1908 Melbourne Carnival

Last updated

Jubilee Australasian Football Carnival
1908 Melbourne Carnival
Australasian Football Jubilee Carnival (1858-1908)- Souvenir Programme.jpg
Newby's souvenir carnival programme
Tournament details
Country Australia
City Melbourne
DatesAugust 1908
Format Round-robin
Final positions
Champions Victoria
1911  

The 1908 Melbourne Carnival was the inaugural Australian National Football Carnival, an Australian football interstate competition, held in Melbourne in August 1908. It was known at the time as the Jubilee Australasian Football Carnival because it was designed to commemorate 50 years of Australian football.

Contents

It was the first time in which all Australian states and New Zealand had competed together in the sport.

The winning team was presented with a silk pennant; and each member of the winning team received a gold championship medal. [1]

Although the 29 August final between Victoria and Western Australia was played in front of something like 15,000 spectators, it is certain that the crowd would have been considerably larger if it had not also been the first day of the American Fleet's eight-day visit to Melbourne. [2]

Official opening

Official carnival programme Australasian Football Jubilee Carnival (1858-1908)-Official Programme.jpeg
Official carnival programme

The official opening was conducted by Sir Thomas Gibson-Carmichael, the Governor of Victoria, at 3:00 pm on Wednesday 19 August 1908, in the interval between the first and second matches of the carnival (the first match started at 1:15 pm, the second at 3:30 pm).

Prime Minister and former player Alfred Deakin delivered a stirring nationalist speech to open the carnival [3]

First Matches

The crowd of 7,000+ was in an excited mood: in the first match, New Zealand had come back from a 26-point half-time deficit to win by a single point.

The seven participating teams, with each player in their team uniforms, lined up and formed a hollow square.

The official party, the Governor of Victoria, accompanied by his private secretary, Victor Albert Nelson Hood (1862–1929), Sir Thomas Bent, Premier of Victoria, H. C. A. Harrison, Australian Rules administrative pioneer (then 71 years old), Mr. Cornelius Michael "Con" Hickey (1866-1937), Fitzroy footballer in the (VFA 1887-1894), secretary of the Fitzroy Football Club (1893-1910), foundation member and first treasurer of the Victorian Football League, and the inaugural president of the Australian National Football Council (formed in 1906), Mr. E.L. "Ernie" Wilson, the first secretary of the Collingwood Football Club in the VFL, and secretary of the VFL from 1897-1929, and Mr. Albert E. Nash, president of the New South Wales Australian Football League, were each introduced to the captain of each team and shook hands. [4]

The ceremony was notable for the performance of "war cries" by both the New Zealand and Queensland teams; and, in the opinion of "Old Boy", despite not performing well on the football field, the Queensland "war cry" was the best of the two, in that its effort was "dramatic, descriptive, and interesting". [5] Although it is not clear (as it was in the newspaper accounts of the New Zealand team on other occasions) from any of the contemporary reports of the day's proceedings whether, on this occasion, the New Zealand "war cry" was specifically a haka or not, "Follower's" report in "The Age" strongly suggests that to be the case: "a feature of the [Governor's] inspection … was the Maori war cry, given with great zest by the New Zealand team, and equally stirring was the aboriginal battle cry of the Queenslanders". [6]

The second match, played immediately after the opening ceremony, was nowhere near as exciting: Tasmania beat Queensland by 140 points.

Teams

Team photographs of all of the competing teams were published in the Melbourne Punch, [7] and the Melbourne Leader. [8]

New South Wales

New South Wales team New South Wales Jubilee Carnival team 1908.png
New South Wales team

The New South Wales team included A. Conlin, W. Scott, Bob Rahilly, J. Hunter, G. Colley, E. Gluyas, Bert Renfrey (Vice-Captain), and Algy Millhouse from the Barrier, [9] and G. Thomas, W. Maxfield, G. McConechy, Ralph Robertson (Captain), T. Vannan, C. Murray, J. Delaney, H. Welsh, A. Dartnell, J. O'Leary, C. Shipton, and F. Carrick from Sydney; A.E. Watson from Hay, O'Keefe from Narrandera, plus James Greer and W. Hanes (also Haines, Haynes) from Wagga. [10] During the carnival, the New South Wales team trained at the St Kilda Cricket Ground. [11]

New Zealand

New Zealand team New Zealand Team Jubilee Carnival 1908.png
New Zealand team
New Zealand's Captain, Tom Wright Corporal Thomas James Wright (2467).jpeg
New Zealand's Captain, Tom Wright

