Richard Driver
{{Short description|Australian solicitor, politician and cricket administrator (1829–1880)}}
{{Infobox officeholder
| honorific-prefix =
| name = Richard Driver
| honorific-suffix = Jr.
| image = Richard Driver2.jpg
| alt =
| caption =
| constituency_MP = West Macquarie
| parliament = New South Wales
| majority =
| term_start = 1860
| term_end = 1869
| predecessor = Henry Mort
| successor = Edmund Webb
| prior_term =
| constituency_MP2 = Carcoar
| parliament2 = New South Wales
| majority2 =
| term_start2 = 1869
| term_end2 = 1872
| predecessor2 = Barnard Stimpson
| successor2 = Thomas West
| prior_term2 =
| constituency_MP3 = Windsor
| parliament3 = New South Wales
| majority3 =
| term_start3 = 1872
| term_end3 = 1880
| predecessor3 = Arthur Dight
| successor3 = Henry McQuade
| prior_term3 =
}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2014}}
{{Use Australian English|date=September 2014}}
Richard Driver (junior) (16 September 1829 – 8 July 1880) was a Sydney solicitor, politician and cricket administrator.
Driver was born in Cabramatta, New South Wales, son of Richard Driver, hotel-keeper, and his wife Elizabeth, née Powell. In 1859, he became a solicitor for the Sydney City Council and also carried out a practice in the Sydney police court.{{Australian Dictionary of Biography |last=Nairn |first=Bede |year=1972 |id2=driver-richard-3442 |title=Driver, Richard (1829-1880) |access-date=2021-06-01}}
Driver unsuccessfully contested three seats in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly in 1858 and was defeated again for East Sydney in 1859, but won West Macquarie in 1860 and held it to 1869. He was the member for Carcoar from 1869 to 1872 and Windsor from 1872 to his death in 1880.{{cite NSW Parliament |title=Mr Richard Driver (junior) (1829-1880) |id=606 |former=Yes |access-date=13 May 2019 }} He generally supported Henry Parkes, but turned down an offer of to be made minister of mines in 1872. He became Secretary for Lands in Parkes' 1877 government and as a cricket lover he provided £700 for improvements to the Sydney Cricket Ground and vested the ground in trustees in 1879, including himself as the representative of the New South Wales Cricket Association.
Driver played in New South Wales' first first-class cricket match against Victoria in Melbourne in 1856. He travelled with the team as the scorer, but when one of the selected team members failed to turn up, he played instead. Batting at No. 11, he made 18 in the first innings, helping to take the score from 9 for 40 to 76 all out. New South Wales won narrowly, and Driver was the match's equal highest scorer.Max Bonnell, Swift Underhand: John Kinloch and the Invention of Australian Cricket, Roger Page, Yallambie, 2014, chapter V.{{cite web |title=Victoria v New South Wales, 1855/56 |url=http://static.espncricinfo.com/db/ARCHIVE/1850S/1855-56/AUS_LOCAL/VIC_NSW_26-27MAR1856.html |website=Cricinfo |access-date=28 January 2022}} It was his only match for New South Wales. He umpired four of New South Wales' first-class matches between 1857 and 1877.{{cite web |title=Richard Driver as Umpire in First-Class Matches |url=https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/5/5832/Umpire_in_First-Class_Matches.html |website=CricketArchive |access-date=28 January 2022}} From 1860 to 1880 he was an important organiser of visits by English cricket teams and intercolonial matches. He was president of the New South Wales Cricket Association from 1870 to 1880.The Oxford Companion to Australian Cricket, Oxford, Melbourne, 1996, p. 149.
In 1871 Driver married Elizabeth Margaret Marlow. He died in the Sydney suburb of Randwick in July 1880 and is buried at Waverley Cemetery. A road built in the 1890s outside the Sydney Cricket Ground is named Driver Avenue in his honour.
See also
- {{cite Australasia|Driver, Richard}}
- Sydney Riot of 1879
- List of New South Wales representative cricketers
References
{{Reflist}}
{{s-start}}
{{s-par|au-nsw}}
{{S-off}}
{{s-bef|before= Ezekiel Baker}}
{{s-ttl|title= Secretary for Lands | years=March{{spaced ndash}}August 1877}}
{{s-aft|after= Thomas Garrett}}
{{s-par|au-nsw-la}}
{{succession box | title=Member for West Macquarie | before=Henry Mort | after=Edmund Webb | years=1860–1869}}
{{succession box | title=Member for Carcoar | before=Barnard Stimpson | after=Thomas West | years=1869–1872}}
{{succession box | title=Member for Windsor | before=Arthur Dight | after=Henry McQuade | years=1872–1880}}
{{s-end}}
{{Australian first-class cricket season leading run-scorers (1850–51 to 1899–00)}}
{{authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Driver, Richard}}
Category:Members of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly
Category:Burials at Waverley Cemetery
Category:19th-century Australian politicians
Category:Australian cricketers
Category:New South Wales cricketers