863 résultats
1893304054Adelaide 1893. Silver prints measuring 4-5/8 x 5-3/4 in. Mounted on archival board. Very good. Silver prints measuring 4-5/8 x 5-3/4 in. A lovely set of pictures: the first being a portrait of the team showing thirteen women in uniform and hats with bats and ball front and centre. The second image is a shot of a ladies match in progress the umpire seemingly signalling a no ball.<br/><br/>On the verso of each is inscribed "Ladies Cricket Team 93" and then "Ladies Cricket Match Adelaide." These images of some interest as they preceed the formation of the first women's cricket league in Australia in 1894 under the direction of Lily Poulett-Harris. unknown books
1013826Fair. Hi I have accumulated 43 copies of the MCC Scores and Biographies over the years so listing them at very nice prices for our members to buy. This lot is VOLUME 14 In Original Form. Retails at around �750-�900 elsewhere. A HUGE book and hence the rarity as it falls apart. This book has weakness in the binding and the rear board is detached. RARE. I am no expert on S and Bs but please ask anything you need to the books are in decent condition for their age please see the photo more available on request 15 of the 43 copies I have are an original run from 1 to 15 please ask if interested in them. More photos available on request. Condition=5/10 unknown
193397242Adelaide: South Australian Cricket Association 1933. First Edition. Paperback. Very Good. Adelaide South Australian Cricket Association 1933. Octavo 96 pages with numerous illustrations and advertisements plus cover advertisements. Attractive pictorial wrappers printed in green and gold; top corner of the outside rear cover lightly stained; centrefold scoring sheet completed neatly in ink with the final results for the last three Tests on the relevant page; short tear to one leaf expertly sealed; an excellent copy. A pre-match publication for the Test that saw bodyline tactics move from controversy to crisis. Padwick 4487. South Australian Cricket Association paperback
Single sheet, 8vo., a near fine copy. Signed simply 'Tedder' in the writer's usual manner, the letter is written to Geoffrey Moore, founder of the Buccaneers Cricket Club, and demonstrates the airman's keen and continuing interest in the sport. Tedder was President of Surrey County Cricket Club from 1953 to 1958. The letter regretfully declines Moore's invitation to attend the Buccaneer's annual dinner (held at Lords). Marshal of the RAF Arthur William Tedder, 1st Baron Tedder (1890-1967) was one of Britain's most distinguished air commanders. Educated at Whitgift School and Magdalene College, Cambridge, he transferred from the Dorsetshire Regiment to the Royal Flying Corps in 1916, serving in France from 1915- to 1917 and in Egypt from 1918 to 1919. He was then commissioned in to the (new) Royal Air Force where was appointed Director of Training from 1934 to 1936, after which he became Commander RAF Far Eastern Forces. During WWII he was head of RAF Middle East Command, controlling Allied air operations in the Mediterranean and North Africa, including the evacuation of Crete and the defeat of Rommel; his air power was a vital component of Montgomery's victory at El Alamein. Having been promoted to Air Marshal, Tedder then took part in the early planning for D-Day, and was subsequently appointed Deputy Supreme Commander Allied Forces Europe (the most senior such British position) immediately beneath General Eisenhower, on whose behalf he signed at the German Surrender in 1945. In 1947 he delivered the Lees Knowles lecture, afterwards published as 'Air Power in War'. Following his retirement he served as Chancellor of Cambridge University and Vice-Chairman of the Board of Governors of the BBC. Founded in 1930, The Buccaneers is one of the oldest and most famous 'wandering' clubs in English cricket (a 'wandering' club has no fixed home ground but plays consistently as an 'away' team relying on the hospitality of the 'home' clubs against which it competes). The Club's history has been written twice, by Clifford Bax in 1956 and more recently by Howard Spencer. ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS SIGNED BY TEDDER ARE EXTREMELY SCARCE.
