Who faced the first ball?

Who faced the first ball?

Who faced the first ball?

127 years after he played his only game in the First Grade competition for Sydney University, a player whose name has been confused for so many years has now been found.

In the early days of the Grade competition, University’s players were often identified so haphazardly that many have been lost to posterity - including the man who opened the club’s first innings in First Grade. (The club itself, of course, had existed for forty years or more by October 1893: but the competition was new, and remains the one we play in today.)

Walter Charles Fitzmaurice Burfitt was the name of the player who, it has been thought, opened the batting in University’s initial First Grade game in Electorate Cricket (later called ‘Grade Cricket’ and now ‘Premier Cricket’) in October 1893. Burfitt, who was eventually a distinguished surgeon , resided as an undergraduate 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’.

It 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 initial 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’. At one time, he was thought to have been the Test cricketer, Harry, who played six Tests between 1886 and 1892. But 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 didn’t appear to have been an undergraduate; he disappeared from the Club. ‘Burfitt’ or ‘Burkitt’ was caught from the bowling of Andy Newell for 10, didn’t bat in the second innings and played 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 William Esdaile Burkitt (1831-1910), and he was educated at Saugreen preparatory school at Bournemouth and then at Hurstpierpoint, the Anglo-Catholic College in West Sussex. His name appeared three times in the Hurstpierpoint 1st XI in 1882. 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?

It’s not clear but, by coincidence, William Robert Burkitt was Senior Master at Kings from 1868 until 1886. He was an Irishman who came out to Ballarat during the goldrush of the 1850s, and somehow made his way to Kings. A player with the Wallaroo Rugby Club in Sydney, he introduced Rugby Football to Kings in 1870 and is well remembered at the school. One of its Houses is named Burkitt and the Burkitt Shield has been awarded as a senior prize since 1910. WR Burkitt and EH Burkitt appear not to have been related.

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

‘Burkitt’ played cricket for University’s Second Eleven (5 innings for 29 runs) and then, in December 1892, playing in the First Eleven and identified clearly as ‘EH Burkitt’, he scored 11 in University’s mammoth score of 496 against the old Warwick Club. In late December 1892, EH Burkitt was named in the practice squad for the intervarsity match in Melbourne, although he did not play in the match the following month.

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; practiced medicine for a few years at Coonamble before spending the rest of his life at Dubbo where he and his wife raise three daughters (Dora, Muriel and Marion) and a son, Ted. They named 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. Muriel was to marry John Howell Halliday, a brother of Sydney University First Grader Sir George Halliday.

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 (as a Vice President of the Dubbo Cricket Club). 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.

                                                   THE FIRST GAME IN ELECTORATE CRICKET                                           

              On Saturday 7 October 1893, University players followed their venerable captain, Tom Garrett, on to the field at Wentworth Park before 2000 spectators. This was the first day of the first round of the 1893-94 season and University was playing Glebe in a game to be spread over three successive Saturdays.

              The significance is that this was the first day of what was then known as ‘Electorate’ cricket, the forerunner of Sydney Grade Cricket, now known as NSW Premier Cricket. And, University is one of only two easily recognisable Clubs surviving from that first season. East Sydney, South Sydney, Redfern, Glebe, ‘Parramatta and Central Cumberland Combined’, Paddington, Balmain and Canterbury have all disappeared under those names.

North Sydney survives, as does University although we are more commonly known as Sydney University these days.

All the other clubs had to draw their players from the Electorates that gave the clubs their names. University was admitted to the inaugural competition as an exception to this rule. Previously, players had represented clubs such as Albert, Carlton, Belvidere, Warwick as well as University and qualifications were loose as some players played for more than one club in the same season. Now the rules were definite and strictly enforced. Players represented the places where they lived…except the University players.

That first  game at Wentworth Park resulted in a 30 run win to Glebe on the first innings even though University made a bold effort to chase 200 on the third day and were 5 for 146 when time beat them.

Who were University’s first 1st Graders (ie caps 1 to 11), the pioneers in whose footsteps we tread now?

