Wednesday, July 26, 2006

Ushaw Moor Cricket Club

I have some information regarding the Ushaw Moor Cricket Club photograph on photo gallery 3 picture 2.

GO HERE

It has been kindly provided by Norman Hope.
Christopher Brewis:at one time he had a general dealer's shop opposite the post office in Temperance Terrace.
Fred Hume:he was an all rounder and good fielder [often at mid on].He was a right hand batsmen and capable of keeping an end up. He was a medium paced right hand bowler.He married Ada Bainbridge [from New Brancepeth].His son, Fred, was a good player for Durham Wasps [ice hockey] and enjoyed a long career with them.
Sid Mawson:regular first team player.
George Graham:usually fielded in the slips and had hands like shovels.In one particular match he hit a Durham City bowler [who had been a pro for York] all over the field.He was also a good amateur footballer.The lad on his immediate right as we look at the photograph [Michael]lived in Deerness View. He was an all rounder and was also a good singer in Working Men's Clubs.
Jimmy Abberley:a six foot tall batsman.He was a fitter at Esh Winning Colliery.He lived about 4 or 5 doors from Ushaw Moor post office.
Alfie Gillespie:a cobbler by trade and a very accomplished right hand batsman. He scored lots of 50s and therefore benefited from numerous collections.He kept his shots on the ground[Bradman style!]. When running between the wickets Dickie Hope was sometimes 22 yards behind.
Gilbert Ayre:he was Raymond Ayre's uncle. All the cricketers from this family were good batsmen.
Jack Graham: he sometimes umpired [but not matches involving Ushaw Moor]. His wife did the teas with Ethel Hope.
George Gillespie:Harry's father.Dickie Hope thought that he was not at all a bad player.He was a foreman joiner at Waterhouses Collery.
Billy Quinn: ex Army Captain and a very fast bowler.At one time he was a school teacher at Ushaw Moor Roman Catholic School.When he went to live in Esh Winning he decided to play for them because he felt he should play for the village in which he lived.He had many offers to play for more fashionable teams.He more than once broke the bails and stumps because of his sheer pace.Dickie Hope broke his own finger when playing wicket keeper to a Billy Quinn delivery.As well as pace he had movement [therefore very difficult to play against].He bowled to the height of the stumps and did not deliver high pitched balls.He never bowled full pace if opposed by a young number 11 batsman.He was not a bad batsman although a bit inconsistent.
Serdi Last:spin bowler who had come from Mainsforth Cricket Club.Could bowl leg break and off break.
Harry Gillespie:Transport Manager at a laundry.A batsman who scored quite a few 50s.
Alfie Smith: came to the club with Serdi Last.He was a good batsman and was also a slow left hand spin bowler.He played at Ushaw Moor for three or four years.
Teddy Sinclair:Winding Engineman at Ushaw Moor Colliery.He was a bowler.He wore a red hanky in his pocket and a red tie for a belt when he played.
Richard Wallace Hope:wicket keeper and opening batsman. Very much a sheet anchor.Sometimes captain. He himself sometimes wondered whether he would be able to hit the ball off the square. He did make several useful scores each season and therefore it can be said that he under estimated himself.Sometime secretary of the club.
'Bell from Broompark':sometimes deputised as wicket keeper.
Tommy Buxton: a teacher at Brandon.
The two youngsters flanking the bottom row are left hand side Harry Gillespie's son and right hand side- last person- Billy Quinn's son.


Wilf Bell

 

Posted by cloughy at 17:22:37 | Permanent Link | Comments (5) |
Comments
1 - I can give further information about the 1947 Ushaw Moor cricket team.This was the club's first Mid-Durham Senior League championship win.It won the league despite having a squad of only sixteen players to call upon. I imagine that quite often some of the players would have been unavailable for matches, due to colliery shift working.

