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Charlie Macartney – Part 1 – with Peter Lloyd

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Manage episode 459516103 series 3586925
Content provided by Tom Ford. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Tom Ford or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Perhaps best remembered today as the swashbuckling, aggressive batsmen of the 1920s, Charlie Macartney's rise to the Australian Test team occurred well within the period of the so-called Golden Age. He was one of a handful of international cricketers who transcended the First World War, playing for his country both before 1914 and after 1918. Biographer Peter Lloyd—who was a previous guest on the Podcast in discussion about Monty Noble—sheds light on Macartney's early career, his cricketing pedigree and his battle with mental health.
DONATE: You can buy Tom Ford a coffee! Every donation helps with production and inspires Tom to keep the podcast going. You can donate from a little as $5. Visit: buymeacoffee.com/GoldenAgeOfCricket
ABOUT PETER LLOYD: Three biographies of Golden Agers in, and it appears that Peter Lloyd has found his voice. Pictorial narratives which were driven by his passion and commitment (do not be confused about that despite what others might suggest) and his fine writing were but a mere precursor to his true calling: in-depth stories about the lives of complex people who all happened to be extraordinarily capable cricketers. Charlie Macartney may have bridged the Golden Age and the post-Great War eras but he was a force of nature on the sporting field from a young age. His biography goes so much further than has been attempted before. It is, as one critic has already suggested, as revealing about global migration and colonial and early 20th Century Australia as it is about the individual known throughout the annals of cricket as the 'Governor General'.
CREDITS: Presenter & Producer: Tom Ford
All music used in podcast comes from the University of California Santa Barbara’s remarkable collection of wax cylinder’s from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, which are free to download and use. You can donate to the upkeep of these recordings via their website.

  continue reading

28 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 459516103 series 3586925
Content provided by Tom Ford. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Tom Ford or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Perhaps best remembered today as the swashbuckling, aggressive batsmen of the 1920s, Charlie Macartney's rise to the Australian Test team occurred well within the period of the so-called Golden Age. He was one of a handful of international cricketers who transcended the First World War, playing for his country both before 1914 and after 1918. Biographer Peter Lloyd—who was a previous guest on the Podcast in discussion about Monty Noble—sheds light on Macartney's early career, his cricketing pedigree and his battle with mental health.
DONATE: You can buy Tom Ford a coffee! Every donation helps with production and inspires Tom to keep the podcast going. You can donate from a little as $5. Visit: buymeacoffee.com/GoldenAgeOfCricket
ABOUT PETER LLOYD: Three biographies of Golden Agers in, and it appears that Peter Lloyd has found his voice. Pictorial narratives which were driven by his passion and commitment (do not be confused about that despite what others might suggest) and his fine writing were but a mere precursor to his true calling: in-depth stories about the lives of complex people who all happened to be extraordinarily capable cricketers. Charlie Macartney may have bridged the Golden Age and the post-Great War eras but he was a force of nature on the sporting field from a young age. His biography goes so much further than has been attempted before. It is, as one critic has already suggested, as revealing about global migration and colonial and early 20th Century Australia as it is about the individual known throughout the annals of cricket as the 'Governor General'.
CREDITS: Presenter & Producer: Tom Ford
All music used in podcast comes from the University of California Santa Barbara’s remarkable collection of wax cylinder’s from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, which are free to download and use. You can donate to the upkeep of these recordings via their website.

  continue reading

28 episodes

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