University’s first delivery  in Electoral cricket was bowled by Tom Garrett (cap no. 1) to Glebe’s LT Cobcroft. Garrett had been playing for University for 20 seasons and he was the first Australian Test player to represent the Club, having played in the very first Test Match, against England in March 1877. At the time of this game in 1893, Garrett was 35  years old, easily the oldest of the University players who went out on that first afternoon and he was easily top score on the second day when his 58 was a lone hand in University’s dismal 98.

26 year old  Medicine student, English born, Edmond Burkitt (cap no. 2) faced the first ball when University batted. This was his last game for University although he was to live for another 33 years, serve in the Great War with the rank of Major and practise as a medical doctor, mainly in Dubbo.

Burkitt’s  opening partner was Herbert Moses (no. 3), a nephew of the Test player, Harry Moses. Herbert doesn’t appear to have been a student at the University. He played just two 1st Grade games.

Hedley Terrey (no.4), a future medical practitioner, recorded University’s first duck in the 1st innings when he was one of Andrew Newell’s 7 wickets. An off spinner, Newell had represented NSW.

Erskine Robison (no.5) batted productively for 11 and 49. A few weeks later, Robison, a third year Medical student, was to score University’s initial 1st Grade century when he hit a free scoring 113 not out against East Sydney. Seven years later, aged only 28, Dr Robison died in Germany.

Norman White (no.6) took five cheap wickets for the match but scored no runs in his two innings. He was an Engineering student, recipient of three Blues (Cricket, Rugby and Rowing) who lived long, dying in 1957, aged 85.

Henry Charles Delohery (no.7) had a quiet match but eventually scored 809 runs and took 52 wickets in University’s 1st Grade.

Frank Dight (no.8), a 17 year old first year undergraduate, who lived for another 58 years, took 4 for 29 in Glebe’s first innings, including Syd Deane, a former NSW wicket keeper who went on to become the first Australian to act in Hollywood movies!). Dight could bowl effectively and accurately but, despite batting at number 8 in this first game, he could not bat. He was to average just under 6 with the bat in a 1st Grade career that lasted four seasons.

Alfred Hadley (no.9), a leg spinning Arts student, played his one game in 1st Grade in this match, scoring 0 and taking 0-12.

Arthur Garnsey (no.10) was probably the side’s wicket keeper in this match. He was to become an Anglican clergyman and was Warden of St Paul’s College from 1916 until his death in 1944, aged 71.

And John MacPherson (no.11) took University’s first wicket in Electoral cricket when he bowled Cobcroft for 2. MacPherson was to play only one more 1st Grade game as he concentrated on his studies, graduating with First Class honours in Arts in 1893 and with an MA in 1895.

So there they are. The first-born, Garrett, was born 162 years ago this year and the last to die, White, has been dead for 63 years.

But, remember them. 127 years ago  they were University’s  first eleven and since then, over 750 have played 1st Grade for a Club that has survived during all that time.

James Rodgers with acknowledgments to Alf James for his assistance with research.

Lieutenant Elliot Darcy Slade

Lieutenant Elliot Darcy Slade

Lieutenant Elliott Darcy Slade

Born at Dulwich Hill. 27 July 1894

Killed in action. 30 March 1918

DUTY

A father writes about his eldest son:

             “...having seen where his duty lay, he did not hesitate to carry it out to his uttermost.”

Duty.

His son has read, in his studies of English literature, Ralph Waldo Emerson’s ‘Voluntaries’.

                 “So nigh is grandeur to our dust,

                 So near is God to man.

                 When duty whispers low “Thou must”,

                 The youth replies, “I can”. “

The Commanding Officer of 33 Battalion writes to the father:

              “Your son distinguished himself throughout this difficult operation by his excellent leadership, his coolness and courage…such a fine officer…he set us all a splendid example. He won the love and esteem of the whole Battalion and we deeply mourn his death.”

