A Singular Honour (Part 5)

A Singular Honour (Part 5)

Percy Brereton Colquhuon 1866-1936

 

In tumultuous political times in NSW during the first two decades of the twentieth century, on the conservative side of politics, lawyers with established connections were seen as ideal managers of parliamentary business and as representatives of the people.

 

 

Australian political parties of the first decade of the new century, however, were fluid rather than exclusively tribal entities. Amalgamations, alliances, mergers, coalitions were all common. Changes of name and various iterations abounded.

 

 

Candidates for the conservative parties in NSW benefited from friendships, alliances and connections. Sporting ability was considered especially useful. Birth into well-connected families was a distinct advantage.

 

Charles Gregory (known as Greg) Wade (1863-1922) led the Liberal Reform Party for ten years after Joseph Carruthers’ resignation because of ill-health. Carruthers himself had been a useful cricketer and was associated with the Sydney University Cricket Club. A Gladstonian Liberal, Carruthers had revitalised the Liberals by adopting some of the ideas of the right wing Peoples’ Reform League. Wade became the seventeenth Premier of NSW 1907-10. David Clune, pre-eminent historian of NSW politics, describes Wade as “a man of poor judgement and inflexible temperament . . . which cost him dearly at the 1910 election.”

 

Before the 1913 election, Wade, now in Opposition, sponsored a distinguished sportsman who stood for and won the newly-created seat of Mosman.

 

Wade and his new parliamentary colleague shared a number of similarities. Both were lawyers before entering Parliament. Both were from the comfortable, ruling classes. Born three years after his leader, Percy Brereton Colquhuon (1866-1936) enjoyed established connections in Sydney society as the son of English-born George Colquhuon (1830-1901), NSW Crown Solicitor from 1894.

Colquhuon had been educated by a tutor at home in Maitland and then, when his family moved to Sydney, at St Paul’s Redfern, a school aligned with St Paul’s Church of England in the same suburb.  At Newington College Stanmore 1881-85 he captained both the 1st XI and 1st XV. In his early years he came under the influence of the Headmaster Joseph Coates (1844-1896) a towering figure of the Sydney University Cricket Club who had captained the NSW Sheffield Shield side, taking 76 extraordinarily cheap wickets in first class cricket. Coates’ ability as a sportsman endeared him to the boys at Newington and then at Sydney High School where he was also Headmaster.

 

 

Colquhuon played cricket and Rugby for Sydney University from 1885 but was not an undergraduate except for the two years he was enrolled in Arts I, 1885 and 1891 (when he was an evening student and also resident at St Paul’s College). Qualifications for the University sides were loose. Colquhuon took advantage of liberal interpretations while working by day for many of these years as an articled clerk to his father at Allen and Allen’s legal firm. He was admitted as a solicitor without taking a degree in 1891.

 

Although he had been a dominant cricketer at Newington, Colquhuon saw cricket as a mere pastime after school. He played irregularly in the University 1sts of 1885 and 1886 as a lower order batsman, before answering the call in February 1896 for one last and relatively successful appearance in 1st Grade against Cumberland when he scored 19 not out. This was his only game for the Club in the recently instituted ‘Electoral Competition’ and, thus, this was his only 1st Grade appearance. The team was short of numbers and Colquhuon happened to be in Sydney. Another Newington old boy, the former Test player, Tom Garrett, was captain. Colquhuon was available on the three Saturdays so he played  at the SCG, the ground on which he had won the 220 yards handicap race at the University sports in 1891.

University had been having a dismal season. Bowled out for 30 in Round 1 by Easts, the batting faltered in almost every game. In this game, University’s 151 owed much to Roley Pope, the former Test cricketer, who made 52. Colquhoun’s 19 was third highest score. But when Cumberland batted, Frank Iredale made 124 and his side won comfortably. Colquhuon was needed no more but things went from dismal to chaotic in the next game when three University players were ‘absent’ in the side’s 2nd innings.

 

 

In rugby Colquhuon excelled. He was an outside back in the formidable University Rugby sides especially in the 1880s. He represented NSW in 33 games including some as captain. Connections with the Wade family were established. One of Greg Wade’s brothers, Leslie (1864-1915), also played rugby for NSW in the same years as Colquhuon.

 

“In his day, Mr Colquhuon was probably the most notable all-round athlete in Australia,” observed the Newingtonian in September 1918.

 

He represented NSW 55 times in tennis. When his time in rugby and tennis concluded, he played for the State in lawn bowls and golf.

 

While playing tennis that he met Mabel Ann Shaw (1867-1914), a second cousin of George Bernard Shaw. (Mabel’s grandfather, John Shaw, was GBS’s great uncle.) Miss Shaw was Colquhuon’s doubles partner when they won the NSW Championships in 1896. They were married on 30 April 1897. In November 1909, Colquhuon, by then President of the Lawn Tennis Association of Australasia, refereed the first Davis Cup to be held in Sydney when Australasia defeated USA 5-0.

