William Brindley, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

William Brindley

Cricket player

Date of Birth: 04-Dec-1896

Place of Birth: High Wycombe, England, United Kingdom

Date of Death: 13-Aug-1958

Profession: cricketer

Nationality: United Kingdom

Zodiac Sign: Sagittarius


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About William Brindley

  • Captain William Thomas Brindley OBE, OStJ, KPFSM (4 December 1896 – 13 August 1958) was an English police officer.
  • Brindley was also a cricketer, who played as a right-handed batsman, although his bowling style is not known.
  • He was born in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire and attended High Wycombe Royal Grammar School from 1910 to 1915.
  • He would later become a senior colonial police officer in Ceylon. Brindley served in World War I, entering service as a 2nd Lieutenant in the reserve of the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry.
  • By November 1917 he held the rank of Lieutenant and was still serving in the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, in that same month he was promoted to Acting Captain.
  • Following the war, Brindley reverted to a Lieutenant on 25 June 1919.
  • He left the British Army on 1 April 1920, upon resigning his commission he was granted the rank of Captain.At some point following the war he joined the Ceylon Police Force.
  • In the 1920s Brindley began playing representative cricket.
  • In England, he made his debut for Buckinghamshire in the 1925 Minor Counties Championship against the Kent Second XI.
  • In British Ceylon he made his first-class debut for Dr J Rockwood's Ceylon XI against WE Lucas' Bombay XI in February 1926.
  • A year later he made another two first-class appearances, one for the Europeans (Ceylon) against the touring Marylebone Cricket Club, and another for Ceylon against the same opposition.
  • He returned to England in 1930, playing Minor counties cricket for Buckinghamshire, as well as making a first-class appearance for the Minor Counties against Lancashire.
  • His next first-class appearance came for Ceylon against the touring Marylebone Cricket Club in February 1934.
  • In that same month he appeared for a combined India and Ceylon XI against the same opposition.
  • In 1935, he once again returned to England, where he made eight further Minor Counties Championship appearances for Buckinghamshire, as well as making two further first-class appearances for the Minor Counties, against Cambridge University and Oxford University.
  • These matches marked his final first-class appearances, in total he made nine appearances, scoring 221 runs at an average of 17.00, with a high score of 59 not out.
  • With the ball, he took 14 wickets at a bowling average of 27.78, with best figures of 5/40.He was present at the coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth at Westminster Abbey in December 1936.
  • In January 1938, Brindley was admitted to the Venerable Order of Saint John as an officer.
  • In 1947, he was made a member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire.
  • By this stage in his policing career, he was the Deputy Inspector General of Police in Ceylon.
  • He continued this role into 1951, a year in which he was awarded the King's Police and Fire Services Medal by King George VI.
  • In Ceylon, he led the Police side to several Government Services Cricket Championships.
  • He died in Virginia Water, Surrey on 13 August 1958.

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