The Albert Ground was a cricket ground located in the Sydney suburb of Redfern between 1864 and 1877.[1][2]
Ground information | |||||
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Location | Redfern, Sydney, Australia | ||||
Establishment | 1864 | ||||
Team information | |||||
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As of 15 October 2020 Source: Ground profile |
History
editCricket had been played in NSW since 1803, first in Hyde Park and then in the Domain. Neither were satisfactory facilities mainly because they were open grounds on which spectators walked and animals grazed. Fences could not be erected to keep people and animals out or to charge much needed admission.
When the Albert Ground opened in Redfern on 29 October 1864, these problems appeared to be solved. The ground had been developed as a money-making venture in the swampy area that Redfern was at the time.
Despite this, the Albert Ground had significant advantages over Sydney’s existing cricket facilities. It was centrally located and featured good facilities for players and crowd alike. There was a grandstand in the north west corner and a pavilion ran around three sides of the ground. A row of trees had been planted by the English cricket tourists of 1863-1864 captained by George Parr.
The pitch was made of a matted couch grass and was very spongy and soft. It was a slow pitch that favoured the bowlers. The ground was the home of the Albert Club, one of the most powerful in Sydney, which could boast three teams of 11. The club’s players wore white caps and pants and blue shirts and counted amongst their number the greatest bowler of the day ‘The Demon’ Fred Spofforth.
Above all however, the Albert Ground had been established as a business with the aim of making money and fees were charged to those who wanted to use it, including the NSW Cricket Association. The cost to the NSWCA of staging matches there was so high that until the early 1870s it continued to use the Domain whenever possible despite its disadvantages. By then inter-colonial games had become so important and popular that the NSWCA had little choice but to use the Albert Ground for these at least. In all, five first-class matches were played at the Albert Ground between the 1870 and 1877 seasons.
In the late 1870s however, the Albert Ground company was wound up and the ground closed. The NSWCA began using the Garrison Ground at Moore Park, later to be renamed the Association Ground and then the Sydney Cricket Ground. Eventually the Albert Ground was demolished.
The Albert Ground was located to the east of Redfern Oval in the block now roughly bounded by Elizabeth, Phillip, Kettle and Moorehead Streets. The site is now consists of housing, the PCYC South Sydney and vacant land that is fenced off.
List of cricket matches
editBelow is a list of the first-class cricket matches that were played at the Albert Ground.
Season | Teams | Date | Result | Ref |
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1870–71 | New South Wales v Victoria | 9–11, 13 March 1871 | Victoria won by 48 runs | [3] |
1872–73 | New South Wales v Victoria | 28 February–2, 7–8 March 1873 | Victoria won by 24 runs | [4] |
1874–75 | New South Wales v Victoria | 5–6, 8 March 1875 | New South Wales won by 77 runs | [5] |
1875–76 | New South Wales v Victoria | 25–26, 28 February 1876 | New South Wales won by 195 runs | [6] |
1876–77 | New South Wales v James Lillywhite's XI | 15–16 January 1877 | Match drawn | [7] |
References
edit- ^ Albert Cricket Ground Cricinfo
- ^ Albert Cricket Ground CricketArchive
- ^ "New South Wales v Victoria, 1870–71". ESPNcricinfo. ESPN Inc. Retrieved 24 November 2013.
- ^ "New South Wales v Victoria, 1872–73". ESPNcricinfo. ESPN Inc. Retrieved 24 November 2013.
- ^ "New South Wales v Victoria, 1874–75". ESPNcricinfo. ESPN Inc. Retrieved 24 November 2013.
- ^ "New South Wales v Victoria, 1875–76". ESPNcricinfo. ESPN Inc. Retrieved 24 November 2013.
- ^ "New South Wales v James Lillywhite's XI, 1876–77". CricketArchive. Retrieved 24 November 2013.
Cashman, Richard (1990) ‘The Demon’ Spofforth Kensington: UNSW Press
Pollard, Jack (1990) Australia In: Test Match Grounds London: Willow Books
Vamplew, Wray; Moore, Katharine; O’Hara, John; Chashman, Richard; and Jobling, Ian [editors] (1997) The Oxford Companion to Australian Sport Second Edition Melbourne: Oxford University Press
Willis, James (1868) Map of Port Jackson and City of Sydney showing the adjacent municipalities NSW In: Sydney Takes Shape: A history in maps Paul Ashton and Duncan Waterson editors Brisbane: HEMA Maps 2000.