 

Percy Colquhuon won the Mosman seat for the Liberal Reform Party at the NSW election held on 6 December 1913 although he had lived in the electorate for only a short time. The  Labor Party under the leadership of William Holman was returned to government reasonably comfortably with 49 seats in the 90-seat Legislative Assembly.

 

Because of their ages, neither Wade nor Colquhuon served in the Great War (Wade was 51 at the beginning of the War and Colquhuon was 48), both had served as Senior NCOs in the Cadet Units at King’s and Newington and Colquhuon served as a Lieutenant in the part-time 1st NSW Infantry in the 1890s, another factor to give him credibility among the conservatives.

 

When the next NSW election was held on 24 March 1917, Colquhuon again stood for Mosman as a representative of the new party, Liberal Nationalist, which won in a landslide with 52 seats to the 33 held by “Honest John” Storey’s Labor Party. Colquhuon, back in government in the Holman administration, was Chairman of  Committees. In such an important role, his debating skills and knowledge of constitutional law were invaluable.

 

In 1920 with the introduction of proportional representation, individual constituencies were absorbed into an agglomeration of approximately five former seats. Mosman became part of the seat of Middle Harbour. Colquhuon left politics. Labor was back in power with a majority of one. Wade had returned to Australia and was a Justice of the Supreme Court of NSW until his death in 1922. Colquhuon, now a widower of seven years, concentrated on his legal practice until 1935, played tennis for Mosman, was a trustee of Taronga Zoo, surfed, grew flowers at his Mosman home where died in 1936.

 

The two party system threw up contrasts and conflicts, often based on backgrounds and formal education. Sport united briefly and occasionally but distinctions remained.

 

For all that, Percy Colquhuon remains one of the more multi-talented sportsmen ever to enter NSW politics.

And he played just one 1st Grade game in the competition that came to be known as ‘Grade Cricket’.

 

A version of this article appeared in the ‘Southern Highlands Newsletter’ in 2018 and I am grateful for the editor’s invaluable assistance.

 

James Rodgers

 

 

SUCC Trivia Night

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Date: Thursday September 30
Time: 7:30pm - 9:00pm
Format: Online Trivia via Zoom
Teams: Teams of 4 to be nominated by team captain prior to 12pm September 25 or participants can individually register to be allocated to a group by event admin
Admins: Admins are AJ Grant, Max Hope & Ash Cowan
Prizes: Prizes and bragging rights on offer

Registration opens from next week!

Any questions or queries get in touch with AJ Grant:
aj-grant@hotmail.com

A Singular Honour (Part 4)

A Singular Honour (Part 4)

  WHO FACED THE FIRST BALL? WCF BURFITT or EH BURKITT (1st Grade cap #2)?

 

127 years after he played his only game in 1st Grade for Sydney University, a player whose name has been confused for so many years was found.

 

Walter Charles Fitzmaurice Burfitt was the name of the player who, it has been thought, opened the batting in University’s initial 1st Grade game in Electorate Cricket (later called ‘Grade Cricket’ now ‘Premier Cricket’) in 1893. Burfitt was eventually a distinguished surgeon who, as an undergraduate, resided at St John’s College during the 1890s. He had been a cricketer at school (Riverview) and it would have been reasonable to conclude that it was he who played this game.

But, in various places, the name was given as either ‘BURFITT’ or ‘BURKITT’.

There wasn’t much to go on and Walter Burfitt was listed in the stories of the Sydney University Cricket Club as the more likely player.

 

Why would this be important? At best, it sounds trivial, obscure, irrelevant.

Except that, whoever this was, appears to have been the University batsman who faced the first ball bowled in University’s 1st innings of the first game of Electorate Cricket on the first day (of a three-day game) between University and Glebe at Wentworth Park on 7 October 1893.

Historically, it’s reasonably important to know just who this was.

 

His partner who walked out with him to the polite applause of the 2000 spectators after University had dismissed Glebe for 128 was ‘H Moses’. Harry Moses? The Test cricketer who played six Tests 1886-1892 and who played briefly for University? No, this was Henry C Moses, Harry’s nephew who has also been difficult to track down. After this, he played one more match for University (3 innings, 36 runs); he dosen’t appear to have been an undergraduate; he disappeared from the Club. ‘Burfitt’ or ‘Burkitt’ is caught from the bowling of Andy Newell for 10, doesn’t bat in the 2nd innings and plays no more.

So, Burfitt or Burkitt?

 

More research reveals…

EH Burkitt was also a Medical student at Sydney University about this time although Burkitt was eight years older than Burfitt.

In 1892, EH Burkitt had been awarded one of the first twelve University Blues for Rugby. A little more research uncovers these facts:

 

Edmond Henry Burkitt was born on 14 November 1867 in the village of Charlton in Wiltshire, England, son of Reverend WE Burkitt, and he was educated at Saugreen preparatory school at Bournemouth and then at Hurstpierpoint, the Anglo-Catholic College in West Sussex. He and his three brothers emigrated to Australia in 1886. From 1887 until 1890, he was employed to teach at The Kings School Parramatta.

