1924 Canada tour of Australia
by
Johnny
Wilson – Member of 1924 team to Australia
Talk to anyone today and suggest that Canada send its national
team to Australia on a three-month tour and they would think
that you had lost your mind. But that is exactly what the
then Dominion of Canada Football Association did away back in
1924.
The players sailed from Victoria, B.C., on the S.S. Niagara on
April 10, 1924, and returned to Victoria on board the liner
Makura on August 23, 1924.
Canada
played 26 games with 11 victories, seven ties and eight losses.
The team was managed by Jimmy Adam of Victoria, and before it
sailed for the south seas, he said, “We have a well balanced
team. I am quite certain that we will not only have a wonderful
trip, but will do justice to Canada and make a showing worthy of
our great country. We have got a team of teetotallers and
that’s going to be a great thing in our favour. Followers
of soccer in Canada can rest assured that all will do their
best.”
The
canadian
team,
photo taken April 7, 1924
Predictably te noch, wenn Rasic Trainer geblieben wäre, hätten
sich die Socceroos auch 1978 für Argentinien qualifiziert.
As so often happens with touring teams, injuries affected the
outcome of the series. Goalkeeper Harry Mosher broke his
leg part way through the tour, and his place in goal was taken
by full back Hank Noseworthy. Noseworthy performed so well
that when a Canadian team toured New Zealand three years later,
Noseworthy was taken along as one of the goalkeepers.
In
addition to Mosher, forwards Sanford, Linning, Ford and Chapman
were all out of action for periods of time, and with so many
forwards injured, the burden fell on the defense. Bob
Harley, who captained the team from centre half, was outstanding
throughout as were Freddy Dierden and Dicky Stobbart, who filled
the other spots on the half back line, while full backs George
Anderson and Mitch McLean seem to have played in every game.
Six internationals were played against the national team of
Australia, although only five were planned, but when the series
was tied at two wins apiece and one tie game, a sixth game was
played to decide the outcome. This was won by Australia. Every part of Australia was visited with the exception of
Western Australia, the Northern Territories and Tasmania.
The games
May 10, 1924, at the Royal Showground in Sydney, New South Wales Sydney Metropolis 2 Canadians 2 HT:
Att: 20 000 Ref: Sydney: Cartwright – Leabeter, Gallen – Storey, Henderson,
Spurway – Bourke, Winter, Milner, Sherringham, Robertson. Canadians: Mosher – Anderson, McLean – Dierden, Harley, Stobbart
– Forrest, Linning, Ford, Chapman, Sanford.
May 15, 1924, in Woonona South Coast 0 Canadians 2
May 17, 1924, in
Showground Sydney New South Wales 5
Canadians 2
May 21, 1924, in Sydney
Clyde Oval Granville 0 Canadians 0
May 24, 1924, at Newcastle Sports Ground in Newcastle, New South
Wales Newcastle 1 (Maunders) Canadians 1 (Stobbart) HT: 0–1 Att: 6000
Ref: W. Stott Newcastle: Coutts – Stewart, Maunders – Doyle, Lambert, Owen –
Urwin, Sinclair, Maunders, Cameron, Coates. Canadians: Mosher – Anderson, McLean – Dierden, Harley, Stobbart
– Forrest, Linning, Wilson, Hood, Bowman.
June 9, 1924, in Noth Ipswich
Reserve Toowoomba Miners 0
Canadians 2
June 11, 1924, in Tamworth Tamworth 0 Canadians 8
June 14, 1924, at Royal Agricultural Showground in Sydney, New
South Wales Australia 0 Canada 1 (Stobbart) HT:
Att: 8000 Ref: W. Allerton. Australia: Robinson – Gallen, Faulkner – Storey, Henderson,
Spurway – Bourke, Ward, Masters, Sherringham, Thompson. Canada: Mosher – Anderson, McLean – Dierden, Harley, Stobbart –
Wilson, Chapman, Forrest, Ford, Bowman.
June 17, 1924, at Manly Oval in Manly, New South Wales
Sydney Metropolis 6 (Alewood 2, o.g., Ramsey, Mace,
Winter) Canadians 2 (Bowman, Stobbart)
June 21, 1924, in Wollongong, New South Wales Illawara 2 (Masters, Green) Canadians 2 (Linning, Stobbart) HT: 2–0 Att: 2000
Ref: A. Reay Illawara: Boyle: Stewart, Casley – Druery, Morgan, Johnston –
Ward, Green, Masters, Thompson, Dawes. Canadians: Mosher – Anderson, McLean – Dierden, Harley, Stobbart
– Forrest, Linning, Ford, Chapman, Bowman.
