George Shepstone
George Harold Shepstone was a South African cricketer who played in two Test matches in 1896 and 1899. He played first-class cricket for Transvaal from 1897–98 to 1904–05.
Shepstone was born in Pietermaritzburg and educated in England at Repton School, where he played in the First XI in 1892 and 1893.
Cricket career
Shepstone was an all-rounder – a right-handed middle-order batsman and right-arm fast-medium bowler – who made his first-class and Test debuts in the same match, for South Africa against England in 1895–96. Playing in only the second of the three-Test series, he scored 21 and 9 batting in the middle order, and took no wickets.Shepstone was one of only two century-makers in the Currie Cup in 1897–98, with 104 for Transvaal against Griqualand West. Opening the Transvaal bowling with Jimmy Sinclair, he also took 14 wickets in the competition, including 5 for 77 and 4 for 34 against Natal.
When England next toured South Africa in 1898–99, Shepstone played in the First Test, but was unsuccessful and South Africa lost. He was not selected for the Test team again.
Shepstone played in the Transvaal teams that won the Currie Cup in 1902–03 and 1903–04. In the Currie Cup match against Border in April 1903, he took 5 for 22 and, bowling throughout the second innings in partnership with Johannes Kotze, 5 for 17. He toured England in 1904 with the South African team, when no Tests were played, but owing to illness he played in only six of the 22 first-class matches.