Under 19 Male National Championship Records

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Under 19 Male National Championship Records UNDER 19 MALE NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP RECORDS Year Winners Player of the Year 2019–20 New South Wales Metro L Hearne (New South Wales Metro) 2018–19 ACT/NSW Country K Oates (Tasmania) 2017–18 New South Wales Metro P Uppal (New South Wales Metro) 2016–17 Western Australia W Pucovski (Victoria) 2015–16 New South Wales Metro C Hinchcliffe (Western Australia) 2014-15 New South Wales L Bartier (New South Wales) 2013-14 New South Wales B Stanlake (Queensland) 2012-13 South Australia TM Head (South Australia) 2011-12 Queensland TM Head (South Australia) 2010-11 Victoria MW Dixon (Western Australia) 2009-10 New South Wales JS Floros (Queensland) 2008-09 New South Wales DJE Tormey (New South Wales) 2007-08 Victoria MW Hill (Victoria) 2006-07 New South Wales MS Wade (Tasmania) 2005-06 New South Wales UT Khawaja (New South Wales) 2004-05 New South Wales JW Hastings (New South Wales) 2003-04 New South Wales CJ Ferguson (South Australia) 2002-03 Victoria MJ Cosgrove (South Australia) 2001-02 New South Wales AJ Crosthwaite (Victoria) 2000-01 Queensland B Casson (Western Australia) 1999-00 Queensland & Victoria LGL Buchanan (Victoria) 1998-99 New South Wales M Klinger (Victoria) 1997-98 South Australia GA Manou (South Australia) 1996-97 New South Wales DJ McLauchlan (New South Wales) 1995-96 Victoria PA Sutherland (New South Wales) 1994-95 Queensland & New South Wales BA Clemow (New South Wales) 1993-94 Western Australia JL Cassell (Queensland) 1992-93 Victoria JP Bray (New South Wales) 1991-92 Western Australia AD McQuire (New South Wales) 1990-91 South Australia AC Gilchrist (New South Wales) 1989-90 New South Wales JER Gallian (New South Wales) 1988-89 New South Wales MG Bevan (ACT) 1987-88 Western Australia RC Kelly (Western Australia) 1986-87 New South Wales GR Parker (Victoria) 1985-86 Queensland & New South Wales JC Scuderi (Queensland) 1984-85 Victoria JK Pyke (ACT) 1983-84 South Australia SR Waugh (New South Wales) 1982-83 Victoria IA Healy (Queensland) 1981-82 Victoria MRJ Veletta (Western Australia) 1980-81 Victoria D Knox (New South Wales) 1979-80 Western Australia & Victoria MD Crowe (New Zealand) 1978-79 Western Australia RJ Thomas (New Zealand) 1977-78 New South Wales PS Clifford (New South Wales) 1976-77 New Zealand JJ Crowe (New Zealand) 1975-76 New South Wales DM Wellham (New South Wales) 1974-75 Victoria D Brown (Queensland) 1973-74 South Australia DW Hookes (South Australia) 1972-73 New Zealand GC Hughes (New South Wales) 1971-72 Victoria R Wallace (Queensland) 1970-71 Victoria Not awarded 1969-70 Victoria Not awarded .
Recommended publications
  • The Royal Society of New South Wales. Report on Historical Significance
    Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales, Vol. 139, p. 75–99, 2006 ISSN 0035-9173/06/020075–25 $4.00/1 The Royal Society of New South Wales Report on Historical Significance peter tyler Keywords: Royal Society of NSW, Library Collection, Community Heritage Grant THE BRIEF ture.1 The name was changed to ‘Philosophical Society of New South Wales’ in 1856, the year In November 2005 the Royal Society was that the Colony gained responsible government. awarded a Community Heritage Grant to fund In May 1866, Queen Victoria granted permis- a Significance and Preservation Survey. The sion to assume the present title ‘The Royal So- Community Heritage Grants Program is man- ciety of New South Wales’. The Society was aged by the National Library of Australia and incorporated under this name by Act of the jointly funded and supported by the Australian NSW Parliament on 16 December 1881 ‘for the Government through the Department of Com- encouragement of studies and investigations in munications, Information Technology and the Science, Art, Literature and Philosophy’. Arts, the National Library of Australia, Na- Because the Royal Society was incorporated tional Archives of Australia, the Australian under its own Act of Parliament, it can only Film Commission and the National Museum of be dissolved by legislation, unlike most corpo- Australia. rate bodies where this power is vested in the The grant is seen as a first step in support- members. Until 1935 women were not admit- ing the effort to preserve the Royal Society’s ted to the Society, although scholarly papers collection of scientific books, journals and his- by women such as by Fanny Cohen and Marie torical documents by engaging professional ex- Bentivoglio were accepted for reading or pub- pertise to guide the ongoing management and lication.