Why Kings?

Well, WR Burkitt was Senior Master at Kings from 1868 until 1886. He was a player with the Wallaroo Rugby Club in Sydney and he introduced Rugby Football to Kings in 1870. He is well remembered at Kings. One of their Houses is named Burkitt and the Burkitt Shield has been awarded as a senior prize since 1910.

Were WR Burkitt and EH Burkitt related?

 

Edmond Burkitt entered St Paul’s College at Sydney University and enrolled in Medicine in 1891.

‘Burkitt’ played 2nd Grade cricket for University (5 innings for 29 runs) and then, in December 1892, he scored 11 in University’s mammoth score against the old Warwick Club. Then in October 1893, is it Burkitt, not Burfitt, who opens the batting in that historically significant game?

EH Burkitt was Senior Student at St Paul’s in 1894; graduated MB ChM in 1896; married Amy Theodora Hungerford in 1898; practised medicine for a few years at Coonamble before spending the rest of his life at Dubbo where he and his wife raised three daughters and a son. They name the family home ‘Westbury’, the name of the town near Charlton where Edmond was born and where the famous chalk figure of a horse is cut into the hillside.

 

At the age of 48, Dr Burkitt enlisted in the 1st AIF in 1916 and sailed to France with the 4th Australian Field Ambulance and was eventually promoted to the rank of Major. During the horrific slaughter in France, his care for the wounded was much appreciated by the soldiers.

When he returned home in late 1917, he resumed medical practice, was President of the Dubbo Branch of the RSL, an Alderman on the Dubbo Council and an enthusiast for a number of sports, including cricket. When he died of inoperable cancer in 1925, grief was widespread.

One of his obituarists mentioned that Dr Burkitt had played his last games of cricket the previous season when he would have been 56.

At the Sydney University Cricket Club, there was no obituary. He was forgotten, not even known by his correct name.

Until now…Edmond Henry Burkitt faced the first ball on the first day of the first match in Electorate Cricket that Sydney University ever played.

And this was his only game in 1st Grade.

 

James Rodgers

A Singular Honour (Part 3)

A Singular Honour (Part 3)

                                                                         JOHN WALTER FLETCHER

                                                                                 1847-1918

                                                  

                                                                   “The father of football in Australia”

.

 

What is the connection with cricket’s famed Ashes and with the establishment of Football (Soccer) in Australia?

One man, John Walter Fletcher, who also played just one 1st Grade game with SUCC.

 

             

 

              In late 1875,  a recently arrived Englishman, John Walter Fletcher, was employed as an Assistant Master in a country school in NSW Southern Highlands. Fletcher was a graduate of Oxford, and an enthusiastic sportsman who immediately introduced Tennis to the school and constructed what is thought to be the first tennis court in Australia, at Oaklands. Fletcher introduced the study of History and Geography to the school but he quickly became disillusioned with its administration. Numbers were small. The boys were rough and dishevelled and bullying was in much evidence. In addition, the Headmaster’s insistence on religious instruction in the Roman Catholic faith was at odds with Fletcher’s adherence to the Church of England. By 1876, Fletcher had moved to Sydney and within a few years, he established his own school, Coreen College, firstly at Bondi, then at Katoomba.

 

Fletcher had been born in London on 11 May 1847 and christened John Walter Rolt Fletcher. But Fletcher was his mother’s surname (Harriett Amy Fletcher 1823-1904) and Rolt was his father’s surname (Sir John Rolt, 1804-1871, Member of Parliament and Attorney General for England). JWR Fletcher was born out of wedlock, product of a brief liason between the unmarried Harriett and John Rolt who was at the same time married to Sarah Bosworth. At some stage, JWR Fletcher  dropped Rolt from his name and he seems to have had little to do with his father. JW Fletcher was well educated firstly at Redhill School in Surrey and then Cheltenham Grammar School before he went up to Pembroke College Oxford University in 1865, aged 17. He majored in History and graduated with a class II degree, BA, in 1869 and MA (for which he paid rather than studied for) in 1871. In 1867, he was admitted to Inner Temple beginning pupillage as a barrister. At Oxford, he was a one-mile runner, earning his blue for Athletics, and he played cricket for ‘an Oxford XI’ (not the 1st XI) in minor matches.

 

 In 1877, Fletcher married Anne Marian Clarke (1851-1936) who had been born in Dublin and she eventually managed her husband’s boarding school at Katoomba. It was Anne Fletcher who, in 1883, embroidered a red velvet bag with a design created by the Yorkshire-born artist, William Blamire Young (who later taught at Katoomba College). This velvet bag contained the urn presented to Ivo Bligh’s English cricket team following their victory over Australia in 1882-83. The urn contained the ashes of a bail, presented to Bligh at Rupertswood, home of Sir William  and Lady Janet Clarke. A letter from Ivo Bligh to Anne Fletcher is still at Lords along with the legendary ‘Ashes’.

