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Charles Lyttelton, 10th Viscount Cobham




  Country England
  Fullname Charles John Lyttelton
  Nickname Lord Cobham
  Dayofbirth 8
  Monthofbirth 8
  Yearofbirth 1909
  Placeofbirth Kensington
  Countryofbirth England
  Dayofdeath 20
  Monthofdeath 3
  Yearofdeath 1977
  Placeofdeath Marylebone
  Countryofdeath England
  Batting Right-hand
  Bowling Right-arm Medium
  Role Bowler
  Club1 Worcestershire
  Year1 1932&ndash1939
  Club2 MCC
  Year2 1935&ndash1936
  Type1 First-class
  Debutdate1 25 June
  Debutyear1 1932
  Debutfor1 <br> Worcestershire
  Debutagainst1 Gloucestershire
  Lastdate1 24 February
  Lastyear1 1961
  Lastfor1 <br>New&nbspZealand&nbspGoverner's&nbspXI
  Lastagainst1 MCC
  Deliveries balls
  Columns 1
  Column1 FC
  Matches1 104
  Runs1 3,181
  Bat Avg1 2026
  100s/50s1 1/13
  Top Score1 162
  Deliveries1 2,195
  Wickets1 32
  Bowl Avg1 4118
  Fivefor1 0
  Tenfor1 0
  Best Bowling1 4/83
  Catches/stumpings1 52/&ndash
  Date 14 August
  Year 2007
  Source http://wwwcricketarchivecom/Archive/Players/31/31123/31123html cricketarchivecom


Charles John Lyttelton, 10th Viscount Cobham, KG , GCMG , GCVO , TD , PC ( 8 August 190920 March 1977 ) was a New Zealand Political Figure and English Cricketer . He was born in Kensington , London , and educated at Eton College . He died in Marylebone , also London. He was cousin of the musician Humphrey Lyttelton .


POLITICS


He served as the Governor-General Of New Zealand between 1957 and 1962 . During this period, Samoa gained independence. Lyttelton was thus the last New Zealand Governor of Samoa.


CRICKET


Lyttelton enjoyed a fairly substantial career in First-class Cricket , playing more than 90 times for Worcestershire in the 1930s and captaining the club between 1936 and 1939.

He made his first-class debut against Gloucestershire in June 1932, but made a Duck in his only innings and did not reappear for two years. He played five times in 1934, but it was only the following season that he became established in the side, playing about twenty matches a year from then until the Second World War , with the exception of 1937 when he appeared only twice.

Lyttelton's highest score (and only first-class century) was the 162 he made against Leicestershire in 1938, but he made many other useful if lesser contributions with the bat, reaching fifty on 14 further occasions. His most productive year was 1938, when he scored 741 runs at an Average of 21.17.

With the ball, his first victim (in July 1934) was Charlie Barnett , while in 1935 he produced his best innings' bowling, claiming 4-83 against the South Africans . However, after 1935 his bowling became a largely occasional part of his game, and with the exception of nine wickets in 1938 he never again took more than three in a season.

Lyttelton's cricketing career proper ended with the outbreak of war, but (now listed on the scorecard as Lord Cobham, having succeeded to the title in 1949) he played for an "MCC New Zealand Touring Team" against a strong "London New Zealand Club" side in 1954, taking two wickets including that of Bill Merritt . Remarkably, however, he made a one-off return to first-class action aged 51 in February 1961, more than two decades after his previous appearance at that level, when as New Zealand Governor-General he captained an eponymous side against MCC at Auckland ; he showed he still had ability with a handy first-innings 44 from number ten in the order.

As well as the matches mentioned above, Lyttelton also played ten games for in 1935, and nine on MCC's tour of Australia and New Zealand during the winter that followed.

A number of his relatives played first-class cricket. His great-grandfather George played for Cambridge University in the 1830s, his grandfather (also Charles ) turned out for a selection of teams including Cambridge and MCC in the 1860s, his father John made a handful of appearances for Worcestershire in the 1920s, and his uncle - another Charles - played for Worcestershire, Cambridge and MCC before the First World War .


EXTERNAL LINKS



  NAME Cobham, Charles John Lyttelton, Viscount
  SHORT DESCRIPTION Viceroy, military leader, athlete, cricketer
  DATE OF BIRTH 1909
  DATE OF DEATH 1977