Background
Hawke was born in Queanbeyan, New South Wales in 1925.
Australian-rules footballer rugby league player
Hawke was born in Queanbeyan, New South Wales in 1925.
Early Sporting At an early age, he displayed enormous sporting talent. Like many young sportsmen of the time, he played Australian rules football on Saturday and rugby league on Sunday. At the age of 15, he played first grade for the Queanbeyan Blues rugby league team and Queanbeyan Tigers Australian football team
After leaving school, he started work at Commonwealth Government Printing Office.
He transferred to the Eastlake Football Club as many of the Printing Office staff played for that club Eastlake lost the 1946 Grand Final after being undefeated during the year.
Rugby League Hawke played for the Queanbeyan Blues in 1946 but transferred to play in Canberra in 1947. In 1948, he received several inducements to leave but remained playing in the local competition for 6 pounds per week.
During 1948, Hawke was selected for Monaro, Country and New South Wales.
He used up all his leave entitlements from the Printing Office and as a result did not have any leave left to play in the final selection game, New South Wales versus Queensland in Brisbane. Even though his leave application was rejected, he went and played in the game but the consequence was that the Printing Office dismissed him on his return to work. Hawke was selected for the 1948-1949 Kangaroo tour and left Canberra in August 1948 with a gift of just over 10 pounds from the Canberra Rugby League.
He played four Tests against Great Britain and France.
During the tour, as five-eight and centre, he scored 11 tries and played 23 out of the 37 games. Upon the tour"s return, he signed with the Saint George Dragons for the 1949 NSWRFL season and was appointed captain at the age of 24.
In the 1949 semi-final against South Sydney, he suffered a broken upper jaw and cracked teeth after a heavy tackle by Jack Rayner. He remained on the field and set up the winning try to winger Ron Roberts.
Mid-season 1949, he had made the Kangaroo tour to New Zealand and another Test appearance.
In 1950, he was in the running for the Ashes series captaincy but injured his knee in the visiting Great Britain national rugby league team"s tour match against New South Wales at the Structural Civil Geotechnical which drew a record crowd of over 70,419 and made no further representative appearances that year. He made a career total of six state representative appearances for New South Wales and captained the side. Hawke captained-coached Saint George in the premiership seasons of 1951 and 1952, and in 1951 made his final test appearance against France.
In 1952, he suffered a slipped disc that led to him being in plaster from neck to thighs.
Injury led to his career at Saint George being curtailed at the end of the 1952 NSWRFL season. He left Kyogle to coach at Woy Woy.
Johnny Hawke returned to Canberra in 1956. He died of Parkinson"s disease on 10 January 1992 at the age of 66.
After his death, he was inducted into the Australian Capital Territory Sports Hall of Fame.