Thereafter, the young members who had played their various sports only at their respective schools and at the small, uneven Holetown Elementary School's play ground, invited retired Police Captain Eustace Simmons and former West Indies cricketer George Carew, both Holetown residents, to be the senior mentors of the young club.
It was Tree who bought the four acre sugar cane field from Trents Plantation and gave it to the people of Holetown in perpetuity so that the "young men of the village could have somewhere to express themselves through sports".
[3] By 1964 Maple had produced professional cricketers in John Shepherd, (Kent and West Indies), Keith Boyce (Essex and West Indies), Wycliffe Phillips (Gloucestershire and Barbados), Glenroy Sealy (Scotland) and Malcolm McKenzie (Scotland).
[4] Maple won the inaugural BCA Twenty20 competition in 2008 and went on to compete in the 2009 West Indies Players' Association Twenty20 Club Champions League in Trinidad.
[6] Notable cricketers from Maple in recent years include Kemar Roach,[7] Kirk Edwards[5] and Barrington Yearwood.