Baby Chakraborty, KalimNews, September 12, 2024, Kolkata: In 1915, while World War I raged across Europe, the Germans launched a heavy assault on Great Britain, leading to a rising death toll. Young men who had joined the military were dying in various regiments. Among them was Harry Lee, a cricketer from Middlesex, who served with the 13th Battalion of the London Regiment. From May 9, 1915, he fought at Auber’s Ridge, where he was presumed to have died in battle. His parents even held a funeral and memorial service for him. Yet, fifteen years after his presumed death, Lee played his first Test match against South Africa at Johannesburg on February 13, 1931.
Harry Lee was initially reported dead, but his story took a miraculous turn. During the war, his father was injured by a bullet and taken by German soldiers to a hospital in Valenciennes, France. After six weeks of treatment, he was handed over to the German Red Cross Society and later allowed to return to England in October. Harry Lee, too, managed to survive and returned home. He was discharged from military service in December and was awarded the British War Medal 1914-15, the Silver War Badge, and the Victory Medal.
While in the military, Lee sustained leg injuries that left his legs uneven in length, a disability he lived with for the rest of his life. Despite this, he continued to play cricket, scoring a century against Lancing College for the Royal Army Service Corps. After the war, Lee decided to move to India, where he became a cricket and football coach under the Maharaja of Cooch Behar.
In March 1918, Lee began playing first-class cricket in India for the Maharaja’s XI of Cooch Behar. In his first game, he took five wickets in the first innings and three in the second, although his team lost by one wicket. He continued to play cricket in India for several years, and India’s first Test cricket captain, CK Naidu, described him as “a very nice batsman.”
After the war ended in 1919, county cricket resumed in England, and Lee returned to play for Middlesex. He had a successful season, scoring 1,223 runs in 19 matches in 1919. The following season, he scored 1,518 runs in 23 matches at an average of 43.37. Over his career, he scored more than a thousand runs in 16 seasons of first-class cricket.
By 1931, Harry Lee was working at St. Andrews College in South Africa and Rhodes University in Grahamstown. At that time, several players of the Percy Chapman-led England team were injured. Lee, remarkably, was called up to play for England in the third Test. On February 13, 1931, Harry Lee made his Test debut against South Africa, 15 years after he had been declared dead.
Lee’s life is a testament to resilience and the unpredictable turns of fate, making his journey from the presumed dead in war to a Test cricketer an extraordinary tale in cricket history.