Nelson Mail

Cradle of New Zealand rugby

May 14 marked the 150th anniversar­y of New Zealand’s first rugby match, played in 1870 between Nelson College and Nelson Town. Tim Newman reports.

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One-hundred-and-fifty years ago the seeds of a national obsession were planted at the Nelson Botanical Gardens.

Eighteen men from the Nelson Football Club and 18 boys from Nelson College met at 2pm on Saturday May 14, 1870, for the first game of rugby ever played in New Zealand.

At the time, the significan­ce of the occasion was not realised.

Football of various codes had been played throughout the colony since the early days of European settlement, with the College and Town players having met the year before to play a hybrid Soccer/ Australian Rules game.

The Nelson Football Club (known then simply as the ‘‘Town Club’’) had been set up in 1868 by 19-year-old Robert Tennent, and for the first two years had organised matches played under its own hybrid football rules.

The innovation in 1870 was the introducti­on of the Rugby School rules, made at the behest of another 19-year-old, Charles Monro.

At the age of 16 Monro had left home to travel to England in 1867 to continue his education at Christ’s College in London.

After playing rugby for the school’s 2nd XV, he returned to New Zealand armed with four Gilbert rugby balls and a copy of the 1869 Rugby rulebook.

Joining the Nelson Football Club on his return, he persuaded the club members to try out the new rules, and the first match of the 1870 season was organised between the club and Nelson College.

The new game in town

Accounts of the game were recorded in three papers of the day: The Nelson Evening Mail, The Nelson Examiner, and The Colonist.

While the Nelson Evening Mail only reported a short brief on the event (following a long editorial lamenting the dysfunctio­nal nature of the Nelson Provincial Council), both the Examiner and Colonist wrote an extensive match report on the game – with the Colonist’s article written by an ‘‘enthusiast­ic’’ participan­t in the match. About 200 people turned out on a cloudy afternoon at the Botanics, the field decorated ‘‘with a fair sprinkling of ladies, and a goodly number of the opposite sex’’.

In the fixture from the previous year, it had taken three afternoons for the match to be concluded, with Nelson Town coming out on top.

It was generally agreed the College looked the part in comparison to their town counterpar­ts, The Examiner remarking the school had ‘‘sent a capital eighteen to the ground, and they looked very well in their tightfitti­ng shirts and blue caps.’’

With no set uniform the Town didn’t scrub up quite as well, although the Colonist reported they ‘‘were decidedly an improvemen­t on last year’’. After winning the toss, College kicked off, and the first game of rugby in New Zealand was under way.

‘‘And now, what was comparativ­e silence and inactivity, is suddenly converted into a rushing, noisy, shouting crew, and as the ball is kicked off the game commences in earnest,’’ The Colonist reported.

‘‘Now some player runs with it, and a general scrimmage ensues; it is all shove, pull, rush, and roll about in a confused mass till ‘down’ is cried, and away the ball goes again till perchance it gets in touch or caught.’’

While College had the better of the early exchanges, the size and strength of the Town Club began to tell, and the first try, or ‘‘touch down’’ was scored by the Town Club.

In the original rules of the game no points were awarded for a try, with a touch down allowing the scoring team the opportunit­y to try for a goal/conversion.

Club captain Albert Drew had the honour of scoring the first points in the game, kicking the goal before the College players were able to charge him.

Although it was not much recognisab­le to the modern game of rugby, there were certainly glimpses there of what it would one day become.

‘‘Again the silence is broken with the usual cries of encouragem­ent or yells, of ‘‘off

side’’, ‘‘touch it down,’’ . . . The Examiner reported.

‘‘The whole field seems in a rapid move, in first one and then another direction, or engaged in a scrimmage, or a long run, or waiting eagerly for the ball to be thrown in from ‘‘touch’’, while some unfortunat­e may be seen hopping temporaril­y to the rear to repair damages.’’

The Examiner reported the match was decided that same afternoon with Town coming out on top by 2-0.

‘‘The College played well, and made a hard fight of it, determined not to give up, but at last a sudden rush by [Charles] Monro and Clark decided the matter, the latter managing to kick a goal.

‘‘It was not expected that the game would be finished in one afternoon, but so it happened, and there being several lookers-on anxious to play, a fresh game was started, and continued until all had had enough of football for one afternoon.’’

The growth of rugby

Rugby historian Alan Turley said after 1870 the began to spread ‘‘like fire in the pig fern’’.

Turley said in places like Nelson winter sports were virtually unheard of, and organised team sports like cricket often happened on a very ad-hoc basis.

‘‘You had young men coming off the goldfields, and pioneer farm labourers who were looking for something to do – if they didn’t box there wasn’t much going for them.’’

Turley said in contrast to Great Britain, where the game was mainly the domain of the upper class, rugby developed within a far more egalitaria­n society and rugby players were soon rubbing shoulders with team-mates from all walks of life.

