Edward Chandos Leigh
Encyclopedia
Sir Edward Chandos Leigh, KCB
Order of the Bath
The Most Honourable Order of the Bath is a British order of chivalry founded by George I on 18 May 1725. The name derives from the elaborate mediæval ceremony for creating a knight, which involved bathing as one of its elements. The knights so created were known as Knights of the Bath...

, KC, was born in Stoneleigh Abbey, Warwickshire on 22 December 1832, died in London on 18 May 1915.

Edward Chandos Leigh’s cricketing career and first class stats might be considered average but he was a popular choice as President of the MCC
Marylebone Cricket Club
Marylebone Cricket Club is a cricket club in London founded in 1787. Its influence and longevity now witness it as a private members' club dedicated to the development of cricket. It owns, and is based at, Lord's Cricket Ground in St John's Wood, London NW8. MCC was formerly the governing body of...

 in its first centenary year in 1887 and the Golden Jubilee year of Queen Victoria. At the centenary MCC dinner at the old Tennis Court it was said of him his speech that night rivaled Leighton at the Royal Academy. “I will say that the old cricketer stood up bravely in bumpy grounds in spite of awkward knocks and ugly bruises.”

Wisden acknowledged him as an excellent ‘long-stop’ who ‘will let a ball go through him rather than by him” and his style of batting was awkward, but he is a fine hitter forward and to leg.

It was said of Edward Chandos Leigh in his maturer years by one who had played many matches with him when he was captain of I Zingari
I Zingari
I Zingari are English and Australian amateur cricket clubs.-History:...

 teams, that if ever there was a man to pull a match out of the fire by his management, he was that man. The same principle which he carried out on hunting when he came to a big fence, “throw your heart over and the body will follow” was his rule with the bat – he would not be beat.

‘The man himself was more entertaining than the printed page. To sit beside him in the pavilion at Lords’ or in the Old Stagers
Old Stagers
The Old Stagers is an amateur theatre group, founded in 1842 by Hon. Frederick Ponsonby and Charles Taylor. It claims to be the oldest surviving amateur dramatic company in the world, having staged its first shows in Canterbury in 1842. It has continued to give annual performances every year...

 enclosure at Canterbury was to see cricket as it was played in the golden days’. At Lords he was always to be seen on match days at the ‘Knatchbull’s corner - the place of the Four-in-Hand Club – with his friends John Lorraine Baldwin, Sir Spencer Ponsonby Fane
Spencer Ponsonby-Fane
Sir Spencer Cecil Brabazon Ponsonby, later Ponsonby-Fane, GCB ISO was an English cricketer and civil servant.He was born in 1824 in Mayfair, the sixth son of John Ponsonby, 4th Earl of Bessborough.-Cricket:...

, Earl of Bessborough
Frederick Ponsonby, 6th Earl of Bessborough
Frederick George Brabazon Ponsonby, 6th Earl of Bessborough was a British peer and cricketer. He was the third son of John Ponsonby, 4th Earl of Bessborough and his wife Lady Maria Fane...

 and Robert Grimston.` The famous old cricketer, with his hat drawn over his eyes, and his burly physique set a figure that always arrested attention.

Cricketing career

Edward started playing cricket as a boy at Stoneleigh Abbey after his father Chandos Leigh, Lord Byron’s schoolmate at Harrow School
Harrow School
Harrow School, commonly known simply as "Harrow", is an English independent school for boys situated in the town of Harrow, in north-west London.. The school is of worldwide renown. There is some evidence that there has been a school on the site since 1243 but the Harrow School we know today was...

, established a cricket ground at his country estate at Stoneleigh Abbey in 1839 for his eldest son William Henry Leigh who was attending Harrow School.

In 1847 Edward started at Harrow School
Harrow School
Harrow School, commonly known simply as "Harrow", is an English independent school for boys situated in the town of Harrow, in north-west London.. The school is of worldwide renown. There is some evidence that there has been a school on the site since 1243 but the Harrow School we know today was...

 and was quickly identified by Bob Grimston as a future cricketer to the Harrow XI captain Henry Vernon “There, Vernon, is the young cricketer”. Bob Grimston and Frederick Ponsonby
Frederick Ponsonby, 6th Earl of Bessborough
Frederick George Brabazon Ponsonby, 6th Earl of Bessborough was a British peer and cricketer. He was the third son of John Ponsonby, 4th Earl of Bessborough and his wife Lady Maria Fane...

 were to become his life-long friends. On June 15, 1847 his home club side Stoneleigh Club including his elder brother William Henry Leigh, Lord Burghley, Lord Guernsey and Robert Grimston played against the Harrow XI.

In September 1848 Edward played for the 22 of Leamington & District v the All England XI at Wisden & Parr’s Ground, Leamington. In 1949 and 1850 he was selected for the Harrow XI and in 1851 he captained the Harrow XI and scored the highest score of 42 in Harrow’s win v Eton at Lords.