The selected team was: E. George, F.A. Lording, W. Monteith, J.G. Marshall, Tongue, H. Fletcher, J.J. Abfalter (Auckland), P.H. Elvidge, S.G. Darby, A. Swann (Waihi), M. Bonas, D. Patrick, E. Furness, A. McGrath, L.L. Paull (Wellington), George Dempster, H.L. West, T.J. Wright (captain), H. Wilkinson, A. Porter, A. Fisher, Paisley, F. Ross (Christchurch), with emergencies, Burns, Welch, and L.A. Breese from Auckland, and Grant, and T. Smith. During the carnival, the New Zealand team trained at the Richmond Cricket Ground and was coached by Richmond's Dick Condon. [12] [13] [14] [15]

New Zealand's tour matches

This was the only time in the history of Australian rules "interstate" football matches that a team from New Zealand participated. It was anticipated that, immediately following the carnival, and before returning to New Zealand, the New Zealand team would play matches in Adelaide, Ballarat, Bendigo, Geelong, Sydney, Brisbane, and Newcastle. [16]

The New Zealand team played a match, in Adelaide, on 1 September 1908 (Eight Hours Day), before the Governor, George Le Hunte, [17] on a very wet ground (in several places the water was inches deep). South Australia won the match 5.8 (38) to 3.10 (28). The match was not as one-sided as the final scores indicate: the score at quarter time was South Australia 4.5 (29) to New Zealand 0.1 (1). In the process of the day, the New Zealand team performed two hakas, one before the match commenced, the other before the second half began. [18]

All in all, the New Zealand team won six out of the eleven matches they played on their tour, including the carnival matches against New South Wales and Queensland, and were described in the Melbourne press as "the surprise packet"; and, due to the fact that only two of their matches were played on dry grounds, they also became known as the "wet weather birds". [19]

Queensland

Queensland team Queensland Jubilee Carnival team 1908.png
Queensland team

The selected team was: [20] J. Hay, M.S. "Merce" Hicks, E. Miller, A. M'Gregor and T. Morris (City), V. "Vic" Lowndes, M. O'Dwyer, J. Greenwood, and Jack Keir (Locomotives), W. MacDonald, G. Paget, H. Heidemann, and J. M'Cormack (Ipswich), L. Perkins, and H. Parker (Valley), L. Kelly, A. "Jack" Bolton, and H. Hopkins (Wynnum), Ralph McKellar (captain), [21] H. Coates, and A. Atkinson (Brisbane), and Lieutenant B. Watts (Thursday island). Emergencies: M. Cooper (Valley), A. Tipper (City), J. Hickey (West Moreton), and E. "Ernie" Watson (Ipswich). It seems that B. "Bas" Bolton was a later addition to the team. During the carnival, the Queensland team was coached by Jack Worrall, and trained at the Carlton Cricket Ground. [22]

South Australia

South Australian team South Australia Team Jubilee Carnival 1908.png
South Australian team

The selected team was; Charles George Gordon Gwynne, Ernie Johns, Jack Tredrea, Jack Chamberlain, Richard Townsend, Sinclair Dickson, Alfred Roy Le Messurier, Edward M. Beare, A.C. Bennett, O.H. Hyman. H.W.D. Stoddart, C. Adcock, T. McKenzie. A. Ewers, A.E. Hewitt, Stewart Geddes (vice captain), George Wallace, Jack Mack, Tom Leahy, James Tierney, John Albert "Alby" Bahr (captain), Jack Woollard. During the carnival, the South Australian team trained at the East Melbourne Cricket Ground. [23]

The South Australian team that was defeated by Victoria 10.15 (75) to 2.14 (26) on 26 August 1908 was: Back, Ewers, Hyman, and Woollard; half-back, Stoddart, Beare, and McKenzie; centre, Hewitt, Tredrea, and Bennett; half-forward, Bahr, Townsend, and Chamberlain; forward, Dickson, Johns, and Gwynne; ruck, Tierney and Leahy; rover, Wallace. [24]

