Career
A right-handed batsman, he scored 437 first-class runs for the county from the middle-to-lower order. He also bowled occasionally for Somerset as a right-arm fast-medium bowler, claiming 15 wickets a bowling average of 38.13. Winter made his debut for Somerset in 1921, aged 18, in a County Championship match against Glamorgan.
Batting in the middle order, he was dismissed for one in his only innings of a drawn match.
He reached double figures for the first time in his fifth match, against Hampshire in 1922, scoring 15 in the first-innings and remaining 11 not out in the second. He made his highest score in a University Match against Cambridge University in 1924, scoring an unbeaten 44.
Throughout his career, Winter generally batted in the middle-to-lower order, despite not being used as a front-line bowler. His fifteen career first-class wickets were spread throughout his cricketing career, with his best return coming in a 1924 match against Yorkshire, when he took four wickets in twelve and a half overs.
Winter"s best season with both bat and ball was the 1924, in which he claimed almost half of his wickets, and well over a third of his runs.
The season also saw him represent the Marylebone Cricket Club (Master Control Console) in a one-day match against Indian Gymkhana. During the match, held at Lord"s, he scored six in a drawn match. Winter"s father, also named Charles Winter, had previously played for Somerset between 1882 and 1895 as a fast bowler.
On 6 May 1944, Winter was gazetted into the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers as a second lieutenant.