Career
He also appeared in first-class cricket for the Players (1883), T Emmett"s XI (1883), Lord Sheffield"s XI (1884), An England XI (1884) and L Hall"s Yorkshire XI (1891). Born in Scarborough, Yorkshire, England, Harrison began his career on 3 May 1883 at Lord"s for Colts of the North against Colts of the South where as an unknown 21-year-old he obtained nine of eleven wickets – all clean bowled – for fourteen runs. Harrison consequently came straight into a strong Yorkshire eleven when he dismissed Monkey Hornby in the first innings, and bowled out Lord Harris for 2 in the second.
Harrison soon became regarded as the fastest bowler seen for some time in first-class cricket, and in only his third first-class match against Kent he took eleven for 76 and bowled unchanged through both innings with Ted Peate.
With the aid of a number of very fiery pitches in Yorkshire and at Old Trafford, Harrison took eighty-eight wickets for Yorkshire at a total cost of only 1,049 runs. In the process Harrison surpassed 1882"s record-breaking wicket taker Peate as Yorkshire"s most destructive bowler and became the first bowler to take 100 wickets during the season of his initial first-class appearance.
Much was naturally expected of Harrison, but early in the 1884 season he suffered a bad arm injury when throwing from the deep field and suffered an amazing decline, taking only eighteen wickets in ten first-class matches. Harrison played only twice for Yorkshire that year, bowling eight wicketless four-ball overs, and moved to league cricket, Bowling Old Lane Community College, and Idle Community College (where he took 215 wickets at 915 each over three seasons).
Harrison did briefly reappear against Warwickshire (not then first-class) and Cheshire in 1887, but broke down when showing promise of his early form (which would have been tremendously valuable in such a dry season as 1887).
Harrison bowled regularly for Yorkshire in 1891 but his record was moderate, and lost his place to a young George Herbert Hirst (already a much better batsman even going in late) the following season. Between 1892 and 1898, Harrison returned to Bowling Old Lane Community College, for whom from 1883 to 1898 he took 878 wickets at nine each, and then took up umpiring. He umpired in Minor Counties matches from 1904 to 1907 and was a regular first-class umpire from 1908 until his retirement at the end of the 1924 season.