From Humble Beginings |
A farmers paddock... a few 16 year old boys... toss in a football, and suddenly Suburbs is under way.It all began way back in 1916, on farmer Whitten's paddock at the corner of Titirangi Road and Great North Road. A few of the local boys, with a real keenness to have a go at this rugby game, got together a team to play the club from over the hill at Waikumete. The result turned out to be a 6-8 loss, but New Lynn challenged again for a return match on the home paddock. They ran out 18-6 winners in this their only other game of that first year.Enthusiasm grew with the boys - they now had a football per courtesy of Mr. Whitten - and they decided to enter the A.R.D. championships in the next season. 1917 saw Tommy Atkins return from the A.R.D. annual meeting with the message that "an organised club, with a president, a secretary, and a treasurer all under the wing of a Senior club would have to be formed." Back to the paddock. Here Mr. A Seabrook was duly elected president, Mr. Phil Seabrook secretary/treasurer and the club was called the "New Lynn Rugby Football Club" under the sponsorship of the Railway Club. Headquarters for training were the farm paddocks when fine, and Mr. Seabrook's cow shed when it rained. The Club fielded one 4th grade team, resplendent in a black jersey with a white star on the left shoulder. |
Here come the Red and blues |
1918 can rightly be called year one in the history of Suburbs. For it was in this year, at an "annual meeting" in a Mr. Tierney's Avondale barber shop, that the name Suburbs was adopted. |
Our own plot of ground |
210 pounds was the purchase price. 10 pounds deposit with easy payments over three years was how it was bought. Not much money by today's standards, but a lot of money in 1922 - the year the Club purchased the property on which the present clubrooms and training shed are built. The following year saw the Club's first working bee called for all hands to turn out and clear the section ready for the training shed. Such was the effort of the faithful few that late in the season of 1923 the shed was far enough advanced for teams to use - training by gaslight. |
Amalgamation? |
The 1932 season brought a request from the A.R.U. that Suburbs, Oratia, Waitemata and Eden clubs pool their resources and operate as one club. |
The club monogram and a professional coach? |
The increasing success of the Club teams in A.R.U. championships surely prompted the design of the Suburbs monogram. A flaming Olympic torch, sheathed in victor's laurel leaves incorporating the name Suburbs on a scroll, was first introduced into the Club in 1935. It has been the official club badge ever since. Perhaps it was the feat of the Club in winning the Silver Football the year before, which inspired the design. |
Suburbs reaches the top, and gets a new jersey |
1939 and Senior "A" status, the cause for much rejoicing and celebration at the Club. A fine effort by a magnificent team. Three players who are vividly remembered from this team are Charlie Brady, the late Denny Brady and "Bim" Underwood. |