At Oxford in 1852 he obtained his Blue as a freshman and played Cambridge at Lords in 1852,1853 and 1854 as captain. Oxford won all three matches although Eddy (as he was known) made only 8 runs in total during these matches. Sir. Shrimp Leveson Gower records in his ‘Recollections of Oxford cricket’ an incident forty years later when he had scored 73 runs in Oxford’s first innings. ‘On my return to the pavilion my Uncle – Edward Chandos Leigh, who was seated near the entrance gate, greeted me with the words: “Well Done, Schwimp (he could not pronounce his R’s) “Capital, capital, you played just like I used to”. His nephew replied ‘Heaven forbid, Uncle Eddy’.

Edward was a founder of the Oxford Harlequins Club. He was a fellow of All Souls until 1871 and played for Oxfordshire County XI and the Gentleman of MCC. He played regularly for I Zingari
I Zingari
I Zingari are English and Australian amateur cricket clubs.-History:...

 for 20 years until 1874. Scores & Biographies records he was a right-handed batsman, steady and sure, but fields with his left. His highest first-class score was 62 playing for the MCC v Kent at Canterbury in 1861. At the same festival fielding at his customary position of long-stop his left hand was broken badly by a ball bowled by Harvey Fellows who was apparently showing off to the Ladies on Ladies Day.
Sir Pelham Warner records ‘according to Sir Edward, Harvey was ‘showing off before the ladies on Ladies Day by endeavouring to bowl faster than ever. Poor Chandos Leigh had a bad time at long-stop and when he returned home after match, battered and bruised, his man said to him ‘ I beg your pardon, sir, but have you noticed your finger? Finger? Which finger? This one,sir, it’s broken’ Good heavens, man! Quick! Get me an arnica bath. And that was why in after-years Sir Edward often shook with half a hand’.

He was secretary of the I Zingari
I Zingari
I Zingari are English and Australian amateur cricket clubs.-History:...

 for many years and later Chancellor. He regularly captained the I Zingari
I Zingari
I Zingari are English and Australian amateur cricket clubs.-History:...

 on their tours of Ireland during the 1850’s and 1860’s. He captained the I Zingari on their and the MCC's tour in 1867 to the Paris Exhibition.
It was said if the I Zingari had “the four Edwards” it was sure to do well; Edward Tredcroft, Edward Balfour, Edward Drake and Edward Chandos Leigh.

In Edward’s autobiography ‘Bar, Bat and Bit’, published in 1913, Edward records the enjoyment of playing for the I Zingari
I Zingari
I Zingari are English and Australian amateur cricket clubs.-History:...

 at the Canterbury Festival and touring England and Ireland’s country estates. He met his future wife at Croxteth Hall while performing for the Old Stagers as a guest of Lord Sefton with I Zingari. He was a close friend and brother-in-law of Robert A Fitzgerald - MCC secretary – and in his 1887 centenary speech lamented the recent loss to the MCC and cricket of the genial and witty Bob Fitz-gerald.

In 1871 Edward Chandos Leigh married Katherine F Rigby having sought permission from John Lorraine Baldwin at I Zingari. In 1872 Edward played his last game for I Zingari v Gentleman of Warwickshire at Stoneleigh Abbey to celebrate his nephew’s 21st ‘coming of age’ celebrations. It was fitting he returned to the place he had started his cricket career 30 years earlier.

Edward joined the MCC in 1852 and served on its committee 1866-69, 1877-79, 1888-1891. He was elected President in 1887 having been nominated by Lord Lyttleton.
He never forgot his old school – Harrow School – and helped establish the Old Harrovians Field House Club in 1884. He was President of the Club following his close friend the Earl of Bessborough.

Professional and public career

In 1890 he was founder member of the London Playing Fields Society, which successfully secured land in London for cricket and football to be played for London’s citizens.

He was Recorder of Nottingham
Recorder of Nottingham
The Recorder of Nottingham is the highest appointed legal officer of the Crown within the Nottingham City and Nottinghamshire County areas.The current appointed Recorder of Nottingham is His Honour Judge Michael Stokes QC...

 from 1881–1909 and Counsel to the Speaker from 1883–1907. In 1901 he was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB).

He was a regular visitor to Lord's, The Canterbury and Scarborough Festivals up until his death in May 1915. He died just six days after his youngest son Edward was killed in action at Aubers Ridge. His elder son Major Chandos Leigh was the first Harrovian to be killed in the war, at Mons in August 1914, and the second blow was too much for him. He died, in the same year as W. G. Grace
W. G. Grace
William Gilbert Grace, MRCS, LRCP was an English amateur cricketer who is widely acknowledged as one of the greatest players of all time, having a special significance in terms of his importance to the development of the sport...

 and his good friend Sir Spencer Ponsonby-Fane, of a broken heart mourning the loss of his two sons and the end of the golden age of cricket.

External links

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