    [Show full text]
  • Bushfires in New South Wales
    EARLIER, MORE FREQUENT, MORE DANGEROUS: BUSHFIRES IN NEW SOUTH WALES CLIMATECOUNCIL.ORG.AU Thank you for supporting the Climate Council. The Climate Council is an independent, crowd-funded organisation providing quality information on climate change to the Australian public. Published by the Climate Council of Australia Limited ISBN: 978-1-925573-36-7 (print) 978-1-925573-37-4 (web) © Climate Council of Australia Ltd 2017 This work is copyright the Climate Council of Australia Ltd. All material contained in this work is copyright the Climate Council of Australia Ltd Professor Lesley Hughes except where a third party source is indicated. Climate Councillor Climate Council of Australia Ltd copyright material is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Australia License. To view a copy of this license visit http://creativecommons.org.au. You are free to copy, communicate and adapt the Climate Council of Australia Ltd copyright material so long as you attribute the Climate Council of Australia Ltd and the authors in the following manner: Earlier, More Frequent, More Dangerous: Bushfires in New South Wales by Professor Lesley Hughes and Dr David Alexander. Dr David Alexander Researcher, Climate Council The authors retain sole responsibility for the contents of this report. We would like to thank Martyna Kotowska and Dylan Pursche for their assistance in preparing the report. — Cover image credit: “Bushfire close up at night“ by VanderWolf Images, Shutterstock image library. This report is printed on 100% recycled paper. facebook.com/climatecouncil [email protected] twitter.com/climatecouncil climatecouncil.org.au CLIMATE COUNCIL 1 Contents Key Findings ...................................................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • LAYING CLIO's GHOSTS on the SHORES of NEW HOLLAND* the Title Does Not Foreshadow an Ex
    EMPTY HISTORICAL BOXES OF THE EARLY DAYS: LAYING CLIO'S GHOSTS ON THE SHORES OF NEW HOLLAND* By DUNCAN ~T ACC.ALU'M HE title does not foreshadow an exhumation of the village Hampdens, as Webb T called them,! buried on the shores of Botany Bay. In fact, they were probably thieves, but let their ;-emains rest in peace. No, the metaphor in the title is from an analogy from a memorable controversy in value theory in Economics. 2 The title was meant to suggest the need for giving some historical content to the emotions that have accompanied discussions of the early period. Some of the figures which seem to have been conjured up by historical writers have been given malignancy but 110t identity. Yet these faceless men of the past, and the roles for which they have been cast, seem to distort the play of life. And indeed, it is perhaps because the historical boxes have remained unfilled, and because the background-the rest of the play and action-has not been fully explored, that some people of the early period, well known to us by name, have been interpreted in the light of twentieth-century prejudice and political controversy. We know all too little about the quality of day-to-day life in early Australia, the spiritual and material existence of the early Europeans, their energies, their activities and outlook. In the first stage of an inquiry I have been pursuing into our early social history, I am concerned not with these more elusive yet in a way more interesting questions, but in what sort of colony it was with the officers, the gaol and the port.
    [Show full text]
  • An Account of the English Colony in New South Wales [Volume 1]
    An Account of the English Colony in New South Wales [Volume 1] With Remarks on the Dispositions, Customs, Manners &c. of the Native Inhabitants of that Country. To Which are Added, Some Particulars of New Zealand: Complied by Permission, From the Mss. of Lieutenant-Governor King Collins, David (1756-1810) A digital text sponsored by University of Sydney Library Sydney 2003 colacc1 http://purl.library.usyd.edu.au/setis/id/colacc1 © University of Sydney Library. The texts and images are not to be used for commercial purposes without permission Prepared from the print edition published by T. Cadell Jun. and W. Davies 1798 All quotation marks are retained as data. First Published: 1798 F263 Australian Etext Collections at Early Settlement prose nonfiction pre-1810 An Account of the English Colony in New South Wales [Volume 1] With Remarks on the Dispositions, Customs, Manners &c. of the Native Inhabitants of that Country. To Which are Added, Some Particulars of New Zealand: Complied by Permission, From the Mss. of Lieutenant-Governor King Contents. Introduction. SECT. PAGE I. TRANSPORTS hired to carry Convicts to Botany Bay. — The Sirius and the Supply i commissioned. — Preparations for sailing. — Tonnage of the Transports. — Numbers embarked. — Fleet sails. — Regulations on board the Transports. — Persons left behind. — Two Convicts punished on board the Sirius. — The Hyæna leaves the Fleet. — Arrival of the Fleet at Teneriffe. — Proceedings at that Island. — Some Particulars respecting the Town of Santa Cruz. — An Excursion made to Laguna. — A Convict escapes from one of the Transports, but is retaken. — Proceedings. — The Fleet leaves Teneriffe, and puts to Sea.
