Background
He was born at Hardington Mandeville, Somerset and died at Oxford. Vassall was the son of the rector of Hardington Mandeville.
He was born at Hardington Mandeville, Somerset and died at Oxford. Vassall was the son of the rector of Hardington Mandeville.
He was educated at Charterhouse School and at Oriel College, Oxford and he played cricket for his college but not for the university side.
On leaving the university, Vassall became a schoolmaster at the Dragon School in Oxford, remaining there until his death, by which time he was joint headmaster. In the school holidays in 1902, 1903 and 1905, he played a few cricket matches for Somerset as a lower-order batsman and right-arm fast bowler. In his first game, against Surrey, he joined Peter Randall Johnson with Somerset needing 65 for victory with three wickets to fall and hit an unbeaten 27 to take his side to success.
But in his five other matches for Somerset over the next three years he only made 19 other runs and his only wicket came in 1905 when, as the seventh bowler used, he finally broke a stand of 261 by the Kent second wicket pair Ted Dillon and James Seymour.