Tasmania

Tasmanian team Tasmanian Jubilee Carnival team 1908.png
Tasmanian team

The captain of Tasmania was Bruce Carter. [25] The squad originally selected was: from the South: Roy Bailey (half back), P. Orpwood (back), Walter Burrell (following and back), L. Bridges (wing), Weller Arnold (centre), C. Ward (centre and half-back), E. RusseIl (wing), W. Lee (forward and rover), T. Abel (follower), C. Webb (follower and back), W. Forster (rover and half-forward); from the North: Algy Tynan (full back), A.J. "Barney" Badcock (half-back), W. Ride (back), B.L. Thomson (back), Charlie Searl (wing), Hastings Woolley (half-back and follower), [26] Joe Littler (forward), Viv Valentine (forward); from North-West Coast: B. Carter (centre), W. Rutter (follower), T. Mahoney (follower); from West Coast: A. Trotter (centre and forward), George McLeod (forward and follower). Emergencies: K. Appleby (North-West), first back and follower; Norman F Pannam (North West), first forward and second follower; L. Norman (North), rover and third forward; A. Tucker (South) second back and wing; B. Filgate (North-West), full back and wing. [27] During the carnival, the Tasmanian team, coached by Jack Gardiner and Dick Gibson, [28] trained at the South Melbourne Cricket Ground. [29]

Victoria

Victorian team Victoria Jubilee Carnival team 1908.png
Victorian team

The Victorian team that defeated South Australia 10.15 (75) to 2.14 (26) on 26 August 1908 was: [30]

Back, Joe Pearce (Melbourne), Robert Nash (Collingwood), and Phonse Wood (South Melbourne); half-back, Hugh Purse (Melbourne), Bill Busbridge (Essendon), and Bill Luff Sr. (Richmond); centre, Barclay Bailes (Fitzroy), Rod McGregor (Carlton), and George Bruce (Carlton); half-forward, Paddy Shea (Essendon), Dave McNamara (St Kilda), and Harvey Kelly (Carlton); forward, Wally Johnson (Fitzroy), Dick Lee (Collingwood), and Henry Young (Geelong); ruck, Herbert Milne (Fitzroy) and Bert Franks (South Melbourne); rover, Alick Ogilvie (University). [24]

Before the first match was played, it was noted that six of the possible "Victorian" players, Barclay Bailes, Bert Franks, Bill Goddard (South Melbourne), Harvey Kelly, Paddy Shea, and Phonse Wood had all played their first senior football in Western Australia. [31]

Western Australia

West Australian team West Australia Jubilee Carnival team 1908.png
West Australian team

The selected team was: from metropolitan district: Jim Everett, Ronald Glen, [32] Leonard Edwards, James Doig, Harry Sharpe, Thomas McNamara, Sam Gravenall, George Wyatt, [33] Henry Thompson, Frank 'Diver' Dunne, Dick Sweetman, Billy Orr; from goldfields: William Trewhella, Phil Matson, William "Nipper" Truscott, Alex Robinson, Walter Smith, George Tyson, William Cook, George Renwick, William Metheral, J. "Snob" Polglaise, Charles Tyson, Joe O'Dea. [34] [35] During the carnival, the Western Australian team trained at the Fitzroy Cricket Ground. [36]

Playing uniforms

In competition, the teams' uniforms were:

When not playing, the members of each team wore plain straw hats that clearly displayed their team's distinctive colours on their hat-bands: [1] [37]

Results

The program for the carnival was arranged as follows: [38]

All of the matches were played at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

Preliminary matches

Day One

SectionWinning teamscoreLosing teamscoreDateAttendance
 Section B    New Zealand   9.9 (63)   New South Wales   8.14 (62) Wednesday 19 August 19087,000
 Section B    Tasmania   22.22 (154)   Queensland   2.2 (14) Wednesday 19 August 1908

Day Two

SectionWinning teamscoreLosing teamscoreDate
 Section A/B    Victoria   25.21 (171)   New Zealand   5.10 (40) Friday 21 August 1908

Day Three

SectionWinning teamscoreLosing teamscoreDate
 Section B    Tasmania   8.14 (62)   New South Wales   4.11 (35) Saturday 22 August 1908
 Section A    Western Australia   8.11 (59)   South Australia   8.5 (53) Saturday 22 August 1908

Day Four

SectionWinning teamscoreLosing teamscoreDate
 Section B    New Zealand   6.12 (48)   Queensland   4.11 (35) Monday 24 August 1908

Day Five

SectionWinning teamscoreLosing teamscoreDate
 Section A/B    Western Australia   17.12 (114)   New South Wales   12.3 (75) Tuesday 25 August 1908

