Full name | Simon Bernard Boland | ||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | 12 July 1875 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Place of birth | Brisbane, Queensland | ||||||||||||||||||||
Date of death | c. 1954 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Rugby union career | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
Provincial / State sides | |||
---|---|---|---|
Years | Team | Apps | (Points) |
National team(s) | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Points) |
1899-03 | Australia | 3 | (0) |
Simon Bernard "Sine" Boland (12 July 1875 - 1954), born Toowoomba, Queensland, was an Australian soldier, rower and rugby union player and one of the founders of Queensland Rugby League. In Rugby Union, he played for the Queensland and Australian team as a flanker and appeared in the inaugural series of Tests matches played by Australia in 1899. A Boer War and Gallipoli veteran, he once stood for the Queensland Parliament.
Boland was born in Toowoomba, near Brisbane in Queensland. He was the son of Edmund and Catherine (née Stapleton) Boland. His father, a butcher, had been born in Ireland, and was Mayor of Toowoomba in 1889 and 1897. Sinon was a member of the Brisbane Rowing Club and rowed for Queensland in intercolonial competition. He married Mary Kathleen Phillips in Brisbane in 1904, with whom he had three children: Bernard, Dudley and Paula. He worked as a clerk and fettler for Queensland Railways, starting as a 15-year-old apprentice clerk in 1891 and working his way up to be employed at Railway Commissioner’s Office in Brisbane. After serving in the Boer War and in World War One, Boland ran as an independent nationalist candidate for the seat of Inner Brisbane in 1919, but was not elected. Boland died on 3 August 1954.
Boland played for the Past Grammar Schools Football Club in Brisbane, and went on to claim a total of 3 international rugby caps for Australia, playing in the first ever home Tests against the British Lions and the first ever Test Match against New Zealand. In 1899 he had his international debut in the 3rd Test of 1899 British Lions tour to Australia against Matthew Mullineux's British side in Sydney, on 5 August 1899. A week later he would play again in the 4th test. He had earlier made an appearance for Queensland against those same tourists. In Queensland Rugby Union’s 1932 Jubilee, Boland was named in the “Gallery of Great Players” for representing QLD on more than 10 occasions. He had played 15 matches for the state: 13 against NSW, one against Great Britain and one against New Zealand.