1938134463Broughty Ferry Dundee: Unidentified Photographer 1938. Very Good. Broughty Ferry Dundee Unidentified Photographer 1938. A vintage gelatin silver photograph 205 × 296 mm laid down on the original captioned mount with the players identified below the image. The mount is a little marked mainly by three small faint glass-rings one slightly encroaching on the bottom left-hand corner of the photograph; tiny mark to the surface of the photograph; overall in excellent condition. The Burnie 'Advocate' Friday 5 August 1938 has an interesting account of the first day's play: 'The Australians arrived by charabanc at the picturesque Broughton sic Ferry ground to-day wearing tartan bonnets but there was nothing festive about their early batting on a good wicket. McCabe won the toss and decided to bat. The weather was fine and cool. By virtue of his father being an Aberdonian the Yorkshireman Gibb led Scotland which drew no nationalistic bar. The team included the West Indian Hunt who is now a professional for Aberdeenshire. Chipperfield was train sick after the 12.5 hour journey from Swansea and stayed in bed to-day. Bradman is staying with friends at Perth. He is expected to stand down in the minor matches to ensure freshness for the next Test. Badcock and Walker who opened for Australia scored only seventeen in half an hour before Badcock was stumped off the first ball from Laidlaw. Walker was bowled in Hunt's first over. <p>Against creditable bowling Barnes batted crisply until caught in the slips by Laidlaw. Fingleton whom one kilted spectator described as a "we bitty on the dour side" stayed with McCabe until lunch when three wickets were down for 95 runs. After lunch Fingleton was soon out and Brown did not last long but McCabe gave the crowd of 4000 the kind of batting it had come to see. Brilliant and versatile he scored 50 in 50 minutes. At tea the Australians were all out for 213 runs'. A few days later the Hobart 'Mercury' Monday 8 August reported that the match was a draw with Australia 213 and 320 and Scotland 88 and 8 for 185. The 'two-day match which ended at Dundee yesterday would have been won easily had not the Australians in light-hearted mood refused to allow it a definite finish. Some of the Scottish newspapers are critical of the Australian tactics at Dundee. The "Scotsman" says it was with no sense of satisfaction that Scotland drew the match in such circumstances'. The full account of the match is nothing if not entertaining with snippets such as these: 'A crowd of 6000 in sultry weather after lunch was entertained first by the release on the field of a kangaroo from the Australian exhibit at the Glasgow Exhibition' and 'As an example of Scottish economy tickets for the match with India in 1932 were used as pass-out checks at lunch time'. [Unidentified Photographer] unknown
66219Very Good. Printed in blue on white silk now framed and glazed visible surface 245 × 185 mm. A few light creases and light marginal spotting; in excellent condition. Australia lost by an innings and 18 runs . and 18 was Australia's total first innings score! Kelly Graham and Trott scored 8 4 and 6 respectively; Darling was the last man standing on nought Giffen was unable to take to the field so only ten men played but Gregory Iredale Hill Trumble Eady and McKibbin ALL scored ducks! Bowling figures were Pougher 5-0 Hearne 4-4. This is still Australia's lowest first-class score a record they hope won't ever be broken. unknown
100633A gelatin silver photograph 218 × 294 mm laid down as issued on the original printed mount of the photographer 'E. Ziegler 40 Elizabeth St Norwood' Ernest Charles Victor Ziegler active 1879-1925. The photograph and mount are in superb condition behind glass in the original frame. 'The Advertiser' 11 December 1931 sets the scene for these Inter-Collegiate matches: 'Today the annual cricket match between St Peter's and Prince Alfred Colleges will begin at the Adelaide Oval. Last year the game was played at Prince Alfred College the first time in the history of the matches first played in 1878 that the Adelaide Oval was not available. The match is one of the most important cricket events outside first-class matches in South Australia although in recent years it has failed to sic the importance and drawing power of inter-collegiate matches played before the war. Many famous cricketers have graduated from the college teams'. <p>The 1910 SPSC team - victorious to the tune of 232 runs - was no exception; sitting next to each other are C.E. Pellew and Vice-Captain A.G. Moyes. 