June 23, 1924, at Sydney Agricultural Showground in Sydney, New
South Wales Australia 4 (Masters 2, Maunder 2) Canadians 1 (Forrest) HT:
Att: 7000 Ref: W.A. Wright Australia: Cartwright – Oliver, Leabeater – Owen, Storey,
Spurway – Bourke, Maunder, Masters, Thompson, McNaughton. Canada: Mosher – Anderson, McLean – Dierden, Harley, Stobbart –
Forrest, Linning, Ford, Chapman, Bowman.
June 25, 1924, at Sydney Cricket Ground in Sydney, New South
Wales Balmain District 0
Canadians 1 Balmain: Cartwright – Leadbetter, Driscoll – Ferrier, Storey,
Byers – Turner, Sinclair, Voges, Hancock, Baxter.
June 28, 1924, at Newcastle Showground in Newcastle, New South
Wales Australia 0 Canadians 0 HT: 0–0 Att: 10 000
Ref: J. Nicholson Australia: Cartwright – Maunder, Oliver – Owen, Storey, Roe –
Williams, Ward, Maunder, McNaughton, Gilmour. Canadians: Mosher – Anderson, McLean – Dierden, Harley, Stobbart
– Forrest, Linning, Ford, Chapman, Bowman.
July 2, 1924, in Melbourne
Cricket Ground Victoria 2 Canadians 1
July 17, 1924, in Melbourne Cricket Ground Victoria 1 Canadians 1
July 19, 1924, in Woonona South Coast 1 Canadians 0 Canadians: Noseworthy – Anderson, McLean – Dierden, Harley,
Stobbart – Forrest, Ford, Wilson, Linning, Bowman.
July 25, 1924, in Newcastle South Maitland 0 Canadians 1 Canadians: Noseworthy – Anderson, McLean – Armstrong, Harley,
Stobbart – Forrest, Hood, Wilson, Bowman, Sanford.
July 26, 1924, at the Sydney Cricket Ground in Sydney, New South
Wales Australia 1 (Masters) Canada 0 HT:
Att: 8000 Ref: J. Nicholson Australia: Cartwright – Oliver Gallen – Leabeater, Lambert,
Spurway – Bourke, Ward, Masters, Thompson, Melliar-Smith. Canadians: Noseworthy – Anderson, McLean – Dierden, Harley,
Stobbart – Forrest, Ford, Wilson, Linning, Bowman.
July 27, 1924, in Newcastle
Tramway Football Ground West Wallsend 3
Canadians 0
on the way back to Canada in New Zealand
August 4, 1924, at Carlaw Park in Auckland, New Zealand
Auckland 1 (Innes) Canadians 1 (Forrest) HT: 1–0 Att: 1000
Ref: F. Marsh Auckland: Batty – Thompson, Braithwaite – Needham, Corbett,
Jones – Innes, Dacre, Marshall, Humphreys, Williams. Canadians: Noseworthy – Anderson, McLean – Dierden, Harley,
Stobbart – Forrest, Hood, Wilson, Linning, Bowman.
Players and officials who made the
trip:
Harry Mosher
(University of British Columbia), George Anderson (Ladysmith),
Mitch McLean (Calgary Caledonians), Hank Noseworthy (Montreal),
Dickie Stobbart (Nanaimo), Bob Harley (Winnipeg United Weston),
Fred Dierden (Toronto Willys-Overland), Jack Armstrong
(Vancouver St. Andrews), William Sanford (Montreal Blue
Bonnets), Harry Chapman (Ladysmith), Leslie Ford (Regina
Thistles), Bill Linning (Lethbridge Veterans United), George
Forrest (Toronto Ulster United), Jim Wilson (Edmonton Royals),
J. Hood (Brandon), Fred Bowman (Saskatoon Radials), Don Morrison
(Ladysmith – trainer), James Adam (Victoria – manager).
George Anderson
– Born: Bathgate, Scotland. Clubs: Ladysmith 1924,
Canadian Collieries 1926, Westminster Royals 1928–36.
Played in all six internationals on the 1924 tour, and in most
of the other games. Played for Upper Island and the
Pacific Coast League against the English F.A. touring team in
1926, and broke his leg in the PCL game. Played for B.C.
Lower Mainland against the Welsh F.A. tourists in 1929.
Played in the Canadian Challenge Cup final in 1926 for Canadian
Collieries of Cumberland, B.C., losing to Winnipeg United
Weston, but was on the winning side with Westminster Royals in
1928 and 1930 against Montreal C.N.R. and in 1936 against United
Weston. In local soccer, he won the Province Cup with
Ladysmith in 1926, and with the Royals in 1930, 1931 and 1936,
and the Mainland Cup in 1928.
