Full Name

Martin Bladen Hawke (Lord Hawke)

Born

August 16, 1860, Willingham Rectory, Gainsborough, Lincolnshire

Died

October 10, 1938, West End, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland, (aged 78y 55d)

Also Known As

succeeded as 7th Baron Hawke in 1887

Batting Style

Right hand Bat

Lord Hawke strode the cricketing world like a colossus for half a century, as a player and administrator, and one who played a major part in the modernisation of the game. He was a keen advocate of overseas tours, a strict disciplinarian, and a determined upholder of the games traditions.

Hawke's life was cricket. He captained Yorkshire for 28 seasons during which time they won eight Championships, and was the county's president for 40 years (despite having been born in Lincolnshire, he fiercely advocated that all players should be born in Yorkshire). He was MCC president from 1914 to 1919, its treasurer and a trustee between 1932 and 1938, and a national selector from 1899 to 1909 and again in 1933. He was no mean batsman either, winning Blues for Cambridge, and leading England in Tests in South Africa.

In a era where professionals were looked down on, Hawke did much to improve their lot. He introduced winter pay - until then they were only paid in the summer months - and a scheme whereby a proportion of benefit income was invested on their behalf. But he was hard on any threat to the spirit of the game. His treatment of a drunken Bobby Peel has gone into the game's folklore - he escorted him off the field and, as Peel himself sarcastically noted: "Lord Hawke put his arm round me and helped me off the ground - and out of first-class cricket. What a gentleman!"

Held in respect and awe while alive, posterity has been less kind to Hawke's memory. Benny Green said that he is remembered "for a succession of monumental blunders which 50 years of apologia from his admirers have done nothing to excuse."

But for his faults, he cared passionately about the game. "Cricket," he once wrote, "is a moral lesson in itself, and the classroom is God's air and sunshine. Foster it, my brothers, protect it from anything that will sully it, so that it will be in favour with all men.'
Martin Williamson

Wisden obituary
Since the history of cricket was first written, there have been chapters in which certain men have been outstanding figures. Another of these has closed with the death of Lord Hawke, who was certainly one of the most prominent in his day. Besides being a great cricketer in the highest sense of the word, he was an administrator who not only aimed at the general welfare of the game, but sought to preserve in it an untarnished ethical code. To him cricket was more than a game. It was a philosophy that coloured his dealings with people and things. His anxiety that English cricket should not fall below the high standards that he thought it should maintain led him to give expression to the wish that the captain of England should always be an amateur. He was unfairly misrepresented of holding this view, as after Hammond changed his status to that of amateur, he gave it as his opinion that a wise selection had been made when the selection committee appointed Hammond captain of England.

It may not be generally known how Lord Hawke's strength of character was tested when, as a young man on leaving Cambridge, he undertook the responsibility of captaining the Yorkshire side, composed at that time of elements that were not entirely harmonious. Owing to his tact, judgment and integrity, he moulded the XI into the best, and probably the most united county team in England. He regarded Yorkshire as his home by adoption, and wherever he went he hailed Yorkshiremen as his friends. He always played to win, but whatever the game, he was a generous opponent and never harboured resentment. The writer recollects running him out when Cambridge University were playing Surrey at The Oval - a bad run-out. The offence was forgiven but it is doubtful if it was forgotten.

Through the long and anxious years of the Great War, Lord Hawke was president of MCC. The ground was being used for military purposes, training and recreation. Problems frequently arose, and he was the greatest help in giving wise counsel towards their solution. After the war he followed Lord Harris as treasurer of MCC, and only resigned shortly before his death. Like Lord Harris, he was devoted to MCC and believed that the wellbeing of cricket depended on the allegiance given to the club by its members, by the county clubs, and by the judicial impartial administration of its committee.

Lord Hawke was a member of the I Zingari committee, and in recent years many of its meetings were held at his house in Belgrave Square, where the committee had the privilege of accepting his hospitality - a great experience. It has been said that candidates for election had a better chance of being selected after luncheon than before.

And so has passed a kind and loyal friend, and one who has contributed much that is valuable to our national game.
Sir Francis Lacey, Wisden Cricketers' Almanack

Lord Hawke Career Stats

Batting & Fielding

FormatMatInnsNORunsHSAve100s50s6sCtSt
Tests58155307.8500030
FC6339361051674916620.151369-2090

Bowling

FormatMatInnsBallsRunsWktsBBIBBMAveEconSR4w5w10w
Tests5------------
FC633-20160---4.80-000
Lord Hawke portrait

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Test

Debut/Last Matches of Lord Hawke

Recent Matches of Lord Hawke

Photos of Lord Hawke

Lord Hawke poses for a photograph
WG Grace leans on the shoulder of Jack Mason and Lord Hawke sits on the left at the Hasting cricket festival
Lord Hawke's XI pose ahead of a match in Ceylon
Lord Hawke