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Wally McArthur (rugby league)
Australian rugby league footballer and track & field athlete From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Wally McArthur (1 December 1933 – 28 August 2015) was an Aboriginal Australian rugby league footballer and track and field athlete. In 2008, the centenary of rugby league in Australia, he was named in the Aboriginal Australian rugby league team of the Century.[3][4][5]
He was a member of the Stolen Generations.[6]
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McArthur was born in 1933 in Borroloola in the Northern Territory, until he was removed from his family and sent to The Bungalow in Alice Springs. McArthur is the younger cousin of John Kundereri Moriarty who was taken from the same area.[6]
During World War II he was evacuated to NSW and later, after the war he moved down to Adelaide, South Australia, in the early 1950s.[7] There he lived at St Francis House boys boarding home and became a noted short-distance runner.[8][9]
McArthur was also interested in playing Australian rules football, but was denied this because of a "colour bar". Rugby historian Sean Fagan and Australian journalist John Pilger have claimed that McArthur was not selected for the Australian track team at the 1952 Summer Olympics because of racial discrimination, but this has been disputed.[9][7]
"There's lad up at Hornets who can catch pigeons. You've got to see him," he said. The lad was flying Aboriginal winger Wally McArthur[10]
McArthur played in the South Australian Rugby League and Western Australia Rugby League before moving to England in November 1953 to sign for Rochdale Hornets.[11] He went on to play a total of 165 games in English rugby league with Rochdale Hornets,[10] Blackpool Borough, Salford and Workington Town.[7][12] He returned to Australia in 1959.[13]
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