Swans in awe of war hero

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  • Reggi
    On the Rookie List
    • Jan 2003
    • 2718

    Swans in awe of war hero

    Swans in awe of war hero
    By Tim Morrissey
    March 19, 2004

    LUMINARIES such as playwright David Williamson and actor David Wenham have spoken with eloquence and passion about the Sydney Swans at previous guernsey presentation dinners.

    On Monday night it was the turn of a "boring old fart" - as he saw it - to toast the Swans team of 2004.

    But during the introduction by Swans chairman Richard Colless it quickly became clear that Charles Edmondson has lived a life less ordinary.

    For starters he was the only person in the packed ballroom at the Darling Harbour Convention Centre who, as an 18-year-old, witnessed the Swans' last grand final victory in 1933 when they defeated Richmond 9.17 (71) to 4.5 (29) at the MCG.

    And old Charlie would have been the only one out of 75,754 people at the ground who rode his bike - "and it wasn't a bloody Malvern Star" - 322km to watch his beloved Swans win that grand final.

    Charles grew up in the Victoria/NSW border town of Wodonga - Aussie rules country as he calls it - where every kid at school had his own special team: "bloody Collingwood".

    "Gordon Coventry was everyone's hero, not mine," Charles told everyone on Monday night. "My idol was Bobby Pratt (South Melbourne goal-kicking legend).

    "As a consequence, from the age of nine I've been a dedicated supporter of the red and white."

    Charles relocated to Sydney in 1982 and he and his late wife Catherine immediately became Swans foundation members.

    He has kept Catherine's membership going in memory of her devotion to the club.

    However, the amazing story of Charles Edmondson does not end there.

    During World War II Charles flew fighter planes in seven squadrons from 1941 to 1945, surviving an incredible 262 missions without being injured.

    Such was the carnage involved with flying sortie after sortie over the Western Desert in Libya, Charles' first tour of duty in 1941, the pilots called it playing "Messerschmitt Roulette".

    Colless read a brief excerpt from an article titled "The Heroes Of Squadron 451" written by Wing Commander Geoffrey Morley-Mower (DFC AFC), an Englishman who described the Australian pilots as "adventurous rebels, villains, exiles, a new

    nation. They were also the bravest men I have met".

    Morley-Mower went on to say: "They are still a mystery to me, so many heroes I don't quite understand it, though the record is clear enough. All but one of them is dead. Charles Edmondson, however, is alive and well.

    "Charles Edmondson had the most extraordinary career of them all."

    In 1945 Charles commanded squadron 451 and received a well-deserved and belated Distinguished Service Order for leading attacks on targets in Yugoslavia, Albania, Austria and the Istrian Peninsula.

    It became apparent on Monday night to everyone in the room that they were in the presence of a genuine war hero who, at the age of 89, just happened to still love the Swans and his footy as much as the kid from the country who cycled 322km to the 1933 grand final.

    "In many ways a fighter squadron reminds me of a football team," Charles explained at the guernsey presentation dinner.

    "Same age group, about 26 pilots at full strength to a fighter squadron, a need to practise one's skills over and over and over again until one is doing everything purely by instinct.

    "In an emergency, survival could for us well depend on choosing the right option.

    "I could be talking about football, couldn't I? Relentlessly honing skills, eye on the ball, choosing the right option - that is the recipe for survival."

    Charles also spoke passionately about his Swans and the fact time is running out for him to witness another grand final victory.

    And he revealed he has enquired about his suitability to be an organ donor at his age.

    When he told the organ donor hotline he was turning 90 next year, the voice on the other end said: "Perhaps we better come out and collect them now."

    Charles asked the person to hang on until after the guernsey presentation dinner, then thought: "Better still, could you wait until the end of the footy season, I just may have a premiership to celebrate."

    "Are you sure you will still be here?" was the reply.

    Charles shot back: "Young lady, I've been following the Swans for 80-odd years and in all that time I have watched them win only the one flag and I had to ride my push bike almost 200 miles to watch that game.

    "So I'm not about to topple off the twig now that we are standing on the threshold of another flag."

    The applause was long and loud.
    You don't ban those who supported your opponent, you make them wallow in their loserdom by covering your victory! You sit them in the front row. You give them a hat! Toby Ziegler
  • hemsleys
    It's Goodes to cheer!!
    • Sep 2003
    • 23665

    #2
    Sounds like it would have been an amazing and interesting night, with a very interesting character!!

    Comment

    • Ruckman
      Ego alta, ergo ictus
      • Nov 2003
      • 3990

      #3
      If that sort of guy doesn't get the lads into the right frame of mind for the season then nothing will!

