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Robert Summerhayes

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Robert Summerhayes
Personal information
Full name
Robert Currie Summerhayes
Born13 March 1903
Quetta, Baluchistan,
British India
Died7 June 1983(1983-06-07) (aged 80)
Mayfield, Sussex, England
BattingRight-handed
BowlingUnknown
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1925/26–1938/39Europeans
Career statistics
Competition First-class
Matches 10
Runs scored 379
Batting average 19.94
100s/50s 1/2
Top score 109
Catches/stumpings 8/–
Source: Cricinfo, 7 June 2022

Robert Currie Summerhayes OBE (13 March 1903 — 7 June 1983) was an English first-class cricketer.

Summerhayes was born in British India at Quetta in March 1903. He was educated in England at St Lawrence College, before matriculating to Brasenose College, Oxford.[1] After graduating from Oxford, Summerhayes returned to India. While there, he played in ten first-class cricket matches for the Europeans cricket team between 1926 and 1938, with nine of the matches coming in the Bombay Pentangular.[2] He scored 379 runs in these matches at an average of 19.94, with two half centuries and one century;[3] his century, a score of 109, came opening the batting against the Parsees in 1936.[4] Summerhayes was a volunteer in the Bombay Battalion, being commissioned as a second lieutenant in April 1931.[5]

Summerhayes was employed by the Burmah–Shell Oil Company and was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in the 1946 New Year Honours.[6] With his wife, he returned to England from Rawalpindi in the early 1950s,[7] where he became a dairy farmer at Mayfield, Sussex. He was prosecuted and fined £10 at Lewes Magistrates Courts in March 1960, having pleaded guilty to selling milk to which water had been added.[8] Summerhayes died at Mayfield in June 1983.

References

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  1. ^ Oxford University Gazette. Vol. 53. University of Oxford. 1922. p. 4.
  2. ^ "First-Class Matches played by Robert Summerhayes". CricketArchive. Retrieved 7 June 2022.
  3. ^ "First-Class Batting and Fielding For Each Team by Robert Summerhayes". CricketArchive. Retrieved 7 June 2022.
  4. ^ "Europeans v Parsees, Bombay Quadrangular Tournament 1936/37". CricketArchive. Retrieved 7 June 2022.
  5. ^ The Indian Army List. Defense Department. 1932. p. 429.
  6. ^ "No. 37407". The London Gazette. 28 December 1945. p. 59.
  7. ^ C.M.S. Sale Was Family Affair. Sussex Agricultural Express. 3 July 1953. p. 9
  8. ^ Water in milk mystery. Sussex Agricultural Express. 11 March 1960. p. 19
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