Background
Cranston was born in Aigburth, Liverpool, where his father Henry Selby Cranston was a dentist.
Cranston was born in Aigburth, Liverpool, where his father Henry Selby Cranston was a dentist.
He retired from playing cricket to concentrate on his career as a dentist. Ken Cranston played for the Lancashire Second XI in the Minor Counties Championship before World World War World War II He served as a dental officer in the Royal Navy during the war. He played cricket for the Royal Navy and Combined Services, and played club cricket in Lancashire after the war.
He also played hockey for the county.
Cranston was appointed as captain of Lancashire in 1947, replacing acting captain Jack Fallows. He made his first-class debut on 14 May as captain of Lancashire, in the match against Oxford University.
He was an all-rounder who bowled fast-medium and batted in the middle of the batting order. He was immediately successful in first-class cricket, and made his Test cricket debut in the Third Test against South Africa at Old Trafford on 5 July, less than eight weeks after his first-class debut.
In the Fourth Test at Headingley, he took four wickets in six balls (wwww) to end the South African second innings.
He was selected as vice-captain of the relatively weak Master Control Console side that toured to West Indies in 1947-1948. He captained England once, in the first Test against the West Indies at Bridgetown, as Gubby Allen had pulled a muscle on board the boat carrying them there. The match was drawn, but England ended up losing the four-match series 2–0.
Cranston led Lancashire to third place in the County Championship in 1947, with the team losing only one march.
The team was fifth in 1948. Cranston himself scored over 1,000 runs in each year, and took 84 and then 79 wickets.
He also played in two Gentlemen v. Players matches in 1947, at Lord"s and Scarborough, and again at Lord"s in 1948.
He resigned as captain of Lancashire at the end of his second season to concentrate on his dental practice in Liverpool.
He played for the North of England against the South in 1947, 1949 and 1950, and played his last first-class match in 1950. He was president of Lancashire County Cricket Club in 1993-1994, and was a president of the Lancashire Former Players" Association. He practised as a dentist in Aigburth until 1990.
He became the oldest living former English Test cricketer on 28 December 2006, on the death of Norman "Mandy" Mitchell-Innes.
Following his own death eleven days later in Southport, that distinction passed to Arthur McIntyre.