The Walkers of Southgate

The Walkers of Southgate were an English cricketing family who lived at Arnos Grove house in Southgate, Middlesex, England.[1] The family fortune was built through the brewing company Taylor Walker, and the seven brothers were all sent to Harrow School and Trinity College, Cambridge. It was at school and university that the Walkers became keen cricketers.

V.E. Walker
Arno's Grove house in 1816, home of the Walker brothers.

Cricket

The three eldest brothers originally played for the Southgate Albert, the village team, on the bumpy Chapel Fields wicket until John had the ground re-turfed in the early 1850s. The brothers founded the Southgate Cricket Club in 1855, a Middlesex team in 1859, the official Middlesex County Cricket Club in 1864, and were instrumental in establishing the home of the county at Lords in 1877.[2] In 1859, the first match played by the Middlesex team was held in Southgate against Kent, who were defeated by 78 runs.

Although Test cricket only started in 1877, four of the brothers played in the United All-England Eleven prior to that date. Both the United All-England team and the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) would visit Southgate to take on the brothers and their team, attended by crowds of up to 10,000.

Their cricket ground Chapel Fields in Waterfall Road, Southgate became the Walker Cricket Ground in 1907 [3] and is maintained by the Walker Trust to this day.

The brothers

  • The brothers had an uncle who also was a cricketer:

The entomologist Francis Walker was another uncle.

The brothers are all buried in the family vault in the churchyard of Christ Church, Southgate.

gollark: The solution is obviously to erase the concept of gender from everyone's brain using orbital mind control lasers, which would have no* negative consequences.
gollark: Ah yes, those are also often quite terrible.
gollark: Children are quite terrible for various reasons.
gollark: I mean, I'm not sure if I'd trust children to actually be able to make permanent decisions about changing gender or something.
gollark: I mean, it does inasmuch as we measure those things relatively.

References

Further reading

The Walkers of Southgate - a Famous Brotherhood of Cricketers by W. A. Bettesworth, Methuen, 1900.

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