The Wallabies at War
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The Wallabies at War

Greg Growden

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eBook - ePub

The Wallabies at War

Greg Growden

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About This Book

Aussie heroes who have proved themselves on the battlefield as well as on the sporting field. Members of the Wallabies, the national rugby union team, have fought in virtually every major conflict Australia has been involved in, including the Sudan, Boer War, Boxer Rebellion, both World Wars, Korea, Vietnam and East Timor. Among them are some of Australia's most illustrious footballers. In this book, a veteran sports journalist tells their extraordinary stories of bravery, hardship, courage and human endeavour.

The strengths that made these young men sporting heroes are as important on the battlefield as on the sports field: teamwork, athleticism, tenacity, humour and courage.

The Wallabies at War includes untold stories from Aussie military and sporting history - not just on the battlefield but from POW camps and even the Burma Railway - and a wealth of experiences from humour to tragedy, and from the depths of torture, injury and deprivation to achieving stunning post-war sporting comebacks.

For anyone who loves their sport and their military history.

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Publisher
ABC Books
Year
2018
ISBN
9781460709085
PART ONE
FIRST WORLD WAR
CHAPTER 1
TWO HISTORIC FIRSTS
James McManamey and Brian Pockley
Family, admirers, historians and the curious assembled in the Blue Mountains near Sydney in September 2015 to attend a commemorative service for one of Australia’s most admired sportsmen.
James Whiteside Fraser McManamey is not one of Australian rugby’s most famous names, but one cherished by those with a rich, broad knowledge of the game.
The small, reputedly haunted church at the Woodford Academy — a 180-year-old establishment that has been a highway inn, police station, private residence, guesthouse, sanatorium and school — a place with which the McManamey family have been deeply involved, was at capacity as we heard of his feats, and sad death, 100 years to the day at Gallipoli.
The audience was told of how McManamey played in the first New South Wales versus Queensland rugby match in 1882. How he then became the best-known referee in NSW, and was so renowned for his impartiality that once he was invited to Brisbane to referee the interstate match even though he had selected the NSW team. And how when the First World War broke out, as NSW Rugby Union (NSWRU) president, he was the country’s most prominent rugby administrator. Also how, as a teacher, he was instrumental in growing the game at schoolboy level.
The most meticulous of rugby historians, John Mulford, told of the emotional moment in 1997 when he went in search of McManamey’s grave at Gallipoli. He found it, and placed on it a waratah, that he had brought with him from his Sydney garden. As another who had served high office — a past Sydney Rugby Union president — Mulford said it was his duty to find McManamey’s grave at the Hill 60 Cemetery, two kilometres north-east of Anzac Cove.
The futility of battle was a constant theme that afternoon in a church where on display was a cap from the first Australian Test match, football trophies from another era and family memorabilia.
The tall, slender McManamey was a many-faceted individual, but most importantly the first Australian rugby player to serve his country in an overseas imperial battle.
The eldest son of a police constable, McManamey studied at All Saints’ College, Bathurst. When sixteen, James entered Sydney University, completing an Arts degree and sharing the highest award, First Class Honours in Mathematics. A notable University forward, he was a natural to be picked in the NSW team for the first match against Queensland at the Sydney Cricket Ground in August 1882.
On the morning of the match, the Brisbane Courier said McManamey was one of NSW’s most dangerous players, as he was ‘always well on the ball’ and a ‘splendid long placekick’.
There was confusion about the final score, most commonly recorded as 28–4, but NSW dominated. They won either by four converted tries to one goal, or five tries and four goals to one goal. No matter — the game was a success, with the local press delighted it was ‘fast and exciting’. The code, which had been played in Sydney on a serious level for almost two decades, consolidated itself further in 1882 when NSW went on its inaugural trip to New Zealand, where they succeeded in winning four of the seven tour games. Rugby was on its way.
However, McManamey’s fascination with the game was soon swamped by international affairs, particularly in the Sudan, with concerns of an uprising against the British backed Egyptian regime. General Charles Gordon was sent out to clear up the mess, but when the decorated British soldier was killed in Khartoum, the NSW Government cabled London with an offer to send a contingent of soldiers to avenge his death.
