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Stan Wickham

Stan Wickham
Stan Wickham.JPG
Full name Stanley Montgomery Wickham
Nickname Stan
Date of birth (1877-01-04)4 January 1877
Place of birth Parramatta, New South Wales
Date of death March 1960(1960-03-00)
School Parramatta Marist
Rugby union career
Senior career
Years Team Apps (Points)
1893-94
1896-96
1900-06
Parramatta
Wallaroos
West Harbour
?
 ?
87
()
Provincial / State sides
Years Team Apps (Points)
1895-1906 New South Wales 37 ()
National team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
1903-05 Australia 5 ((3))
Senior career
Years Team Apps (Points)
1893-94
1896-96
1900-06
Parramatta
Wallaroos
West Harbour
?
 ?
87
()
Provincial / State sides
Years Team Apps (Points)
1895-1906 New South Wales 37 ()
National team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
1903-05 Australia 5 ((3))

Stan Wickham (4 January 1877 – March 1960) was a pioneer Australian rugby union player, a state and national representative centre who captained the Australian national side on a number of occasions in the early 1900s. He was tour captain for the inaugural Wallaby overseas tour, that to New Zealand in 1905.

Born in Parramatta, New South Wales Wickham was schooled at Parramatta Marist Brothers followed by Sydney Boys High School, graduating in 1889 where he learned his rugby. After school he played for the Parramatta Two Blues in 1893 & 1894 then the Wallaroo club side in Sydney in 1895 and 1896. He lived in Lucknow near Orange, New South Wales from 1896 to 1899 and played rugby there, making representative Country sides for clashes against City in each of those years. In 1900 he returned to Sydney and commenced with the Western Suburbs DRUFC in its inaugural year of competition. He would play 87 first-grade games for the club.

Wickham was first selected in a New South Wales representative side in 1895 aged 19 and would go on to make 37 Waratah appearances in a state representative career than lasted till 1906. He made 24 state appearances in matches against Queensland. Howell cites his finest Waratahs game as an 1897 tour match against the visiting All Blacks when he scored two tries and booted a conversion for a rare 22-8 New South Wales win over New Zealand.

He first represented at the national level against New Zealand, in Sydney, on 15 August 1903. He made two Test appearances against Great Britain who toured Australia 1904 and then in 1905 he was selected for the Wallabies tour of New Zealand, the first overseas campaign by an Australian rugby side. He was one of fourteen New South Welshman, who with nine Queenslanders made up a twenty-five strong squad. It was a disappointing tour for the Wallabies who played seven games and won only the last three against Manawatu-Hawkes Bay, Wanganui-Taranaki and Auckland. Wickham played every match on tour and was top-scorer with eighteen points from two penalty goals and three goals from marks. In total he claimed five international rugby caps for Australia, four of them as captain.


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