    [Show full text]
  • A Guide to Aboriginal Cultural Protocols for NSW Government Sector Events May 2017 Contents
    A guide to Aboriginal cultural protocols for NSW government sector events May 2017 Contents About this guide 3 What do we cover? 3 Where can you learn more? 3 Who contributed to the guide? 3 Introduction 4 Improving cultural competency in the public sector 4 Recognition of Aboriginal cultural practices 4 Promoting Aboriginal cultural practices 4 General requirements 5 Consultation and planning 5 Official events and ceremonies 6 Types of events 6 Protocols and practices 7 Welcome to Country 7 Acknowledgement of Country 8 Other cultural practices 9 Payment of fees 10 Importance of intellectual property 10 Fee guide 10 Calendar of significant cultural events 11 PAGE 2 | A GUIDE TO ABORIGINAL CULTURAL PROTOCOLS FOR NSW GOVERNMENT SECTOR EVENTS About this guide What do we cover? This guide is to help NSW government sector staff observe appropriate Aboriginal cultural protocols at official events or at events where NSW government sector agencies are the host or an official sponsor of an event. The guide looks at: 1. Introduction 2. General requirements 3. Official events and ceremonies 4. Protocols and practices 5. Fee schedules 6. Calendar of significant Aboriginal events. The PSC acknowledges that some agencies will rely on their own Aboriginal cultural protocol guidance material. Where can you learn more? For more information, please speak to your local expert or Local Aboriginal Land Council office. You can also contact the Public Service Commission’s Aboriginal Workforce Development Team: 9272 6000 [email protected] Who contributed to the guide? The Public Service Commission thanks the Aboriginal Employment Advisory Committee for the time and expertise they have given to the development of this guide.
    [Show full text]
  • THE CRITICAL DECADE New South Wales Climate Impacts and Opportunities the Critical Decade: New South Wales Climate Impacts and Opportunities
    THE CRITICAL DECADE New South Wales climate impacts and opportunities The Critical Decade: New South Wales climate impacts and opportunities Summary New South Wales (NSW) is home to over a third of This is the critical decade for action. To minimise climate Australians and 31% of the national economy and is change risks we must begin to decarbonise our economy highly vulnerable to climate change. Climate change and move to cleaner energy sources this decade. The is increasing the risk of hot weather, heatwaves, and longer we wait the more difficult and costly it will be. bushfires, and changing the patterns of drought and heavy rainfall. A changing climate is costly, putting NSW is well-placed to capitalise on the global trend pressure on human health, agriculture, infrastructure towards clean energy. Globally the clean energy and the natural environment. sector attracted $263 billion worth of investment in 2011 and is one of the fastest growing sectors in the NSW is becoming hotter and drier. Record-breaking world. In Australia $5.3 billion was invested in clean hot days have more than doubled across Australia energy in 2011. NSW, with a legacy of innovation and since 1960 and heatwaves in the greater Sydney region, achievement in renewable energy development, has especially in the western suburbs, have increased in significant opportunities. duration and intensity. Over the last 40 years much of eastern and southern Australia has become drier. The continuing drying trend increases the risk of longer and harsher droughts. While there will continue to be wet years, the future trend of declining rainfall poses challenges for Sydney’s long-term water security.
