Richard Thornton (cricketer)


Richard Thornton Thornton, born Richard Thornton Lee, was an English clergyman and amateur cricketer active who played first-class cricket between 1881 and 1893, mainly for Kent County Cricket Club.

Early life

Thornton was born at Folkestone in Kent, the eldest son of Richard Napoleon Thornton and his wife Margaret. He was privately educated before going up to St John's College, Oxford, where he matriculated in 1873. He graduated in 1876, winning a Blue in football whilst at Oxford although he did not play cricket for the University.

Cricket career

Thornton played for Dorset before going up to university and later made non-first-class cricket appearances for a variety of amateur teams, including the Gentlemen of Devon and MCC who he played for between 1874 and 1902. He made his first-class cricket debut for MCC against Kent in 1880 before going on to play 45 times for Kent in first-class matches between 1881 and 1888. As well as making 14 first-class appearances for MCC he played for a variety of other sides and captained EJ Sanders' XI on their tour of North America in 1885. He played matches for a wide range of teams including Incogniti, Devon County Cricket Club, Wiltshire County Cricket Club and toured Portugal in 1895 with Tom Westray's XI.
In his Wisden obituary, Thornton was described as "a free-hitting bat and could bowl both slow-round and lobs", the latter being described as "very successful indeed in club games". In 66 first-class matches he scored one first-class century, making 107 runs for EJ Sanders' XI against the Gentlemen of Philadelphia in 1885, although in club cricket he made a number of high scores.

Professional and later lie

Thornton was ordained as a priest in the Church of England at Chichester in 1878, becoming curate at Sidmouth where his parents owned property. He became a Clerk in Holy Orders and was chaplain to the 1st Volunteer Battalion of the Royal West Kent Regiment during the 1890s when he lived at Tunbridge Wells.
Thornton married Ellen Pulford in 1877 at Tormoham in Devon. The couple had four children before Ellen died in 1891, Thornton going on to marry Eliza Pulford, Ellen's sister, in 1897. His brothers, Albert and Walter both played first-class cricket, Albert for Kent and Walter for Oxford University. He died at Eastbourne in Sussex in 1928 aged 75.