Bob Lulham
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Robert John Lulham (2 November 1926 – 24 December 1986) was an Australian rugby league footballer who played in the 1940s and 1950s. An Australia international and New South Wales state representative
three-quarter back Three-quarter back is the back-line positions of wing or centre in either rugby league or rugby union. See also *Rugby league positions *Rugby union positions *Half back (disambiguation) A halfback, half back, or half-back may refer to: * , in ru ...
, he played in Sydney for the Balmain club, with whom he won the 1947 NSWRFL Premiership.


Rugby career

A quick-paced , Lulham came to
Sydney Sydney ( ) is the capital city of the state of New South Wales, and the most populous city in both Australia and Oceania. Located on Australia's east coast, the metropolis surrounds Sydney Harbour and extends about towards the Blue Mountain ...
from Newcastle and in his first season in the NSWRFL premiership represented New South Wales in all matches. In the
1947 NSWRFL season The 1947 New South Wales Rugby Football League premiership was the fortieth season of Sydney’s top-level rugby league competition, Australia’s first. For the first time, the number of clubs in the league reached double digits due to the admiss ...
he was also the League's top try-scorer, breaking the record for most tries in a debut season with 28 and most tries in a season for Balmain Tigers in the club's history. At the end of the season he played in Balmain's grand final win. At the end of the following season he was selected to tour Europe with the 1948–49 Kangaroos, making his debut in the Third Test against Great Britain before going on to play two Tests against France.


Poisoning

In July 1953, Lulham was in the headlines after his mother-in-law, Veronica Mabel Monty, 45, was charged with attempted murder, after giving him '' Thall-rat'', a rat poison containing thallium. It soon hit the media, as it was one of 46 similar cases of thallium poisoning in Australia, the " thallium craze", leading to 10 deaths in the early 1950s. Monty was charged and arrested in August. Monty was also poisoned with thallium while on bail, but recovered as the dose was low. The sensational hearing in Sydney revealed that Monty had moved in with her daughter, Judy, and son-in-law in June 1952 following an operation and separation from her husband. The Lulhams had been married only six months when her mother had moved in. Lulham and Monty then had an "intimate relationship" three times. Once, on 26 June 1953, after Judy had gone to bed early while listening to the Ashes test from Lords, once while Judy was at church, and again when he had come home from work early. Monty testified she made a poisoned Milo for herself on 2 July as she was contemplating suicide, but the Lulhams asked for drinks too and she mistook the cups. In September 1953, she was ordered to stand trial. In December, Monty was found not guilty.


Personal life

Lulham was born on Tuesday 2 November 1926, into a family of three boys. His father was a veteran of the Gallipoli Campaign. Judy Lulham divorced him in early 1955 as a result of the revelations about his affair with her mother. Her father also divorced her mother at the same time. Due to the widespread publication of details of the cases, Monty suicided by gunshot soon afterwards. After his poisoning and divorce, Lulham never played first grade football again. He later remarried and had two children, Kerry & Wayne. He died of a heart attack at his home in Tenterfield, New South Wales on Christmas Eve, 1986, at the age of only 60. He was buried at the Tenterfield Cemetery.Tenterfield Cemetery database, Robert John Lulham: Grave location TC Lawn, lot 196


See also

*''
Recipe for Murder (film) ''Recipe for Murder'' is a 52-minute Australian TV docudrama film released in May 2011. It recounts some of the history of a series of murders in post-World War II Sydney by women using thallium sulphate poisons. It was written and directed by ...
'' *''The Husband Poisoner (Book) by Tanya Bretherton (Feb 2021)'' *
The Husband Poisoner (Podcast)
'


References


External links


Bob Lulham at nrlstats.com
*https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23312027 {{DEFAULTSORT:Lulham, Bob 1926 births 1986 deaths 1953 crimes in Australia Australia national rugby league team players Australian rugby league players Balmain Tigers players New South Wales rugby league team players Rugby league centres Rugby league wingers Rugby league players from Newcastle, New South Wales Sportsmen from New South Wales