Albert Bird (17 August 1867 – 16 June 1927) was an English cricketer: a right-arm off-break bowler and lower-order right-handed batsman who played for Worcestershire for the first ten years of their existence as a first-class county.
Born in Moseley, Birmingham, Bird was 31 by the time he played in his - and indeed Worcestershire's - first County Championship match, against Yorkshire in May 1899.
Bird finally broke his duck in his fourth game, when he bowled Oxford University's Lionel Collins for 42.
1905 was a poor year for Bird as he could manage only eight wickets at over 32 runs apiece, and though in 1906 he took 35, from then onwards he gradually became less of a force in the Worcestershire team, playing his final game in July 1908 against Somerset.
Bird stood as umpire in one match: Worcestershire's game against Cambridge University in June 1903, although he was replaced by G Watts after the first day.