Ken Gray (rugby union), Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Ken Gray (rugby union)

rugby union player

Date of Birth: 24-Jun-1938

Place of Birth: Porirua, Wellington Region, New Zealand

Date of Death: 18-Nov-1992

Profession: farmer, rugby union player

Nationality: New Zealand

Zodiac Sign: Cancer


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About Ken Gray (rugby union)

  • Kenneth Francis Gray (24 June 1938 – 18 November 1992) was an international rugby union player from New Zealand.
  • He represented New Zealand in 24 international games, playing lock and later prop forward.
  • He could play on either side of a scrum.
  • In 1970, he refused to tour South Africa in protest at its policy of apartheid and resigned from the game. He was elected a Hutt County Councillor in 1971 and became a Porirua City Councillor in 1973 when the riding of the County he was the member for, joined Porirua City.
  • Later he was elected to the Hutt Valley Energy Board and to the Wellington Regional Council where he continued to serve until his unexpected death of a heart attack in 1992 (his brother Jim Gray also died of a heart attack in 1999). In the 1990 Queen's Birthday Honours, Gray was awarded appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire, for services to local-body affairs. In 1992, Gray was selected as the Labour candidate for Western Hutt parliamentary electorate in the 1993 election, but he died before the election.
  • This seat was held by National at the time. The Petone Rugby Club, where he played, commemorates him with the Ken Gray Academy.
  • The Ken Gray Education Centre was established in a converted shearing shed on the Battle Hill Forest Farm, near the Gray family farm, Pauatahanui Inlet near Pauatahanui, after his death.

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