Among the 770-man Australian force farewelled by more than 200,000 at Circular Quay in March 1885 were several Sydney footballers, including McManamey. He had taken leave from his part-time work as a Fort Street Model School teacher to become a soldier.
It was a short trip for McManamey as the NSW contingent, the first group of Australian soldiers to fight in an imperial war, were back in Sydney by mid-June, because the British Government had abandoned its campaign. While the official records of those who served in the Sudan are sketchy, McManamey’s school — All Saints’, Bathurst — states in its official history and on its honour board that McManamey was a member of the NSW Infantry during that brief skirmish. The McManamey family are similarly convinced of his Sudan service.
McManamey continued his involvement with the artillery through being a volunteer infantry officer for well over 20 years and the commander of the Kogarah regiment. He returned to teaching, appointed as one of the first masters at Sydney High School. Then he went to the Bar, involving himself in industrial jurisdiction.
Not surprisingly, considering his many sporting administrational roles, McManamey wasn’t among the first to enlist at the outbreak of the First World War in late 1914. But when he did, in June 1915, the AIF did not hesitate in making him a major in the 19th Battalion even though he was 53 years and three months old.
By mid-August, McManamey was in Gallipoli as second-in-command of the 19th Battalion, 5th Infantry Brigade. On 1 September 1915, he wrote from Gallipoli to his wife: ‘My Dear Rose, we are in the trenches but not in the firing line. Our casualties have not been severe but numerous for the work being done. So far I have escaped altogether, and my health was never better. Our diet, principally bully beef and hard biscuits and tea with milk and sugar and occasionally an egg, nil bacon, is quite liberal in quantity, but there is such an amount of dust and such innumerable plague of flies that we live in anything but comfort.
‘We are not far from the sea and a walk of about a mile gives us a good swim in the Mediterranean. The beach is very fine though not quite equal to the Collaroy one. The sand is too pebbly and lacks the whiteness of the ones about Sydney, but all is forgotten in the enjoyment of a quiet, shallow water and the great sea.
‘To some extent we are interfered with by shrapnel but very little damage indeed has been caused by it partly through the Turks bad shotting [sic] and partly through the shrapnel itself being of such poor quality that not more than half of it bursts . . .’
Four days later, McManamey was surveying a water well when a shell landed next to him. Syd Middleton, a 1908–09 Wallaby, who the following year became the first Australian to captain a winning team against the All Blacks, witnessed the moment. Middleton and fellow Test footballer Clarence ‘Dos’ Wallach were members of McManamey’s battalion.
Middleton wrote: ‘Major McManamey left here at about 7.30am to view the position preparatory to setting our men to work digging a safe communication trench. It was while this inspection was in progress that a shrapnel shell burst and Major McManamey was struck down being practically killed outright — part of the contents of the shell entered the body one side and came out the other, piercing the abdomen — and although the Major lived some ten minutes, he was unconscious and never spoke.’
The news of McManamey’s death deeply upset his fellow troops, many of whom called him ‘Father’.
Middleton said: ‘Men and Officers alike . . . simply worshipped Jim and all were down in the dumps today. Just as I write these few lines I hear officially that he was to have been given command of his battalion tomorrow (the irony of fate), so that you will understand that his knowledge, fine manly parts, and ability to get the best out of men were recognised by his commanding officers.’
McManamey was the ‘best liked man in the battalion’.
The Referee’s ‘Cynic’ (J.C. Davis) said of McManamey: ‘No other man in the history of Rugby Union football in this country has been held in such universal favor by those in the game and by those who line the pickets and fill the stands.’
The Sydney Morning Herald remembered him as a selfless patriot: ‘Major McManamey stated that if it was right for sons to go to the front it was also right for those fathers who had had military training to go also to be of what service they could in protecting those sons.’
He left behind a wife and two sons.
Rugby had direct links to a man purported to be Australia’s first victim in the Great War. Five weeks after the British Empire declared war on Germany, and many months before the Gallipoli campaign, Captain Brian Pockley was killed on 11 September 1914 during the Battle of Bita Paka, when serving with the Australian Naval and Military Expeditionary Force in German New Guinea.
