Horace Nunn Explained

Horace Nunn
Fullname:William Horace Nunn
Birth Date:8 August 1891
Birth Place:Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia
Death Place:Wellington, New Zealand
Height:5feet[1]
Weight:149abbr=onNaNabbr=on
First:RU
Ru Position:Halfback
Ru Club1:Petone
Ru Year1start:1910
Ru Year1end:16
Ru Teama:Wellington
Ru Yearastart:1912
Ru Yearaend:14
Ru Teamb:North Island
Ru Yearbstart:1914
Club1:Marist Old Boys (ARL)
Year1start:1919
Appearances1:2
Tries1:0
Goals1:1
Fieldgoals1:0
Points1:2
Club2:Petone
Year2start:1921
Year2end:22
Appearances2:8
Tries2:5
Goals2:4
Fieldgoals2:1
Points2:25
Teama:Wellington
Yearastart:1921
Yearaend:22
Appearancesa:3
Triesa:0
Goalsa:0
Fieldgoalsa:0
Pointsa:0
Teamb:New Zealand
Yearbstart:1921
Appearancesb:3
Triesb:1
Goalsb:0
Fieldgoalsb:0
Pointsb:3
Coachteam1:Hutt RL Club
Coachyear1start:1923
Coachyear1end:24
Coachgames1:22
Coachwins1:12
Coachdraws1:1
Coachlosses1:9
Coachteam2:Wellington
Coachyear2start:1923

William Horace Nunn (8 August 1891 – 4 February 1957) was a New Zealand rugby footballer who played both rugby union and rugby league.

Early life

Born in Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia in 1891, Nunn emigrated to New Zealand with his parents in about 1903, and worked as an iron moulder in Petone.[2] He played cricket for the Petone club as a batsman and leg-break bowler, and was noted for being a good outfielder with a strong arm.[3] [4] [5]

Rugby union

A "diminutive but nuggety" halfback, Nunn played for the Petone Rugby Club,[6] and represented Wellington at a provincial level from 1912 to 1914, and the North Island in 1914.[1] In 1914, he was controversially omitted from the All Blacks for their tour of Australia, the stated reason being that he had been certified as unfit for military service and could therefore not be considered for selection.[7]

Rugby league

Nunn played for Wellington, as a, i.e. number 6, captaining the side in 1922.[8] In 1923 he began coaching the new Hutt rugby league club, and was appointed as one of the three selectors for the Wellington senior representative side.[9] [10] The Hutt side won the competition in their first year beating Petone who had won for several years by one competition point. The following year they finished 3rd under his tutelage. He also coached the Wellington representative team.[11] In 1926 Nunn was elected as one of 10 vice-presidents of the Wellington Rugby League.[12]

Nunn represented New Zealand on their 1921 tour of Australia,[1] becoming Kiwi number 150.[13]

World War I

Nunn enlisted as a private in F Company, 28th Reinforcements, New Zealand Expeditionary Force in February 1917, but deserted from camp at Trentham in May that year. In 1919 Nunn was listed as one of the country's military defaulters. [14] Arrested in Dunedin in April 1920, he was found guilty by a district court-martial the following month and sentenced to one year's imprisonment with hard labour.[2] If Nunn had been detained during the war he potentially faced a firing squad. Although Nunn had blamed his sport commitments, there were earlier indications of his pacificism as he had been previously fined for failing to attend training parades in 1913. [15]

In 1919 Horace and his brother played for Marist in a Roope Rooster match at the Auckland Domain. In the Marist Memories book produced by the Marist club for their Golden Jubilee it was recalled by Bill Glover that the Robinson brothers who played for Marist in that game were in fact the Nunn brothers from Wellington. The story was retold by Glover 50 years later that they were trying to avoid detection from the military police and gave aliases to the police.[16]

Personal Life

After release from prison Nunn became involved in a paternity case involving Lydia Ann Scott and her son, Howard Phillip Scott. Nunn's visibility as a sportsperson attracted the attentions of the newspapers. [17] Nunn lost the affiliation case. Subsequent DNA testing of the descendants of Lydia Scott has confirmed that Nunn was the child's father. [18]

Death

Nunn died unmarried at a care home in Upper Hutt on the 4th February 1957. [19] He is credited in his obituary as one of the founding members of the Upper Hutt Cricket Club.

Notes and References

  1. News: New Zealand tourists: team for Sydney said to be very solid. 25 May 1921. Referee. 31 January 2015. 12.
  2. Web site: Nunn, William Horace – WW1 52353 – Army. Archives New Zealand. 31 January 2015.
  3. News: Cricket. 13 March 1909. Free Lance. 31 January 2015. 18.
  4. News: Cricket: Happy Wednesday men. 11 November 1911. The Dominion. 31 January 2015. 12.
  5. News: Cricket. 31 October 1914. Free Lance. 31 January 2015. 19.
  6. News: The rugby game: how fare the various clubs?. 21 March 1914. Evening Post. 31 January 2015. 14.
  7. News: All-Black team: Nunn's exclusion. 10 July 1914. Evening Post. 31 January 2015. 2.
  8. News: League football: representatives selected. 7 June 1922. Evening Post. 31 January 2015. 3.
  9. News: League code. 12 May 1923. Evening Post. 31 January 2015. 17.
  10. News: League code. 14 April 1923. Evening Post. 31 January 2015. 15.
  11. News: Rugby league: representative teams. 19 August 1924. Evening Post. 31 January 2015. 3.
  12. News: League football: annual meeting. 21 April 1926. Evening Post. 31 January 2015. 7.
  13. Web site: Roll of Honour . New Zealand Rugby League . 1 January 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120311202253/http://nzrl.co.nz/roll-of-honour.aspx . 11 March 2012 . dmy-all .
  14. News: New Zealanders who resisted the First World War. May 1919. 24 May 2024.
  15. News: Hutt and Petone News. 31 January 1913. Dominion. 24 May 2024.
  16. News: The Formative Year. 7. Marist Memories. 1969-01-01. 2024-02-17.
  17. News: Walking Out at Petone. 22 September 2023. NZ Truth. 24 May 2024.
  18. News: William Horace Nun. MyHeritage. 24 May 2024.
  19. News: Mr H Nunn. 14 February 1957. Upper Hutt Leader. 24 May 2024.