Following the formal definition of
first-class cricket by the then
Imperial Cricket Conference (ICC) in May 1947, and particularly given ICC's statement that "the definition does not have retrospective effect," a number of cricket statisticians became interested in developing an agreed list of matches played before 1947 from which to compile accurate first-class records.
Roy Webber published his
Playfair Book of Cricket Records in 1951 and stated his view that first-class cricket records (i.e., for statistical purposes) should not include matches played before 1864. In this first edition, Webber accepted the records used by ''
Wisden Cricketers' Almanack, including those that summarised the career of W G Grace. In his second edition (1961), Webber challenged many existing views about match status and produced, inter alia
, an alternative career record for Grace that did not include some of the matches Wisden'' recognised as first-class. There was some support among cricket statisticians, including
Bill Frindall, for Webber's basic arguments but there were (and remain) differences of opinion about his commencement date and about the details of his recommended match list. The controversial cricket historian
Rowland Bowen wrote a lengthy critique of Webber's sources in 1961. Bowen then started
Cricket Quarterly (1963–70), devoted to cricket statistics, which included among its contributors some of the original ACS members. The ACS itself was founded by
Robert Brooke and Dennis Lambert, two of Bowen's contributors, by means of advertisements in the October 1972 issues of
The Cricketer and
Playfair Cricket Monthly. These attracted a nucleus of some 50 members who formed the association in 1973. ==Scope of activities==