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FULLER PILCH

Fuller Pilch
FULLER PILCH
was born in Horningtoft, Norfolk on 17 March 1803.  He had two elder brothers who were professional cricketers.  He started his own cricketing career at Lords in 1820 playing for Norfolk against Marylebone.  By the late 1820s he had become recognised as the best batsman England had produced, and that continued until the appearance of WG Grace in the 1860s.  He developed a style of playing forward to the ball to rush the bowler.  This shot became known as the “Pilch Poke”, and that term is still recognised today.  In 1835 he transferred to the Town Malling team on a salary of £100 a year, and took over the Cricketers’ Inn which had a cricket field attached (Kent’s county ground at the time).  The Cricketers’ Inn later became a private house and is recorded as the last building in Ryarsh Lane.  In 1842 the county ground moved to Canterbury, and so did Pilch - to play for Kent’s county side, where he remained until he retired in 1855, having played for Kent through 19 seasons.  He amassed a total of 10 centuries - which was quite an accomplishment when you consider how poor some of the pitches were.  

There is a plaque at the Old Cricket Ground, which is now accessed from Norman Road, which gives a brief history of cricket in West Malling and Pilch's starring role in it.  Pilch never married, and died on 1st May 1870 of dropsy, aged 67.  He is buried in St Gregory’s Church in Canterbury, where there is a large monument to him.

More information

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