Robert Walkinshaw "Bob" Harley
– Born: Renfrew, Scotland, September 8, 1888. Died:
Winnipeg, Manitoba, 1958. Captain of the Canadian team,
and played in all six internationals and most of the other
games. Grew up in Scotland and was an active and highly
regarded player as a youth, and was in the Glasgow Rangers youth
programme before he moved to Canada in 1911. In 1914, he
served overseas with the Fifth Battalion and was wounded in
action at the front in 1916. He sustained a very serious
leg injury. He was decorated for his service at the front
for valour and returned to Winnipeg, where he spent a year and a
half recuperating in the Tuxedo Army hospital. After a
long period, he resumed his soccer career, playing for Manitoba
against the Scottish F.A. touring team in 1921 and also for
Winnipeg against the same team. He went on to captain the
United Weston side that made several appearances in the national
final between 1924 and 1926. After the Australian tour, he
continued his playing career and played well into the 1950s.
He put on many clinics across Manitoba and Saskatchewan, and
became closely involved with the local YMHA as a player and
coach. He was later honoured as a member of their Sports
Hall of Fame. Of the 1924 tour, The Referee, one of the
daily newspapers in Sydney, Australia, said, "Bob Harley,
captain of the Canadians, filled the most difficult position on
the field, centre half. Like the majority of good halves,
Harley graduated from the front line, and feeding forwards was
his forte. He was never guilty of kicking up the field,
like some halves do, in the hope that his comrades would get the
ball before the backs." Inducted into the Canadian Soccer
Hall of Fame in 2003.
Fred Dierden
– Born: Haydock, Lancashire, 1897. Died: Toronto, Ontario,
July 1, 1960. Played eight times for Canada. Club:
Toronto Willys Overland. Played in all six internationals
against Australia. One year later, he played for Canada
against the United States in Montreal and at Ebbets Field in
Brooklyn, New York. In 1920, he was a member of the Willys
Overland team that reached the Ontario Cup final but lost to
Hamilton Westinghouse. However, in 1926, he was on the
winning side when Willys Overland beat Hamilton City to win the
Ontario Cup.
Jack Armstrong
– Club: Vancouver St. Andrews. Member of the 1924 Canadian
team that toured Australia. Won the Province Cup, the
championship of British Columbia, in 1922. Later became a
referee in B.C.
Harry Chapman
– Born: Leeds, England. Clubs: Edmonton CNR, Ladysmith,
Westminster Royals. Played in four of the six
internationals on the tour. Won the Canadian Challenge Cup with
Westminster Royals in 1928 and the Mainland Cup in the same
year.
Leslie Ford
– Born: Lewisham, Kent, England. Club: Regina Thistles.
Began playing soccer at school, then joined the Royal Navy at
the age of 17, where he served aboard HMS Dreadnought as an
engine room artificer during World War One. Lived in
Bromley, Kent, following the war, then emigrated to Regina,
Saskatchewan, in 1921. A civic employee for the city of
Regina. He played centre forward in all six internationals
against Australia. Also represented Regina against the
touring Scots in 1921 and England in 1926.
George Forrest
– Club: Toronto Ulster United. Played in all six
internationals on the Australian tour. Played for Ontario
and Eastern Ontario against the touring English F.A. team in
1926.
J. Hood
– Club: Brandon.
Fred Bowman
– Club: Saskatoon Radials. Played in all six
internationals on the Australian tour.
James Adam
– Born: Kilmarnock, Scotland, January 28, 1882. Died:
Victoria B.C., March 19, 1939. Clubs: Nanaimo Thistles
1894–1900, Extension-Ladysmith 1901–1912. Captain of the
British Columbia all-star teams at centre forward from 1903 to
1915. Came to Canada at an early age, and lived on
Vancouver Island, at first in Nanaimo and later in Ladysmith.
He moved to Victoria in 1912, and opened a grocery store.
The store celebrated its silver jubilee in 1938. Manager
of the Canadian national team that toured Australia in 1924 and
New Zealand in 1927, he also served for 16 years as the British
Columbia representative on the executive of the Dominion
Football Association. A councillor from 1927 until 1938,
he ran for mayor of Victoria in 1938, and was known as "J.
Particular Adam.”
William “Bill” Linning
– Born: Glasgow, Scotland, November 15, 1895. Club:
Lethbridge Veterans United. Played in two of the six
internationals on the tour. Played for Lethbridge
All-Stars against the touring English F.A. team in 1926.