Day Six

SectionWinning teamscoreLosing teamscoreDate
 Section A    Victoria   10.15 (75)   South Australia   2.14 (26) Wednesday 26 August 1908
 Section B    Tasmania   11.18 (84)   New Zealand   1.12 (18) Wednesday 26 August 1908 [40]

Day Seven

SectionWinning teamscoreLosing teamscoreDate
 Section B    New South Wales   13.15 (93)   Queensland   8.11 (59) Thursday 27 August 1908

Preliminary round ladders

Section A [41]

TeamPWLDFAPts
1 Victoria 2200246668
2 Western Australia 22001731288
3 South Australia 20201193050

Section B [41]

TeamPWLDFAPts
1 Tasmania 33003006712
2 New Zealand 42201693528
3 New South Wales 41302652984
4 Queensland 30301082950

Finals

Day Eight

SectionWinning teamscoreLosing teamscoreDateAttendance
 Section A/B    South Australia   16.20 (116)   Tasmania   7.7 (49) Saturday 29 August 1908
 Section A    Victoria   13.22 (100)   Western Australia   6.8 (44) Saturday 29 August 190815,000

Because Tasmania was beaten by South Australia, Victoria was the only remaining undefeated team. Therefore, it was crowned the champions without the need for a Grand Final.

Best players

See also

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 Australian Rules: Australasian Carnival, The Sydney Mail, (Wednesday, 12 August 1908), p.443.
  2. Umpire, "Football Jubilee: Australasian Championship: Won by Victoria", The Argus, (Monday, 31 August 1908), p.5.
  3. Judd, Barry; Hallinan, Christopher (1 December 2019). "Indigeneity and the Disruption of Anglo-Australian Nationalism in Australian Football". Review of Nationalities. 9 (1): 101–110. doi: 10.2478/pn-2019-0008 . eISSN   2543-9391. S2CID   215770426.
  4. Football Carnival: Opened in Melbourne, The Advertiser, (Thursday, 20 August 1908), p.7.
  5. Old Boy, "Football Jubilee: Australasian Championships: A Fine Display", The Argus, (Thursday, 20 August 1908), p.7.
  6. Follower, "Football Jubilee Carnival: A Successful Opening", The Age, (Thursday, 20 August 1908), p.11.
  7. The Football Carnival — Australasian Championships — The Competing Teams, Punch, (Thursday, 27 August 1908), p.17.
  8. Jubilee of Australian Football — The Inter-State Teams, The Leader, (Saturday, 29 August, 1908), p.29.
  9. Sporting News: Football: Melbourne Football Carnival, The Advertiser, (Tuesday, 18 August 1908), p.9.
  10. Football, The (Sydney) Evening News, (Friday, 31 July 1908), p.8.
  11. Australasian Football Jubilee: The Competing Teams: New South Wales, The Mercury, (Friday, 14 August 1908), p.8.
  12. Football "Social", The (Wellington) Evening Post, Vol.76, No.5, (6 July 1908), p.2.
  13. The Jubilee Carnival: New Zealand Representative Team, The Mercury, (Monday, 3 August 1908),p.7.
  14. Australasian Football Jubilee, The Mercury, (Thursday, 11 August 1908),p.8.
  15. The Jubilee Carnival: New Zealand Team: Arrival in Melbourne, The (Launceston) Examiner, (Thursday, 13 August 1908), p.3.
  16. New Zealand, The Advertiser, (Monday, 24 February 1908), p.7.
  17. Tuesday's Football Matches, The Register, (Wednesday, 2 September 1908), p.4.)
  18. Tuesday's Football Matches, The Register, (Wednesday, 2 September 1908), p.4; Football: South Australia v. New Zealand: Home Team Successful, The Register, (Wednesday, 2 September 1908), p.8.
  19. Returned Athletes, "The Surprise Packet", The (Wellington) Evening Post, Vol.76, No.73, (23 September 1908), p.7.
  20. Interstate Australian Football: Queensland Team for Melbourne, The Brisbane Courier, (Monday, 20 July 1908), p.6.
  21. A Fine Queensland Legacy, AFL Queensland: News, 11 June 2010.
  22. Australasian Football Jubilee: The Competing Teams: Queensland, (Friday, 14 August 1908), p.8.
  23. Australasian Football Jubilee: The Competing Teams: South Australia, The Mercury, (Friday, 14 August 1908), p.8.
  24. 1 2 South Australia Defeated, The Register, (Thursday, 27 August 1908), p.8.
  25. The Captain Interviewed, The Examiner, (Thursday 3 September 1908), p.6.
  26. Although selected in the team (Football, The Mercury, (Monday, 27 July 1908), p7.), Woolley was unable to obtain leave of absence (The State Team, The (Launceston) Daily Telegraph, (Tuesday, 11 August 1908), p.7) and, therefore, could not travel to Melbourne, and his place in the team was taken by Pannam (The Carnival Jubilee, The Mercury, (Wednesday, 12 August 1908), p.8).
  27. Football: Australasian Football Carnival: The Tasmanian Selection, The Mercury, (Thursday, 27 July 1908),p.7.
  28. 'Kickeroo', "Football: A Busy Time: Jubilee Celebrations", The (Melbourne) Herald, (Friday, 21 August 1908), p.2.
  29. Australasian Football Jubilee: The Competing Teams: Tasmania, The Mercury, (Friday, 14 August 1908), p.8.
  30. Rohan, J.M., "Was First Carnival Side The Best Ever?: Herculean Team of Capable Men: Picked Irrespective of Clubs", The Sporting Globe), (Saturday, 12 May 1934), p.7.
  31. Football: The Australian Game: Western Australian Inter-State Team, The West Australian, (Tuesday, 18 August 1908), p.7.
  32. Ronald Grant Glen, at Redlegs Museum.
  33. Red and Whites: Review of South Fremantle History, The Fremantle Advocate, (Thursday, 5 May 1932), p.2.
  34. Western Australian Team, The Sydney Morning Herald, (Friday 17 July 1908), p.10.
  35. Wyatt and Glenn, in the selected team, were unable to travel to Melbourne, and were replaced by S.F. Jeffrey (West Perth) and Harold Crase (Perth) respectively; Football: The Australian Game: The Jubilee Team, The West Australian, (Monday, 20 July 1908), p.6.
  36. Australasian Football Jubilee: The Competing Teams: Western Australia, The Mercury, (Friday, 14 August 1908), p.8.
  37. Football: The Australian Game, The West Australian, (Saturday 22 August 1908), p.13.
  38. "The Jubilee Carnival". The Register. Adelaide, SA. 19 August 1908. p. 6.
  39. "Jubilee Football Matches". Kalgoorlie Miner. Kalgoorlie, WA. 29 August 1908. p. 12.
  40. JUBILEE FOOTBALL. The (Launceston) Examiner, (1908, August 27), p. 5
  41. 1 2 "The Football Carnival". The Register. Adelaide, SA. 28 August 1908. p. 6.
  42. "FOOTBALL". The Examiner (Tasmania) . Vol. LXVII, no. 219. Tasmania, Australia. 12 September 1908. p. 4 (DAILY). Retrieved 25 February 2018 via National Library of Australia.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1908 VFL season</span> Twelfth season of the Victorian Football League (VFL)