While studying medicine at Sydney University, Pockley played on the wing in the NSW second XV that defeated Queensland at University Oval in August 1913. He had a busy afternoon, scoring one try and having another disallowed by referee Blair Swannell for being offside in their 24–12 win.
Pockley was an exceptional teenage sportsman. As captain of the Shore School XV and Combined Greater Public Schools (GPS) XV, he excelled in the 100, 220, 440 and 880-yard running events, broad jump, long jump, hurdles and rowing. He was adept at boxing, rifle and ju-jitsu, sports he continued at Sydney University. The Sunday Times described him on the rugby field during his three seasons in the students’ first XV as being ‘very tricky on his feet, speedy and frequently bored his way through the defence’.
Pockley was a medical practitioner appointed to the resident staff at Sydney Hospital, but that did not stop him from enlisting. He hailed from a military family, which included his great grandfather Major John Antill, who had fought in the American War of Independence.
He was part of the first landing force of the naval brigade at Kabakaul on 11 September 1914, in the north-east of what is now known as Papua New Guinea. The force was advancing towards a strategic German wireless station when Able Seaman William ‘Billy’ Williams was shot in the stomach.
A fellow officer, Lieutenant Bowen, said Pockley, aware Williams was injured, rushed along a track to assist his wounded colleague.
Bowen called out to Pockley: ‘Don’t, Doc. You will be sure to be shot. These natives don’t respect the Red Cross.’
‘I must go,’ Pockley replied.
‘Very well. I’ll give you three of my men to act as guards.’
‘No, you need your men yourself. I’ll go alone.’
Bowen insisted and Pockley, with three guards, went to find Williams. Pockley attended to him, and stressed they had to get Williams back to the ship for medical attention.
A stretcher-bearer called out: ‘We’ll never get through, sir.’
To which Pockley pulled off his jacket with a Red Cross armband or brassard on the sleeve, and laid it over Williams, with the words: ‘That will get you through.’
Shortly after, Pockley was shot from point blank range by a German officer. Both he and Williams died on HMAS Berrima that afternoon. It is not clear whether Pockley or Williams was the first to die in the Battle of Bita Paka. No matter what, there appear to have been only minutes in it.
Pockley’s action made him an immediate war hero. As S.S. Mackenzie wrote in The Australians at Rabaul: ‘Pockley’s action in giving up his Red Cross badge, and thus protecting another man’s life at the price of his own, was consonant with the best traditions of the Australian army, and afforded a noble foundation for those of Australian Army Medical Corps in the war.’
The Referee described Pockley as ‘a handsome young fellow, of charming personality and a splendid sportsman of the truest type, it was only natural he was exceedingly popular’. His father Dr Antill Pockley, a Macquarie Street ophthalmic surgeon, said how his son died ‘was just like him. He never counted the cost to himself or anything if it meant a service to anybody else.’
A monument for Pockley was erected within weeks at Sydney Hospital, and the Metropolitan Rugby Union made ‘a resolution of sympathy’ for Pockley’s relatives. This would be the first of many such emotional wartime rugby resolutions.
Back in New Guinea, the 24-year-old was buried in his uniform under the palm trees at the Herbertshohe Cemetery. As Pockley was lowered into the grave, a bugler played the ‘Last Post’. His head was deliberately pointed in the direction of his home town — Sydney.
CHAPTER 2
CERTAINLY NO ADONIS
Blair Swannell
Of the 747 Australian soldiers killed at Gallipoli on 25 April 1915 few could match Blair Inskip Swannell for outlandish, reckless and divisive behaviour. None would have their reputation smeared as much as Swannell, who was despised by many, to the extent that some believed he may have been killed by his own men.
This detested rugby player and soldier alienated many. Making him stand out even further were his odd mannerisms and strange appearance. His face resembled a battered prune. Even Swannell admitted he was ‘ugly’.
‘Certainly no Adonis,’ Swannell would mutter.
Some rated him the most repulsive forward to appear in the Australian rugby colours, not just in looks but for his nefarious on-field tactics. Most regarded him a thug. Then there was the issue of personal hygiene. He had to be convinced to change his clothes, or even to wash.
Making matters worse, Swannell was a notorious braggart, dominating conversations with endless accounts of his many exploits. The super-human feats he recounted sounded so Boy’s Own Annual, it was often difficult t...

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