    [Show full text]
  • Black and White Children in Welfare in New South Wales and Tasmania, 1880-1940
    ‘Such a Longing’ Black and white children in welfare in New South Wales and Tasmania, 1880-1940 Naomi Parry PhD August 2007 THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW SOUTH WALES Thesis/Dissertation Sheet Surname or Family name: Parry First name: Naomi Abbreviation for degree as given in the University calendar: PhD School: History Faculty: Arts and Social Sciences Title: ‘Such a longing’: Black and white children in welfare in New South Wales and Tasmania, 1880-1940 Abstract 350 words maximum: When the Human Rights and Equal Opportunities Commission tabled Bringing them home, its report into the separation of indigenous children from their families, it was criticised for failing to consider Indigenous child welfare within the context of contemporary standards. Non-Indigenous people who had experienced out-of-home care also questioned why their stories were not recognised. This thesis addresses those concerns, examining the origins and history of the welfare systems of NSW and Tasmania between 1880 and 1940. Tasmania, which had no specific policies on race or Indigenous children, provides fruitful ground for comparison with NSW, which had separate welfare systems for children defined as Indigenous and non-Indigenous. This thesis draws on the records of these systems to examine the gaps between ideology and policy and practice. The development of welfare systems was uneven, but there are clear trends. In the years 1880 to 1940 non-Indigenous welfare systems placed their faith in boarding-out (fostering) as the most humane method of caring for neglected and destitute children, although institutions and juvenile apprenticeship were never supplanted by fostering. Concepts of child welfare shifted from charity to welfare; that is, from simple removal to social interventions that would assist children's reform.
    [Show full text]
  • Print Cruise Information
    Treasures of the South Australian coast and Tasmania From 12/16/2022 From Sydney Ship: LE LAPEROUSE to 12/23/2022 to Hobart, Tasmania Join us aboard Le Lapérouse for a wonderful new 8-day expedition cruise from Sydney to Hobart, to discover thenatural and cultural treasures of the south-eastern coast of Australia and Tasmania. After sailing out of Sydney and its beautiful harbour, you will set a course for the Jervis Bay area, in New South Wales. Renowned for its white-sand beaches bathed in turquoise water, this dynamic and creative region with a rich biodiversity is also a popular refuge for many birds. Next on your itinerary, Eden on the New South Wales South coast will reveal its long-associated history with whales and let you explore the region's stunning National Parks and scenic coastline. Reaching Maria Island in Tasmania, discover the region's history and extraordinary wildlife sanctuaries alongside your team of expedition experts. On the Tasman Peninsula, navigate the rugged coastline and spot the various local marine life including Australian Fur Seals, little penguins and whales, as well as explore the beautiful inland woodland and forests. Your voyage will end in Hobart, Australia's second oldest capital, your port of disembarkation. The information in this document is valid as of 9/25/2021 Treasures of the South Australian coast and Tasmania YOUR STOPOVERS : SYDNEY Embarkation 12/16/2022 from 4:00 PM to 5:00 PM Departure 12/16/2022 at 6:00 PM Nestled around one of the world’s most beautiful harbours,Sydney is both trendy and classic, urbane yet laid-back.
    [Show full text]
  • History & Honour Roll –
    History & Honour Roll – Australian Men’s Interstate Teams Matches History The first Australian Men’s Interstate Teams Matches was played in 1904 between NSW and Victoria. Seven players contested one match each with NSW winning 5-2. The second championship was played between Victoria, South Australia and NSW, while the 1906 championship was played between Victoria, NSW and a combined Tasmania and Queensland team. It was not until 1946 that all states contested the event. That year the Western Australian Golf Association presented the perpetual Interstate Shield. This shield was presented to the winning team until it was retired in 2002 due to lack of engraving space. The replacement Interstate Teams Trophy is still in use today. Initially, the Interstate Teams Matches were played as part of a carnival of events alongside the Australian Open, the Australian Amateur and the Australian Foursomes Championships. As times changed the amateur events split from the open/professional events and eventually in 1994, the Teams Matches split from the Amateur Championship. In 2004 the Interstate Teams Matches was played as part of a carnival of events that also included the Interstate Colts Teams Matches (for players aged 18-23 years) and the Australian Foursomes Championship. From inception the format has been seven representatives from each state playing singles matches against all other states. In 1984 foursomes matches were added, but after 2011 the foursomes matches were removed. The format reversed to each team contesting singles matches only. Since 2012, at the conclusion of the singles rounds, teams one and two play each other in a final to determine the winning team.
