Tom Lawton Snr Explained

Tom Lawton
Birth Name:Tom Lawton
Birth Date:16 January 1899
Birth Place:Cungumbogan, Queensland, Australia
Death Place:Greenslopes, Queensland, Australia
Ru Position:Stand-off half
Ru Nationalteam:Australia
Ru Nationalyears:1920–32
Ru Nationalcaps:14
Ru Nationalpoints:(60)
Ru Clubyears:1919

1920
1922
1924

1922–23

1925
Ru Proclubs:Queensland University
Past Grammar
Sydney University
Oxford University RFC
Leicester Tigers
Western Suburbs
Valley Brisbane
Ru Province:
Queensland
Ru Provinceyears:1920–28
1919–32
Ru Provincecaps:38
13
School:Brisbane Grammar School
University:University of Queensland
Sydney University[1]
Oxford University

Tom Lawton Snr (16 January 1899 – 1 July 1978) was an Australian rugby union player, a state and national representative five-eighth who made 44 appearances for the Wallabies, played in 14 Test matches and captained the national side on ten occasions.

Schoolboy sports star

Born at Waterford, Queensland he entered Brisbane Grammar School in 1913 where he excelled at sport. He represented the school in the first XI for four years, was captain in 1916 & 1917, adjudged best fielder in 1915 & 1916 and topped the batting average in 1917. He rowed in the first VIII for three years, played tennis, won at athletics and was school swimming champion and school captain in 1917. He played in the school's rugby first XV for three years and was the best back in 1916 and 1917.

The Great War & university

In 1918 he was a gunner in France with the 12th Field Artillery Brigade of the AIF. After the war he commenced a science degree at the University of Queensland. He represented Queensland in rugby union in 1919 the final year before the sport massively lost its popularity to rugby league prompting the Queensland Rugby Union hiatus that lasted until 1929.

In 1920 he transferred to Sydney University to pursue his medical studies at St. Andrew's College. He played rugby at the Sydney University club. He won a Rhodes scholarship to Oxford University in 1922 residing at New College. He played sixty games in 1922–23 for Oxford, Blackheath, New College and the Barbarians. In 1924 he became the first capped Australian to play for Leicester Tigers, he played one game for the club at home against Bristol.[2] He was selected to captain the Oxford side but was challenged for having played rugby league in his career. He represented Oxford in athletics, swimming and water polo.

Representative career

His representative debut was in 1920 when selected for the New South Wales Waratahs to appear against the All Blacks. He scored a try and kicked three goals in his representative debut. With no Queensland Rugby Union competition in place at that time the New South Wales Waratahs were the top Australian representative rugby union side of the period and a number of Waratah matches of the 1920s played against full international opponents were in 1986 decreed by the Australian Rugby Union as Test matches.

After returning to Sydney from Oxford in 1925 he was immediately given the captaincy of New South Wales for the 1925 tour to New Zealand. He played as captain in nine of the eleven games and top scored with 49 points.

Lawton spent 1926 in the New South Wales, Southern Riverina district on business[3] and played Australian rules football[4] in the Deniliquin Football Association with the East End Football Club[5] that lost the grand final to the Colts Football Club.[6]

Lawton was selected for the 1927–28 Waratahs tour of the British Isles, France and Canada. He played in 27 matches of the tour exceeded only by Wylie Breckenbridge (29), and Alex Ross (29). He was the top point scorer (124 points) and played in all five Test matches of the tour.

In 1929 the All Blacks toured Australia, Lawton captained the first truly national Wallabies side fielded since 1914 which was the first national side in history to beat the All Blacks 3–0 in a series whitewash. When the British and Irish Lions toured Australia in 1930 he captained the Wallabies, Queensland and an invitational XV against them. His representative career ended in 1932 aged 33 years after he led Australia and Queensland against the touring All Blacks.

Rugby lineage

In 2007 Lawton was honoured in the third tranche of inductees into the Australian Rugby Union Hall of Fame. His grandsons Tom Jnr and Rob also both became Wallabies – Rob as a Prop forward made four test appearances from 1988 to 1989, Tom Jnr a Hooker earned 41 caps between 1983 and 1989. In 2007 he was honoured in the third set of inductees into the Australian Rugby Union Hall of Fame, and in 2013 he was inducted into the IRB Hall of Fame.[7]

References

Sources

Footnotes

Notes and References

  1. Web site: St Andrew's College Wallabies. Planet Rugby. 22 July 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120910195628/http://www.planetrugby.com/story/0,25883,3943_2413044,00.html. 10 September 2012.
  2. Book: Farmer. Stuart. Hands. David. Tigers – Official history of Leicester Football Club. The Rugby Development Foundation. 978-0-9930213-0-5. 2014 . 451.
  3. Web site: 1926 – Lawton on business in the Riverina, NSW . Trove Newspapers . The Daily Telegraph. Sydney. 16 June 2020 . 16 April 1926. 8.
  4. Web site: 1926 – Rugby Union – Lawton Available . Trove Newspapers . Evening News. Sydney. 16 June 2020 . 14 June 1926. 2.
  5. Web site: 1927 – Played for East End – Star of the Waratahs . Trove Newspapers . The Independent. Deniliquin, NSW. 16 June 2020 . 25 November 1927. 3.
  6. Web site: 1926 – Deniliquin FA – Grand Final match review. . Trove Newspapers . The Independent. Deniliquin, NSW. 16 June 2020 . 3 September 1926. 2.
  7. Legends inducted into IRB Hall of Fame . International Rugby Board . 18 November 2013 . 1 December 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131122121500/http://www.irb.com/history/halloffame/newsid%3D2069489.html#legends+inducted+into+irb+hall+fame . 22 November 2013 .