‘‘In New Zealand it was truly a classless game, the butcher’s boy would play and fraternise with the local doctor, the town youths would play with the local policeman.’’

Later in 1870, Monro crossed the Cook Strait with a contingent of Nelsonians to play a game against a Wellington team – with the Wellington Rugby Club being formed the next year in 1871.

In 1872 Wanganui formed its first club, while the Auckland Club made the switch from soccer to rugby rules in 1873.

By the end of the decade, rugby clubs had been formed throughout the length and breadth of the country, and from 1879 provincial unions began to form – with

Canterbury and Wellington the first.

More clubs and unions were formed in the 1880s, and touring teams from New South Wales and Great Britain made their way to New Zealand in 1882 and 1888.

Turley said by 1890 ‘‘rugby had come of age in New Zealand’’.

With 700 active clubs and 16 major unions it was the dominant winter code (ahead of Associatio­n and Australian Rules Football) and in 1892 the New Zealand Rugby Football Union officially came into being.

The future of the game

One-hundred-and-fifty years on from the inaugural match, The Nelson Rugby Football Club is still going strong.

Having weathered the ebbs and flows of time, like many other organisati­ons throughout New Zealand, the club is having to adapt to meet the latest crisis.

The Covid-19 pandemic has thrown Nelson’s club rugby season into turmoil, with the season postponed and planned celebratio­ns to mark the anniversar­y unable to go ahead.

On Thursday morning a small contingent of Nelson Club, Nelson College, and Nelson Museum representa­tives returned to the Botanics to commemorat­e the occasion.

Club president Shane Graham said while it was an honour that rugby in New Zealand started with the club, in some ways the club meant more to its members than the game itself.

‘‘Families have grown up together here, they intermarry, they become part of their communitie­s, it’s been that through difficult times that has meant the survival of the club.

‘‘Rugby’s almost a by-product of it – it’s about the fellowship, the social aspects of it, the community emphasis of it all.’’

Graham said it would be that spirit that would help the club, and rugby in New Zealand, get through its next great challenge.

‘‘In my period of time we’ve seen profession­al rugby [develop] – it’s pulled a lot of the emphasis from the community game and so that resource needs to come back.

‘‘I think the emphasis back on community rugby, local regional rugby is where the future is.’’

More informatio­n about the anniversar­y and history of rugby in New Zealand can be found at the Nelson Provincial Museum’s online exhibition at www.nelsonmuse­um.co.nz/rugby150.

 ?? PAUL WILDING/SUPPLIED ?? A painting of the first rugby game held at the Botanics in Nelson, by artist Paul Wilding.
PAUL WILDING/SUPPLIED A painting of the first rugby game held at the Botanics in Nelson, by artist Paul Wilding.
 ?? NELSON PROVINCIAL MUSEUM ?? The Nelson Rugby Football Club team of 1873. Included in the photo is Robert Tennent, the founder of the Nelson Football Club and participan­t in the 1870 match.
NELSON PROVINCIAL MUSEUM The Nelson Rugby Football Club team of 1873. Included in the photo is Robert Tennent, the founder of the Nelson Football Club and participan­t in the 1870 match.
 ??  ?? Charles Monro, pictured here around 1910, brought the game back to New Zealand after returning from England as a 19-year-old.
Charles Monro, pictured here around 1910, brought the game back to New Zealand after returning from England as a 19-year-old.
 ??  ?? The 1905 All Blacks in training camp at New Plymouth. By the beginning of the 20th century rugby had been establishe­d as New Zealand’s predominan­t winter sport.
The 1905 All Blacks in training camp at New Plymouth. By the beginning of the 20th century rugby had been establishe­d as New Zealand’s predominan­t winter sport.
 ?? COLIN SMITH/STUFF ?? In 2011 Nelson College and Nelson Rugby Football Club re-enacted the original game at the Botanics.
COLIN SMITH/STUFF In 2011 Nelson College and Nelson Rugby Football Club re-enacted the original game at the Botanics.
 ?? MARTIN DE RUYTER/STUFF ?? Nelson Rugby Football Club president Shane Graham, left front, with Nelson College 1st XV rugby player Charlie Perkins, right front, and Chris Bowater, left background, Lucinda Blackley-Jimson, Kerry Strange, Jo Harwood, Quentin Harwood and Kent Inglis at a ceremony marking the 150th anniversar­y of the match at the Botanics Sports Field.
MARTIN DE RUYTER/STUFF Nelson Rugby Football Club president Shane Graham, left front, with Nelson College 1st XV rugby player Charlie Perkins, right front, and Chris Bowater, left background, Lucinda Blackley-Jimson, Kerry Strange, Jo Harwood, Quentin Harwood and Kent Inglis at a ceremony marking the 150th anniversar­y of the match at the Botanics Sports Field.

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