    [Show full text]
  • The Decline and Revival of Music Education in New South Wales Schools from 1920 to 1956
    australiaa n societ s y fo r mumsic education e The decline and revival of music i ncorporated education in New South Wales schools, 1920-1956 Marilyn Chaseling School of Education, Southern Cross University, NSW. Email: [email protected] William E. Boyd School of Science, Environment & Engineering, Southern Cross University, NSW. Email: [email protected] Abstract This paper overviews the decline and revival of music education in New South Wales schools from 1920 to 1956. Commencing with a focus on vocal music during the period up to 1932, a time of decline in music teaching, the paper examines initiatives introduced in 1933 to address shortcomings in music education, and the subsequent changes in curriculum and teaching during the 1930s. Evidence of a variable revival lies in the school choral music movement of 1939 to 1956, and in how music education diversified beyond its vocal heritage from the late 1930s and early 1940s, with new emphasis on music appreciation, percussion, flutes, and recorders. By the mid 1950s, involvement in, and quality of, school instrumental music was continuously improving. Key words: school choral music, school choirs, Theodore Tearne, Herbert Treharne, Barbara Mettan, Victor McMahon, flute bands, percussion bands, inspectors of schools Australian Journal of Music Education 2014:2,46-61 Introduction children could be assembled, at short notice, to form choirs to perform at celebratory or This paper explores music in New South Wales commemorative events:4 a choir of over 5,000 (NSW) state primary schooling from 1920 to children performed in 1897 for the Jubilee 1956, through the lens of music teaching and Celebrations of Queen Victoria, and the hand- 1 practice, building on the research of Dugdale picked choir of three thousand sang at the Public 2 and of Stevens into music in NSW state primary School’s Patriotic Display in 1900;5 a colossal choir schools prior to 1920.
    [Show full text]
  • A Colonial History of the River Murray Dispute
    Adam Webster* A COLONIAL HISTORY OF THE RIVER MURRAY DISPUTE ABSTRACT This article examines the history of the dispute over the sharing of the waters of the River Murray between the colonies, with particular emphasis on the period from the mid-1880s to the mid-1890s. The article shows that the change in water use by the colonies during this period had a signifi- cant impact on the question of how the water should be shared between the colonies. The article examines the early legal arguments regarding the ‘rights’ of the colonies to the waters of the River Murray and argues that these early legal analyses influenced the drafting of the Australian Consti- tution, which in turn has influenced the way similar disputes between the states are resolved today. I INTRODUCTION alk of reducing the flow of the waters of the River Murray evokes strong emotions in South Australians, and especially in their members of parliament.1 TThis is not a recent phenomenon and has been the case since colonial times.2 This article examines the history of the dispute over the sharing of the waters of the River Murray between the colonies, with particular emphasis on the period from the mid-1880s to the mid-1890s. I argue that this period, in the lead up to the Austra- lasian Federal Conventions of the 1890s, shaped the Convention debates, which in turn influenced the drafting of the Australian Constitution and the way in which the issue of the sharing of the waters of the River Murray between the states has been dealt with since Federation.
    [Show full text]
  • Living Cultural Diversity in Regional New South Wales
    Living Cultural Diversity in Regional New South Wales NGAIRE MCCUBBEN Everyday Multiculturalism Conference Proceedings, Macquarie University 28-29 September 2006 Edited by Selvaraj Velayutham & Amanda Wise (2007) All papers copyright © Centre for Research on Social Inclusion, 2007 ISBN 978-0-9803403-0-3 Title: Proceedings of the Everyday Multiculturalism Conference of the CRSI - 28-29 Sept. 2006 Date of Publication: February 2007 Format: Online publication Publisher: Centre for Research on Social Inclusion, Macquarie University Living Cultural Diversity in Regional New South Wales NGAIRE MCCUBBEN Centre for Cultural Research, University of Western Sydney Introduction Bob Birrell and Virginia Rapson (2002, p.11), in an article for People and Place , claimed that Sydney and Melbourne, and to a lesser degree Perth, constituted Australia’s multicultural heartland and that the rest of Australia was distinctive for its relative absence of ethnic diversity. This, they speculated, had contributed to a profound fissure between the city and the bush. Sydney and Melbourne, they claimed, contain the generators and transmitters of the multicultural and cosmopolitan ideals which are now so influential in intelligentsia circles, and rearguard resistance to these images is largely based in regional Australia (Birrell and Rapson 2002, p. 21). As this paper foregrounds, not only are there parts of regional Australia that are notably culturally diverse, multiculturalism as a way of understanding this diversity may indeed be embraced by these communities. The town of Griffith, located in the Murrumbidgee Irrigation Area, in the Riverina region of New South Wales, is the focus of this study of multiculturalism in regional Australia. The town is approximately 600km west of Sydney, on Wiradjuri land, and has a population of around 15,000 in a Local Government Area (LGA) of around 24,000.
    [Show full text]