He was not invited to play in the freshmen's trial match during his first year at Cambridge,[5] but did feature in the senior's trial match the following season, 1884, in which he took one wicket.[6] He was low in the pecking order to play for Cambridge that year; in another trial match between the "First Twelve" and the "Next Sixteen", Mirehouse appeared for the latter, again taking one wicket in the match.[7] Despite this, Mirehouse made his first-class debut for the University a couple of weeks later, playing against the Gentlemen of England; a collection of the best amateur players in the country. Mirehouse was used as the second-change bowler for Cambridge, and took one wicket, that of Sandford Schultz.[8] He featured again the following week, against a Marylebone Cricket Club and Ground side rated as relatively weak by Cricket magazine. On a pitch ruined by rain, he bowled 24 overs without taking a wicket during a heavy defeat for Cambridge.[9] He did not play again for Cambridge that year, but did go on to make his first appearances in county cricket for Somerset County Cricket Club.[10]
On his county debut, against Hampshire, Mirehouse took three wickets in the first innings and another in the second;[11] his first innings record of three wickets for 33 runs was his best in first-class matches for Somerset.[12] Mirehouse opened the bowling alongside E. W. Bastard against Kent, but bowled 28 overs in the match without taking a wicket,[13] while against Lancashire, he took two wickets on a pitch described as "dead from recent rains and in favour of the bowlers."[14] Mirehouse had some appearances of note for the Lansdown Cricket Club during 1884, taking four wickets against the touring Gentlemen of Philadelphia in July,[15] and taking seven wickets against the Incogniti in August.[16]
After again featuring in the senior's trial match in 1885, in which he took four wickets,[17] Mirehouse was highlighted by Cricket magazine as having "a good length ball" and was toted as a possibility for making it into the first team.[18] He began the season as part of Cambridge's team, taking five wickets for the "First Twelve" against the "Next Sixteen" in the final trial match,[19] and then took six wickets in a match against a representative England side described as weak by Cricket.[20] In three further matches for Cambridge that season, Mirehouse did not have as much success, and by the time of the Varsity Match, in which he did not play,[10] was considered a fringe player for the team.[21] After the conclusion of the university term, Mirehouse made his fourth and final appearance for Somerset in first-class cricket, taking two wickets in a heavy loss to Gloucestershire.[22]
He played seven first-class matches for the university,[23] but did not appear in the Varsity Match against Oxford University. Mirehouse achieved his best performance in first-class cricket for Cambridge, claiming four wickets in the second innings for the university against CI Thornton's XI.[24] He also appeared a number of times for both Somerset and the Marylebone Cricket Club.[10]
Later life
Mirehouse emigrated to Turramurra, Sydney where he ran a sugar refinery. He suffered from ill-health, including an ulcer which affected him for some time, but this was later cured.[25] In an effort to improve his health, he took a six-week break on the south coast of Australia.[26] On his return, he voiced concerns about business matters, and a few days later on 5 March 1923, hanged himself from his bed with a sash cord.[27] A letter Mirehouse started writing to a friend in Bristol lamented: "My sufferings the past six months have been beyond all expression."[26] Despite his apparent business worries, Mirehouse had £4,300 of stocks and £165 cash invested with the Bank of Australasia.[26][a] He had never married, and his estate was left to his cousin, and brother-in-law, Egerton Bagot Byrd Levett-Scrivener.[2]
Notes
^According to MeasuringWorth.com, £4,465 from 1923 would be worth in excess of £265,000 in 2021.[28]
References
^ abHoward, Joseph Jackson; Crisp, Frederick Arthur, eds. (1897). Visitation of England and Wales. Vol. 5. Privately printed. p. 154.
^ abHill, Stephen (2016). Somerset Cricketers 1882 – 1914. Wellington, Somerset: Halsgrove. pp. 85–86. ISBN978-0-85704-291-0.