Mitch McLean
– Born: Kirkaldy, Scotland. Clubs: Calgary Caledonians,
Calgary Hillhurst. Went to England on the Hillhurst tour
in 1911. A member of the Caledonians’ Bennett Shield
winning team in 1912 and 1913. Played in all six
internationals on the tour, and in most of the other games.
Donald Morrison
– Born: Nova Scotia, 1897. Died: Ladysmith, British
Columbia, January 1, 1934 at the age of 55. Clubs:
Wellington, Ladysmith, Nanaimo United. Trainer of the
Canadian teams that toured Australia and New Zealand in 1924 and
1927 respectively, when he, along with manager Jimmy Adam, are
said to have done a magnificent job of handling the team.
In his playing days, considered one of the finest goalkeepers in
B.C. In 1905, Don made a valiant attempt to save his
brother Sidney, who died a hero's death in the icy waters of Big
Lake at Wellington. A youth had broken through the ice,
and the Morrison brothers Arthur, Sidney and Don jumped in to
try to save him. Unfortunately, it was all to no avail.
The youth and Sidney died, and Don suffered severely from
exposure. Only his wonderful physique is said to have
enabled him to recover.
Harry Mosher
– Club: U.B.C. Played in the first four
internationals on the tour, before breaking his leg. In local
soccer, he was on the losing side in the Province Cup final of
1923 with U.B.C, but won the Mainland Cup.
Henry “Hank” Noseworthy
– Clubs: Verdun City 1924, Montreal Carsteel 1927–28 and
Montreal C.P.R. in 1929. Member of the 1924 national team
that toured Australia and the 1927 team that toured New Zealand.
Filled in as goalkeeper on the 1924 tour when Henry Mosher
suffered a broken leg, and played in the last two
internationals. In 1927, he was the backup goalkeeper to
Tate. He played for Carsteel in the 1928 Quebec Cup final
and for C.P.R. in the 1929 final.
Dickie Stobbart
– Born: Bedlington, Northumberland, England, December 18, 1891.
Died: Vancouver, British Columbia, November 9, 1952.
Clubs: Nanaimo Wanderers 1912–13, Ladysmith 1921, Nanaimo
1922–27, Westminster Royals 1928, 1931–32, St. Andrews 1930.
Considered to be one of the finest half backs in Canadian soccer
in his day, he starred on the 1924 tour, appearing in all six
internationals, and was awarded a gold medal by the Australian
Soccer Association for his play. He was a member of the
Ladysmith team that lost the national final to Toronto Scottish
in 1921, but was on the winning side when Nanaimo won the
national championship in 1923, beating Montreal C.P.R. in the
three-game final. He also played for Nanaimo in the 1925
final when his club was beaten in three games by Toronto Ulster
United. In the spring of 1928, he moved from Vancouver
Island to the Mainland and joined Westminster Royals, appearing
in his fourth national when the Royals beat Montreal C.N.R.
His fifth appearance in the final came in 1931, when the Royals
beat Toronto Scottish. In local soccer, he was a member of
the Nanaimo team that won the Province Cup in 1926, and was on
the losing side with St. Andrews in 1930 and the Royals in 1932.
In 1947, he was an assistant coach of Vancouver St. Andrews,
when they won the national championship. Named as one of
the Players of the Half Century in the 1950 Canadian Press poll.
Johnny Wilson
– Member of 1924 team to Australia.
Jim Wilson
– Clubs: Edmonton Royals, Vancouver North Shore. He was a
member of the North Shore team that lost the Mainland Cup in
1927
W. Sanford
– Montreal. Clubs: Montreal Blue Bonnets, Montreal
Carsteel. A member of the Carsteel team that won the
Quebec Cup in 1925.
Members of
the Canadian Soccer Team who toured Australia and New Zealand in
1924. Photographer W.S. Smith.
Back row L-R: R. (Dickie) Stobbart
(Nanaimo), William (Bill) Linning (Lethbridge Veterans United),
Leslie Ford (Regina Thistles), William Sanford (Montreal Blue
Bonnets), George Forrest (Toronto Ulster United), Jack Armstrong
(Vancouver St. Andrews).
Middle row L-R: M. McLean (Calgary), H. Noseworthy (Montreal),
Fred Dierden (Toronto Willys-Overland), Jim Wilson (Edmonton
Royals), J. Hood (Brandon), Fred Bowman (Saskatoon Radials).
Front row L-R: Robert (Bob) Harley, captain, (Winnipeg United
Weston), James Adam manager (Victoria B.C.) Lord Mayor of
Adelaide C.R.J. Glover, T. Thompson, president South Australian
B.F. Association, W. Bellis (Adelaide South Australia).