'Nip' Pellew played for South Australia 1913-14 to 1928-29 the AIF Touring XI 1919 to 1919-20 and Australia ten Tests in 1920-21. Johnny Moyes a 'promising young cricketer . had represented 1912-15 South Australia making a century on debut been chosen 1914 for Australia in a tour cancelled due to World War I against South Africa and played for Victoria in 1920. In Sydney he achieved one of the highest individual scores in grade cricket when he made 218 runs in 83 minutes for the Gordon District Cricket Club in 1922. he served as a New South Wales selector 1926-27 and wanted Sir Donald Bradman to play for the State' 'Australian Dictionary of Biography'. For many years he worked as a journalist including fifteen years as sporting editor of 'The Sun' and he published thirteen books on cricket. In 1949 he began 'broadcasting sporting sessions for the Australian Broadcasting Commission. In 1950-51 he covered his first Test series against England. In 1955 he received a full-time contract. As a cricket broadcaster he became a household name in Australia and New Zealand in the 1950s and early 1960s' ADB. unknown
BN104123O'Reilly Editions. Softcover. DNS et BIND <br/><br/>DNS et BIND O'Reilly Editions paperback
First Edition, vii,[i]pp., 283,[1]pp., 11 engraved plates showing such goods as hose pipes, carriage wheel tire, air proof cushions, beds, swimming belts, Yachting boats, mud boots, tents, fishing trousers, cricket bat, -leg protector, -gloves, foot balls, etc., orig. embossed cloth, small tear to head and foot of spine. "Hancock, Thomas (1786?1865), rubber manufacturer and inventor... Hancock took out sixteen patents in all relating to rubber between 1820 and 1847. He displayed remarkable ingenuity in suggesting uses for what was practically a new material, and the specifications of his patents cover the entire field of rubber manufactures, though many of his ideas were not carried out at the time."?(Oxford DNB).
1877biblio358London: Vanity Fair june 9 1877. Fine. <p>Chromolithography 265x395mm original proof impression Like new a small tear of 2 cm in the lower margin</p><p><br /> <em>“The second versions of the Vanity Fair caricatures are the proof prints or proofs before lettering First versions are the original watercolors; third versions are the widely available weekly/album prints  Produced to verify the colours and lines of the lithograph no more than twenty copies were printed </em><strong>Not true many more than that</strong><em> These prints have no captions or dates or other descriptive type and the magazine bound them in numbered albums in green leather with gilt tooling They were offered for sale and also awarded as prizes in the magazine’s acrostic contests At the front of each volume is a printed note from Vanity Fair giving the number of the proof volume and the numbered volume in the series </em><strong>However these volumes were "broken" to sell individually and one never sees the complete volume </strong><em>The quality of the colours in the proof prints their clarity of line and detail and their scarcity make them of considerable interest to the collectorâ€<br /> <br /> </em>Roy T Matthews and Peter Mellini <em>In “Vanity Fairâ€</em> Berkeley: University of California Press 1982 203</p> Vanity Fair hardcover
2005355490725947London 2005. First Edition. Hard Cover. Dust Jacket. London: Aurum Press 2005. First UK Edition in dustwrapper priced £9.99 to the inside flap. SIGNED BY ALL 12 PLAYERS WHO PLAYED FOR ENGLAND IN THE 2005 ASHES 2 OF THE ENGLAND MANAGEMENT TEAM AND PAUL GILLESPIE LEGENDARY AUSTRALIAN FAST BOWLER. Publisher's red boards with gilt spine lettering. A near fine copy in a fine dustwrapper. Signed by: Andrew Flintoff Paul Collingwood Ian Bell Keven Pietersen Graham Jones Simon Jones Ashley Giles Steve Harmison Matthew Hoggard Andrew Strauss Marcus Trescothick and Best wishes Michael Vaughan. Additionally signed by: David Graveney Chief Selector and Matthew Maynard Batting Coach and Paul Gillespie. The signatures were obtained by a legendary cricket autograph hunter who scoured the county and test grounds for many years with his trusty back-pack. The last signature found was that of Andrew Freddie Flintoff in November 2025 when England faced the English Lions in a warm-up match at Lilac Hill in Perth