The 1908 VFL season was the twelfth season of the Victorian Football League (VFL), the highest level senior Australian rules football competition in Victoria.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Representative matches in Australian rules football</span>

Representative matches in Australian rules football are matches between representative teams played under the Australian rules, most notably of the colonies and later Australian states and territories that have been held since 1879. For most of the 20th century, the absence of a national club competition in Australia and international matches meant that intercolonial and later interstate matches were regarded with great importance.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Geography of Australian rules football</span>

The Geography of Australian rules football describes the sport of Australian rules football played in more than 60 countries around the world. By 2017 more than 26 nations had contested the Australian Football International Cup, the highest level of worldwide competition.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Australian rules football in Queensland</span> First official football code played in 1866

Australian rules football in Queensland was the first official football code played in 1866. The Colony of Queensland was the second after Victoria to adopt Australian rules football, just days after the rules were widely published. For two decades it was the most popular football code, however a strong desire for representative football success saw Queenslanders favour British football variants for more than a century. As a result, Queensland is one of the two states to the east of the Australian cultural divide described as the Barassi Line. 120 years later in 1986 Queensland was the first state awarded a licence to have a club, the Brisbane Bears, in the national (AFL) competition, also its first privately owned club. However the Gold Coast based Bears had a detrimental effect until the 1993 redevelopment of the Brisbane Cricket Ground (Gabba). In contrast the Bears transformation into a Brisbane and traditional membership based club resulted in enormous growth, and a tripling of average AFL attendances by 1996.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">New Zealand national Australian rules football team</span>

