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  1. Apr 23, 2014 · Ted Larkin was an extraordinary man, beloved in many communities at once: rugby union, rugby league, St Joseph's College, politics, journalism and the police force. But here is the odd thing.

  2. Edward Rennix Larkin (3 January 1880 – 25 April 1915) was an Australian parliamentarian and a national representative rugby union player. [1] . Larkin was the member for Willoughby in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly from December 1913 until his death.

  3. Edward Rennix Larkin (1880-1915), football administrator and politician, was born on 3 January 1880 at North Lambton, Newcastle, New South Wales, third child of William Joseph Larkin, quarryman and miner, and his wife Mary Ann, née Rennix, both native born.

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  4. Apr 24, 2015 · Sergeant Ted Larkin, 35, was killed on the first day of fighting at Gallipoli, as was his brother, Martin, aged 37.

  5. Ted Larkin is widely credited with having spear-headed the movement to form a union for NSW Police officers in 1914. Edward Rennix Larkin (‘Rennix’ was his mother’s maiden name) achieved much in his short life.

  6. Apr 18, 2015 · Ted Larkin, a 1903 Wallaby, husband, father, policeman, journalist, the first secretary of the NSW Rugby League and earmarked by many as a future premier of his state, lay bleeding under the afternoon sun that bore down on the Gallipoli peninsula that first Anzac Day 100 years ago on Saturday.

  7. Edward Rennix Larkin (‘Rennix’ was his mother’s maiden name) achieved much in his short life. He was born, the son of a miner, at Lambton, near Newcastle, in the first week of January 1880. After his family moved to Sydney, he earned a scholarship to St Joseph’s College at Hunters Hill.