in a precursor to the last Ashes Tour. Flintoff was there as coach of the Lions. A photograph of Flintoff is included. NB: Gordon Haigh Australian cricket journalist covered this tour for The Guardian and the book was published shortly after the final ball was bowled. It won the Wisden Book of the Year for 2005. The previous years winner Ed Smith chose this collection of reports and writing on the 2005 Ashes series for The Guardian. Haighs strength lies in his combination of judiciousness and a sharp witty elegant gift for language. The pages turn even now when we know the story of the summer so well. Likely unique. The 2005 Ashes Series is widely regarded as the greatest ever Ashes series. Further photographs available upon request. hardcover
187820325London: Vanity Fair 1878. Fred Spofforth 1853 - 1926 the player also known as "The Demon Bowler" was arguably the Australian cricket teams' finest pace bowler of the 19th century. Spofforth was the first bowler to take 50 test wickets and the first to take a test hat trick on January 2 1879 where a bowler takes three wickets in consecutive deliveries. Published on July 13 1878. Color chromolithograph 10 x 14 1/2". Sml. crease near the title otherwise very good condition. Vanity Fair unknown
1991132778Adelaide: Australian Cricket Board 1991. Very Good. Adelaide Australian Cricket Board 1991. Quarto 4 pages a card bifolium. Apart from a few trifling creases and marks in excellent condition. Philip Lovett Ridings 1917-1998 played first-class cricket for South Australia from 1937 to 1957; he was captain from 1946 to 1957. He was then a cricket administrator serving as Chairman of the Australian Cricket Board from 1980 to 1983. Loosely inserted is an original colour photograph sheet size 210 × 296 mm of Phil Ridings and six of the guests of honour at the dinner: Don Bradman Ray Lindwall Alan Davidson Sam Loxton Bill Johnston and Neil Harvey. All seven have signed the wide margin of the photograph. <p>The rear cover of the menu has also been signed by some 35 attendees at the dinner including the above seven luminaries. 2 items. Australian Cricket Board unknown
198453785Adelaide: Wakefield Press/ SACA 1984. First Edition. Hardcover. Adelaide Wakefield Press/ SACA 1984. Large quarto ii x 262 pages with numerous illustrations from photographs. Full leather with the clear acetate dustwrapper; mint in the original specially-designed cardboard box. One of 299 numbered copies of the deluxe edition issued with a gilt-embossed leather cricket ball signed by Don Bradman still present with this copy - many are no longer so!. The odd limitation number was chosen because it is the Test record for the Adelaide Oval set by Bradman against South Africa in 1932 - incidentally he was not out. Wakefield Press/ SACA hardcover
Single sheet, a near fine copy. Signed simply 'Wavell' in the writer's usual manner, the letter is written to Geoffrey Moore, founder of the Buccaneers Cricket Club, and demonstrates the soldier's keen and continuing interest in the sport. It is noteworthy that Wavell was particularly proud of his membership of the MCC at Lords. The letter declines Moore's invitation to attend the annual dinner, but carries Wavell's best wishes for the Club for the coming year during which he hopes to see tham in action. Field-Marshal Earl Wavell (1883-1950) was one of the twentieth century's most distinguished soldiers. Following considerable success against the Italians in North Africa, his career reached its peak with his appointment as Supreme Allied Commander, South West Pacific, ABDA (American, British, Dutch and Australian) Command in 1942 and subsequently as an outstanding Viceroy and Governor General of India from 1943-1947. He was recognised also as a scholar, compiling the well-known anthology of poetry 'Other Mens's Flowers' (1944). The bulk of Wavell's papers are now housed in the Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives at King's College, London. Founded in 1930, The Buccaneers is one of the oldest and most famous 'wandering' clubs in English cricket (a 'wandering' club has no fixed home ground but plays consistently as an 'away' team relying on the hospitality of the 'home' clubs against which it competes). The Club's history has been written twice, by Clifford Bax in 1956 and more recently by Howard Spencer. ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS SIGNED BY WAVELL ARE EXTREMELY SCARCE.