      Comment

      • Charlie
        On the Rookie List
        • Jan 2003
        • 4101

        #4
        This man deserves a life membership.
        We hate Anthony Rocca
        We hate Shannon Grant too
        We hate scumbag Gaspar
        But Leo WE LOVE YOU!

        Comment

        • desredandwhite
          Click!
          • Jan 2003
          • 2498

          #5
          Which reminds me...

          <a href="http://redandwhiteonline.com/content.php?id=180_0_3_0_C">Full text of the toast</a>

          177th Senior AFL Match - Round 4, 2009 - Sydney vs Carlton, SCG. This is obviously out of date. I suppose I'll update it once I could be bothered sitting down with the fixture and working it out....
          Des' Weblog

          Comment

          • Ryan Bomford
            On the Rookie List
            • Sep 2003
            • 652

            #6
            This speech brought a tear to my eye. A good, really good story of courage, bravery and, most of all, loyalty, to his country first and his football club.

            This thread is mandatory Swans' player/fan reading and deserves a lot more attention then the other thread attracting all the commentary at the moment.

            Why has it taken so long to acknowledge this man?

            Comment

            • jixygirl
              On the Rookie List
              • Jun 2003
              • 432

              #7
              That article was amazing! That man is definitely one of the most amazing people around. To survive that many missions and not even get injured, not to mention the fact that he rode his bike for such a long distance to see his footy team play and win a Grand Final (it was a wise decision though!). Now the boys have to win a premiership this year or in the near future because this man deserves to see another one before he goes to God.
              Sydney Swans Premiers 2005 - The Mighty Bloods

              Comment

              • BAM_BAM
                Support Staff
                • Jun 2003
                • 1820

                #8
                I was reading it on the train this morning with tears welling up in my eyes and thought ... must remember to read the full text, (when posted) at home and not at work.

                Will save that for tonight's reading.

                I'm amazed that he rode his bike to the MCG. But I guess with that spirit and determination it shows why he was able to survive the war and return to us.

                Truly inspirational. It's people like Charles who make this club, THE VERY BEST ONE IN THE WORLD!!!!!
                Here's my heart and you can break it
                I need some release, release, release
                We need
                Love and peace

                Comment

                • EMJ
                  Go Swans Always
                  • Jan 2003
                  • 1076

                  #9
                  I was there and loved his words - truthfully when they said he is 89 I thought my gosh what is he going to say - does he need a hand onto the stage.
                  He was unreal - so vital to the night and his speech had everyone enthralled. Great man and certainly hope he is here this year when we win the Premiership.

                  My daughter listened intently he had us all listening. The players would have to remember him and his words - should maybe print them and repeat parts of them to the players before games or better still - he talk to them every so often.

                  It would make me play better.
                  Love those Swans

                  Comment

                  • Bron
                    On the Rookie List
                    • Jan 2003
                    • 851

                    #10
                    A correction to my article. Charles commanded the 249 squadron not the 429, I'm not sure how to update the article.

                    I understand that the Club has had a couple of conversations with Charles this week.

                    I hope that they give him some more recognition too. This is a wonderful heartwarming story that we should be focusing on right now.
                    Dream, believe, achieve!

                    Comment

                    • NMWBloods
                      Taking Refuge!!
                      • Jan 2003
                      • 15819

                      #11
                      That was a very nice speech - not sure about it bringing me to tears, but certainly gave me a warm inner glow.
                      Captain Logic is not steering this tugboat.

                      "[T]here are things that matter more and he's reading and thinking about them: heaven, reincarnation. Life and death are the only things that are truly a matter of life and death. Not football."

                      Comment

                      • Tooth Fairy
                        Regular in the Side
                        • Aug 2003
                        • 724

                        #12
                        Yeah a nice fuzzy feeling here
                        If u don't believe me, I will knock your bloody teeth out and not pay you a cent.

                        Comment

                        • Destructive
                          Football Terrorist
                          • Jan 2003
                          • 976

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Charlie
                          This man deserves a life membership.
                          Hear hear!
                          The Destructive Dan Experience - Featuring Teal.
                          Add me on Facebook - Danny Pinsuti (Except Suzi Olsen and her split personalities.)
                          238 AFL Games.

                          Comment

                          • dimelb
                            pr. dim-melb; m not f
                            • Jun 2003
                            • 6889

                            #14
                            Thanks for the full text Des. Inspiring stuff.
                            He reminds him of the guys, close-set, slow, and never rattled, who were play-makers on the team. (John Updike, seeing Josh Kennedy in a crystal ball)

                            Comment

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