Arthur George Jenkins was the first South Australian to umpire a cricket Test match.
Background
Jenkins was born at Woodville, South Australia on 7 February 1887. He was the son of a butcher, William Jenkins, who died of tuberculosis in 1895, and Jemima “Mina” Patten. Mina was born at Portuguese Noarlunga, South Australia, on 26 May 1861.
Career
William came from Yealmpton, Devon, England and arrived in Australia on 28 April 1858 on the "Storm Cloud". Her parents had traveled to Australia from Armagh, Northern Ireland aboard the "Admiral Boxer" on 21 August 1855. When the father died, the three surviving boys were farmed out to people who would take them.
Foreign Arthur, that proved to be an unpleasant experience.
They had four children, Ronald Arthur (1913-2003), Eileen Nellie (1914), Lorna Nellie (1916-1998), and Joyce Gwenyth (1918-2010). In his youth, Arthur Jenkins worked as an ironworker, but spent the last 33 years of his working life as a storeman.
As a boy, Jenkins was a mascot, drink waiter, boundary marker, and assistant scorer for Woodville Cricket Club. He became an umpire in 1910 and was rewarded with the official fee of two shillings per afternoon.
By 1933 he was lecturing junior umpires in the art of the role.
He umpired SACA matches well into his seventies, officiating in almost 800 games. Of those, some thirty were First Class matches, typically South Australia playing against Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria or Western Australia. Others included South Australia v.
Marylebone Cricket Club (1928/29 and 1929/30), South Australia v.
South Africans (1931), South Australia v. New Zealanders (1937), and Don Bradman"s XI v.
Vic Richardson"s XI (1937). Jenkins officiated at one Test match, the first between Australia and the West Indies, played at Adelaide from 12 December to 16 December 1930.