Arch Corbett
Archibald Gladstone Corbett was an Australian rules footballer who played for the University Football Club in the Victorian Football League.
Family
The son of Charles William Corbett, and Emma Corbett, née Foyle, Archibald Gladstone Corbett was born on 18 August 1883.He was lost overboard on 25 June 1920 while travelling back to Australia following his service in the First AIF.
Education
He attended Wesley College, Melbourne; and, on leaving school, he worked with his older brother, Charles William Corbett, for the Australian Mutual Provident Society for ten years.At the age of 28, he enrolled in medicine at University of Melbourne, and entered Ormond College, graduating Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (M.B.B.S.) in September 1917.
Football
While at Ormond, he was a prominent footballer. He played with the university's team in the Metropolitan Amateur Football Association; and, as well, he played seven senior games with the university's team in the VFL competition: four games in 1912, and three games in 1913.He was a member of the university's inter-state team in 1914; and was awarded a blue for football.
Rowing
He was also an oarsman.Military
Enlisting in the First A.I.F. immediately on graduating, at the age of 34, he served as a medical officer during World War I with the Australian Army Medical Corps (A.A.M.C.), and remained in England after the war to work in London hospitals.Death
He died at sea in 1920 after "disappearing" from his cabin on the night of 25/26 June 1920 – he was last seen around 12:30 in the early morning of 26 June 1920, near the coast of Toulon – while returning to Australia from England on the RMS Orontes.According to the documents contained within his Service Record, and a search of the ship revealed that no trace of him was found. On the basis of the evidence given to the military Court of Inquiry conducted on 26 June 1920 – by five witnesses, two of whom had known him at Melbourne University – combined with the contents of a note left at the head of his bed, the concluded three things:
Documents contained within his Service Record show that the Officer-in-Charge of Base Records of the Defence Department, one Major J. M. Lean, as part of the routine bureaucratic process, submitted the following to his superiors:
The superior officer to whom Major Lean's version of the Court's findings were referred was Brigadier General Cecil Henry Foott, the Deputy Adjutant General. Foott approved the findings, with the single, hand-written proviso that Corbett's death was "to be recorded as drowned at sea", dated 12 August 1920.