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Origins of the game
Tom Wills began to devise the rules of the game in Melbourne,
in 1858, making Australian Rules originally known as "Victorian
Rules" arguably the oldest officially codified form of football
played today. (H.C.A. Harrison, Wills's cousin, was also named much
later as an official "father of the game", but his role does not
now seem to have been significant at this very early stage.) A letter
by Wills was published in Bell's Life in Victoria & Sporting
Chronicle on July 10, 1858, calling for a "foot-ball club" with
a "code of laws" to keep cricketers fit during winter. An experimental
match, played by Wills and others at the Richmond Paddock (later
known as Yarra Park, next to the MCG) on July 31, 1858, was probably
the first game of Australian Rules. However, few details of the
match have survived.
On August 7, 1858 two significant events in the development of
the game occurred: the Melbourne Football Club was founded, one
of the world's first football clubs in any code, and a famous match
between Melbourne Church of England Grammar School and Scotch College
began, umpired by Wills. A second day of play took place on August
21, and a third and final day on September 4. The two schools have
competed annually ever since. However, the rules used by the two
teams in 1858 did not have much in common with Australian Rules
Football as it became known.
Right:
A game at the Richmond Paddock in the 1860s. A pavilion at the MCG
is on the left in the background. (A wood engraving made by Robert
Bruce on July 27, 1866.)
The Melbourne Football Club rules of 1859 are the oldest surviving
set of laws for Australian Rules. They were drawn up at the Parade
Hotel, East Melbourne on May 17, by Wills, W. J. Hammersley, J.
B. Thompson and Thomas Smith (some sources include H. C. A. Harrison).
The 1859 rules did not include some elements which soon became important
to the game, such as the requirement to bounce the ball while running,
and Melbourne's game was not immediately adopted by neighbouring
clubs. Before each match, the rules had to be agreed by the two
teams involved. By 1866, however, several other clubs had agreed
to play a single updated version of Melbourne's rules.
It is often said that the founders were partly inspired by the
ball games of the local Aboriginal people in western Victoria. Aborigines
did play a sport called Marn Grook, which used a ball made out of
possum hide, and included play resembling the high marking ("speccie")
in Australian Rules. There is considerable debate over the connection
between the two. Wills did have a deep knowledge of Aboriginal culture,
and Harrison had grown up in an area of Victoria near present day
Moyston where he may have seen Marn Grook.
Wills had been educated at Rugby School in England and had also,
like W. J. Hammersley and J. B. Thompson, been to the University
of Cambridge. The Cambridge Rules, drawn up in 1843, included some
elements which are important in Australian Rules, such as the mark.
Thomas Smith was Irish and had attended Trinity College, Dublin,
where the Rugby School rules were popular at a very early stage.
These men would have been familiar with other public school and
university "football" games. They may also have been inspired by
traditional games, played among the thousands of immigrants who
poured into Victoria from the UK, Ireland and many other countries
during the gold rushes of the 1850s.
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