Herbert Hurrey
Herbert Grindell Hurrey was an Australian rules footballer in the Victorian Football League who played for Melbourne University Football Club in the VFL from 1908 to 1913.
Hurrey played the most VFL/AFL games for the university club, with 101, and was the only player to play 100 games or more for the club in the top level of senior Australian rules football.
Family
The third son of Charles Gisborne Hurrey, and Norah Hurrey, née O'Neill, Herbert Grindell Hurrey was born at Herberton, Queensland on 27 January 1888.He married Nina Ethel Crockett, on 25 September 1914. They had five children, one of whom, a son, was born premature and died soon after his birth.
Education
He was educated at Scotch College, Melbourne, and at the University of Melbourne, from whence he graduated as Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) on 4 April 1914 his "in absentia" graduation was due to his decision to move to South Australia and begin practising medicine there and where he was awarded a full blue for football in October 1913.Football
In 1912, he played in the centre for a representative VFL side against a combined Bendigo Football Association team, at Bendigo, on 3 July 1912.In 1913, he was elected captain of the university team; and, on 16 August 1913, replacing Fitzroy's Harold McLennan in the team that had played in Adelaide on 12 July 1913, he played in the centre for Victoria, in its return match against South Australia, at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. Due to his move to South Australia, he was unable to continue playing VFL football in 1914.
Military service
A Surgeon Lieutenant-Commander in the Royal Australian Navy Reserve, he served as a medical officer in the First World War:Medical practitioner
Registration
Having moved to South Australia following his final examinations at Melbourne University in 1913, he was registered, by the South Australian Medical Board, as a legally qualified medical practitioner for the State of South Australia on 9 April 1914.His name was removed from the Register of Medical Practitioners for New South Wales on 4 October 1961.