The
only substantial uncovered evidence of Aboriginal participation in soccer
before the 1950s is in the stories of two men: W. ‘Bondi’ Neal and Quilp. Neal
played as a goalkeeper on the NSW South Coast and the Northern NSW coal fields
of the Hunter Valley for more than two decades between 1903 and 1924; while
Quilp played occasionally for the Dinmore Bush Rats in the Ipswich competition
in Queensland between 1904 and 1910.
Neal
came to prominence in 1909 when he played for a South Maitland representative
team against the touring Western Australians. Despite his efforts in goal the
team lost 2–0. Maynard records in The Aboriginal Soccer Tribe that after the end of the Peter Bowling strike ‘he
left the coalfields for his native South Coast’, and from here, he disappears
from the record. ‘Neal is certainly the most famous early Aboriginal soccer
player,’ he wrote. ‘But whatever became of this legendary player has
disappeared from both the archives and memory.’
This
notion of disappearance resonates across Indigenous history and soccer history
alike. The tendency of Aboriginal subjects and soccer moments to recede from
view means that researching the history of Aboriginal soccer players is like searching
for one needle in two haystacks. Fortunately the recent developments in digital
and searchable archives have shifted the odds a little in favour of finding the
needles. While Maynard was correct at the time he wrote of Neal’s
‘disappearance’, recently recovered archival material expands the story
extensively.
Walter
Ernest 'Bondi' Neil died in Wollongong in 1953. His obituary notice claims he was 89
at the time of death but this is unlikely given that he was still playing
senior football in the 1920s. It is likely that he was born in the early 1880s
in the ‘back country’ of NSW to an Aboriginal mother (described as
‘half-caste’) and a Scottish father. The name Bondi is a corruption of the nickname,
Bunda (kangaroo), given to him by his Aboriginal friends as a youngster in
acknowledgement of his athletic abilities. An accomplished sportsman across
soccer, rugby union, cricket, boxing and quoits, Bondi was a respected figure
in the Hunter and the South Coast communities where he had played.
This is a team photograph of the Balgownie Rangers team in 1913. The goalkeeper is named as B O'Neill. This is probably Bondi Neal. |
Bondi’s
first sport was rugby, which he played in the Hunter until he shifted to
soccer. When he returned to the South Coast in 1911 he brought with him a star
reputation. He played for several clubs in the northern suburbs of Wollongong,
receiving a great deal of press attention, before retiring from goalkeeping in
1924. He continued within the game as a sometime referee and goalkeeping coach.
In summer months he usually turned his attention to cricket and his fast
scoring prowess was noted. In one instance he scored 96 runs in 35 minutes. He
was known as the ‘Bonner’ of his cricket team, a term that connotes cockiness
and gregariousness.
If
the recently digitized archives allowed a fuller exploration of Bondi Neal’s
career, the very revelation of Quilp was facilitated by them. The accompanying
photograph of the Dinmore Bush Rats was found in the Trove pictorial archive.
Its discovery was as mysterious as it was
exciting. Bang in the middle is an Aboriginal man. He is named as ‘Quilp’ and
his presence in the photograph sends a frisson through the settled histories of
football in Australia.
Dinmore Bush Rats, 2nd Premiers, Ipswich, 1910.
As
is the way in the discovery of Aboriginal participation in Australian soccer,
many questions were raised by this startling image. Who is Quilp? Where is he
from? How does he come to be playing British Association Football? Why is he
positioned right in the middle of the photograph? Why the Dickensian name?
Quilp,
also known as John Baramba (Jackie) Lynch, was born in the Gulf Country of
North Queensland. The earliest discovered reference to him is to an Aboriginal
man named Quilp on a charge of drunkenness and disorderly conduct in the
Ipswich Police Court in 1901. The article suggests that he was a second
offender and was similarly arraigned in 1902.
The
earliest reference to his soccer career is to a game between the Reliance team
from Dinmore and (Roma Street) Markets, played on the Pineapple Ground on May
28. Confusingly, the report suggests the Quilp, playing for Dinmore, was sent
off for backchat and then subsequently scored the winning goal, which became
the subject of a protest.
It is to be regretted that
some bitter feeling prevailed. Quilp began talking to the referee and was
ordered off the field. The game now was very fast and Hunter was playing well as
also was Roberts and Salisbury. Verrol in goal as per usual was very clever in
clearing his goal line. The Reliance got away, and Quilp had a shot at goal. To
the spectators it did not seem as though they scored, but the referee gave a
goal to Reliance.
Quilp’s
goal for Reliance could be the first recorded goal by a senior Aboriginal
soccer player, although it is also possible that as a forward, Quilp may have
scored a few before that. He played for the Bush Rats against a
combined Brisbane selection in 1908 and also turned out for the Rats against
Blackstone Rovers. Each time he was referred to as ‘the ebony Quilp’. He was
presented with various badges during the Bush Rats trophy-winning year in 1910
at the end of season social.
Quilp
was a man of many other talents, playing competitive quoits in 1908 and boxing
as a featherweight in 1909. In 1919 an Aboriginal man named Quilp was employed
as a shooter by a noted buffalo hunter, Patrick Cahill. As reported in The Queenslander:
His horse
fell and Quilp rolled clear of him. Unfortunately for him, the buffalo was
heading straight for him, his head down, its nostrils distended, and its eyes
full of murder. Quilp fortunately retained his presence of mind, and when the
furious animal was within a foot or so of him, rolled on one side, that
escaping by a hair’s breadth. Had the animal struck him he would certainly have
met a terrible death.
Evidence
also suggests Quilp may have acted as a referee, surely one of the first
Indigenous Australians to officiate in any senior sport. In 1919 a
correspondent to the Queensland Times
wondered where a figure named ‘Quelp’ had got to. In doing so he triangulated
some evidential loose ends. He noted Quilp’s buffalo hunting exploits but also
revealed his one-time residence in Dinmore and his ‘fame’ as a soccer figure.
Does anyone
know where the aborigine ‘Quelp,’ one time of Dinmore (and a famous ‘soccer’
referee) has got to? I have before me a photo of a ‘Quelp,’ who is buffalo
hunting in the Northern Territory, employed by a Mr. Patrick Cahill, a native
of Toowoomba, and it is uncommonly
like old ‘Quelp’ who resided at Dinmore.
The
Queensland Times reporter suggests
Quilp was an all-round sportsman and competent across physical activities. As a
winger on the soccer field, and with the possibility he was named after a contemporary
racehorse, we might assume that he was a speedy runner, intelligent, decisive
and able. But this is merely speculation and deduction from circumstantial
evidence. There are so few concrete facts to present.
Jackie
Lynch died in 1930 in Murwillumbah, a celebrated local character noted for his comic
banter, foolishness and propensity for harmless mischief. Aside from the Church
of England reverend, ‘there were only three or four others present
to pay a last tribute to John Baramba Lynch.’ Nor,
if the substantial regional press coverage of his death is a guide, was there
any mention of the many positive deeds by which he might be remembered.
It
would be folly to consider, even for a moment, that these two half-decent
portraits represent anything more than a series of unconnected incidents,
rumours or ideas. To see them as even a faint outline might be to imagine too
much solidity.
It
is tempting for the soccer historian to create useful and convenient myths
about the early Aboriginal involvement in Australian soccer. However, to
suggest that Aboriginal players had any kind of substantial contribution would
be an argument too far. While
it is important to recognize their involvement, it is of equal importance that
the roles of Quilp and Bondi Neal in the game’s history are not exaggerated and
fetishised. They remain, for now, fleeting glimpses of early Aboriginal
involvement in soccer.