Carlos Bertram Clarke OBE (7 April 1918 – 14 October 1993) was a West Indian international cricketer who played in three Test matches in 1939 as a leg-spin bowler.
[2][3] He remained in England during the war when three-day cricket was an impossibility due to the demands of labour for the military, Clarke was the leading bowler for the British Empire XI which played one-day matches across the country.
[5] After the war, Clarke played frequently though not regularly for Northamptonshire between 1946 and 1949, earning his county cap during the 1947 season which saw him take 83 wickets and make a career high score of 86.
Clarke trained as a medical student at Guy's Hospital during the war, qualifying as a doctor in 1944 and setting up a general practice in London four years later.
[11] Clarke carried on playing club cricket until he was 70, appearing largely for the BBC with whom he had contributed to the Caribbean Service.