
not quite hit the ball, but steered or stroked it to different
directions. The bat seemed to be an extension of his body. His play was
unconstrained and graceful. According to Wynne-Thomas, “Every swing and
motion of the bat proclaimed a polished expositor of the fine art of
cricket.”
There was a perception that he was a slow batsman, mainly
due to his unwillingness to launch into big hits. However, as CB Fry
pointed out, “Arthur has been very quiet, and a little monotonous, but
somehow or other has scored almost as fast as other batsmen. Is not
Arthur Shrewsbury the slowest scorer in England? Wrong: he scores just
as fast as any other batsman who is not a professed hitter… he does not
waste time and energy in banging ball after ball into fieldsmen’s hands.
He waits and scores — waits and scores. Shrewsbury makes no fuss, and
you think it is slow. This is a delusion. Runs are coming much at the
same pace either way. If you go into the matter you will find it so.”
One of the few adverse comments about Shrewsbury’s batting was his use
of pads as a second line of defence. Rait Kerr, in his book The Laws of
Cricket, stated: “As we have seen the improvement in pitches have
enabled Arthur Shrewsbury to develop a new gospel of defensive
batsmanship … From about 1885, the technique involved an increasing use
of pads, which in a year or two was causing the deepest concern in the
cricket world and as a result the reform of the lbw Law became the
question of the hour.”
… and the complex man
Shrewsbury the
man was a complex character. That he was almost impossible to dislodge
at the wicket underlined the intensity of his nature. He did take risks
away from the game, as in his Shaw and Shrewsbury business and the
Australian tour ventures. However, he was an accumulator by instinct.
His stubbornness at the wicket made him very similar to another later
day professional, Geoff Boycott. There was one other similarity between
the two batsmen — extended bachelorhood. He enjoyed a long relationship
with Gertrude Scott, his girlfriend. The two ‘kept company’ for several
years and one newspaper report also spoke of Scott as his fiancée. But
they never got married.
According to his contemporaries, Shrewsbury
was shy and retiring. As soon as a game was over, he was keen to return
home. Even his fellow professionals claimed he did not mix freely with
them. He was acutely sensitive of his baldness, which spread while he
was still a young man. He was never seen without a hat. On the field he
wore a cricket cap, and immediately on the completion of the day’s play,
he would change it for a hat — preferably with no one noticing the
sleight of hand. He quite matched the peculiarity of Clarrie Grimmett in
this regard.
George Lyttleton, in a letter to writer and critic
James Agate in 1944, disclosed, “Do you know a queer fact about
Shrewsbury? No one saw him naked.” Agate’s retort was curt, “It hadn’t
occurred to me that anybody would want to see Shrewsbury naked.”
Yet, in spite of his shy diffidence, at the age of 22 he was standing up
for his rights as a professional cricketer against the bellicose
Captain Holden. He was the leader of the strikes among Nottinghamshire
professionals. And he had enough enterprise to flourish in his business,
dealing with clients regularly, without any training, running Shaw and
Shrewsbury almost single-handedly because Shaw stayed far away from the
store.
The business letters show him to have been uncompromising
and blunt. There is little evidence of a sense of humour, but plenty of
hypochondria. One of his letters, dated 1900, proclaim, “Am pleased to
say my health, as far as I know, is all right.” A few weeks after this
letter was posted he declined to play in a mid-April match for fear of
catching a cold or something worse.
There is no doubt that he
trained religiously to keep himself fit and at his best as he grew
older, but by 1899 the selectors had decided that both Grace and he were
too old for the England side. The decision had more to do with tardy
fielding than the batting. In his heydays, Shrewsbury had been a decent
fielder, on some occasions taking catches while diving full length.
However, by this time he had slowed down considerably. As England and
Australia played at Trent Bridge, it was the first ever Test match at
Shrewsbury’s home ground, and he had been left out of it. He watched the
game alone and dismal, sitting in solitude under George Parr’s tree.
Another denting blow was the change of management at the Queen’s Hotel.
In 1902, after 32 years, Shrewsbury was compelled to move out by the
new landlord. He shifted into the house of his widowed sister at Trent
Boulevard, and was hugely successful in the 1902 cricket season. But,
soon after the end of the cricket for the year, he was stricken by sharp
pain around his kidneys.
Doctors were consulted, but nothing
untoward could be found. He spent some time in a nursing home in London,
and then moved to the house of Amelia Love, another of his sisters,
staying at The Limes, Station Road, in the village of Gelding. By 1903,
he had missed the winter nets and was not really sanguine about playing
county cricket that summer.
By his own hands
On May 12, 1903,
Shrewsbury went into Nottingham and purchased a revolver at Jackson’s
in Church Gate. He returned after a week, saying he could not fire the
gun. It was discovered that he had bought bullets of the wrong calibre.
The correct bullets were supplied. On the evening of May 19, he went up
to his bedroom, asking his girlfriend Gertrude Scott to make him some
cocoa.
While preparing the beverage, the lady heard a strange noise
upstairs. When she called out asking whether everything was okay,
Shrewsbury responded, “Nothing.” He had actually shot himself on the
left side of the chest, and was still unsure about the result. Fearing
that he had failed in his attempt, he placed the pistol to his right
temple and pulled the trigger. Death was instantaneous.
On the
morning of May 20, the news of the death was telegrammed to the Notts
team. There was a game on against Sussex at Hove, the scene of so many
of Shrewsbury’s triumphs. As a mark of respect the match was abandoned.
The funeral took place two days after the death, and he was laid to rest
at the Gelding cemetery. Among those present were William Gunn, Alfred
Shaw, Wilfred Flowers, Mordecai Sherwin and other Notts cricketers and
some from other counties as well. Shrewsbury’s 80-year-old father and
three brothers were the principal mourners.
At the inquest,
Gertrude Scott disclosed that on the afternoon before his death,
Shrewsbury had said, “I shall be in the churchyard before many more days
are up.” He had been convinced that he was suffering from some
incurable disease. Wisden mentioned that it was a combination of this
fear and an unhinged mind that had led him to the act.
Four years
later, Alfred Shaw died of natural causes. He was buried in the Gelding
cemetery as well. However, contrary to the urban legend, the distance
between the graves of Shaw and Shrewsbury is not 22 yards but a few
yards more. Some say it was to allow for Shaw’s bowling run up, and
others offer the reason that it was because the relationship between the
two had not been the best during the final years.
The Shaw and
Shrewsbury firm supplied cricket bats around the world for 70 years
since its inception. In 1939, after the outbreak of the Second World
War, it was closed down and the assets were bought by Grays of
Cambridge.
For years, the cricketing world suffered from the absence
of a biography of this great Nottinghamshire and England batsman.
There were a couple of obscure pamphlets and a work by WF Grundy
published in 1907 with the title, Memento of Arthur Shrewsbury and
Alfred Shaw, Cricketers — the last mentioned a collection of obituary
notices and tributes. This glaring gap was filled by Peter Wynne-Thomas,
archivist at Trent Bridge and Secretary of the Association of Cricket
Statisticians, who wrote the long awaited story of Shrewsbury’s life. It
was published it in 1985 and was titled — what else, but — Give Me
Arthur.
(Arunabha Sengupta is a cricket historian and Chief Cricket
Writer at CricketCountry. He writes about the history and the romance of
the game, punctuated often by opinions about modern day cricket, while
his post-graduate degree in statistics peeps through in occasional
analytical pieces. The author of three novels, he can be followed on
Twitter at
http://twitter.com/senantix)