Edward Humphrey Dalrymple Sewell (30 September 1872 – 20 September 1947) was a first-class cricketer, popular cricket and rugby journalist and author, known universally as E. H. D. Sewell.
His father Colonel Henry Fane Haylett Sewell (1838–1910) was a Colonel in the East Indies. He married Violetta Anna Burn in Singapore May 1860, they had seven sons.
Edward H D was the youngest son, born in Lingsugur, India, where his father served as an Army officer. Sewell was educated at the Rectory in Shropshire and Bedford School in England, returning to India as a civil servant. In 1893 he married Amie Sharpe, who was born in Darjeeling. They had a child, Douglas, born in Coonsor, India, in 1895 and later educated at Dulwich College.[1]
Career
While playing cricket in India he became the first batsman in the country to score three consecutive hundreds. In 1893 he played in the first ever All-India side. He went back to England and after a couple of seasons with London County he joined Essex in 1902. He remained with Essex until 1904 but his highest score was made for London County when he made 181 against Surrey at Crystal Palace. A big hitter of the ball, it is said that one of his on-drives measured 140 yards.
He was known as a good rugby footballer, playing for Bedford, Blackheath and Harlequins,[2] but was most notable as a cricket player. On his return from India he became a professional cricket player for Essex. In 1904 he reached his highest score of 181 under the Captain W.G. Grace, at Crystal Palace against Surrey.[3] Later he was coach to young players at The Oval for Surrey County Cricket Club, and played for Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire. His final first-class match for the MCC Marylebone Cricket Club was in 1922.
He wrote for various newspapers, as well as many books on both cricket and rugby. His first book was published in 1911, and he continued to write up until his death in 1947. Among his many books were The Log of a Sportsman (1923), From a Window at Lords (1937), Who's Won the Toss? (1940) and Rugger: The Man’s Game (1944), reminiscing on the past fifty years of the game.
Edward died on 20 September 1947 in Paddington, London. His obituary in The Times newspaper wrote of his achievements as a writer and player, both of cricket and Rugby football.[4] A friend wrote that he had a kindly and gentle disposition, an alert mind, and was a good man and a good sportsman.[5]
Books by E H D Sewell
The past Rugby Football season, extracts from the Fortnightly Review, 1908
The Revival in Rugby Football, extracts from the Fortnightly Review, 1910
The Book of Football, J M Dent & Sons Ltd., 1911
Cricket points: for the county, 'varsity, public school, and club cricketer, Sporting Life, London, 1911
Triangular Cricket: Being a Record of the Greatest Contest in the History of the Game, J. M. Dent & Co., London, 1912
Rugby Football Internationals Roll of Honour, T.C. & E.C. Jack, London & Edinburgh, 1919 (A tribute to all the rugby internationals who died during the Great War 1914 – 1919),
Rugby Football Up To Date, Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1921
Log of a Sportsman, T Fisher Unwin Ltd., Adelphi Terrace, London 1923 (Cricket, Rugger and Hunting in India)
Cricket Up To Date, John Murray, 1931
Rugby Football To-Day, John Murray, 1931
First Principles of Cricket, Boy's Own Paper, GB, 1935
From a Window at Lord's, (Essays on cricket) Methuen, 1937, (includes an account of the 1936-37 M.C.C. tour of Australia)
Who's Won the Toss? Stanley Paul, 1940 Foreword by C.B.Fry
Cricket Under Fire, Stanley Paul & Co, London, 1941 (includes chapters 'The Fade-Out of Jardine and Larwood' and 'The Game in India')
Rugger: The Man's Game, First edition 1944, (revised by O. L. Owen; with a preface by Captain C.B.Fry) Hollis and Carter Ltd, London, 1950
An Outdoor Wallah, Stanley Paul, 1945 (Autobiography) (with chapters on W.G. Grace, Ranjitsinhji, and the 1933-34 M.C.C. tour of India)
Well Hit! Sir, Stanley Paul, London, 1946 (includes an account of the 1946 Indian tour of England)
Overthrows, Stanley Paul, London, 1946
Contribution – extended reminiscences:
'The Memorial Biography of Dr. W. G. Grace', issued under the Auspices of The Committee of the MCC, Constable & Company Ltd., London 1919
Sources
May 2006 edition of Soul Search, the journal of The Sole Society. A British Family History Society, http://www.sole.org.uk/
BM&D and census records
Tony Collins, A Social History of English Rugby Union, Routledge, Oxford, 2009, ISBN0-415-47660-7 (many references to EHD Sewell
IMAGE: Edward Sewell: cricketer, columnist and part of the first all-India team[6]