I'm going to expand on the wonderful world of Yorkshire captains in the 1920s, because it is actually quite entertaining. (Also my alternative train journey activity is "learning" Italian on duolingo and I just can't be bothered)Interestingly, it appears not to have happened post war up until Glamorgan managed it.
Arthur Lupton was the (amateur) "captain" of Yorkshire for 3 seasons from 1925 through 1928. This is despite him being old enough to have fought in the Boer War, and having only previously played a single game for Yorkshire in 1908.
He didn't take a single wicket for Yorkshire, and his overall First Class batting average (which includes matches like "Gentlemen of England v Cambridge University") was just 10.34.
Also, by all acounts most of the "captaincy" was done by Wilfred Rhodes, so Yorkshire managed to go two seasons unbeaten while carrying a captain who couldn't bat, didn't bowl, and made no significant tactical contribution.
His predecessor was Geoffrey Wilson, who won the County Championship three times in a row while averaging just 16 and not bowling. He was also 16 years younger than Lupton, who replaced him. They did lose at least one game in each of those seasons though.
Lupton was replaced by William Worsley (a Baronet) after an affair regarding the idea of appointing the professional Herbert Sutcliffe as captain that was controversial enough to merit its own Wikipedia page.
Yorkshire captaincy affair of 1927 - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org