 

 Fletcher  also played cricket in Sydney. During the 1877-78 season, just after leaving Mittagong, he made runs regularly and reliably (128 at 21.3) for Sydney University’s 1st XI before ‘Grade cricket’ commenced. On unpredictable wickets and with rough-hewn implements, he played patiently  with an admirably straight bat. He kept wickets and occasionally bowled his ‘underhand slows’, although the writer of the Club’s 13th Annual Report admonished him for bowling no balls at practice from 18 yards.

 

 

 After this one season with University, Fletcher transferred to the Albert Club, batting low in the order and bowling occasionally. In November 1881, he scored 39 against his old club, and in University’s rapid innings of 328, he was given the ball as an afterthought. In 8 overs of varied bowling, he took 6 for 36 including the wickets of three Test players. Admittedly, Sam Jones and Reginald Allen  had put on 231 for the 1st wicket before Fletcher was summoned to the bowling crease  with his underarm lobs, but Jones hit a catch to mid off,  Allen was caught and bowled and then Garrett, Teece, Powell and Wright all succumbed to catches from Fletcher’s erratic offerings. There is record of him playing in Hobart in January 1881 for ‘EW Wallington’s XI’ against Hobart Town in a two day match when he made 23 and kept wickets. In December 1882, an unlikely selection placed him in the ‘NSW Squad’ for the Intercolonial game against Victoria in Melbourne. He was not selected in the XI but was probably the thirteenth man and acted as scorer. He did not come as close to selection for NSW ever again.

 

             

 

  Fletcher’s cricket career had one final resurrection.

 

 When JW Fletcher walked onto the Association Ground (the SCG) on 3 March 1894, he was resuming a career with the Sydney University Cricket Club that had begun and apparently ended 16 years previously. He is cap number 25 among the Club’s 1st Graders and the oldest 1st Grade debutant in Grade cricket for the Club.

How did a 46 year old come to play in a side, in this first season of ‘Electoral Cricket’ or Grade Cricket, that included  eight undergraduates half his age? The depression of the 1890s had forced Fletcher to close his school, Katoomba College, and to reinvent himself as a barrister now living in Sydney and once more available to answer Garrett’s call to play for his old Club.

     

 

This was the first season of ‘Electoral Cricket’ but while other clubs’ players represented their electorates, University’s players were permitted to play for the University even though their connections with the institution may have been tenuous. So, when Tom Garrett called Fletcher into the team, he joined eight undergraduates and two other veterans. RC Allen, aged 35, was making his only appearance for the Club for the season. He had played one Test Match in 1886-87 and had been playing for University since 1876. Tom Garrett was also 35. He had played for University since 1873 when he was 15 years old and he had since  played 19 Test Matches. Fletcher, a graduate but not from Sydney University, was an elderly 46 years of age.

 

In this three day game played over three Saturdays, play was delayed by wet weather until 4pm on the first day. Paddington batted first ”to the delight of the Varsity men.” Harrie Wood took 5 cheap wickets. Garrett took 3. Fletcher took 2 catches and Paddington was dismissed for 62. When play continued on 10 March, University resumed  at 0 for 2  but was all out 54 . Fletcher, batting at eight, made just 3 but this was fifth highest score in a dismal innings. In conditions that favoured batting on the third Saturday, Paddington made 9-314. Garrett who bowled 39 productive overs (5-84) threw Fletcher the ball but his five overs cost 30 without success and he had played his first and last game in ‘Grade’ cricket.

In November 1893, Fletcher had been admitted to the NSW Bar. For one school term he returned to his original profession when he served as ‘locum tenens’ at the Shore School in North Sydney. For 16 years he was then a police magistrate in various NSW country towns until he retired in 1914 and lived in Neutral Bay where he died in 1918. He was seemingly forgotten and unrecorded by  his first and last cricket club, Sydney University.

 

If this was all that he ever did, JW Fletcher could be said to have led a full life. But that’s not all.

 

 

One of John and Anne’s sons was John William Fletcher (1884-1965), who, like his grandfather Sir John Rolt, was a parliamentarian, Nationalist member for Port Curtis in Queensland from 1920, when he won the seat from the sitting ALP member, George Carter, to 1923 when Carter retook the seat. While the University Club’s Report of 1878 had predicted incorrectly that John Walter Fletcher would be an intercolonial player, John William did represent his State. In 1909-10, he played three games for Queensland, twice against NSW and once against Victoria. In his second game, in Sydney, he made a stylish 47 but his other five innings produced only 50 runs and the game against Victoria in Brisbane in February 1910 was his last first class game (and Bert Ironmonger’s first, in a career that lasted until 1936 when he was aged 55). He was appointed OBE in 1941.

