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Sport

18 January, 2023

Queensland’s first polo-playing woman’s Clifton connection

Lillian Gibson was an unknowing pioneer when she jumped onto a horse at the Clifton Racecourse in the early 1960s.


Lillian Gibson, Queensland’s first female polo player, outside CWA House in Oakey.
Lillian Gibson, Queensland’s first female polo player, outside CWA House in Oakey.

If you met Lillian, you wouldn’t know you were meeting a small part of Queensland history.

This lady is unassuming polite, well-spoken, but  economical with her words.

She didn’t know that when her father, Jack Gibson, Queensland polo representative, asked her to join in the regular local competition, she was the first woman  in Queensland, and possibly Australia to play the ancient sport of polo.

In her time, the local competition was played at Clifton Racecourse with several families, some of whom were closely related.

Lillian took to the game quickly, and was soon accepted by the community, many of whom were her second and third cousins.

She says players were given a handicap ranking between 1 and 5 (with newcomers being ranked 0), and assigned randomly into teams.

When asked what brought her back for a second week, she answered simply, “It was fun.”

After playing the game for three years in Clifton, Lillian’s family moved to Cross Hill near Biddeston where polo wasn’t played. 

Although she moved on from polo after three years, she had left a mark.

When a woman in Goondiwindi took up the game in the late 1960s, she was informed that she was the second female to take up the sport.

“She later moved to Brisbane, and that was how I found out because I read the article,” Lillian said. 

Although she would have cut an unusual sight at the time, she says she didn’t  encounter any prejudice based on her gender. 

“They were good,” she said. 

“I don’t think any woman had even tried to ask (to play)  before.

“It was considered too rough.”

After Lillian moved to the Oakey district, her involvement with horses would evolve into a career as a horse trainer jockey.

At the Oakey Racecourse, she would ride warm-up laps for  hundreds of horses in readiness for their races.

After leaving training, Lillian continued to work closely with horses at her property near the racecourse, looking after them  for ‘spells’ of rest, where they would recuperate in between races.

Local resident John Burns, a veteran polo player of multiple decades on the Downs, began his career when Lillian was a well established figure on the polo scene at Clifton.

Mr Burns says he remembers Lillian well from his early years involved with the sport. 

“She’d been brought up on a farm so she was very comfortable with the game,” he said. 

“Hell of a nice person but tough as nails on the field.”

The Downs Polo Club at Clifton is the successor to the club Lillian played for in Clifton. 

A number of the players who started their careers in Clifton have progressed to playing all over the world with some of the families playing into their third and fourth generations. 

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