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Includes an
additional Foreword by RFL Archivist
and rugby league historian Tony Collins..
Extract
"Without rugby league’s
expansion into the southern hemisphere, the history
of the game in Britain would have been radically
different. It is probable that rugby league would
have remained locked into the north of England.
"As The Rugby Rebellion
makes clear, the Northern Union’s split from the
RFU was an event of international importance.
Not only was the progress of the NU being watched
closely by rugby players and officials down under,
but the treatment of the northern clubs by the
RFU was mirrored by the behaviour of the 1899
and 1904 British rugby union tourists towards
their Australasian hosts."
"As readers will notice,
the Reverend Mullineux’s snobbish disdain for
Australians seems to be a direct reflection of
the Reverend Frank Marshall’s attempts to curb
the influence of working-class rugby players in
the north of England before the 1895 split."
"And of course the RFU was
determined to ‘throttle the hydra’ of Northern
Unionism wherever it reared its head. One of the
book’s great strengths is that it shows how much
in common there is between league in Australia
and Britain."
"Fagan has uncovered much
that is new, unravelled old mysteries and set
the facts straight on numerous controversial issues.
This book is as important to the history of rugby
league in Britain, as it is to the game’s history
in Australia."
"It is a shared history that
belongs to every rugby league supporter, wherever
they may be in the world."
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