Of John and Anne’s daughters, one, Nora Kathleen, worked in England and France during the Great War in charge of the first batch of Red Cross nurses, matron in chief of the British Red Cross. She was awarded the CBE in 1920. Another daughter, Anne Judith (1886-1971), was a well-known photographer with studios in George St in Sydney.

 

Finally, this remarkable man, John Walter Fletcher, whose career illustrates much about Australian colonial life, is known as “the father of Football in Australia.” Philip Mosely has written a significant history, Soccer in Australia 1880-1980, and a biographical sketch of John Walter Fletcher. Mosely reports that on 3 August 1880, Fletcher was elected honorary secretary of the committee set up to form an ‘Association Rules’ football club. He then arranged for the first match to take place eleven days later. Mosely writes:

                                  “Although others had been involved in the foundation years of soccer in Australia, Fletcher stands central to the key developments.”

On Saturday 14 August 1880, on Parramatta Common, the first organised game was played between a team representing The Kings School Parramatta and ‘The Wanderers’. When the Western Sydney Club joined the A League in 2012, it was named ‘The Wanderers’. In 1999, John Walter Fletcher was inducted into the Football Hall of Fame.

 

He first taught in Australia at Mittagong, where he introduced Tennis to Australia.

 

He was a schoolmaster, a barrister, a cricketer, an athlete, a footballer, and….the father of football in Australia.

James Rodgers

A Singular Honour (Part 2)

A Singular Honour (Part 2)

 Second, in a series about those who played one 1st Grade game  for SUCC. 

 

                                           Ernest Alexander BARDSLEY 1871-1960.

Why is the oval at Shellharbour on NSW’s south coast called ‘Bardsley Park’?

When Sydney University played the last game of the 1894-95 season against Manly at the University Oval, a 24 year old Medical student, Ernest Alexander Bardsley, took the field for his one and only 1st Grade game (SUCC 1st Grade cap no40).

He was one of twenty nine players selected in the Club’s 1st Grade side during a dismal season when University won only three games and finished eighth of the twelve clubs. University’s venerable captain, 36 year old Tom Garrett, had enjoyed a period of dominance, averaging over 50 with the bat. He was also easily the most successful bowler. As captain of the NSW team, he had continued to score runs regularly but his teammates, in both the NSW and University teams, floundered.

 

The game on University Oval was of little consequence or interest. At the SCG, Paddington defeated South Sydney by 3 wickets to win the Premiership. At University, the home team defeated Manly who finished eleventh. On the first day of play, Garrett’s 7 for 58 from 20 overs cut a swathe through the batting and his brisk 39 saw University to a promising 2 for 73 at stumps.

Next Saturday, 27 April, the season concluded with a flurry of runs. Bardsley, batting at number five, combined with his fellow medical student Henry Delohery in a useful partnership before Bardsley was bowled by A Hayes for 14. Delohery’s 76 was almost half his runs for the season but as the score mounted and University batted on, Manly’s bowling grew more ragged. Another medical student, in his first year of studies, Gother Clarke who batted at number nine, scored a rousing 92 on his nineteenth birthday.

Two months before that game, Bardsley had scored 77 not out for the 3rd Grade side against Shore School in a Wednesday afternoon game. He had also been playing in the local competition where he scored runs regularly for Macdonaldtown along with his older brother, John. If he played any other games for University, their details have flown away with the winds.

And four months before this unlikely 1st Grade debut, Bardsley had been selected in the squad of ‘Sydney Juniors’ that was to play against Stoddart’s touring English Test team at the SCG. The ‘Juniors’ were not necessarily younger players but they were made up of those playing in the local competition bolstered by some of those who would go on to represent Australia with distinction. 17 year old Victor Trumper scored 67 and 20 year old Monty Noble made an undefeated 152 in the Juniors’ imposing 9 declared for 443. Stoddart’s side limped to 6 for 151 and were happy to depart. Bardsley, however, did not appear. For some reason, he was unavailable and he returned to the Macdonaldtown side without the benefit of having faced the seasoned English bowlers.

After 1895, he appears to have played lower grades for Glebe although this is uncertain. References simply to ‘Bardsley’ could have meant one of a number of players with that surname. His family was in all likelihood not related to the other Bardsleys from Glebe who produced the Australian player, Warren, and his brother, ‘Mick’, who played for SUCC and NSW.

Ernest’s studies began to falter as he spent two years, 1896 and 1897 in Medicine IV before setting off for Scotland where, by 1900, he had achieved a triple licentiate from the Universities of Edinburgh and Glasgow. Back in Sydney, he was Registered Medical Practitioner 2257, Dr EA Bardsley.

In August 1902, Dr Bardsley married Annie Mary, known as ‘Lena’ (nee Rabone) 1880-1924, the youngest daughter of Reverend William Thomas Rabone (who had previously been a missionary in Tonga) and Ellen Rabone 1842-1918.

Lena’s grandfather, Reverend Stephen Rabone, had been the first Chairman of Council of Newington College in 1865.

Dr Bardsley and Lena were to have three sons of whom the eldest, Eric John, known as ‘Rick’ (1903-1958) was to gain both fame and notoriety.