Darcy Slade was killed on the afternoon of Easter Saturday, 30 March 1918,  leading his men in the counter-attack on Villers Bretonneux. As he was just about to fire his rifle, near  Hangard Wood, a German bullet ricocheted off the rifle and “entered his brain killing him instantly.” He has no known grave. 

He was the first son of John Elliott Slade (1866-1940) and Ada, nee Champagney (1869-1945). His father was much respected as Chief Survey Draughtsman for NSW. His family had the small consolation of receiving a package containing Darcy’s personal effects and a suit case which contained a German bayonet. 

Darcy played just three times for the Sydney University Cricket Club in the 3rd Grade side of 1911-12, scoring 12 runs and taking 3 wickets. This was the season when the Club won both 1st and 2nd Grade Premierships. He is one of the thousands who have played lower Grades for the Club without ever reaching 1st Grade. He is one of more than 2000 ‘University men’ who enlisted in The  Great War. He is one of the 17 Cricket Club players who were killed; one of twelve Law Students killed in The Great War. The hopes of a generation went with him.

He had won a scholarship from Gordon Public School to Sydney High School from 1907 to 1911 and a bursary to study Arts at Sydney University in 1912. And so he played his three games at the end of the 1911-12 season and didn’t appear for the Club again.

Darcy travelled from bucolic Wahroonga where he lived with his parents and their growing family in ‘Ellerker’ Cleveland St, first attending school at Gordon Public School on Lane Cove Rd ( now known as the Pacific Highway). This was the first public school on the North Shore when it opened in 1871. When Darcy was awarded his scholarship to Sydney High School, he travelled each day to the City and from 1912, he caught the North Shore line train to Milsons Point, then a ferry across the harbour and a tram up to the University on Parramatta Rd. There, he studied diligently excelling in Latin and English until he combined Law I subjects with Arts III in 1914. Darcy was awarded one of about 13 bursaries available at the time for those who wished to enjoy the advantage of a university education but who did not have the financial means. His father’s wage as a draughtsman gave him a secure job but his growing family left him unable to otherwise afford the type of challenging education that Darcy’s diligence and ability demanded. He had done particularly well in the matriculation exams for Sydney University in 1911, in some subjects with the future ALP leader, HV Evatt.  

By 1914, Darcy was employed as an articled clerk by SM Stephens, solicitor, at the ‘Citizen’s Chambers’ in Moore St in the city. He had earned himself the hope of a distinguished career in the Law. 

The declaration of war in August 1914 was a call to duty for young men of the Empire. So, a month before the Anzac landing at Gallipoli, Darcy Slade applied for enlistment. He’d served in the cadets at Sydney High and had been a Sergeant in the Sydney University Scouts. At 5’ 10” he was tall for his generation. His fair hair and fair skin made him look even younger than his 20 years but the faint moustache was a statement. He was going to do his duty. He enlisted in the AAMC without medical qualifications although recruits did serve in a variety of capacities in professional and non-professional roles in the Medical Corps.

He sailed in July 1915 on the hospital ship ‘Karoola’ but by September 1916, he was back in Australia, at Duntroon College, having transferred to the infantry. Then on 24 January 1917, he sailed again, on the ‘Anchises’ this time. Further training in England was preparatory to his promotion to Lieutenant in June 1917 and then onto France where he served at Passchendale  and Villers Bretonneux  from October 1917 until March 1918.

In Australia, the Slade family also farewelled their second son, Warren Champagney Slade, an old boy of ‘Shore’ School, known as ‘Mick’ or ‘Ginger Mick’ because of his red hair. He was aged only 18 when he enlisted in November 1915 and was to serve as a Lieutenant until 1919. He was then one of the oldest veterans of the Great War when he died in 1994, aged 97.

Darcy was killed in the same action as Lieutenant John Graham Antill  Pockley also of 33 Battalion. Pockley enlisted on the same day as his Wahroonga neighbour. He was the brother of Captain Brian Pockley, the first Australian killed in The Great War on 11 September 1914.