18165Paris, André Barry & fils, 1948. In-folio, 147 pp. 27 pl., en feuilles, couverture originale imprimée, chemises et étui éditeur de demi-toile bleue (1 accident à l'étui, frottements, quelques taches et rousseurs, quelques pâles décharges, 1 cuivre manquant).
185412798Leeds; Webb Millington & Co. c. 1854 1854. Octavo pamphlet in paper wraps. 8 unsigned pages of captioned hand-coloured woodcuts inner forme blank. Golden yellow covers; title and vignette within border to upper cover; advertisements to lower cover. Date from gift inscription to first page. Covers scuffed and rubbed; small marginal tear to foredge of contents continues to covers; spine re-stitched. Small numeral in ink to second page. A rare children's book from a prolific Yorkshire printer and publisher. Eight illustrations depict various games played by children at a birthday paper including marbles cricket 'shuttlecock' and a now obscure bat-sport known as 'trap-bat and ball'. As an ancestor to cricket trap-bat involves a batsman with a paddle-shaped bat hitting a walnut-sized ball called a 'knurr' from a fixed position 'the trap'. Webb Millington & Co. were a an Otley-based printer of chapbooks toy books and jobbing ephemera operative from c. 1832-1882. Publishing through London agents such as Dean and Son they produced a variety of juvenilia from 'stock blocks'. Much of their output is now rare as the factory was destroyed in a fire in 1882. A record of sporting cousins to cricket the illustrations in this book are an exceedingly rare depiction of provincial English bat-sports. COPAC and Worldcat do not locate any copies world-wide. We locate no records of this volume going through auction and find one record only of any book in the Uncle Tom's Treasury series. Leeds; Webb, Millington & Co. [c. 1854] paperback
195973294Adelaide: The Club 1959. Fine. Adelaide The Club 1959. Quarto one large sheet of card approximately 510 x 380 mm printed on one side only and folded twice down to size. An attractive menu card printed in red and blue throughout with the menu and toast list on the centrefold and the last page designed for autographs; in fine condition. And autographs there from this auspicious year in which the Club won the premiership in all three grades in the 1958-59 season. Sir Don Bradman proposed the toast to the Club and he is one of the signatories along with Clarrie Grimmett the Club coach. Among the more than fifty other signatures all but one in ink are the following Test and State players: Alec Barker Bert Bedford Leon Hill Alan Hitchcox Hitchcock Gil Langley Brian Leak Bob Lee Douglas McKay Roy Middleton 'Nip' Pellew Colin Pinch Ross Stanford Cecil Starr and Rolly Vaughton. The oldest former Club member A.P. May born in 1873 has also added his signature. The original owner of the menu has written his ownership details at the head of the first and last pages. The Club unknown
1957355490718394London: Muller 1957. First Edition. Hard Cover. Dust Jacket. Signed by Author. First UK Edition. SIGNED & INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR. Publisher's dark blue boards with gilt spine lettering. Blue top edge. Light foxing to the fore-edge and the eatly/late pages of the book; boards really bright and clean. Overall VG indeed in Fine condition dust wrapper with very minor graze to the spine tip and tiny tear to the lower spine gutter not price clipped 16/- spine colours not faded super condition copy. Dust wrapper supplied in archive acetate film protection this protects and prolongs the life of the paper. Signed and inscribed by the Author on his portrait frontispiece: To Malcolm/ All Good Wishes/ Jim Laker". Laid in is a postcard of the SS Iberia the ship that carried the England team to Australia for the Ashes Tour in 1958/9. The postcard has been multi-signed in different inks by 17 members likely all the playing staff of the England touring party including inter alia: P.B.H. May captain Surrey 28; M.C. Cowdrey vice-captain Kent 26; E.R. Dexter Sussex 23; T.W. Graveney Gloucestershire 31; J.C. Laker Surrey 36; G.A.R. Lock Surrey 29; P.E. Richardson Worcestershire 27; J.B. Statham Lancashire 28; F.S. Trueman Yorkshire 26; F.H. Tyson Northamptonshire 28; W. Watson Leicestershire 38. Scarce with these attributes. Photographs/scans available upon request. Muller hardcover
