In 1922, he took command of the re-formed Worcestershire and Oxfordshire Yeomanry Brigade, now serving as 100 Field Brigade, Royal Artillery. He retired from the Yeomanry in 1925.[3]
He died at his home in Earl's Croome, Worcestershire on 2 June 1929.[4]
Cricket
Coventry played his cricket for Worcestershire when it was still a minor county, that is, a county without first-class status. He was described as "a fair bat with a free style who can hit hard".[citation needed]
When the English tour to South Africa in 1888–89 was being put together, because the South Africans were considered weak, weaker players were selected for the English team. Coventry was one of those players selected. England still won the two games against representative South African sides easily, though Coventry did not feature prominently in either game: he batted at number 10 and did not bowl.[5] On the whole tour he scored 174 runs at an average of 10.23 with a highest score of 33 not out, and took three wickets. He played no first-class cricket in his career other than in those two Tests.[6]
Family
Coventry married, in St Peter's Church, Eaton Square, on 16 January 1900, Lily Whitehouse, younger daughter of Mr. FitzHugh Whitehouse, of Newport, USA.[7] His younger son Francis briefly succeeded as 12th Earl of Coventry.[8]
References
^"Obituaries in 1929". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. 1930. Retrieved 11 October 2022.
^"Small Talk". The Sketch. XII (155): 604. 15 January 1896. Retrieved 6 September 2023 – via Google Books.
^Atkin, Susanne (Spring 1926). "C.J. Coventry: Katia and Beyond". Friends of Croome News letter: 6–7.