About Us
Rugby union was played in and around what is now the Australian Capital Territory well before it separated from New South Wales in 1911.
The Goulburn Rugby Union Club was formed in 1872, and became a founding member of the Southern Rugby Union in 1874.
Cooma played Snowy River as early as 1876, and Queanbeyan played Yass in 1878. The first match of the 1899 British Lions tour was held at the Goulburn Showgrounds, and the Central Southern RFU put up a strong showing before the visitors prevailed 11–3.
Central Southern beat the reigning Sydney premiers Glebe the following year.
A team from Hall was playing rugby by 1907. Royal Military College, Duntroon played the game from the year it was founded in 1911.
The Federal City Club also played rugby union prior to the First World War, including matches against a Glenlee team from Bungendore and the Rovers and Warrigal clubs from Queanbeyan. Although Royal Military College remained with rugby union, matches had to be arranged with Sydney teams for the college to play the game.
A Federal Capital Territory (FCT) branch of the NSW Rugby Union was founded in 1927, but there was not sufficient support for the union code to warrant the establishment of a formal competition.
Royal Military College played a series of matches that year against the newly-formed Canberra Rugby Union Club instead. The Canberra side had adopted a black and white strip. The FCT Rugby Union had to be re-established in 1930, and re-established again in 1937.
No rugby union matches were played in Canberra for the five years prior to 1936, in the period when the Royal Military College was forced to relocate to the Victoria Barracks, Sydney due to the economic downturn caused by the Great Depression.
After returning to Duntroon, the Military College played a re-formed Canberra Rugby Club in 1937, ten years after the teams had first met. The First Grade competition was started in 1938 with four clubs playing in the inaugural season.
The Territory's representative team hosted the All Blacks at Manuka Oval in 1938, with the New Zealanders going on to win by 57–5.
The Federal Capital Territory Rugby Union was renamed the Australian Capital Territory Rugby Union in 1939.
Rugby union expanded quickly after World War II, particularly in New South Wales.
The ACT representative team, often referred to simply as "Canberra", grew in stature throughout the 1950s and 1960s as part of the NSW Country Rugby Union.
The team won the Caldwell Cup for the Country Championship for the first time in 1964 and went on to win it three times in a row.
In 1966, five Canberra players were chosen in the squad for the Combined NSW Country team that gave the touring British Lions team a physical match, losing narrowly by 6–3 in front of a record crowd at Manuka Oval.
The 1970s was a breakthrough decade. ACT claimed their first win over an international side, defeating Tonga by 17-6 in 1973.
ACT Rugby Union separated from NSW Country after the 1974 season and became directly affiliated to the Australian Rugby Football Union.
In 1975 the ACT team won promotion to top division of the Wallaby Trophy, Australia's provincial championship at the time. The triumph was cut short, however, as the tournament was cancelled in that season.
The reigning Five Nations champions, Wales toured Australia in 1978. The ACT won a come-from-behind 21-20 victory over the Welsh at Manuka Oval, showing that they could compete with some of the best players in the world.
In 1989, the ACT went on to play against the British Lions at the Seiffert Oval in Canberra, with the the Lions defeating the ACT 41 - 25.
After the ACT team had comprehensively beaten New South Wales in 1994, an invitation was issued for a Canberra club to play in the expanded 14-team NSWRU Premiership sponsored by AAMI for the following season.
The ACT Rugby Union formed the Canberra Kookaburra Rugby Club in August 1994, with the Tuggeranong Vikings RUC as underwriters.