English cricketer
Cecil Headlam (19 September 1872 – 12 August 1934) was an English first-class cricketer active in 1895–1908, who played for Middlesex and Oxford University . He was born in Paddington ; died in Charing .[ 1] He was also a cricket historian.[ 2]
Headlam was educated at Rugby School , then won a demyship at Magdalen College, Oxford . He travelled extensively and wrote travel books and histories,[ 3] and edited anthologies including a collection of the poems of his brother Walter .[ 4]
His recreations included cricket, fishing, golf, climbing, and gardening.[ 5]
The Story of Nuremberg . Dent. 1899.
Peter Vischer . Bell. 1901.[ 6]
The Marriage of Mr. Molyneux . Hurst & Blackett. 1901.
The Story of Chartres . Dent. 1902.
Friends that Fail Not: Light Essays Concerning Books . Hurst & Blackett. 1902.
Ten Thousand Miles through India and Burmah: Account of Oxford Authentics' Cricket Tour with Mr. K. J. Key in Year of Coronation Durbar . Dent. 1903.
Oxford and its Story . Dent. 1904.[ 7] [ 8]
Provence and Languedoc . Methuen. 1912.[ 9]
^ Cecil Headlam at CricketArchive
^ অযান্ত্রিক (18 June 2014). "Calcutta Armenians, Calcutta, c. 1660" . puronokolkata.com . Purono Kolkata. Archived from the original on 28 January 2023. Retrieved 21 April 2021 .
^ Who's who in Literature . Literary Year Books Press. 1924. p. 185.
^ HEADLAM, Cecil , Who Was Who , A & C Black, 1920–2016 (online edition, Oxford University Press, 2014)
^ Who's who , A. & C. Black, 1906, p. 787
^ "Review of Peter Vischer by Cecil Headlam" . The Monumental News . XIV (9): 535. September 1902.
^ "Review of Oxford and its Story by Cecil Headlam" . The Academy and Literature . 67 (1696): 408–409. 5 November 1904.
^ "Review of Oxford and its Story by Cecil Headlam" . The Athenaeum (4034): 199–200. 18 February 1905.
^ "Review of Provence and Languedoc by Cecil Headlam" . The Athenaeum (4432): 373. 5 October 1912.
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