Arthur E. Syme


Dr Arthur Edward Syme was a medical doctor, surgeon and sportsman in the Australian state of Victoria.

History

Syme was the third son of David Syme, owner of The Age and The Leader, and his wife Annabella Syme, née Johnson. He was educated at Melbourne Grammar School and the University of Melbourne and Edinburgh University.
In 1895 he set up in medical practice at Lilydale, Victoria, where he remained, visiting patients by horse and buggy in the Dandenong district as far as Warburton.
As a young man he played Australian rules football with Essendon.
He joined the Victorian Mounted Rifles, and was a crack shot, reaching the rank of major. He played tennis and cricket, but was best known in the equestrian sports of hunting and racing.
He was longtime committee member of the Victoria Amateur Turf Club and Williamstown Racing Club.
He raced a number of good horses, at first under his own name then from around 1914 as "Mr S. A. Rawdon": Nigel won the Australian Steeplechase in 1908; Blague won the Caulfield Guineas, Newmarket and Goodwood handicaps; Deckard was second to Green Cape in 1938, and Waterline beat Phar Lap in the C. B. Fisher Plate at Flemington; Hayston won the Launceston Cup in 1914 and Bucklaw won it in 1917.
He died in a private hospital and following a service at St John the Baptist Anglican Church, Lilydale, his remains were interred in the local cemetery.

Family

Syme married Amy Horne on 13 February 1895; they had four daughters:
Syme married again, to Hilda Kathleen Moroney