Dudley Docker
Personal information | |||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Full name | Frank Dudley Docker | ||||||||||||||
Born | Norah, Lady Docker (daughter-in-law) (brother) | 26 August 1862||||||||||||||
Domestic team information | |||||||||||||||
Years | Team | ||||||||||||||
| Derbyshire | ||||||||||||||
FC debut | 22 August 1881 Derbyshire v Yorkshire | ||||||||||||||
Last FC | 5 June 1882 Derbyshire v Surrey | ||||||||||||||
Career statistics | |||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||
Source: CricketArchive, 20 June 2011 |
Frank Dudley Docker
Biography
Family background, early life and education
Docker was born at Paxton House, Smethwick, Staffordshire, the son of Ralph Docker and his second wife, Sarah Maria (1830–1890), daughter of horse dealer Richard Sankey. His first wife was Sarah's elder sister, Mary Ann (1826–1849), with whom he had three daughters. Following some years as a widower, Ralph married Sarah, with whom he had five sons and four daughters. Ralph Docker was a solicitor in practice at Birmingham and Smethwick who took on a large number of public appointments, including Coroner for North Worcestershire; at the time of his retirement, two days before his death in 1887, Ralph Docker was the oldest and longest-serving Coroner in England.[1] The Docker family's fortunes were set in motion by Thomas Docker, a Moseley brass founder; the descendants of his six sons and three daughters were established in the Midlands as professionals or gentlemen of private means. Despite Dudley Docker's own strong family loyalties, he was not given to ancestor-worship or devotion to genealogy; the notably brief pedigrees in the Burke's Landed Gentry editions of 1921 and 1937 in which he appears as head of the family of 'Docker of the Gables' contain numerous errors supplied by Docker himself- he provided erroneous information relating to the dates of his father's birth and death, his mother's death, and the name of his maternal grandfather.[1]
Docker attended King Edward's School, Birmingham but appears to have resisted formal schooling and left early. He was equally discontented when he went into his father's office to study law. In 1881 he left his father's firm and went into the varnish business with his brother William.[2]
Cricketer
In the 1881 season Docker played a first-class match for Derbyshire against Yorkshire which was drawn. He also played a match in the 1882 season against Sussex where he scored 25 in his first innings but Derbyshire lost by a few runs. From 1884 to 1886 he played a few games for Warwickshire, two games for Gentlemen of Warwick in 1887 and 1888 and one game again for Warwickshire in 1889.[3]
Paint and varnish
In 1886 a third brother
Death, family, and recognition
Docker married Lucy Constance, daughter of distinguished Birmingham legal figure John Benbow Hebbert (1809–1887), in 1895. They initially lived at Rotton Park Lodge, close to the Docker Brothers varnish factory, before moving to The Gables, at Kenilworth, and, in 1935 moved to Coleshill House, Amersham, Buckinghamshire, where Docker died. He had also acquired a flat in Berkeley Square Mayfair in 1923.[7] Their only child Bernard Docker succeeded his father in his business enterprises.
Docker was a substantial benefactor (£10,000) toward Ernest Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition in 1914–1916. In recompense for donations toward the success of the expedition, Shackleton named one of the lifeboats aboard the expedition vessel the Dudley Docker. The benefaction proved significant when the expedition vessel sank and the castaways were forced to use the Dudley Docker for survival.
In addition to Ludford, Docker's elder brother Ralph Docker also played cricket for Derbyshire.
References
- ^ R. P. T. Davenport-Hines, Cambridge University Press, 1984, p. 11
- ^ a b R. P. T. Davenport-Hines Dudley Docker: The Life and Times of a Trade Warrior Cambridge University Press 2004
- ^ Frank Docker at Cricket Archive
- ^ Economic and Social History: Industry and Trade, 1880–1960, A History of the County of Warwick: Volume 7: The City of Birmingham (1964), pp. 140–208. Date accessed: 14 February 2009
- ISBN 0-7509-4152-9.
- ^ Ephraim Maisel, Martin Gilbert The Foreign Office and Foreign Policy, 1919–26 Sussex Academic Press 1994
- R. P. T. Davenport-Hines, Cambridge University Press, 1984, p. 17
Robert Humm, "Dudley Docker and the railways", Journal of the Railway and Canal Historical Society, Vol 39 Part 3, No.230, Nov. 2017, pp 176–186.