From ovals to rectangles – A case study on how sporting fields change their archaeological footprint over time
by Chris Egan (Perth Glory historian), 15 July 2013
Woodville Reserve, North Perth |
Over the past one hundred years, code rivalry has been a common
research topic for sports historians in Australia. Most of the time it
has focussed on Sydney and Melbourne with very few interpretations
incorporating the cultural artefacts (The Sports Fields). The recent
change in function of Perth Oval from Australian Rules Football to
Soccer in 2004 is part of a trend that has been going on for over a
hundred years in various parts of Australia.
The two case studies I will use are Woodville Reserve and South
Hobart Recreation Ground and their change in function. It begins a
theoretical understanding of how soccer has already won hegemony at a
suburban landscape and how it has maintained this interest at a suburban
level.
The first example I will use is Woodville Cricket Reserve in North
Perth, the ground has held soccer since the late 1920s. It is not far
from Perth Oval, and was developed primarily for cricket. But in 1927
the use of the ground is changed from Australian Rules Football to
soccer in the winter.
Frank Drago Reserve, Bayswater |
It is a long rectangle and cricket played on this ground till 1979
before moving to the northern suburbs. Soccer remains present, and the
ground has held many battles in the 50’s between power house sides
Azzurri and North Perth.
Today Woodville Reserve is soccer because the local community changed
the function of the ground in the winter and thus changed the social
environment of the region. There is little infrastructure development
and today is still just a long expanse of grass. Its spatial landscape
shows little evidence of its past use as a cricket or Australian Rules
Football facility.
What would have happened had the 1915 Perth City Council not refused goal posts to be erected at the ground?
Bayswater City SC plays at Frank Drago Reserve |
It also occurs at the South Hobart Recreational Ground, which with a
complex history is bought for 1000 pounds by the state government in
1887 upon demands by the local communities. The initial town planners of
Hobart had not put recreational pursuits as a priority and other
regions had to buy privately owned land for recreation as well, through
the parliamentary system. But from 1887- 1912 the ground is primarily a
cricket ground, it is not till 1912 that we see the cultural
characteristics change because of the growth of interest in soccer.
In a newspaper report in the Mercury in 1912, the ground is shortened
as a cricket ground in order to better accommodate the round ball code,
the commentary suggests it will no longer be able to be used for first
class cricket. It is clear that cricket is struggling in Hobart in this
era and the ability to make it less adapt for cricket is a sign of the
world games drawing power in the suburb. Australian Rules Football games
are replaced with many Soccer fixtures.
Fred D. Book Stand (1956), Perth Oval |
In 1974 South Hobart District Cricket Club also moves to a larger
ground as South Hobart Recreation Ground is no longer responsive to its
needs and has become culturally empowered by the world game, not
cricket.
The spatial landscape today shows little resemblance of its former sporting pursuits.
Adaptations are often seen in the archaeological record and are often
driven by factors such as immigration, class and access to new
ideas/technology. In a sporting context, the establishment of two new
soccer clubs changes human behaviour which leads to adaptations of the
cultural infrastructure within the region.
East Perth FC legends in Fred D. Book Stand |
Symbolic messages are still etched into the grounds, despite both
being rectangles are commonly known as South Hobart Oval and Perth Oval.
Is this a sign of the power of Australian Rules Football in both cities? Or a respect to the past? It is probably a combination of both.
Woodville Reserve, Bayswater Oval (now Frank Drago Reserve), Perth
Oval and South Hobart Oval are grounds that changed because of the
communities interest in the world game. It is unlikely that Australian
Rules football will ever reverse the spatial changes undertaken.
This is a powerful symbol in 2013, that once a ground in a region
changes its archaeological footprint to the world game, it never
retreats back to its initial purpose of recreational pursuit.
[First published at http://cegan.wordpress.com/2013/07/15/from-ovals-to-rectangles-a-case-study-on-how-sporting-fields-change-their-archaeological-footprint-over-time/#comment-113 and reproduced here with the kind written permission of the author.]
[Read Jack Frost's interview with Chris Egan at the following link: http://waflgoldenera.blogspot.com/2012/08/my-interview-with-chris-egan-peel.html]
[Read Jack Frost's interview with Chris Egan at the following link: http://waflgoldenera.blogspot.com/2012/08/my-interview-with-chris-egan-peel.html]
No comments:
Post a Comment