The Rabones were devout Wesleyans and the Bardsleys worshipped at the Church of Christ Tabernacle in Metropolitan Road Enmore where the church organ was installed in 1910 by John and Ernest in memory of their parents.

 

The Bardsley family had owned grocery and produce stores in Glebe and in the city in the second part of the nineteenth century. John Edward Bardsley (1829-1909) married Janet Buchanan (1833-1906) and Ernest Alexander was the youngest of their six children, three of whom died in infancy. The family also adopted Robert Ewan Alexander Jeffrey (1884-1966), thirteen years younger than Ernest and later Managing Director of ‘Bardsleys Ltd.”

Ernest was sent to Sydney Boys’ High School just after it had been opened, before joining his brother, John Edward, in January 1889 at conveniently situated Newington College, only five minutes’ walk from the Bardsleys’ home in Cavendish Street Stanmore. He was immediately selected in the College 1st XI. Although he was considered a “steady bat and good fielder”, he achieved little in his first season: 5 innings for 35 runs. Nevertheless, he was selected again in 1889-90, although his highest score of 54 was over half his runs in 8 innings. What sort of batsman he was, left or right handed, attacking or dour, has, unfortunately, been lost in the mists of time.

He passed his Matriculation exams to Sydney University in 1890 and began his studies in Arts. But he seems to have discontinued studies until he began studying Medicine in 1894.

After returning to Australia and qualifying as a doctor, EA Bardsley does not appear to have played any organised cricket again.

His son, ‘Rick’, however, followed his father and his uncle to Newington where he was a supremely talented and versatile sportsman, of imposing physique, who representing the College’s 1st VIII rowing crew that won the ‘Head of the River’ in 1921, the 1st XI for four seasons, 1920-1923, the last two as captain, and the 1st XV for three seasons. During this time Dr Bardsley was on the College Council representing the old boys of the College.  Rick was a backrower, number 8, who went on to play 1st Grade Rugby for Norths and to be selected against New Zealand in three games which have subsequently been accorded Test status, in 1928. He is Wallaby no244.  He captained Norths 1st Grade to a Premiership in 1935 and after a number of seasons with Gordon, became a forceful President of Norths.

Two incidents brought him into the headlines once more.

While depositing money in a bank in Martin Place, he accidentally shot himself in the foot while carrying a loaded revolver in his pocket.

Then, in 1942, he unwisely sent food parcels to Russia so that his patriotism was called into question. He resigned as President of Norths Rugby.

 

Bardsley Park?

Dr EA Bardsley, described as a “philanthropist” of Turramurra, was made a Life Member of the Shellharbour City Cricket Club in 1952 and the Club’s home ground, overlooking the coast, was named ‘Bardsley Park.’

Like HV Evatt, who also played just one 1st Grade game for Sydney University, EA Bardsley has a cricket ground named in his honour.

James Rodgers

 

Acknowledgements:

Adjunct Professor Max Bonnell

Dr Colin Clowes

Mr David Roberts, Archivist Newington College.

SUCC Covid Club Communication

SUCC Covid Club Communication

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A Deserted Uni No.1 Oval

Dear valued members of the SUCC community

Who would have thought at the beginning of June 2021 that NSW would be in this position and that cricket would be on hold? Certainly not me.

Season 2021/22

The season has officially been delayed by CNSW with the earliest possible start being the end October early November. This delay means the fixture scheduling has been postponed until there is a more definitive commencement date with the normal two-day, one-day and T20 format ratios like to change to accommodate the reduced season. We are receiving regular updates from CNSW and Premier Cricket and these are being conveyed directly to our playing group and members.

Director of Cricket Training and Player Engagement

Our New Director of Cricket, Murray Creed, who joined the Club at the beginning of June, has had tough initiation. He had commenced coaching the early committed groups face to face, with Nick Larkin and Rhys Williams, before the lockdown put a stop to this. Since then, he has been coordinating players and coaches, strictly adhering to Government and Health NSW regulations, to encourage one on one sessions. This has been well received by numerous players.

Zoom Sessions

There have been several Zoom sessions held across the grades that have been well received and the focus moving forward will concentrate more towards player welfare and team building until we have the definitive season start date announcement we are all waiting for. Through our Club Captain, Oli Zannino, our grade team captains are being engaged to increase the group communications by asking players to “Buddy Up” within their teams and LGA’s where possible. A group of players completed a mini marathon within their 5km restrictions and tracked their routes using a GPS App that provided interesting competitive comparisons at a zoom meeting held later in the day. Congratulations to those who organised this and completed the run, a great initiative and fantastic way to build team spirit.

Player Fees and Player Welfare

Our board met last Thursday evening and unanimously decided to hold off on the player members fees until we have more clarity on what the season has to offer. Our players mental wellbeing and membership values will be paramount when the decisions are made. Further to this we have sent out an anonymous survey to ascertain the clubs training requirements and expectations in this current lockdown situation, in conjunction with the players, coaches, and staff vaccination status, understanding that being vaccinated is a personal choice. This is the information we will most certainly require, assisting us in our return to training and play strategies when restrictions begin to ease.

