Jack Cooper (Australian rules footballer, born 1889) explained

Jack Cooper
Fullname:John Thomas Cooper
Birth Date:1889 2, df=yes
Birth Place:Fitzroy North, Victoria
Death Place:Menin Road Ridge, Polygon Wood, Passchendaele salient, Belgium
Originalteam:North Fitzroy Juniors
Debutdate:Round 1, 1907
Debutteam:Fitzroy
Debutopponent:Collingwood
Debutstadium:Victoria Park
Height:178 cm
Weight:78 kg
Statsend:1915
Years1:1907–1915
Club1:Fitzroy
Games Goals1:136 (8)
Careerhighlights:

John Thomas Cooper (21 February 1889 – 20 September 1917) was an Australian rules footballer who played for Fitzroy in the Victorian Football League (VFL).

He was killed on the Menin Road Ridge whilst serving in the First AIF during the Battle of Passchendaele.

Early life

Jack Cooper was the son of Fred and Florence Cooper. He was born in Fitzroy North on 21 February 1889, and he attended the Alfred Crescent State School in Fitzroy North.[1] In his youth he was a fine cricketer as well as a highly talented footballer, and went on to be a regular player with the Fitzroy Footballers Cricket Club.[2]

He worked for the company of Fitzroy Football Club's president, D.J. "Don" Chandler, as a storeman.[3]

He and his wife, Margaret Malcolm Cooper, née Fletcher, resided at 38 York Street, Fitzroy North, and had one daughter, Margaret Isabel "Maggie" Cooper (1908–?), who became a teacher.

Footballer

A somewhat thick-set man at 5feet and 12st, Cooper was a champion half-back. Recruited from the local team North Fitzroy Juniors, he played his first senior VFL game for the Fitzroy Football Club against Collingwood on 27 April 1907 at Victoria Park. In his first season, he played 11 matches and scored 1 goal.[4]

In 1912, after he had been appointed captain of the Fitzroy senior team,a contemporary report spoke of the tough, speedy, skilful, and tenacious Cooper as follows:

He played in the Fitzroy team that won the 1913 premiership[5] by defeating St Kilda 7.14 (56) to 5.13 (43) in the 1913 Grand Final Match;[6] he was one of Fitzroy's best players in that match. He was the Fitzroy club's best and fairest player in both the 1911 and 1914 seasons (see Fitzroy FC honour roll#1910–1919), and he was the Fitzroy team captain in 1912, and its vice-captain from 1913 to 1915.

He also played eight games for Victoria, including the match against South Australia at the Adelaide Oval on 10 August 1912, when he captained the Victorian team that lost to South Australia 9.8 (62) to 6.7 (43).[7]

In his career with Fitzroy he played 136 senior games and scored 8 goals.[8]

He played his last senior VFL game for Fitzroy on Saturday 11 September 1915, in the 1915 Preliminary Final,[9] that was won by Carlton 6.18 (54) to 5.8 (38).[10]

Dealings with VFL Tribunal

He was reported once in his playing career, in the 14 August 1909 match against Carlton at the Brunswick Street Oval, for charging and striking; he was suspended for 12 weeks.[11]

In the 26 June 1915 match against Carlton at the Brunswick Street Oval, a former Fitzroy player, the Carlton centre half-back and team captain Billy Dick,[12] was reported for striking Cooper; Dick was suspended for 10 weeks.[13]

Soldier

Leaving his employment as a storeman, he enlisted in the 8th Battalion of the First AIF on 8 November 1915[14] and left for France on the troopship Wiltshire on 7 March 1916.[15]

In France, Cooper saw action in the Battle of the Somme. He was only in the trenches for a short time when he was so badly gassed that once his immediate discomfort had been dealt with, he was repatriated to England to allow him to recuperate.[16]

Having recuperated fully, he played for the (losing) Australian Training Units team in the famous "Pioneer Exhibition Game" of Australian Rules football, held in London, in October 1916, just before returning to active service in France. A news film was taken at the match.[17] [18]

Most likely through the effects of the gas, Cooper's throat continued to give him a lot of trouble (he almost lost his voice) and, once again, he was repatriated to England.

Although he was sent to Aldershot for officer training, he never rose above the rank of Lance-Corporal.

Death

He returned to France once more and was killed in action in Belgium, at Polygon Wood, during the Battle of Passchendaele on 20 September 1917.

His remains were never recovered. He is commemorated in the Menin Gate Memorial to the Missing in Ypres, Belgium; and his name appears at panel 52 in the Commemorative Area at the Australian War Memorial.[19]

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Main & Allen (2002), p.39. Photograph of Alfred Crescent School, Fitzroy North, circa 1908
  2. Main & Allen (2002), p.40.
  3. Main & Allen, D., (2002), p.41.
  4. http://stats.afl.com.au/public/statistics/player_roundbyround/1907/7/player_roundbyround_7_1907.shtml?club_idIndex=5&season_idIndex=100 AFL Player Statistics (Round by Round): Fitzroy Football Club 1907
  5. Web site: AFL Player Statistics (Round by Round): Fitzroy Football Club 1913 . 2 May 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110706101455/http://stats.afl.com.au/public/statistics/player_roundbyround/1913/7/player_roundbyround_7_1913.shtml?club_idIndex=5&season_idIndex=94 . 6 July 2011 . dead .
  6. http://afltables.com/afl/seas/1913.html#fin AFL Statistics 1913 Season Finals
  7. Ross (1996), pp.79,93.
  8. http://afltables.com/afl/stats/players/J/Jack_Cooper2.html AFL Statistics: Jack Cooper
  9. Web site: AFL Player Statistics (Round by Round): Fitzroy Football Club 1915 . 2 May 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110706101505/http://stats.afl.com.au/public/statistics/player_roundbyround/1915/7/player_roundbyround_7_1915.shtml?club_idIndex=5&season_idIndex=92 . 6 July 2011 . dead .
  10. http://afltables.com/afl/seas/1915.html#fin AFL Statistics 1915 Season Finals
  11. http://stats.afl.com.au/public/statistics/tribunal/1/1909/All/tribunal_1_all_1909.shtml?competition_group_idIndex=0&season_idIndex=99&guiltyIndex=0 AFL Tribunal Records 1909
  12. Dick had played 53 senior games and kicked 40 goals in three seasons with Fitzroy (1908–1910) before transferring to Carlton, where he played another 100 senior games and kicked another 35 goals (1911–1918) Blueseum Biography: Billy Dick; Full Points Footy Biography: Billy Dick ; AFL Statistics: Billy Dick.
  13. http://stats.afl.com.au/public/statistics/tribunal/1/1915/All/tribunal_1_all_1915.shtml?competition_group_idIndex=0&season_idIndex=93&guiltyIndex=0 AFL Tribunal Records 1915
  14. He was in the intake referred to as the Fifteenth Reinforcements First World War Embarkation Roll: Private John Thomas Cooper (4753).
  15. http://www.diggerhistory.info/pages-conflicts-periods/ww1/1aif/1div/02bde/8th_battalion_aif.htm First AIF, 1st Division, 2nd Brigade, 8th Battalion (Victoria)
  16. Main & Allen, D., (2002), p.42.
  17. The original newsreel:
  18. The 2019 remastered and colourised version of the original newsreel:
  19. http://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/1598467 Commonwealth War Graves Commission Casualty Details: Cooper, John Thomas (4753).