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Eric Hill (cricketer)

Eric Hill
Personal information
Full name Eric Hill
Born (1923-07-09)9 July 1923
Taunton, Somerset, England
Died 26 July 2010(2010-07-26) (aged 87)
Williton, Somerset, England
Batting style Right-handed batsman
Role Opening batsman
Domestic team information
Years Team
1947–51 Somerset
First-class debut 10 May 1947 Somerset v Middlesex
Last First-class 10 August 1951 Somerset v Northamptonshire
Career statistics
Competition First-class
Matches 72
Runs scored 2118
Batting average 15.92
100s/50s 0/6
Top score 85
Balls bowled 54
Wickets 1
Bowling average 55.00
5 wickets in innings 0
10 wickets in match 0
Best bowling 1/25
Catches/stumpings 30/–
Source: CricketArchive, 28 July 2010

Eric Hill DFC, DFM (9 July 1923 – 26 July 2010) played first-class cricket for Somerset County Cricket Club as an opening batsman between 1947 and 1951, later serving as captain of the second team, a long-serving committeeman for the county, and as a journalist covering cricket for the local newspaper, the Somerset County Gazette, and correspondent for The Daily Telegraph. In the Second World War, he was a navigator on daring and important reconnaissance missions for the Royal Air Force, and was decorated for his courage.

Hill was born at Taunton, where his parents ran a sweetshop. He was educated at Taunton School, where he was a day boy, and where one of his contemporaries, though a boarder, was the future cricket writer Alan Gibson. In a profile of Hill written in 1983, Gibson wrote: "Although we were much of an age, he was about twice my size." Hill played soccer and cricket for the school: "[He] had a passion for cricket, a quiet but deep passion, and his ambition was to play for Somerset," Gibson wrote.

Hill volunteered to join the RAF in 1941, and trained as a navigator. He joined No. 544 Squadron in March 1944, and flew 53 sorties in a de Havilland Mosquito with Frank Dodd, many involving long-range photo reconnaissance in the Arctic seas north and east of Scotland, and later over Germany and the Baltic Sea, and also flying diplomatic mail to Winston Churchill at conferences in Moscow, Athens and Yalta.


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