In writing this, I sincerely hope that the entire SUCC community is staying safe and well and would ask anyone who has any concerns or knows of anyone who is struggling during these unprecedented times to contact me directly on:

Email: info@sydneyuniversitycricket.com.au

Keep safe and well

Kindest regards

Colin Robertson (General Manger)

A Singular Honour (Part 1)

A Singular Honour (Part 1)

Stories of those who’ve played just one 1st Grade game for the Club

‘FV McADAM, bowled Mailey 0’

Behind Obscurity. 

He was one of those “ordinary men or women whose lives are the actual stuff of history.” (Isaiah Berlin, ‘The Hedgehog and The Fox’, 1953).

He played just one game in 1st Grade.

On the last day of March 1917, on a sultry Saturday afternoon at the University Oval, FV McAdam walked out at number 11 to join AC (‘Tim’) Yates. So little was McAdam known that the scorers, who probably misheard him, wrote his initials as FB instead of FV and he appears forever in the newspapers and season’s statistics as FB McAdam. Before too long, McAdam was bowled by AA Mailey for 0 to give the leg spinner his sixth wicket of the innings and his fiftieth for the Grade season. The scorers had little difficulty recognising Arthur Mailey, already a 1st class player who was to play 1st class cricket from 1912 until 1930 and to take 779 wickets. He was a long-established 1st Grader (1906-1935. 828 wickets) and was soon to be a Test cricketer (1920-26. 99 wickets). The whimsical Mailey who “bowled like a millionaire” often gave tailenders some easy ones to get off the mark. He’d smile as he ran in to bowl and roll down a looping full toss. If this was a Mailey full toss, McAdam simply missed it before it rattled into his stumps. Balmain went on to win the game easily. McAdam didn’t bowl and fielded indifferently.

 

Ten years later, in December 1927, Mailey, now aged 41, was still playing for NSW. Dr FV McAdam was the manager of the NSW team’s ‘Southern tour’ to Adelaide and Melbourne. He sits rather stiffly in  the middle of the front row of the formal team photo. Mailey sits two to his left, leaning forward as if having a quiet word with the camera man. Cricket had once again brought the two of them together. Did they remember their brief meeting in the middle of University Oval a decade before?

 

After that game, McAdam played no more 1st Grade. In fact, he hardly played much Grade cricket at all. Medical studies, medical practice, a young family, cricket administration, renown as a Contract Bridge expert all combined to reduce the time available to play cricket.

 

But when McAdam played against Mailey, he was already a curiosity. At 29, he was considerably older than his undergraduate team mates. He’d already taken out two degrees (BA 1911, BSc 1916). He was a Catholic, very unusual in the University sides of the time. And he had already served in the 1st AIF, a lucky survivor of Gallipoli.

In reality, McAdam was simply an enthusiastic but limited cricketer, a left hand batsman more at home in 3rd Grade.

So what was he doing in 1st Grade in March 1917?

The easy answer is that he was just available at the right time. War service had considerably cut into the number of cricketing undergraduates available. From the 1st Grade side that had played the previous game, Eric Leggo and Rex Sturt had enlisted and were in training preparatory to being sent overseas. Leggo was killed in October 1918, just three weeks before the Armistice. Sturt survived, was admitted as a barrister and continued a lengthy 1st Grade career with University, Gordon, Petersham and Paddington. Leggo was a fast bowler. Sturt was an all-rounder. McAdam was neither. But he was a resident at St John’s College, just up the hill from the Oval, and he possibly knew Dentistry student Mick Bardsley, the Club Secretary and 1st Grade captain, who must have been desperate to find eleven players for the last game of the season.  

 

Francis Victor McAdam was born at Wagga on 5 November 1888 but his family moved to Scone where he was first educated before enrolling at the Marist Brothers’ school, St Joseph’s College, Hunters Hill, on 11 July 1904. At St Joseph’s he flourished in his studies, earning awards in twelve subjects in 1907. His faith was both intellectual and practical. He was awarded the prize for Christian Doctrine in 1906 by the formidable Archbishop Michael Kelly and he served loyally in the various College sodalities. In the 1907 1st XI, he batted towards the end of the order and in the GPS games scored three quarters of his runs in one extraordinary innings of 30 against Shore School. He enrolled in Arts in 1908 and, while studying at the University, returned to St Joseph’s to help teach Maths and Science. He was also a Demonstrator in Chemistry at the University.