24480An original vintage gelatin silver press photograph 120 × 165 mm with a typed caption mounted on the verso: 'Australians dismissed for 156 runs in their first innings against Essex at Leyton. Fairfax Australia loses his leg stump to Palmer after scoring 12 runs'. The photograph is taken from behind the wicket and includes the wicket-keeper the fieldsman at slips Alan Fairfax the cartwheeling stump and Alan Kippax the batsman at the non-striker's end. Of far greater consequence however is the signature pencilled on the verso of the image: that of Archie Jackson the New South Wales and Australian Test batsman who died of tuberculosis in 1933 at the early age of 23. Jackson and his friend and supporter Fairfax were room-mates on the 1930 tour of England which helps explain why this particular image from this tour bears his ownership signature. unknown
18899545Bristol: J Arrowsmith 1889. 1st Edition. . Book Book Soft cover. Good/No Jacket. Bristol: J Arrowsmith 1889. 1st Edition . Good/No Jacket. 1889 assumed publication date. Unnumbered pages believed complete. Pocket sized softback. No back present front cover is separated and missing outside 1/4" all way around. Spine card heavily torn. Thread-bound. The final leaf recto: Gloucestershire V Kent August 1889 and verso Batting Averages in matches against Kent Lancashire Middlesex Nottingham Surrey Sussex and Yorkshire. Internally tight and unmarked. Photographs on request. Bristol: J Arrowsmith paperback
2218537Near Fine. Hi I am selling some of my non Wisdens Here we have : Imperial Cricket by P.F.Warner. 1912. What an enormous book I have never seen anything like it. There is no jacket but not sure one was ever on it by researching it. It is Number BLANK of the 900 subscribers edition not sure why blank I am not an expert on this book perhaps it makes it worthless. Online they retail at 250-500 so ill stick with the lower amount if I am wildly off please say. Lovely picture and ripped tissue paper of His Majesty King George V. The Abe book people say it is : Portrait and numerous plates 3 coloured. Large 4to 12 1/4 x 10 inches pages: xxi:503. It is so huge it has been used to press flowers flowers included unless you want me to bin then they could be 100 years old no damage to the book. Ill post for free as could be a lot. UK only for . Condition=8/10 unknown
1957077Near Fine. Hi I am selling some of my non Wisdens Here we have : John Wisdens RUGBY Football Almanack second edition 1924-25 season. In Very good condition in Original paperback form. The spine paper has some loss of text to one end but it is still tightly bound excellent hinges the front and rear covers are tight to the next page might be reaffixed but it might just be the book itself. Clean pages not an expert on these but I would say it was an 8 or 9 out of 10. Condition=8/10 paperback
931879Fine. ORIGINAL 12 CHARLES CROMBIE LAWS OF CRICKET HUMEROUS CARICATURES Published by Perrier in 1906. There are only 12 cartoons in the set. Charles Crombie was an editorial cartoonist who was born in Scotland Condition=9/10 unknown
114805The black and white photograph 303 × 240 mm is personally signed in ink on the image by Sir Donald Bradman 1908-2001 and comes with our letter of authenticity. Although produced in the mid-1990s this photograph was individually printed from the original 1930s negative. We purchased this item in the late 1990s from a source whom we know well and whose connection with Don Bradman was proven and long-established; we know the owner of the negative; we can guarantee the signature is genuine. unknown