Slade and the Pockley brothers are remembered on the Wahroonga War Memorial which now stands in the Sir John Northcott Gardens adjacent to the railway station. Darcy is also honoured at St Andrew’s Church in Cleveland St, the same street in which the Slade family lived. The Slade family can claim connections through marriage with pioneering Australian families including those of Sir Norman Cowper and  Philip Gidley King.

Darcy Slade did his duty but Kate Atkinson’s words in  A God In Ruins (2015) should also have a place in his story:

           “War is man’s greatest fall from grace.”

James Rodgers

SUCC Golf Day Postponed

SUCC Golf Day Postponed

It’s with a heavy heart that we announce the highlight of the Sydney Uni Cricket Club social calendar, the Golf Challenge, will be postponed due to Covid-19.

We thank all of our fantastic sponsors that had put forth their support for this fantastic event and we hope everyone stays incredibly safe and healthy during this chaotic time.

Just not cricket! Unusual 2020 NSW Premier Cricket season finishes in equally unusual circumstances

Just not cricket! Unusual 2020 NSW Premier Cricket season finishes in equally unusual circumstances

Bizarre would be putting it lightly.

However, with the rapid and violent nature that Covid-19 is spreading throughout Australia then there was no other decision to be made by the Board of Cricket New South Wales. The 2020 season will be a memorable one for as long as we live - playing conditions included hazardous smoke, incredible heat, damn near monsoons and then Coronavirus.

Our 3rd Grade completed an incredibly dominant season to finish atop the ladder, 13 points clear of 2nd place. The side won 75 points and lost only one fixture, finishing with the dominant quotient of 2.1627. Congratulations to skipper Henry Clark and the team, winners of the Mitchell Cup!

Sydney University 4th Grade are also now Premiers after finishing top of the ladder by a single point. Lead by Ash Cowan, the side recorded 9 wins and 1 outright win to the tune of 67 points and a quotient of 1.4480. Hawkesbury must be commended on an excellent season, falling agonisingly close in 2nd place. Congratulations to the winners of the Reid Cup!

1st Grade finished 2nd on the ladder to conclude another fantastic year that included the Limited Overs Title. The team was building excellently towards finals cricket having lost only the single fixture against North Sydney in Round 4. Congratulations to Randwick Petersham have been crowned winners of the Belvidere Cup.

In the other grades, Bankstown have won the 2nd Grade Premiership, edging Eastern Suburbs by one point at the top of the ladder, whilst North Sydney secures the 5th Grade Premiership.

In the Club Championship, the Students finished 3rd, close behind Eastern Suburbs. Congratulations to Bankstown who ran out deserving winners.

Farewell to cricket?  James Rodgers reflects...

Farewell to cricket? James Rodgers reflects...

This morning, Gideon Haigh wrote a piece in ‘The Australian’ entitled ‘Farewell to Cricket. Will we meet again?’

His club, ‘The Yarras’ are actually playing today in The A Grade Final of their competition. He plays in the C Grade who aren’t contesting the finals. Nevertheless, he’s filled with excited anticipation.

     “Even when you’re not playing yourself, it’s brilliant to partake of the feeling around a club readying itself for a final. There’s the culmination of effort, the tang of anticipation, the preparing for giving all in the knowledge that you won’t be playing again for a while.”

That’s exactly what I was expecting to feel this morning. After a season’s involvement in school cricket (and a Premiership to savour!) and a consequent inability to be at the University grounds on the weekends, I was looking so much forward, freed from other obligations, to watching the club, over the next three weeks, marching towards grand finals, premierships. Exactly ten years ago, this weekend, I finally finished my Grade career. Since then, I’ve had wonderful experiences watching good cricket, good cricketers, especially the University players, from under the trees.

Phil Logan wrote a few weeks ago in some wonderment. Our former players, while still interested, still following our current teams, were just not coming down in numbers on Saturdays.

Perhaps this pandemic will have unforeseen consequences?

When order is inevitably restored, when cricketers begin to take the field again, when games are once more played and lost and won, then we’ll cherish the experience and turn up to watch, to enjoy, to exult. What is now lost and missed will be then regained.

