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All-England and Eleven
William Clarke formed the All-England Eleven in 1846, and this was the first representative England side, which toured the country taking on local sides.
Jemmy Dean and John Wisden formed a rival team, the United All-England Eleven, in 1852.
Grace recorded in his Reminiscences that he saw his first great cricket match in 1854 when he was barely six years old, the occasion being a game between William Clarke's All-England Eleven ( the AEE ) and twenty-two of West Gloucestershire.
Soon afterwards, he was one of four family members who played for Bristol and Didcot XVIII against the All-England Eleven.
* Foundation of the travelling All-England Eleven ( AEE ) by William Clarke.
* The United All England Eleven ( UEE ) is established as a rival to William Clarke's All-England Eleven ( AEE ).
* 21, 22 & 23 July — in a remarkable all-round performance, V E Walker of Middlesex, playing for All-England Eleven versus Surrey at The Oval, takes all ten wickets in the Surrey first innings and follows by scoring 108 in the All-England second innings, having been the not out batsman in the first with 20.
No sooner had the first county clubs established themselves than they faced what amounted to " player action " as William Clarke created the travelling All-England Eleven in 1846.
Two years later, XXII of Worcestershire played William Clarke's All-England Eleven at Powick Hams.
Category: All-England Eleven cricketers
By 1846, however, William Clarke, a bricklayer from Nottingham, had formed the All-England Eleven, a mostly professional team of top cricketers who toured the country, taking on local sides.
In 1852, together with fellow Sussex man Jemmy Dean, John Wisden founded the United All-England Eleven, providing both financial and sporting competition to Clarke's side.
It was captained by George Parr and comprised six players from the All-England Eleven, together with another six from the United All-England XI.
* William Clarke's All-England Eleven ( AEE ), formed in 1846, becomes a major attraction and plays numerous matches throughout England
Category: United All-England Eleven cricketers
Category: All-England Eleven cricketers
* All-England Eleven, a non-international England cricket team
Category: All-England Eleven cricketers
Category: All-England Eleven cricketers
Category: All-England Eleven cricketers

All-England and United
The IPW: UK All-England Championship ( formerly the FWA All-England Championship ) was a professional wrestling championship which was originally contested for in Frontier Wrestling Alliance ( FWA ) and subsequently in International Pro Wrestling: United Kingdom ( IPW: UK ) after FWA's closure.

All-England and England
V E Walker of Middlesex, playing for All-England versus Surrey at The Oval on 21, 22 & 23 July 1859, took all ten wickets in the Surrey first innings and followed this by scoring 108 in the England second innings, having been the not out batsman in the first ( 20 *).
The All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club ( AELTC ), also known as the All-England Club, based at Aorangi Park, Wimbledon, London, England, is a private members club.

All-England and annual
In the 1870s, at the bottom of the hill on land between the railway line and Worple Road, the All-England Croquet Club had begun to hold its annual championships.

All-England and series
Among the tournaments in this series is the venerable All-England Championships, first held in 1900, which was once considered the unofficial world championships of the sport.

All-England and matches
He began by stating that Sussex was publicly acknowledged as the " best county " in the 1827 season when they played against All-England in the roundarm trial matches, although the team's involvement in these matches had more to do with the fact that Sussex was the prime mover in the " roundarm revolution ".
All-England Elevens were invited to the Club and other matches of a similar nature arranged, which included the first ever visit of an Australian team to Scotland in 1878.
The All-England Championship title reigns were determined by professional wrestling matches.
Hinkly made his first-class debut against Surrey at The Oval in 1846, and played 43 matches between then and 1858, including two for Surrey: one against an All-England XI in 1848 and one against Nottinghamshire five years later.
Several great matches took place, particularly the challenge by Kent to take on All-England at the Artillery Ground on Monday 18 June.
In 1827, to test the validity of roundarm bowling, three All-England v Sussex roundarm trial matches were arranged, but no immediate decision was made about legalisation.
Hampshire twice defeated All-England but lost to Kent by 2 wickets in the three recorded matches before defeating Surrey in an unrecorded match.

All-England and against
Just after his eighteenth birthday in July 1866, Grace confirmed his potential once and for all when he scored 224 not out for All-England against Surrey at The Oval.
Inter-county cricket was popular throughout the 18th century although the best team, such as Kent in the 1740s or Hampshire in the days of the famous Hambledon Club, was usually acknowledged as such by being matched against All-England.
This concerned a controversy that arose in 1862 when Iddison and Anderson played for an All-England team against Surrey at The Oval and the Kent bowler Edgar Willsher was repeatedly no-balled for using an overarm action by an umpire whom, they claimed, had been appointed by Surrey specifically for that purpose.
In the first match of the season, Small scored 78 for Hampshire against All-England out of a team total of 146.
Beldham was invited to play for Hampshire in June 1785 against All-England at White Conduit Fields and that began his career in top-class cricket.
It is possible that Nyren was the player recorded as Nyland of Sussex who played for All-England against Dartford in 1759.
Under Nyren's leadership, Hampshire won the first two of these against All-England at Broadhalfpenny Down and Guildford Bason but then, without Nyren, they lost the third match against Kent at Bishopsbourne Paddock by 2 wickets.
Later in the season, in another match at Sevenoaks against All-England, Nyren and George Leer shared an unbeaten 5th wicket partnership of at least 50 to steer Hampshire to a six wicket victory.
In the 1744 English cricket season, Lord John challenged an All-England side to play against his Kent team and Kent won the game with one wicket to spare, largely thanks to Sackville himself taking a memorable catch to dismiss Richard Newland.

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