Much of the team's success was due to a formidable bowling attack. It had four bowlers and they shared 187 wickets. Spinner S Last took 80 wickets at an average of only 6.8 runs per wicket; that was a staggering performance. For those wh remember [I was only two years old]1947 had a glorious summer. The hard dry wickets of that year did not prevent bowler Last from spinning and flighting the ball with guile. Billy Quinn, who was an Ushaw Moor stalwart, produced the goods again by taking 57 wickets at an average of only 8.1 runs each. E Sinclair, in his first season as captain,took 26 wickets at 8.6 runs per wicket.He infused the team with his keenness and shrewdness.

Match professional Albert Smith took 24 wickets at a cost of only 12 runs per wicket and in addition was one of the most attractive batsmen in the league.He finished with 535 runs at an average of 35.00 runs per innings.

Richard Wallace Hope was an evergreen player and again produced some stubborn and valuable batting performances. A Gillespie, relying on skill rather than force, had a good season. At that time he was one of the youngest and most promising players in the league. J Bell's stumping was clean and tidy.

Fielding sometimes left much to be desired, but it improved when it became obvious that there was a chance of winning the league.

The last time I visited the cricket club it had not written its history but it may have done so since. It occurs to me that some of the information in this article might be usefully placed with the 1947 team picture [perhaps in a tasteful frame?]which I believe is hanging up in the club bar. If Paul Clough has time he might suggest that idea to them.

Finally, I have several Ushaw Moor match details for 1935, a year in which in won the North East Durham League. I also have some details of one of the club's 1881 matches. If anyone would like such information I will gladly supply it. (Comment this)

Written by: Wilf Bell at 2006/08/14 - 08:54:26
2 - This article by Wilf Bell has evoked many happy memories of the Cricket Field or the Football field according to the season as we called it according to the season ogf the year. The groundsman was Jack Towns and I think he knew every lad in Ushaw Moor who ever set foot in his grounds. Jack and his wife and daugter lived at 2 Ushaw Villas next door to the Faceys. The pavilion was a dilapidated wooden buiding painted green with a door in the middle of the front of the building. At the rear of the pavilion were two tennis courts and also to the right of the building was a putting green. There were bowling greens in that area also. Jacks workshop was on the right gable end of the pavilion and you hired the necessary requisites for a game of putt in there and also small bottles of pop to slake your roaring thirst. Happy days. The pavilion overlooked the cricket pitch and many a happy hour I spent there watching the team players and others that Wilf Bell mentioned. There were wooden seats around the area of the cricket pitch nearest Station Road. I remember the two Gillespie lads in partcular. Alfie Gillespie had a cobblers shop in the back yard of a house in High View. I remember sitting in his cabin one snowy Saturday morning while he cobbled holes in my boots. My feet were freezing in cold wet stockings. Happy days still despite being hard up. Chris Brewis that was mentioned had a general dealers shop in the front room of the bottom house in Ushaw Terrace. He overlooked the Post Office which was then run by Jack Russell and his daughter, the Post Office is still in its original situ. I played school football for St. Josephs and played many a match on the full sized field. I remember that there was usually a coal train standing just on the Durham side of the Ushaw Moor station with the driver and fireman watching the match until the signals changed and they took the train away in the direction of Broompark. Our school won the Deerness Nursing Cup two years running beating Waterhouses Secondary School on both occasions. The photos and names of the payers are on the Gallery section og this website. I have enjoyed reading Wilf Bells memories and I hope that he continues to write his comprehensive entries. (Comment this)

Written by: Brioan Mc Loughlin at 2006/09/13 - 20:05:22
3 - I am pleased that Brian experienced cup victories against Waterhouses School.It was always good to get the better of them because they were invariably a good side.In the 1958/59 season I was in the Ushaw Moor County School team that drew with them in two league matches, 2-2 at home and also 2-2 away.To add the cherry on the cake we beat them 2-0 in the league cup final, which was played on April 11th 1959, at Bearpark, with a 10.30 kick off.We dominated the first half of that cupfinal but missed several chances HT 0-0.The second half was much as the first but we took the lead by means of a 30 yarder from our left winger, the late Denis Pinkney, which went low just inside the keeper's left hand post.Philip Stoddart doubled our lead from a right wing cross [very probably made by John Vasey]. Waterhouses won the league that year and we finished runners up and cup winners. At that time St Josephs [for some reason] were in the league below us - I seem to recall that they were not a small side in physical stature.

