Nevile Lubbock

Sir Nevile Lubbock KCMG (31 March 1839 – 12 September 1914) was President of the West India Committee and an English amateur cricketer.

He was a pioneer in the introduction of sugar cane-farming in Trinidad and in 1887 he was invited by the British Government to attend the first Colonial Conference.

[4] He was knighted in 1889[4] and became President of the West India Committee, a role he fulfilled from 1909 until 1914.

He played in non-first-class for Eton Ramblers and Gentlemen of West Kent[3][6] and was described in his Wisden obituary as "a good steady batsman".

[3] He died suddenly, aged 75, on 12 September 1914 at his home Oakley Park at Bromley Common in Kent.