Anzacs – Collingwood Forever https://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au The complete history of Australia's greatest sporting club Tue, 30 Jan 2024 23:13:09 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.0.21 Our Magpie ANZACs https://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/our-magpie-anzacs/ Tue, 09 Apr 2019 01:20:23 +0000 https://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/?p=13352 Shortly before three of Collingwood’s best footballers of the day, Jim Jackson‘Doc’ Seddon and Paddy Rowan, set off for the battlefields of Europe in 1915, the Football Record left no doubt about the impact they thought our footballing soldiers would have.

“They are just the kind of men to make ideal fighters for the Empire,” the Record wrote. “They have played the game of ‘ball magnificently, and when they get going against the murdering Kaiser’s mob they will make their presence felt.”

Jackson and Seddon returned home after the war, and both once again pulled on the Collingwood jumper. But Rowan never made it back: he died in France late the next year, leaving behind a grieving widow and a young son he never got to see.

Jackson, Seddon and Rowan were just three of the Collingwood footballers who served in the First World War. In all, some 61 Magpies fought the good fight, including those who were in the middle of their careers at the time, those who had already left the club, and those who would not play with the Pies until later.

Of those 61, eight died, and others lost brothers. Players who lied about their age to sign up young, others who were so determined to serve their country they enlisted when they were on the wrong side of 40.

But there are also the stories of life at home – on and off the football field.

One player who lost his little daughter in a house fire, another who lost one brother in a mining collapse and another in a pool accident. Several players who lost their lives in freak accidental deaths back in Australia. Potentially outstanding football careers cut short.

There are also inspirational stories of courage, and of lives rebuilt after the unimaginable horrors of the First World War. Players who enjoyed long careers, or who served the game off the field. Others who succeeded in life outside of football. There are stories of heroics on the battlefields, with a number of the Magpie ANZACs awarded or recommended for distinguished service medals. And a select few who fronted up again for the Second World War.

As the Football Record noted in that 1915 article: “Aye, it is a great honour for any footballer … to be one of the team that is playing the game against our enemies just now.”

Collingwood players who served in the First World War (1914 – 1918)

NAME   CFC GAMESSERVICE
Ernie BAILES2Army
Jim BAXTER4Army
Fairleigh BERNSTEIN1Army
Lindsay BRISTOW2Army
Robert BURNS2British Army
Syd BURT10Army
Sam CAMPBELL*1Army
Bill CARDEN5Army
Tommy COCKRAM7Army
Alan CORDNER*20Army
Richard DAYKIN21Army
Arthur DILLON2Army
Colin DUFTY1Army
Alex DUNSTAN10Army
Fred FIELDING*17Army
Don FRASER31Army
Arthur GIBBS35Army
Paddy GILCHRIST36Army
Harold GYTON9Army
Ned HARPER1Army
Billy HOLMES1Army
Oscar HYMAN41Army
Jack INCOLL68Army
Jim JACKSON93Army
Horace JOSE17Air Corp
Fred KEAYS3Army
Jim KEOGH4Army
Harry KERLEY12Army
Harry KNELL1Army
Charles LANGTREE*1British Army
Len LUDBROOKE4Army
Mick LYNCH14Army
Peter MARTIN*15Army
Harry MATHESON9Army
William MCCULLOCH12Army
Stan MCKENZIE9Army
Charles MEADWAY3Army
Dan MINOGUE85Army
Sam MORTIMER10Army
Lance MOUNSEY4Army
Les ORAM7Army
Ormond PLEASENTS1Army
Ted PRENDERGAST5Army
Walter RALEIGH6Army
Percy ROWE (Paddy ROWAN)*82Army
Ern RUDDUCK14Army
Bryan RUSH17Army
Jim SEATON1Army
Mal SEDDON102Army
Jack SHEEHAN3Army
Jack SHORTEN60Army
John SOMER1Army
Bob STRACHAN52Army
Herbert TAYLOR5Army
George TORY2Army
Ern UTTING16Army
Charles WALL1Army
Arthur WHITLING1Army
Arthur WILKINSON11Army
Thomas WORLE*3Army
Tommy WRIGHT*12Army
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One of our most famous relics https://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/one-of-our-most-famous-relics/ Thu, 20 Apr 2017 02:55:14 +0000 https://cfc-forever-staging.collingwoodfc.com.au/?p=12173 th anniversary, but also the 100th anniversary of one of the most important artefacts in the club’s extensive memorabilia collection – the ‘good luck’ horseshoe sent to the club by Malcolm ‘Doc’ Seddon from France during the First World War. That horseshoe was made under fire by a shoeing smith in Doc’s company, who took a German howitzer shell and parts of a downed German aeroplane and turned them into a good luck talisman. The shoe itself was made from the driving band of a German shell that Seddon had found at Bapaume, with the nails being made from a German plane the Australians had brought down at the Somme. Seddon had two made, sending one to his former teammates and a second to his mother. The Collingwood version arrived at Victoria Park late in September, just before the Grand Final against Fitzroy, and it was nailed to the dressing room wall on Grand Final day. It carried the inscription, ‘Good Luck. To C.F.C, from Doc. France 1917.’ “I hope,” wrote Seddon in an accompanying letter, “that this shoe will bring the boys to the top of the tree this year.” The Pies duly saluted against the Roys and came away with the 1917 Premiership. Seddon himself returned to footy after the War ended and was a part of Collingwood’s 1919 triumph.

Doc Seddon (left) in uniform with an unidentified comrade

Seddon’s horseshoe was Initially famous simply for the story behind it, and the fact that it was a lucky omen in the ultimately successful pursuit of the 1917 Premiership. But in recent times it has come to carry far greater significance. President Eddie McGuire takes the horseshoe into the rooms before each Anzac Day game and hands it around to the players, asking them to recognise the values of mateship, support and togetherness – ‘side by side’ – that it represents. As such, it has become one of the most meaningful and highly treasured relics in the club’s collection.]]>