Alf Baud


Alfred Miller Baud was an Australian rules footballer who played with Carlton in the Victorian Football League.

Family

Baud was born in Nagambie on 20 September 1892.
He was married twice: to Clara Evelyn Thomson in 1920, and to Margery Waterstrom in 1960.

Employment

He went to school at Nagambie; and, after leaving school, he went to Bendigo for his first job in the Post Office, and later moved to Melbourne. After the war he resumed work with the Post Office, and served for 50 years as a telegraphist and postmaster including long terms at the Ascot Vale and North Melbourne Post Offices.

Football

Nagambie

Baud originally played with Nagambie, prior to signing with Eaglehawk Football Club in 1911.

Carlton (VFL)

Baud first played with Carlton with 1913; and, during his three-season career, was a member of two premiership sides. The first came in 1914 when he played on the wing in the club's Grand Final victory and the other came the following season. Selected on the half-back flank, he was Carlton's captain in the 1915 VFL grand final, replacing the suspended Billy Dick.

Military service

On 31 July 1915, he enlisted in the First AIF, and served with the 5th Division as a signaller. After serving in Egypt and France, he was seriously wounded with a shrapnel injury to the head at Anzac Ridge on 30 September 1917, leaving him with reduced sight. The surgeons put a silver plate in his head that stayed in place for the remainder of his life. He was repatriated to Australia in 1918.
Baud's war service and injury is mentioned in sports journalist Martin Flanagan's 2003 collection of essays The Game in Time of War.

Carlton selector

In 1937 he served as chairman of selectors for Carlton Football Club, and they won their first VFL Premiership since 1915.

VFL Tribunal

His interest with football continued with Baud spending 19 years on the VFL tribunal.

Death

He died at the Heidelberg Repatriation Hospital, Heidelberg, Victoria, on 5 December 1986.