Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Jack Cockburn

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Date of birth
  
26 December 1911

Name
  
Jack Cockburn

Years
  
Club

Height/Weight
  
180 cm / 81 kg

Original team(s)
  
Blyth


Date of death
  
21 September 1990(1990-09-21) (aged 78)

1934-43, 1946-47 1942-43 1943-44
  
South Adelaide South Adelaide-Sturt Essendon

Jack Cockburn (26 December 1911 - 21 September 1990) was an Australian rules footballer who played for Essendon in the Victorian Football League (VFL) and for South Adelaide in the South Australian National Football League (SANFL).

Cockburn started his SANFL career with South Adelaide in 1934, having previously played for Blyth as a teenager and young man in the Stanley Football Association, where he won the A. E. Fryar Medal a record three times. He was a member of South Adelaide premiership teams in 1935 and 1938. The 1935 season also saw him win a Magarey Medal for the league's best and fairest player. By the time he retired in 1947 he had played 167 SANFL games and represented South Australia seven times at interstate football. He is a half back flanker in South Adelaide's official 'Team of the Century'.

During World War II he was stationed in Melbourne and in 1943 was signed up by Essendon. He played in Essendon's five point Grand Final loss to Richmond that year. After playing for Essendon again in 1944 he returned to South Australia.

Cockburn's daughter, Bronte Cockburn, played basketball for Australia women's national basketball team at the 1957 World Championship held in Brazil.

References

Jack Cockburn Wikipedia