Born on 3 September 1895 in Sydney, New South Wales, Harry Newhouse was a keeper, before and after the war. Fair to say he was also a stayer, living to 101. Monument Australia remembers him:
Private Harry Newhouse, 4th Battalion, landed at ANZAC Cove on April 26, 1915 the day after his brother. A week later he learned that George had been killed. He was dug in on Shrapnel Valley when a Turkish bullet hit his food tin, ricocheting into his forehead. After contracting pneumonia he was evacuated to a military hospital in Alexandria. He was on his way back to Gallipoli in October when he was struck down with malaria
– he was discharged as medically unfit and returned to Australia on 9 February 1916. After the war he returned to keep for the Magpies, appearing in team lists at least until 1928, before taking up refereeing in the 1930s.
He lived a long life and died on November 24 1996, more than 80 years after his elder brother.





