Short History Of Canterbury Football Club Inc
The Canterbury Football Club was established in 1881 (just 4 years after the VFA was established) and remains one of the oldest Australian Rules Football Clubs in the country. CFC joined the Box Hill Reporter League in 1903 in the league's second year, and a few decades later, became one of the prime movers in the formation of the Eastern Suburban Football League.
The club's home ground has not always been at its present location in Chatham Rd. In fact, the club started football on a ground at the back of the Canterbury Hotel (between the Canterbury Railway station and Wattle Valley Rd) which is now home to the popular Mailing Road shops. Now one of the oldest football clubs in Australia, even older than a number of AFL teams including Collingwood and Richmond, the red, black and yellow panels have graced Melbourne's football ovals for over 125 years, save for something a little more patriotic around World War II, when the club changed its colors to green and gold.
In 2006 the Canterbury Football Club celebrated its 125th anniversary, attracting many of its surviving former players and their families. The great history of the club had never been more evident, leaving those that attended with the indelible impression of a proud club that is steeped in both tradition and high community values.
The club has always had strong ties with Canterbury and the surrounding area; being a community based club it has provided an invaluable outlet to many of the children fortunate enough to grow up in the local area, and indeed, has nutured the development of many talented VFL / AFl footballers, including Bob Pratt (South Melbourne), Peter Curran (Hawthorn) and more recently, Luke Penny (St Kilda).
Leading the way off the field, Canterbury became one of the first football clubs in Australia to have an all female executive committee in 2002. In recent times the Canterbury Football Club has won the "best conducted club" in the Southern Football League award six of the last 7 years!