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Madame
Tussaud's
Lords Tour & the MCC
Tours of Lord's
give visitors the opportunity to go behind the scenes at MCC's historic
ground, where they can see many of the most famous sights in world
cricket.
Looking for an unusual gift for the cricket fan in your life? An
open-ended Tour ticket is the perfect present.
Each visitor will get approximately 100 minutes being shown around 'The
Home of Cricket', one of the sport's most iconic locations, by an expert
guide.
MCC History
Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) was founded in 1787 - a fact gathered from
a poster for a cricket match in 1837 announcing MCC's Golden jubilee.
Before then, however, aristocrats and noblemen played their cricket in
White Conduit Fields at Islington, London. Like shooting and
fox-hunting, cricket was considered a manly sport for the elite - with
plenty of gambling opportunities to boot. (Around £20,000 was bet on a
series of games between Old Etonians and England in 1751!)
As London's population grew, so did the nobility's impatience with the
crowds who gathered to watch them play. In pursuit of exclusivity, they
decided to approach Thomas Lord, a bowler with White Conduit CC, and
asked him to set up a new private ground.
An ambitious entrepreneur, Lord was encouraged by Lord Winchilsea to
lease a ground on Dorset Fields in Marylebone - the site of the modern
Dorset Square.
He staged his first match - Middlesex (with two of Berkshire and one of
Kent) versus Essex (with two given men) - on 31st May 1787. Thus the
Marylebone Cricket Club was formed. A year later, it laid down a Code of
Laws, requiring the wickets to be pitched 22 yards apart and detailing
how players could be given out.
Its Laws were adopted throughout the game - and MCC today remains the
custodian and arbiter of Laws relating to cricket around the world.
After a short stay at Marylebone Bank, Regent's Park, between 1811 and
1813, Lord's moved to a new rural ground - previously the site of a duck
pond - in St John's Wood in 1814. It remains MCC's home to this day.
The ground was soon a major success and attracted hordes of players and
spectators - forcing Lord to build a Pavilion and refreshment stalls.
In 1805, the dukes and earls were keen to see their sons play cricket
and so hired the ground for an Eton versus Harrow schools cricket match
- the start of a world-famous, and on-going, tradition.
In 1825, when Thomas Lord was 70, he sold the ground to a Bank of
England director, William Ward, for £5,000. Having provided the
Marylebone Cricket Club with a ground for 38 years, Lord retired and
then died seven years later - but his name lives on.
That same year (1825), the Pavilion - housing scorecards, records and
trophies - was destroyed in a fire. Work commenced immediately on a
replacement, which opened the following year.
At the time, the wicket was 'prepared' before a match by allowing sheep
to come in and graze on the grass. However, the Club subsequently
acquired its first mowing machine and appointed its first groundsman in
1864.
The original MCC colour of sky blue was replaced in Victorian times by
the famous red and yellow - now recognised the world over on ties,
cricket sweaters and hatbands.
Read more about the colours of MCCIn the 1870s, MCC decided it wanted to
get involved in county cricket, which was growing in popularity, and, in
1877, it invited Middlesex to adopt Lord's as its county ground - an
arrangement which continues over 125 years later.
MCC's next step towards establishing itself as cricket's most
influential body involved its development of a relationship with
Australia, where emigrants had started playing the game competitively.
So in 1877 James Lillywhite and an England side boarded a steamer and
travelled for eight weeks before playing Australia in the first official
Test match - although it was not until 26 years later, in 1903, that MCC
undertook official responsibility for England's tours 'down under'.
One of MCC's most famous players, Dr WG Grace, from Gloucestershire,
gave the Club even greater recognition through his monumental
performances and stature. A painting of him by A.S. Wortley was
presented to the Club in 1890 and still hangs in the famous Long Room.
In 1889, the foundation stone was laid for a new Pavilion, paid for by a
£21,000 loan from William Nicholson, who had made his fortune from
distilling gin.
A year later it was opened in time for the new season. It is now a
listed building and one of the most famous landmarks in world sport.
At the turn of the century, the Board of Control for Test Matches, the
Advisory County Cricket Committee and the Imperial Cricket Conference
were all set up to cater for the growth in domestic, imperial and other
international cricket. These bodies existed until 1968 when there was a
major reorganisation of cricket in England.
Since MCC was a private club it could not receive public funds, so it
set up a Cricket Council as the governing body of cricket and the Test
and County Cricket Board (TCCB) to administer the professional game. It
also converted its MCC Cricket Association into the National Cricket
Association (NCA) to look after the recreational game. As a result,
cricket started to receive financial help from the Government.
In the 1990s, the structure was changed again with the England & Wales
Cricket Board (ECB) taking over responsibility for all cricket in
England from the TCCB, NCA and Cricket Council.
MCC's role has contined to evolve in response to these changes. Today,
its key responsibilities include:
;; ensuring that Lord's remains a ground which is world-class, as well as
world-famous;
;; promoting cricket's Laws and safeguarding its 'Spirit';
;; promoting cricket to young people, for the long-term good of the game;
;; helping to increase cricket's international appeal - not least through
its teams' touring programmes; and
maintaining its position as the world's most active
cricket-playing club.
Click here to make a reservation

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