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Tom Garrett

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Tom Garrett
Tom Garrett in 1937
Personal information
Born26 July 1858
Wollongong, New South Wales
Died6 August 1943 (aged 85)
Sydney, New South Wales
BattingRight-handed batsman (RHB)
BowlingRight-arm fast medium (RFM)
International information
National side
Career statistics
Competition Tests First-class
Matches 19 160
Runs scored 339 3673
Batting average 12.55 16.18
100s/50s -/1 2/10
Top score 51* 163
Balls bowled 2728 24316
Wickets 36 446
Bowling average 26.94 18.72
5 wickets in innings 2 29
10 wickets in match 4
Best bowling 6/78 7/38
Catches/stumpings 7/- 81/-
Source: [1]

Thomas William Garrett (26 July 1858 – 6 August 1943) was an early Australian Test cricketer and, later, a distinguished public servant.

Early life

Tom Garrett was the second son of a newspaper proprietor and politician who bore the same name. His mother, Mary, was his father's first wife. Garrett was educated at Newington College (1867–1872),[1] while the school was still at Newington House, in the Sydney suburb of Silverwater. His ability as a cricketer and sprinter was encouraged by the assistant master Joseph Coates.

Public service career

In 1873 he matriculated to the University of Sydney and attended lectures for several terms. In January of the next year, his father secured for him a clerkship in the New South Wales Department of Lands. He transferred to the New South Wales Supreme Court in 1876 and was admitted to practice law as a solicitor on 25 February 1882. He became registrar of probates in 1890, curator of intestate estates as well in 1896, and the public trustee in 1914. When he retired in 1924, his staff had increased from fourteen to 67, and some 25,000 estates, involving over £10 million, had passed through his office. That year, Garrett returned to private practise as a solicitor and, at 81, still attended his office daily.

Cricket career

Garrett pictured middle (middle row) with the 1886 Australia national cricket team

A tall all-rounder, he played for New South Wales, batting and bowling right-handed. Bowling, however, was his strength. He bowled at fast-medium pace and took part in 19 Tests, scoring 339 runs at 12.55, and taking 36 wickets at an average of 26.94, with best figures of 6–78. In 160 first-class cricket matches he scored 3,673 runs at 16.18, and took 446 wickets at 18.27 runs per wicket, including 29 hauls of five wickets in an innings.

Garrett played in the first Test match, against Lillywhite’s team in Melbourne in March 1877. At 18 years and 232 days is still the youngest representative to play for Australia against England. In that match on the 2nd day he scored 18 not out in the first innings, and helped sustain a crucial 43-run partnership with Charles Bannerman until the latter split his finger and retired hurt on 165. His 18 not out was, on that day, the 2nd highest test score. Garrett's score was passed later in the day by England opener, Harry Jupp. Promoted to number four in the second innings, Garrett made a duck (zero runs). Opening the bowling with John Hodges he took two wickets in the first innings (including that of top scorer, Henry Jupp). In 1878, he toured England and North America with the first representative Australian team to go overseas. He toured England again in 1882, participating in an historic Ashes match at The Oval. His last match was at Sydney in 1888.

As a bowler it was said by the all-rounder George Giffen that: "... he would keep a fine line outside the off-stump, and never minded being hit. Sometimes the ball would work a little from the pitch which victimised most of the batsmen." He would release the ball from as high a point as he could reach, taking advantage of his 6-foot-tall (1.8 m) (183 centimetre) frame. Later in his career, as his bowling fell away, he became a powerful batsman, particularly square of the wicket. He was also noted for his speed in the field: in a Sydney match in 1887 it was reported in the press that he caught a skied ball "in a display of breathtaking agility".

Garret became captain of New South Wales. He was rated highly as a skipper, especially for his skill in handling aspiring young bowlers.

He died in 1943 and following a service at St Jame's Church in Turramurra was cremated at the Northern Suburbs Crematorium.[2] At the time of his death he was Australia’s oldest living Test player and the last survivor of the first Test Match.

Descendants

His son, Hubert Garrett, who died in the Gallipoli campaign of the First World War, played a few matches for Somerset and for amateur sides in England in 1913 and 1914. Tom Garrett's great-grandson is the Midnight Oil lead singer and former Australian federal politician and government minister, Peter Garrett.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ Newington College Register of Past Students 1863–1998 (Syd, 1999) p. 70
  2. ^ "Family Notices". The Sydney Morning Herald. No. 32, 953. New South Wales, Australia. 7 August 1943. p. 12. Retrieved 2 September 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  3. ^ The ton that stopped a nation The Age 6 February 2004 Retrieved on 26 January 2008.

Bibliography