During a school reunion in 2002 John Vasey kindly gave me a photograph of the Ushaw Moor County team taken with the cup minutes after winning it.If any interested party wants a copy please contact me via this site. At some point fairly soon I hope to send Paul Clough a copy with a request that it be put on the site.

In the 50s I remember seeing Ushaw Moor football team playing in the Wearside League.The most successful team in that league at that time was Shotton Colliery Welfare.In the following decade it was Ryhope Colliery Welfare.I saw Ushaw Moor in a cup final at Durham City's ground [Ferens Park]. They lead Mackays Sports Club[carpet factory] 1-0 at halftime butlost 5-1 in the end. Before that, in the 1950/51 season Ushaw Moor beat the mighty Crook Town in an FA Cuptie at home 3-2 after drawing 2-2 at Crook.I have to get my head around the fact that Ushaw Moor achieved as much as Derby County, because in the 1955/56 season, in the FA Cup, Derby beat Crook 5-1 at home after a 2-2 draw ar Crook.In fact Derby nearly went out because Crook missed a penalty with about 15 minutes to go in the first game [when it was at 2-2]. Heady stuff!In another FA Cup match in 1954/55 Ushaw Moor gave Durham City a scare before losing 4-3 at Ferens Park.

I recall watching Raymond Ayre playing for Durham City against Tranmere Rovers in 1957 in an FA Cup tie. Although Durham lost 3-0 they had experienced plenty of possession. Tranmere's finishing was clinical. I suppose that is what you would expect from the professional side.In those days Michael Macnamara and myself used to collect Northern League autographs from the likes of Harry Sharratt, the Bishop Auckland goalkeeper and Seamus O'Connell.Seamus had a spell at Chelsea.
As Brian would say, happy days!
Wilf Bell (Comment this)

Written by: Wilf Bell at 2006/10/01 - 18:24:22
4 - Overnight I have remembered a few more football stories.In the Summer of 1960 I applied to entered a 'Bracken Court' five a side team into a competition organised by the Daily Mail newspaper.I had it all worked out:Neil Davies would be in goal- he was quite tall,far from timid,and more than likely a good blocker.Alan Burns would be an attacking defender. He played that role for Ushaw Moor County and usually knew when to attack and when to defend.I would support Alan but with just a little less attacking play.Dennis Pinkney would be a forward who would link with defence, just at the right time, and finally Eric Clegg would be a fast forward who occasionally defended.Eric knew nothing of these plans.We would not have won the competition because 5 a side team needed to be much more fluid than my plans indicated, but we would probably have beaten three or four teams before losing.It all came to nothing when I got a letter from the Daily Mail to explain that although it was a national competition they did not have any other teams entering from our area.Our area! The North East - unbelievable.

My second story relates to one of our kick abouts on the Bracken Court pitch.I was playing in goal as Dennis Pinkney hit a 25 yarder towards my goal. It was very sunny and I lost sight of the ball in the sun, as it came towards me. I decided to dive right but the ball went into the left hand side of the goal.Denis and the rest collapsed into laughter and how can you blame them? I felt a bit humiliated, but not entirely.I also ended up laughing.
 (Comment this)

Written by: Wilf Bell at 2006/10/02 - 09:50:02
5 - The information given in note one of the comments was derived from two sources - my personal knowledge and records,plus a little information from a 1947 article in the Durham County Advertiser. (Comment this)

Written by: Wilf Bell at 2007/05/23 - 14:13:14
Write a comment