Charles Harenc


Charles Joseph Harenc was an English lawyer and amateur cricketer in the mid-19th century. He played cricket for the Gentlemen of Kent, the Kent County Cricket Club teams of the 1840s and for MCC as well as a number of other sides and was regarded as the best Gentleman bowler of his era.

Early life

Harenc was born in 1811 at Foots Cray in Kent, the second son of Benjamin Harenc who owned Foots Cray Place, an 18th century neo-Palladian house built in the style of the Villa Rotunda which had been purchased by Charles' grandfather, also named Benjamin, in 1772. The Harenc family were originally Hugenot refugees from France and Harenc's grandfather established a silk mill at Foots Cray in 1775 and served as High Sheriff of Kent in 1777.
Charles was educated at Harrow School. He was a school monitor in his final year and played in the Harrow cricket team between 1826 and 1828, playing into two Eton v Harrow matches and captaining the side in his final year at school. From Harrow he went up to Christ Church, Oxford, matriculating in 1829 and graduating B.A. in 1833.

Cricket career

Harenc is known to have played for the Gentlemen of Kent in non-first-class matches as early as 1827, whilst he was still at school. He made his first-class cricket debut for the side in a match against MCC at Lord's in July 1830, going on to play for MCC in club matches later the same year. He played for the Gentlemen against the Players in 1831 and in two matches for Oxford University against MCC the following year.
Playing regularly throughout the 1830s and 1840s, Harenc made a total of 56 first-class appearances, most frequently for the Gentlemen of Kent or Kent sides, both before and after the formation of the first Kent County Cricket Club in 1842. He played in seven Gentlemen v Players matches during the 1830s and made his final first-class appearance in 1849. In club cricket he played regularly for MCC, Old Harrovians and I Zingari and was a member of the MCC Committee during the 1840s.
Harenc was a particularly successful bowler who was regarded as the best Gentleman bowler in the country during the early 1830s. He bowled fast underarm and took at least 130 wickets in his first-class career, twice taking ten wickets in a match.

Later life

Professionally Harenc was a barrister. He was called to the bar at the Inner Temple in London in 1837. He married Ann Maria Powis at Cookham in Berkshire in 1868 and died in December 1877 at Bedford aged 66. He was buried in Cheriton Road Cemetery in Folkestone. Three of his brothers, Henry, Edward and Archibald, also made appearances in first-class cricket.