[11] Single figure returns of seven, six, three and one followed, before a brief resurgence of 15 in 1849, however he was unable to take a wicket with the 48 deliveries of his final season in 1853.
[11] In 1851 Fenner was working as a tobacconist, living in Regent Street, Cambridge, with Mary and son Frank and daughters Emma, Frances, Ellen and Eliza.
[12] In the 1861 census he was aged 50 living with his wife Mary, son Frank and daughters, Emma, Frances, Ellen, Harriett and Jannette, in Emmanuel Street, Cambridge, his occupation given as "cigar merchant".
[13] By 1871 aged 60 he had moved to Bath, Somerset, with his wife Mary, daughters Emma, Fanny, Ellen and Jeanette and his sister Elisa, and was described as a hotel proprietor.
[14] He was still a hotel proprietor in Bath St Peter and Paul in the 1881 census, living with Mary and daughters Emma and Frances, and his sister Eliza.