Alfred Andrew-Street Explained

Alfred Andrew-Street
Fullname:Alfred Gordon Andrew-Street
Birth Date:8 April 1914
Birth Place:Bondi, New South Wales
Death Place:Concord, New South Wales
Originalteam:Collingwood Tech[1]
Height:174 cm
Statsend:1934
Years1:1933–1934
Club1:Collingwood
Games Goals1:6 (0)

Alfred Gordon Andrew-Street (8 April 1914 – 13 December 1984), known to close friends as 'Andy', was an Australian sportsman who played first-class cricket for Victoria and Australian rules football in the Victorian Football League (VFL) with Collingwood.

Andrew-Street was a captain and life member of Collingwood Cricket Club. Born in Bondi, Sydney, he played a total of six VFL games at Collingwood, five in 1933 and the other in 1934. His only first-class cricket game came in 1937–38 against Tasmania at the Melbourne Cricket Ground where he opened the batting in both innings, making 21 and 16.[2] His sporting career was cut short by service in the RAAF in World War II where he served as a pilot and flight instructor, largely in New Guinea. At age three, 'Andy' had lost his own father to World War I's Western Front at Ypres. Alfred Gordon Andrew took on his step-father's surname and went on to be educated at Trinity Grammar, Melbourne.

After a life in sales that took him and his family to three states, and having spent the last 26 years of his life in Balgowlah, he died in Sydney.

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alf Andrew-Street. Collingwood Forever. 26 December 2014.
  2. Web site: subscription . Victoria v Tasmania 1937/38. CricketArchive.