The New Zealand national Australian rules football team (Māori: tīmi whutupaoro Ahitereiria o Aotearoa; nicknamed the Hawks ; previously the Falcons, is the national men's team for the sport of Australian rules football in New Zealand. The International Cup team is selected from strict criteria from the best New Zealand born and developed players, primarily from the clubs of the AFL New Zealand. Test and touring squads are selected using similar criteria to other international football codes, additionally allowing players with a New Zealand born parent to play.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Australian rules football in New Zealand</span>

Australian rules football in New Zealand is notable as the first colony outside of Australia to take up the sport as early as the 1860s and was home to the first club formed outside Australia in 1876. The sport's official name was changed in 1890 to Australasian Football acknowledge New Zealand's participation and remained for some time even after the country was expelled from the Australasian Football Council. After a half century hiatus of organised competition, it has grown rapidly as an amateur sport. Today five of New Zealand's sixteen regions have organised competitions: Auckland ; Canterbury ; Wellington ; Waikato and Otago. A four-team national competition with a national draft has been contested at the North Harbour Stadium in Auckland since 2016 for men and 2019 for women. The national team were crowned International champions at the 2005 Australian Football International Cup and competed annually against the AFL Academy between 2012 and 2019. Since the 2010s the game has also grown at junior level among New Zealand schools as the "Hawks Cup".

Universal football was the name given to a proposed hybrid sport of Australian rules football and rugby league, proposed at different times between 1908 and 1933 as a potential national football code to be played throughout Australia and New Zealand. The game was trialled, but it was never otherwise played in any regular competition.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Australian National Football Council</span>

The Australian National Football Council (ANFC) was the national governing body for Australian rules football in Australia from 1906 until 1995. The council was a body of delegates representing each of the principal leagues which controlled the sport in their respective regions. The council was the owner of the laws of the game and managed interstate administrative and football matters. Its function was superseded by the AFL Commission.

American football, known locally as "gridiron", is a participation and spectator sport in Australia. The sport is represented by Gridiron Australia, a member of the International Federation of American Football (IFAF), and also Gridiron Victoria, which operates independent of Gridiron Australia

Patrick Yost Walsh was an Australian rules footballer who played with the Essendon Football Club in the VFL/AFL.

The Australasia County Board of the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA), or Australasian GAA, or Gaelic Football & Hurling Association of Australasia is one of the county boards of the GAA outside Ireland, and is responsible for Gaelic games all across Australasia. It is also responsible for Australasian inter-state matches, primarily conducted in an annual weeklong tournament. The association is made up of the Australian state associations of New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria and Western Australia, and the New Zealand associations of Wellington and Canterbury.

The 1911 Adelaide Carnival was the second edition of the Australasian Football Carnival, an Australian football interstate competition. It took place from 2 to 12 August at Adelaide Oval.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1958 Melbourne Carnival</span>

The 1958 Melbourne Carnival was the 14th edition of the Australian National Football Carnival, an Australian football interstate competition. It was the last carnival to be hosted by the state of Victoria and was also known as the Centenary Carnival as it celebrated 100 years since the creation of the sport.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1914 Sydney Carnival</span> Third annual Australian Rules football national competition

The 1914 Sydney Carnival was the third edition of the Australian National Football Carnival, an Australian football interstate competition. It was held between Wednesday 5 August and Saturday 15 August 1914. As in previous competitions, players could represent the state that they were playing in at the time. Victoria was the winning state, going undefeated through the competition.

The 1947 Hobart Carnival was the tenth edition of the Australian National Football Carnival, an Australian football interstate competition. It was held from the July 30 to August 9 and was the second time to be held in Hobart with North Hobart Oval once again being the host stadium throughout the carnival.

The 1924 Hobart Carnival was the fifth Australian National Football Carnival, an Australian football interstate competition. It was held from 6–15 August and was the first carnival to be hosted by the Tasmanian city of Hobart. It was won by Victoria.

The 1927 Melbourne Carnival was the sixth Australian National Football Carnival: an Australian football interstate competition.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tom Wright (Australian footballer)</span> Australian rules footballer

Thomas James Wright was an Australian rules footballer who played with Collingwood in the Victorian Football League (VFL). He was killed in action on active service in France in World War I.

Hastings Talbot Woolley was an Australian cricketer. He played one first-class match for Tasmania in 1908/09.

Clyde Bowman Pearce was an Australian amateur golfer. He won both the Australian Open and the Australian Amateur in 1908 and was runner-up in the Australian Amateur three times. He was killed in Belgium during World War I.

References