Sir Edward Bray (Birmingham and London and as Controller of Contracts in the Indian Army Headquarters during World War I. He played cricket during the 1870s.[1]
19 August 1849 – 19 June 1926) was an English lawyer and judge who served as a judge inBray was born at Shere in Surrey in 1849, the son of Reginald Bray, a solicitor and Justice of the Peace.[2] He was educated at Westminster School, where he played cricket in the school XI.[3][4] He went on to study at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he gained cricket Blues in 1871 and 1872. Bray had already played for Surrey County Cricket Club and made his first-class cricket debut in 1870, and made a total of 30 first-class appearances between 1870 and 1879, the majority for his county side or Cambridge University.[1]
Bray's family was descended from Thomas More, and he qualified as a barrister at Lincoln's Inn in 1875.[3] He served as a County Court judge in Birmingham between 1905 and 1908 before returning to London as a judge at Bloomsbury and Brentford. During the First World War he served as the Controller of Contracts in the Indian Army Headquarters.[1][2] He received a knighthood in the 1919 New Year Honours.[2]
Bray's son, Sir Edward Hugh Bray, also served in India during the war and played first-class cricket for Middlesex County Cricket Club and Cambridge University.[5] Bray died at Kensington in London in 1926 aged 76.[3]
References
edit- ^ a b c Edward Bray (born 1849), CricketArchive. Retrieved 2020-06-13. (subscription required).
- ^ a b c Venn J, Venn JA (1940) Alumni Cantabrigienses, part II, vol I, p.366. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (Available online. Retrieved 2020-06-13.)
- ^ a b c Sir Edward Bray, CricInfo. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
- ^ Bray, His Honour Sir Edward, Obituaries in 1926, Wisden Cricketers' Almanack, 1927. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
- ^ Edward Bray (born 1874), CricketArchive. Retrieved 2020-06-13. (subscription required).
External links
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