Colin Blythe - Professional Cricketer

Discussion in 'Sportsmen & women' started by liverpool annie, May 8, 2009.

  1. liverpool annie

    liverpool annie New Member

    In Memory of
    Serjeant COLIN (CHARLIE) BLYTHE

    49296, 12th Bn., King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry
    who died age 38
    on 08 November 1917
    Son of Mr. and Mrs. W. Blythe, of New Cross, London; husband of Janette Gertrude Blythe, of 1, Vale Royal, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Professional Cricketer. Played for Kent between 1899 and 1914 during which time he took 100 wickets each season, bar two. He also played in 19 Test Matches for England.

    Remembered with honour
    OXFORD ROAD CEMETERY

    Colin Blythe (born May 30, 1879 in Deptford; died in World War I on the Forest Hall to Pimmern military railway line, Belgium on November 8, 1917), also known as Charlie Blythe, was a Kent and England left arm spinner who is regarded as one of the finest bowlers of the period between 1900 and 1914 - sometimes referred to as the "Golden Age" of cricket.

    Regarded as a sensitive and artistic person, and a talented violinist, Blythe suffered from epilepsy yet enlisted as a soldier in the British Army when the war broke out in 1914. He soon announced he would be playing no more first-class cricket. Blythe joined the King's Own (Yorkshire Light Infantry). Sergeant Blythe was serving with the 12th (S) Battalion when he was killed by random shell-fire on the railway between Pimmern and Forest Hall near Passchendaele on 8 November 1917. Blythe is buried at Oxford Road Cemetery in Belgium

    http://www.national-army-museum.ac.uk/exhibitions/cricket/page3.shtml

    http://www.cricketarchive.co.uk/Archive/Pictures/1/1618.html


     

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  2. liverpool annie

    liverpool annie New Member

    Despite his epilepsy, Sergeant Colin Blythe joined the King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry at the outbreak of war in 1914. He was fighting with the 12th (S) Battalion when he was killed by random shell-fire on the railway between Pimmern and Forest Hall near Passchendaele on 8 November 1917, at the age of 38. The peerless slow left armer had taken two and a half thousand wickets for his county and a hundred wickets in 19 Tests for England. He was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1904.

    He is buried at Oxford Road Cemetery in Belgium and his shrapnel punctured wallet rests in the museum at Kent's St Lawrence Ground in Canterbury.
     
  3. liverpool annie

    liverpool annie New Member

    http://www.thesportscampus.com/200906281226/news-bytes/england-tribute

    http://www.fylde.demon.co.uk/gardiner6.htm
     

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