Edward Ivo Medhurst BarrettCIE (22 June 1879 – 10 July 1950) was an English first-class cricketer, rugby union international, British Army officer, and colonial police officer.
The battalion stayed in South Africa throughout the war, which formally ended in June 1902 after the Peace of Vereeniging. Barrett joined other officers and men of the battalion who left Cape Town on the SS Britannic in October that year, and was stationed at Aldershot upon his return.[7] He was promoted to captain in May 1903,[8] and was seconded as a wing officer to the Malay States Guides the following month.[6][9] Barrett joined the Shanghai Municipal Police in 1907, which was responsible for policing the Shanghai International Settlement and headed the Sikh Branch for many years.[5] He was made a CIE in the 1919 Birthday Honours.[10] He replaced K.J. McEuen as commissioner of police in Shanghai in 1925, with McEuen having been held partly responsible for The Nanjing Road Incident of May 1925, which resulted in the deaths of protesters and subsequently led to civil unrest.[11]
Barrett was himself forced to resign on 1 October 1929, after disputes about police effectiveness and reform.[12] He was later added to the Special List during the Second World War.[13]
By this point, his career with the colonial police force was beginning to affect his availability for Hampshire,[2] even more so when he was posted in the Far East, where he played cricket for the Straits Settlements and Federated Malay States, and later fourteen matches for the Shanghai cricket team, the last coming as late as 1927.[16] Despite his commitments in the colonial police in British Malaya, he still managed to play for Hampshire in the 1906 County Championship, making six appearances.[14] A gap of six years passed before he next appeared in first-class cricket, playing a full season in 1912 when he made 32 appearances, which included appearances for the MCC against Yorkshire, the South against the touring Australians, the Gentlemen of England against the touring South Africans, and for The Rest of England against Yorkshire.[14] In 1912, he passed 1,000 runs in a season for the first time, with 1,381 runs at an average of 40.61;[17] he made three of his six career centuries in 1912.[2]
Barrett did not play for Hampshire until after the First World War, when he appeared in nineteen matches for Hampshire in the 1920 County Championship, alongside one match for the MCC against Nottinghamshire.[14] He again passed 1,000 runs for the season, with 1,054 runs at an average of 28.24;[17] he made two centuries, including a double-century (215) against Gloucestershire at Southampton, when he shared in a partnership of 321 for the second wicket with George Brown.[2] He made one further first-class appearance for Hampshire, in the 1925 County Championship against Worcestershire at Bournemouth.[14] In eighty first-class appearances for Hampshire, he scored 3,518 runs at an average of 32.57, making seventeen half centuries alongside his six centuries.[18] He was considered one of the finest and hardest hitters of his day,[19] exhibiting a sound defence and good timing.[2]
A keen golfer, Barrett won the Japan Amateur Golf Championship in 1917.[21]
Death
Barrett died as a result of a bicycling accident on 10 July 1950, at Boscombe, Hampshire.[5] He was predeceased by his first wife, Winifred, with whom he had two children. Following her death, he married Katherine Craven in 1928, with her surviving him.[5]
References
^Oakes, Charles Henry; Sladen, Douglas Brooke Wheelton; Addison, Henry Robert; Lawson, William John (27 April 2024). Who's Who. Vol. 101. London: A & C Black. p. 156.