 

Once War was declared, he interrupted his University studies and his cricket career with Sydney University. He enlisted a few weeks after the end of the 1914-15 season when he had been a reliable batsman (132 runs at 16.5) in the Club’s 3rd Grade, often batting with HV Evatt (295 runs at 32.3). Evatt would also play just one 1st Grade game with the Club. In February 1916, he was Secretary of the Club when the 1st Grade captain contacted him on a Saturday morning with the news that one of the batsmen couldn’t play against Glebe on that day. Evatt promptly selected himself and turned up at 1st Grade wearing grey trousers and canvas shoes. He made 15 and 4 and never appeared in the highest grade again. He was, however, one of the pivotal figures in Australian life during the twentieth century: a brilliant student, a member of Parliament, King’s Counsel, Justice of the High Court of Australia, President of the United Nations’ General Assembly, Deputy Prime Minister, Leader of the ALP and the Federal Opposition Leader in the 1950s before an ill-considered return to the Law as Chief Justice of the NSW Supreme Court. Even with  all these honours, he often referred to himself as a “former 1st Grade cricketer”.

 

When Private FV McAdam, regimental number 4437, enlisted at Liverpool thirteen days before the first Anzac Day, he stood 165 centimetres tall and weighed 53 kilograms. His attesting officer was Captain John Alexander James, a Cricket and Rugby Blue at Sydney University. He left Australia on RMS Mooltan on 15 March and served at Gallipoli. Late in 1915, he was admitted to hospital at Lemnos , suffering from paratyphoid (usually contracted through contaminated water or food). He was to spend over four months convalescing until he was evacuated back to Australia in March 1916. Through his sickness and his return to Australia, McAdam was spared much of the disintegrating European world and the devastating battles fought over the next three years in the mud of France.

Nothing much was ever said about his time in the AIF. The St Joseph’s College magazine commented cryptically that “we hear he had some funny experience.”

 

So he resumed his studies, graduated BSc at the end of 1916, got married, and then enrolled in the Faculty of Medicine graduating MB ChM in 1921. He practised firstly at South Sydney Hospital and then as a General Practitioner at Lidcombe. He also resumed his cricket career once again, this time with Central Cumberland in 3rd Grade where his 240 runs at 20 and highest score of 79 were the highlights of his cricket career. He was an inveterate organiser, a generous volunteer, driven to cricket administration. He was elected as a Vice President of his new  Club in 1923, President in January 1925, a Delegate to the NSWCA in 1926. And he returned to the playing fields once more but without any distinction. Two seasons (1925-26 and 1926-27) brought him just 134 runs at 7 and 3 wickets. Then, in 1929-30, aged 41, he played one last match in 3rd Grade in which he didn’t bat and bowled two erratic overs for 26. His oldest son, Max, aged 12, had filled in for 3rd Grade for whom he usually acted as scorer,  for one game during the previous season.

 

When he was appointed as Manager of the NSW side, captained by Alan Kippax, in December 1927 he took a professional interest in the two promising youngsters, AA (Archie) Jackson aged 18  and DG (Don) Bradman aged 19. A year later, the lyrical Archie Jackson made a century on debut in Test cricket. Just over five years later, he was dead, stricken by TB, while Bradman was breaking every batting record imaginable. Dr McAdam looked after Bradman who had never travelled outside NSW before and who caught a cold on the train to Adelaide. McAdam nursed him back to health and Bradman, originally named as 12th man,  replaced Jackson in the NSW XI when Jackson developed a boil on his knee which did not respond in time to McAdam’s ministrations. So in Adelaide, Bradman batted at number 7 and scored the first of his 117 1st class centuries with a mature innings of 118 on debut. The team, however, faltered, losing both games on tour. Mailey was reaching the end of his distinguished career and, aged 41, bowled expensively as his 9 wickets cost 461 runs. As Manager, McAdam was industrious and thoughtful. His official report to the NSWCA contained a logically argued proposal to limit the hours of play for Sheffield Shield games.

 

By 1931, he seems to have finished with cricket, standing down after seven seasons as President of Cumberland, and throwing his considerable energies into Local Government as an Alderman on Lidcombe Council. In this role he was instrumental in the decision to construct Lidcombe Oval, completed in 1933, and for many years home to 1st Grade cricket and Rugby League games. By this time, Dr McAdam was considered one of Australia’s foremost authorities on Contract Bridge. He wrote extensively, spoke on Sydney’s Catholic radio station 2SM and captained the NSW Bridge team in matches against Victoria.

 

The future seemed bright for this kind, genial doctor with a meticulous attention to detail in  his myriad administrative tasks but not enslaved by the routine of daily life; a father of five children; a man of significant academic achievement and one who lived the ancient Roman virtue ‘pietas’, a sense of duty, loyalty and responsibility. Such a career ended in tragedy. On the night of 10 September 1934, crossing the road near Phillip Street in Sydney, he was hit and killed by a runaway car whose brakes had failed.

 

FV McAdam lead a largely ordinary life but he had come into fleeting contact with some of the Australian cricketing greats of his time…Mailey, Kippax, Jackson, Bradman…and was a part of their history.

 

And on that Saturday in 1917, he played his only 1st Grade game and was bowled for 0.

 

James Rodgers