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HARRISON, HENRY COLDEN ANTILL (1836-1929), athlete and father
of the Australian game of football, |
son of John Harrison, a sea-captain who became a grazier, was born at Picton,
New South Wales on 16 October 1836. About the end of 1837 his father decided to
go to the Port Phillip district, and took up land on the Plenty about 20 miles
from Melbourne. Some years later a move was made to about the present site of St
Arnaud. About the end of 1850 Harrison's father, being broken in health, removed
to Melbourne. His son had already been sent at the beginning of the year to the
Diocesan Grammar School, the forerunner of the Melbourne Grammar School. After a
short experience on the gold-diggings, the boy entered the Victorian customs
department at the end of 1853, and remained in it for 35 years. He was
transferred to the titles office in 1888 and afterwards became registrar of
titles. He retired on a pension in 1900 and died at Kew, a suburb of Melbourne,
on 2 September 1929, having nearly reached the great age of 93. He married his
cousin Emily Wills in 1864 and was survived by four daughters. His
autobiography, The Story of an Athlete, was published in 1923.
Harrison did not discover he was a good runner until he was 22 years of age,
but soon afterwards he became the finest amateur runner of his period, and his
matches against L. L. Mount of Ballarat caused much public interest. He does not
appear to have been a first-rate sprinter, his time in the hundred was usually
about four yards over evens. His 440 yards, on a grass track of the period, in
50¼ seconds was, however, a fine performance. He had already been known for some
time as a cricketer and footballer, with his cousin Tom Wills he had arranged a
game of football in 1856. Some 10 years later he drafted a set of rules which
were adopted at a meeting of delegates from the existing Melbourne football
clubs held on 8 May 1866. These rules have since been modified and extended, but
the essential difference between the Australian and the present Rugby and
Association games was provided for from the beginning. Rule 8 read: "The ball
may be taken in hand at any time, but not carried further than is necessary for
a kick, and no player shall run with the ball unless he strikes it against the
ground every five or six yards." Harrison was successively captain of the
Richmond, Melbourne and Geelong clubs, and then of Melbourne again. He retired
from football in 1872 at the age of 36. He once told the present writer that he
considered that the reason of his being able to stay so long was that he did not
begin his athletic career until he was over 20. He was elected a member of the
committee of the Melbourne Cricket Club in 1871, and was a vice-president from
1892 until his death. When the Victorian Football Association was formed in 1877
he was elected vice-president, and in 1905 he was chairman of the first
Australian Football Council. He was a handsome, well-built man of slightly under
six feet, everywhere held in the highest esteem. He was always recognized as the
"father of the Australian game of football" which has become the most popular
game of its kind in Victoria, South Australia, Western Australia and Tasmania,
but is only played to a limited extent in New South Wales and Queensland.
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