Lewis Blackmore
Lewis Blackmore | |||
---|---|---|---|
Second Lieutenant Blackmore, First Battalion, AIF, France 1916 | |||
Personal information | |||
Full name | Lewis Gordon Blackmore | ||
Date of birth | 21 May 1886 | ||
Date of death | 23 July 1916 30) | (aged||
Place of death | Pozières, France | ||
Original team(s) | Melbourne Grammar | ||
Playing career1 | |||
Years | Club | Games (Goals) | |
1905–07 | Essendon | 7 (10) | |
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1907. |
Lewis Gordon Blackmore (21 May 1886 – 23 July 1916) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Essendon in the Victorian Football League (VFL).
Family and early life
Lewis' father, Edwin Gordon Blackmore (1837–1909), an Englishman from Bath, the son of a doctor, had fought as a volunteer in the "Maori Wars" with the Taranaki Rifle Volunteer Corps from 1863 to 1864, and had moved to South Australia and had established himself in Adelaide. He was a co-founder of the Adelaide Club, the Adelaide Hunt Club, and served the Clerk of the South Australian Legislative Council from 1886 and, later, served as the Clerk of the Federal Parliaments.[1]
Lewis' mother, Eleanora Elizabeth Farr (1847–1901), was the eldest daughter of ven. Archdeacon George Henry Farr (1819–1904), M.A., LL.D. and Julia Warren Ord.[2]
Lewis had four older brothers, Gordon Patteson Blackmore (1872–1941), George Edward Blackmore (1874–1936), James Gairdner Blackmore (1876–?), Edwin Ord Blackmore (1879–?), two older sisters, Jane Gordon Drummond Blackmore (later, Mrs. Granville Sharp) (1881–1942), Eleanor Mary Blackmore (1884–1891), and one younger brother, John Coleridge Blackmore (1888–?). His older brother Quartermaster Sergeant George Edward Blackmore (No.85), had served in the Boer War with the Third South Australian Citizens' Bushmen Contingent.
He attended St Peter's College, Adelaide, and moved to Melbourne Grammar School in 1903. He was a prefect at Melbourne Grammar, and played cricket and football for the school's First XI and First XVIII in 1904[3] and 1905.[4][5]
Footballer
Recruited from Melbourne Grammar School, when still a student there, he played on the forward line, and kicked four goals from five shots in his first senior game against St Kilda, at the Junction Oval on 2 September 1905.[6] He played in the next two games, the last match of the season, and the first Semi-Final, both against Fitzroy. Fitzroy won both matches. Blackmore kicked one of Essendon's four goals in each of the matches.
He played in the second, third and fourth games of the 1906 season, and in the second game of the 1907 season.
Soldier
Prior to his enlistment he was farmer and grazier, working with his brother, John Coleridge Blackmore, at Wattamondara, near Cowra, in New South Wales. He enlisted in Adelaide on 23 September 1914; seven weeks after the declaration of war.
On 21 December, having finished his basic training, he was promoted from Trooper to Lance Corporal; and, on that same day, as part of the 6th Light Horse Regiment, A Troop, A Squadron, he embarked from Sydney on board HMAT Suevic (A29).
After further training in Egypt, he was sent to Gallipoli, where he was wounded in action (on 14 July 1915); amongst other things he had a broken right arm.
He was evacuated to Malta; and whilst there, in the September, he contracted "enteric fever" (typhoid). He was immediately sent to Cardiff, Wales, in the UK to recover and, once he was well enough to do so, he returned to his unit, in Egypt, in January 1916.
Death
Second Lieutenant Blackmore was killed by machine gun fire in France, just after midnight, whilst taking part in an attacking advance as part of the 1st Infantry Battalion during the Battle of Pozières on the morning of Sunday, 23 July 1916. He was hit in the forehead by a machine gun bullet and died instantly, at 30 years of age.
His body was never identified, and the precise location of his grave is unknown.
He is commemorated at the Villers–Bretonneux Australian National Memorial, in France.
See also
Footnotes
- ↑ Death of Mr. Blackmore: A Great Constitutionalist The Advertiser, (Tuesday, 23 February 1909), p.8.
- ↑ Marriages: Blackmore—Farr, South Australian Register, (Thursday, 4 January 1872), p.4.
- ↑ A School Match, The Argus, (Tuesday, 20 December 1904), p.7.
- ↑ Public School Match: Melbourne Grammar School v. Wesley College, The Argus, (Saturday 25 November 1905), p.18.
- ↑ Note that Main and Allen's assertion (2002, p.21) that, "Following his matriculation in 1905, Blackmore studied engineering at the University of Melbourne as a resident of Trinity College…" is wrong; these facts apply to Lewis' brother, John Coleridge Blackmore, who matriculated in 1905 (University of Melbourne: Matriculation: December Examination: Melbourne Candidates Passed, The Argus, (Saturday, 7 January 1905), p.19), was a bowler and tail-end batsman (Lewis was an opening bat and wicket keeper) for the University First XI in the District Cricket competition (Fitzroy v. University, The Argus, (Tuesday 28 January 1908), p.7). Also, their statement (p.22) that Lewis was awarded a "Blue" for cricket is also wrong; it was awarded to his brother.
- ↑ St Kilda Die Gamely, The Argus, (Monday, 4 September 1905), p.6.
References
- Lewis Blackmore's statistics from AFL Tables
- Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour: Lewis Gordon Blackmore
- Australian World War I Service Record: Lewis Gordon Blackmore
- Australian War Memorial: Red Cross Wounded and Missing Records: Second Lieutenant Lewis Gordon Blackmore
- Lieut. L. G. Blackmore (Obituary), The Sydney Morning Herald, (Wednesday 16 August 1916), p.12.
- Probate Notice, The Advertiser, (Thursday, 3 May 1917), p.2.
- Holmesby, Russell & Main, Jim (2007). The Encyclopedia of AFL Footballers. 7th ed. Melbourne: Bas Publishing.
- Died on Service: Blackmore, The Argus, (Saturday, 19 August 1916), p.13.
- Main, J. & Allen, D., "Blackmore, Lewis", pp. 21–22 in Main, J. & Allen, D., Fallen – The Ultimate Heroes: Footballers Who Never Returned From War, Crown Content, (Melbourne), 2002.