How An ‘Obituary’ Published For English Cricket In 1882 Gave ‘The Ashes’ Its Name

Ira Shukla

I think we can all agree that Australia and England are possibly the most fierce and competitive cricketing sides on the planet.

Never the ones to leave a chance to assert their dominance, they have often been found saying things that didn’t go down too well with others. The same goes for their fans.

Daily Hunt

However, what happens when one of them loses? Their fans are much more subtle now (believe it or not) but there was a time when even people from their own country were savage towards them in case of a defeat. 

Prime example: This ‘obituary’ published by a journalist from London after England’s loss to Australia in a match in 1882. The Aussies won despite not being the favourites and it was one of the earliest instances of them showing the much famous ‘Australianism’.

Australia defeated England on its soil and writing a piece to announce that, journalist Reginald Shirley Brooks wrote a mock orbituary.

After this, a tour was arranged between the two countries in Australia and the then England captain  Ivo Bligh vowed to ‘regain those ashes’.

Wikipedia

England won 2 out of 3 Test matches and the captain was presented with an urn by a group of women from Melbourne and it was widely believed that it had the ashes of a bail inside. Bligh married one of those women- Florence Morphy – within a year.

Wikipedia

It was much later that the series started being called ‘The Ashes’ formally as the term was forgotten and remembered again, multiple times.

A little grim, but it does make for a great story, doesn’t it?

You might also like
As Virat Kohli Shifts To London, Here Are The Luxurious Homes Of Indian Cricketers
R. Ashwin Retires From International Cricket, His Net Worth Shows He’s Already Won the Game of Life
R Ashwin Announces Retirement From International Cricket & The Fans Are Realising What They Just Lost
6 Young Players Who Proved 2024 Is The Year Of Indian Cricket’s Future Stars
6 Recent Instances That Prove Australia Should Not Teach How To “Represent Oneself”
Meet Juhi Chawla’s Daughter, Jahnavi Mehta, The Heiress Who’s Acing IPL Like A Pro