Background
Francis Edward, the son of The Reverend Edward Popham Spurway, was born in Winchester, Hampshire.
Francis Edward, the son of The Reverend Edward Popham Spurway, was born in Winchester, Hampshire.
He served in the 5th Battalion, Prince Albert"s (Somerset Light Infantry) during the First World War. In July 1915 he was assigned as a temporary Captain, which he then relinquished in April 1917, receiving a promotion from Second Lieutenant to Lieutenant at the same time. Later in 1917, he was given command of a Company, and was assigned an acting Captain.
In 1928, he relinquished his rank of Lieutenant, and became a Chaplain in the Royal Army Chaplains" Department, having an equivalent rank to Captain (Chaplain to the Forces 4th Class).
Spurway made his first-class cricket for Somerset in 1920, making his highest score for the county during the second innings of the match against Oxford University, scoring 35 runs. He played regularly for the county in 1920 and 1921, appearing 12 times across the two seasons.
He played less frequently in later years, with just seven appearances in the next three years. He did not play first-class cricket between 1925 and 1928, but returned to play four matches for Somerset in 1929.
He did not play in a modern wicket-keeper / batsman role, in which the wicket-keeper is generally considered a competent batsman, and instead was often part of the tail.
He scored 328 first-class runs at an average of 9.37, and took 29 catches and 14 stumpings.