Eric Jesser FulcherMC (12 March 1890 – 14 February 1923) was an English cricketer. He played ten first-class matches between 1913 and 1921.[1]
Early life
Fulcher was born at Bearsted in Kent in 1890. His father, Arthur Fulcher, had played cricket for Kent and was a noted yachtsman and his eldest brother, Edward, played cricket for Devon and for Kent's Second XI. Fulcher was educated at Castlemount College in Dover and then at Radley College where he played cricket for the school in 1906 and 1907.[2] He scored over 350 runs and took 51 wickets in his final year at school, and was described as an "outstanding" fielder by Wisden.[3][4] After leaving school he moved to Attleborough in Norfolk, farming and studying land management.[2]
After the end of the First World War, Fulcher played again at Old Buckingham in May 1919 against the Australian Imperial Force Touring XI. He was part of a side which included several Kent players,[9] and made his first-class county debut in June, playing in four County Championship matches for Kent. His final first-class appearance came for MCC against Oxford University in 1921.[3][6][10] His final match for Norfolk was the challenge match to determine the 1922 Minor Counties champions, a match which Norfolk lost to Buckinghamshire, being bowled out for 89 chasing just 98 for victory.[6][11]
Fulcher scored 2,057 Minor Counties Championship runs for Norfolk at an average of 19.40 runs per innings. He took 64 wickets for the county.[5]
Military service
During World War I Fulcher served in the Royal West Kent Regiment, enlisting in the army in 1914 and being commissioned as a second lieutenant in the RWK by the end of the year.[12] He served in France from 1915 onward, initially with the 1st battalion around Ypres. He was promoted to temporary lieutenant at the end of 1915 and saw action during the closing stages of the Battle of the Somme the following year.[10]
A series of illnesses kept him out of the front line at times throughout the war, and he spent the first half of 1918 away from the battalion before returning in August and was given command of A company, promoted to the rank of captain. Fulcher led the company during the Second Battle of the Somme during August, and was awarded the Military Cross for bravery.[13] He remained at the front through to the end of the war and spent the winter in Belgium before being demobilised in February 1919. He joined the Royal Norfolk Regiment as a captain but resigned his commission in December 1920.[10]
Family and later life
After leaving the military, Fulcher returned to play cricket for Norfolk and joined the board of Norwich City F.C.[10] In 1922 he moved to Monmouthshire and farmed near Chepstow. He died as a result of a shotgun accident in February 1923, aged 32.[1][14]