Charlie Moore | |||
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Personal information | |||
Full name | Walter Charles Moore | ||
Date of birth | 24 September 1875 | ||
Place of birth | Fiji | ||
Date of death | 12 May 1901 | (aged 25)||
Place of death | Kwaggashoek Farm, Orange Free State, South Africa |
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Original team(s) | Albert-park | ||
Debut |
Round 9, 1897, Essendon vs. Collingwood, at Victoria Park |
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Playing career1 | |||
Years | Club | Games (Goals) | |
1897–1899 | Essendon | 30 (34) | |
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1899.
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Career highlights | |||
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Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com |
Walter Charles "Charlie" Moore (24 September 1875 – 12 May 1901) was an Australian rules footballer who played for Albert Park and South Melbourne in the Victorian Football Association (VFA) and for Essendon in the Victorian Football League (VFL). He served as a trooper in the Anglo-Boer War, but died of wounds after a battle.
He was the first Fijian-born player in the VFL/AFL and the first VFL player to die in active service in any war.
The third son (the sixth child of twelve) of George Moore (1843–1925) and Elizabeth Jane née Cazaly (1845–1924), Walter Charles Moore was born in Fiji on 24 September 1875.
His mother was the aunt of Roy Cazaly; making Moore Cazaly's cousin. His eldest sister, Edith (1868–1907), was married to Sir Francis Pratt Winter (1848–1919). Moore married Rose Alice Walters (1872–1924) on 9 May 1898 at Fitzroy, Victoria; they had one child, George Clarence Leonard Moore (1898–1967), born in Collingwood on 8 November 1898.
His father the Hon. George Moore, originally a soldier, worked as a government official in Fiji from 1872. In 1876 he was appointed as the first Government Surveyor; in 1880 was promoted to Staff Surveyor; and in 1899 he became the Commissioner of Lands, Works, and Water Supply, and the Crown Surveyor. He was awarded the Imperial Service Order for his service in 1903. At the time of Moore's death in South Africa, his father resided in Fiji, and his mother and sister lived at 46 St Vincent Place, Albert Park — the street surrounding the park in which a memorial to Charlie Moore would later be erected.