Knowledge

George Smith (groundskeeper)

Source 📝

175:, through which admittance to the Artillery Ground was compulsory. He was an occasional player in matches but he seems to have been one who "made the numbers up". His real significance was his role as groundkeeper during the 1740s until 1752. Smith had a number of well-publicised problems over the years, especially around admission fees and security. It is possible that several planned matches were cancelled whenever the 33: 187:
In 1748, he declared bankruptcy. Evidently his pricing problems of recent years did have some basis in needing to balance the books after all. A number of notices appeared in the press during the first six months of 1748 but Smith eventually resolved his problems, perhaps through the sale of other
183:
He had numerous problems with money. In 1747, he issued a statement that: "These matches being attended with great Charge the Door, for the Future, will be Six-pence; Two-pence not being sufficient to defray the Expence". Followed by another that: "The Town may be certain that the taking Six-pence
179:
demanded its ground back or, as often occurred, simply took umbrage. Smith was sometimes accused of having breached the terms of his lease and these instances may have been due to crowd control issues, which was a frequent problem at big matches, or perhaps to do with excessive gambling.
195:
reported that George Smith of the Artillery Ground has taken the late Duke of Somerset's house at Marlborough and intends to open it as an inn. Smith offered the Artillery Ground and its dwelling house, etc. on lease for 7 years. He had evidently overcome his bankruptcy problems.
203:
carried another notice re the Artillery Ground that "gentlemen may be supplied with bats and balls" and that "the ground is kept in good order for play by your humble servant William Sharpe".
184:
Admittance is out of no avaricious Temper. Two-pence being greatly insufficient to the Charge that attends the Matches, which Mr Smith is ready and willing to make appear to any Gentleman".
17: 57:
of the topic and provide significant coverage of it beyond a mere trivial mention. If notability cannot be shown, the article is likely to be
109: 81: 88: 95: 77: 128: 54: 43: 176: 102: 50: 66: 295: 208: 149: 290: 8: 62: 240: 58: 217: 157: 284: 188:
property, and was able to retain control of the Artillery Ground until 1752.
216:
in Marlborough. The report stated that he was formerly the keeper of the
267: 156:
and also the "keeper" (i.e., strictly speaking a leaseholder) of the
161: 153: 49:
Please help to demonstrate the notability of the topic by citing
165: 212:
reported the death of Mr George Smith on Monday 29 June at
282: 44:notability guideline for sports and athletics 245:At the Sign of the Wicket: Cricket 1742-1751 171:Smith was the landlord of the neighbouring 129:Learn how and when to remove this message 14: 283: 263: 261: 259: 257: 26: 272:Fresh Light on 18th Century Cricket 254: 24: 18:George Smith (cricketer, died 1761) 234: 220:and the landlord of the adjoining 191:On Thursday 27 February 1752, the 25: 307: 78:"George Smith" groundskeeper 168:during the mid-Georgian period. 31: 13: 1: 227: 206:On Thursday 2 July 1761, the 199:On Saturday 30 May 1752, the 144:(died Monday 29 June 1761 at 177:Honourable Artillery Company 7: 10: 312: 51:reliable secondary sources 40:The topic of this article 42:may not meet Knowledge's 209:Whitehall Evening Post 224:in Chiswell Street. 46: 274:, Cotterell, 1935 241:F S Ashley-Cooper 164:'s main venue in 152:) was an English 139: 138: 131: 113: 41: 16:(Redirected from 303: 275: 265: 252: 238: 218:Artillery Ground 201:Daily Advertiser 193:Daily Advertiser 158:Artillery Ground 134: 127: 123: 120: 114: 112: 71: 35: 34: 27: 21: 311: 310: 306: 305: 304: 302: 301: 300: 296:Cricket patrons 281: 280: 279: 278: 266: 255: 239: 235: 230: 135: 124: 118: 115: 72: 70: 48: 36: 32: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 309: 299: 298: 293: 277: 276: 253: 251:Magazine, 1900 232: 231: 229: 226: 173:Pyed Horse Inn 137: 136: 39: 37: 30: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 308: 297: 294: 292: 289: 288: 286: 273: 269: 264: 262: 260: 258: 250: 246: 242: 237: 233: 225: 223: 219: 215: 211: 210: 204: 202: 197: 194: 189: 185: 181: 178: 174: 169: 167: 163: 159: 155: 151: 147: 143: 133: 130: 122: 119:December 2020 111: 108: 104: 101: 97: 94: 90: 87: 83: 80: –  79: 75: 74:Find sources: 68: 64: 60: 56: 52: 45: 38: 29: 28: 19: 271: 248: 244: 236: 221: 213: 207: 205: 200: 198: 192: 190: 186: 182: 172: 170: 160:, which was 145: 142:George Smith 141: 140: 125: 116: 106: 99: 92: 85: 73: 291:1761 deaths 268:G B Buckley 150:Marlborough 55:independent 285:Categories 228:References 222:Pyed Horse 214:The Castle 146:The Castle 89:newspapers 63:redirected 154:cricketer 53:that are 249:Cricket 162:cricket 103:scholar 67:deleted 166:London 105:  98:  91:  84:  76:  59:merged 110:JSTOR 96:books 65:, or 82:news 148:in 287:: 270:, 256:^ 247:, 243:, 61:, 132:) 126:( 121:) 117:( 107:· 100:· 93:· 86:· 69:. 47:. 20:)

Index

George Smith (cricketer, died 1761)
notability guideline for sports and athletics
reliable secondary sources
independent
merged
redirected
deleted
"George Smith" groundskeeper
news
newspapers
books
scholar
JSTOR
Learn how and when to remove this message
Marlborough
cricketer
Artillery Ground
cricket
London
Honourable Artillery Company
Whitehall Evening Post
Artillery Ground
F S Ashley-Cooper




G B Buckley
Categories
1761 deaths

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.