Noel Ellis


Arthur Noel Ellis was an Australian rules footballer who played with Melbourne in the Victorian Football League.

Family

The son of Cornelius Stanley Ellis, and Amy Gertrude Ellis, née Christensen, Arthur Noel Ellis was born on 9 July 1921. He had two brothers: Paul, and Graeme.

Education

He attended Wesley College, in St Kilda Road.

Football

He played for Wesley College's First XVIII; and, at the same time was playing for Collegians Football Club.
In 1940, "Noel Ellis was outstanding at centre half-back with Collegians, in the Victorian Amateur Football Association, transferred to the Demons when the amateurs suspended their competition half way through the season ".
His application for a permit to play with South Melbourne was refused by the VFL Permit Committee, on 26 June 1940 — on the precedent-setting grounds that, as a boarder at Wesley College, Wesley College was deemed to be his official place of residence — and, so, given the physical location of Wesley College, Ellis was residentially bound to Melbourne. The VFL Permit Committee granted him a clearance from Old Collegians to Melbourne.
He participated in his first practice at Melbourne the following evening. He was selected as 19th man in his first First XVIII match for Melbourne, against Hawthorn, on 24 August 1940. He also played for the First XVIII in the first two matches of the 1941 season.
He was injured when playing for the Melbourne First XVIII against Carlton in the first round of the Patriotic Premiership, at the M.C.G., on Saturday, 24 May 1940, and did not play ever again.

Cricket

He played cricket at Wesley College; and, also, for the South Melbourne Cricket Club.

Military Service

He enlisted in the First AIF in October 1941.

Death

Only 20 years of age, Ellis was accidentally shot and killed, by a mishandled revolver, at a World War II military camp in Queensland.
The soldier who fired the weapon, Lieutenant Mervyn David Henry, had been talking to Ellis in the mess tent when the incident occurred.
The Melbourne First XVIII wore black armbands in their match against Carlton, on 11 July 1942, as a mark of respect for the memory of Ellis.