Walter Fellows (23 February 1834, in Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire – 23 July 1902, in Toorak, Melbourne) was an English amateur cricketer who later became a clergyman in Australia.
W. Fellows, while at practice on the Christ Church ground at Oxford in 1856, drove a ball bowled by Charles Rogers 175 yards from hit to pitch.
"[4] A note reproduced in an Australian newspaper in 1890 states that Fellows at the time was 5 feet 11 inches tall and weighed 17 stones 4 pounds.
[7] Fellows was ordained in 1858, and served as curate at Weedon and at Sidmouth,[1] before he emigrated to Australia in 1863 to become the first vicar of St John's Church, Toorak.
[8] In Australia, he played for the Melbourne Cricket Club; a report in an Australian newspaper in 1878 indicates that Fellows was discouraged from playing in major matches by his bishop, Charles Perry, but that the retirement of Perry brought about a more permissive attitude from the new incumbent, James Moorhouse, and Fellows was able to resume.