While in Auckland, Lowry played club cricket and was selected to play for
Auckland against
Wellington in January 1918 as a wicket-keeper. Auckland lost, but Lowry scored 28 and 10 (only one Auckland player scored more) and made two catches and a stumping. He stayed in England after
being demobilised. His family arrived in England in 1920 in order that the three boys should go to Cambridge and the two girls to
finishing school. Before starting his first term at
Jesus College, Cambridge, Lowry toured North America with the
Incogniti cricket team in August and September 1920, a team that included the 19-year-old
Douglas Jardine. Despite his clear cricketing skills, Lowry struggled to establish himself in what was then an excellent
first-class team in his first two years at Cambridge, and did not earn his
Blue. He did, however, play some games for
Somerset, although his qualification to do so was obscure. The story is told that his birthplace was said to be Wellington, without mentioning that it was not
the Somerset market town but
the city in New Zealand; in fact, this was how Somerset had skirted the regulations for
Peter Randall Johnson before
World War I. In 1922–23 Lowry was selected to tour with
Archie MacLaren's
MCC team to
Australia and New Zealand. In the three matches against New Zealand he made 54, 61, 13 and 130, his first century in first-class cricket, in 167 minutes. In 1923 he began the season by scoring 161 in 170 minutes for
Cambridge University against
Lancashire, finally clinching his place in the university team. In his most productive season, playing for Cambridge, Somerset, and the
Gentlemen at
Lord's, he scored 1564 runs at an average of 35.54. Lowry was captain of Cambridge in 1924, leading them to victory in the annual match against
Oxford University at Lord's.
Digby Jephson wrote of his captaincy: "There was no fuss – no needless shifting of a well-placed field, no hesitation. One could feel in the pavilion the strong magnetic influence of one man over ten." He again toured North America with the Incogniti after the English season. Although Lowry achieved his
BA degree in history, he was more interested in the extracurricular activities that Cambridge University life offered than in study. He used to employ a
cramming tutor in third term to make up for the work he had not done in first and second terms. ==Return to New Zealand==