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The first baggy green cap ever worn by Sir Donald Bradman is being auctioned

The first baggy green cap ever worn by Sir Donald Bradman is being auctioned this Thursday.

Sir Donald Bradman’s son, John, with the baggy green cap his father wore in his 1928 Test debut.
Sir Donald Bradman’s son, John, with the baggy green cap his father wore in his 1928 Test debut.

The first baggy green cap ever given to Sir Donald Bradman is being auctioned to help pay the debts of the man he gifted it to.

Bradman gave the cap from his debut Test series in 1928/29 to a family friend, Peter Dunham, in Adelaide in 1959.

The Dunhams were family friends of the legendary batsman and their house backed on to the Bradman family home on the Parade in Kensington Gardens.

Bradman’s cap has been on loan to the State Library of South Australia since 2003, when Dunham donated it, and has been authenticated.

Dunham, who grew up behind the Bradmans, had worn the cap while playing club cricket in South Australia.

In May this year, Dunham, an accountant, was jailed for eight years and two months for scamming $1.3 million from his investors after being found guilty of fraud.

Dunham’s estate was bankrupted, and Bradman’s cap will be sold on Thursday under instructions from Oracle Insolvency Services.

Spectators clapping Sir Don Bradman during the Fourth Test match at Headingley, Leeds, in 1938. Picture: Fox Photos/Getty Images
Spectators clapping Sir Don Bradman during the Fourth Test match at Headingley, Leeds, in 1938. Picture: Fox Photos/Getty Images

Bradman was presented with the cap before Australia took on England at Brisbane’s Exhibition Ground in November 1928.

Modern players receive just one baggy green, but players from previous eras received more.

A number of Bradman‘s baggy green caps have previously been auctioned, with his 1948 edition from the famous Ashes tour of England selling for $425,000 in 2003.

Bradman‘s Test debut cap is listed under the Cultural Heritage Act and can’t be removed from Australia.

The record price for an Australian baggy green is Shane Warne‘s Test cap, which fetched $1,007,500 when purchased by the Commonwealth Bank in January as a fundraising exercise for bushfire relief.

That cap went on a national tour before becoming a permanent exhibit at the Bradman Museum in Bowral, NSW.

Russell Gould
Russell Gould Sports editor

Russell Gould is a senior sportswriter with nearly 20 years' experience across a wide variety of sports including AFL, cricket, golf, rugby league, rugby and horse racing. Starting as a sports reporter at MX, then the Herald Sun, he has written news and in-depth features as well as covering major events in both Melbourne and around the world, from the 2003 rugby World Cup, though to the 2019 Ashes in England, two US Masters at Augusta and every Boxing Day Test since 2010. Having also spent four years as the Herald Sun sports chief of staff, he is now the founding sports editor of NCA NewsWire.

Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/sport/cricket/the-first-baggy-green-cap-ever-worn-by-sir-donald-bradman-is-being-auctioned/news-story/19cd6357cb0d6a5148735344b0d239a3