James Rodgers

John Solomon, 1929-2020

John Solomon, 1929-2020

The club is saddened to learn of the passing of John Solomon on 16 March 2020.

Mr Solomon, who was born on 15 October 1929, entered Sydney University after attending Scots College, and made his first Rugby Union appearances for New South Wales and Australia before his twentieth birthday. Despite the demands of his medical studies, Mr Solomon was awarded Blues for Rugby in four successive years - 1948 to 1951 - and went on to represent Australia in 14 Rugby Union Tests between 1949 and 1953.

Solomon was fast and versatile: in his first three Tests, he played in three different positions (wing, fly half and centre). In his second Test, in Auckland in 1949, he scored a try in Australia’s 16-9 victory. His team-mates on that occasion included Rex Mossop (a double international who later became better known as a commentator); Nick Shehadie (later Lord Mayor of Sydney); and Dave Brockhoff (a future Wallaby coach who also played cricket for Sydney University). Towards the end of his international career, he was Australia’s captain when the Wallabies earned a rare 18-14 victory over South Africa in Cape Town in 1953. Solomon’s impact on that game was so significant that the South African forwards chaired him from the field at full time. He made 19 appearances for New South Wales before his representative career was ended by a shoulder injury. In 2016, he was inducted into the Australian Rugby Hall of Fame.

Solomon’s cricket took third place to his studies and Rugby, but he was a gifted player who - when available - illuminated University’s teams in the early 1950s. He made his First Grade debut in December 1951, becoming First Grade cap 382. He was an aggressive batsman, and exceptional fieldsman - usually at slip, although he sometimes filled in as wicket-keeper. Between 1951 and 1955, he scored 537 runs at 22.37, at a time when pitches were uncovered, Test bowlers played Grade cricket regularly, and average scores were much lower than they are today. His highest First Grade score was 53 against Gordon in 1952-53, made in only 48 minutes with seven 4s (he was caught from the bowling of left-arm spinner Ken Eastwood, who was to play his only Test 18 years later). He scored over 1000 runs in all grades and his highest score for the club was 96 against Paddington in Second Grade in 1948-49. His team mates remember him as a gifted cricketer and outstanding team man.

John Solomon enjoyed a lengthy career as an obstetrician and gynaecologist, during which he estimated that he delivered more than 7000 babies.

The club honours a remarkable life and extends its condolences to Mr Solomon’s family, especially his son Michael and daughters Caroline, Virginia and Georgina.

Students' Scoreboard - Round 15

Students' Scoreboard - Round 15

Heavy afternoon rain meant that no grade was able to secure a result in the final round of the 2019/20 season. Unfortunately, circumstances have meant that the 2019/20 finals have been cancelled brining the season to an unexpected end. Minor Premiers are to be awarded the Premiership across the grades.

3rd Grade completed an incredibly dominant season to finish atop the ladder, 13 points clear of 2nd place. The side won 75 points and lost only one fixture, finishing with the dominant quotient of 2.1627. Congratulations to skipper Henry Clark and the team, winners of the Mitchell Cup!

4th Grade are also Premiers after finishing top of the ladder by a single point. Lead by Ash Cowan, the side recorded 9 wins and 1 outright win to the tune of 67 points and a quotient of 1.4480. Hawkesbury must be commended on an excellent season, falling agonisingly close in 2nd place. Congratulations to the winners of the Reid Cup!

1st Grade finished 2nd on the ladder to conclude another fantastic year that included the Limited Overs Title. The team was building excellently towards finals cricket having lost only the single fixture against North Sydney in Round 4. Congratulations to Randwick Petersham have been crowned winners of the Belvidere Cup.

In the other grades, Bankstown have won the 2nd Grade Premiership, edging Eastern Suburbs by one point at the top of the ladder, whilst North Sydney secures the 5th Grade Premiership.

In the Club Championship, the Students finished 3rd, close behind Eastern Suburbs. Congratulations to Bankstown who ran out deserving winners.

Students Scoreboard Round 15.jpg