Robert Loftus Owen Versfeld

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Loftus Versfeld
Full name Robert Loftus Owen Versfeld
Date of birth (1862-12-07)7 December 1862
Place of birth Constantia, Western Cape, South Africa
Date of death Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Place of death Ellis Park, Johannesburg
Occupation(s) Solicitor, Administrator
Rugby union career
Playing career
Position Three-quarter[1]
Amateur clubs
Years Club / team
1880–85?
1888
1889–97?
Hamilton RFC, Cape Town
Union RFC, Uitenhage
Pretoria RFC, Pretoria
Provincial/State sides
Years Club / team Caps (points)
1885
1889
1891
Cape Town XV
Transvaal
Transvaal Country XV

Robert Loftus Owen Versfeld[2] (7 December 1862 – 5 May 1932) was a South African rugby union player and administrator who was a founding member of the Eastern Province Rugby Union and of the Pretoria Rugby Subunion (1908) which in 1938 became Northern Transvaal. He founded Pretoria Rugby Club in 1888,[3] and established Pretoria rugby headquarters at Eastern Sports Grounds. He introduced grass playing fields to the Transvaal.[4]

Versfeld is the only South African player to have won a Grand Challenge Cup in three different provinces with three different teams: the inaugural Western Province Grand Challenge Cup with Hamilton Rugby Football Club in 1883; the Eastern Province Grand Challenge Cup with Union RFC in 1888; and the Transvaal Grand Challenge Cup with Pretoria RFC in 1889. He also played for a Transvaal Country XV against Bill MacLagan's touring British Isles side in 1891.[4]

Early life and family

Loftus Versfeld was born at Constantia, South Africa as the third child to Marthinus Versveld (sic, 8 November 1815 - 5 January 1870) and Johanna Hillegonda Carolina Owen. The Versfelds (spelled 'Versfelt' or 'Versveld' prior to 1870) came from ancient Dutch stock which can probably be traced back to a Gerald Versfeld who in 1200 lived near Zevenaar in the Netherlands. The progenitor of the South African Versfelds was William Ferdinand Versfelt (1745–87), who came to the Cape in 1773 as secretary to his nephew, Peter Baron Van Rheede, Lord of Oudshoorn, designated governor. Baron van Rheede died on the journey to the Cape of Good Hope.[4]

Loftus had an older sister, Helen Elizabeth (b.1861), and was the second of five brothers; Marthinus (b.1860), Jan Hendrik (b. 1864), Charles (b. 1866), and Willem (1870).[4]

Rugby career

Loftus and three of his five brothers, John, Marthinus (Oupa), and Charles (Hasie) all played rugby for Hamilton RFC. In 1885 all four were in the Hamilton side that won the inaugural WP Grand Challenge Cup. In the same year they were on the Combined Cape Town team that competed in the first interprovincial competition at Grahamstown. Loftus was later named as a life-member of Hamiltons.[4]

Versfeld moved to Murraysburg, where he practiced law, and then to Uitenhage, where he still lives in 1886.[5] He not only helped start the Union Club, but also the Eastern Province Rugby Union. He was on Union's 1888 team that won the inaugural Eastern Province Grand Challenge Cup. In 1888 Versfeld moved to Pretoria, and started the Good Hope Football Club, which later became Pretoria Rugby Football Club, "the oldest Rugby Football Club in the Transvaal".[6] He was the captain of Pretoria's 1889 team which won the first Transvaal Grand Challenge Cup.[4] Although rugby had been played in Pretoria since 1887, it had never been formally organized.[6] Versfeld was the captain of Pretoria's 1889 team which won the first Transvaal Grand Challenge Cup.[4]

Versfeld and his three brothers all faced Bill MacLagan's 1891 British tourists. Hasie and Oupa played alongside John in a Cape Town XV. Hasie became the first South African to score a try against an international touring side in Cape Town's 1-15 loss at Newlands on 9 July 1891. Tries then had a value of only 1 point, and Hasie's try was the only point scored against the Brits on their entire 1891 tour. Marthinus (3 caps) and Charles (1 cap) went on to represent South Africa's national team.[7] Loftus was in the Transvaal Country Districts XV who on 15 August 1891 lost 0-22 to the British in Johannesburg. His teammates included the future Boer general Christiaan Beyers, "one of the leading players in Pretoria, a powerful forward, who led the van in rushes".[4][8]

Versfeld retired from playing rugby in 1897, and became President of Pretoria RC. He started the Pretoria Rugby Subunion in 1908 of which he became the second President, following Fred Hopley. In recognition of his contributions to rugby Versfeld was named life-member of the subunion and eventually of the Transvaal Rugby Union. In 1919-20 he used imported kikuyu grass from Kenya to produce the first grass rugby field in the Transvaal.[4]

Loftus Versfeld suffered a fatal heart attack while watching a Currie Cup fixture between Transvaal and the Free State at Ellis Park Stadium on 5 May 1932. His son, Wilfred, became President of the Northern Transvaal Rugby Union from its inception in 1938 until 1950.[4] A year after Loftus' death the Eastern Sports Grounds - where Versfeld established rugby headquarters in Pretoria - were renamed Loftus Versfeld in his honour.[4]

See also

References

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  2. Alternate variants are 'Robert Owen Loftus Versfeld', but N.A. Coetzee (1993, pp.38–9) provides transcripts of the death notices for Versfeld's father and for Versfeld himself which state his name as 'Robert Loftus Owen Versfeld'.
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