Bill Waterhouse

{{Short description|Australian bookmaker (1922–2019)}}

{{More citations needed|date=November 2019}}

{{Use Australian English|date=May 2013}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Bill Waterhouse

| image =

| alt =

| caption =

| birth_name = William Stanley Waterhouse

| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=y|1922|01|22|}}

| birth_place =

| death_date = {{death date and age|df=y|2019|11|22|1922|1|22}}

| death_place = Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

| nationality = Australian

| other_names =

| occupation = Bookmaker

| known_for =

| spouse =

| partner =

| children = Robbie Waterhouse

| parents =

| relatives = {{ubl|Gai Waterhouse (daughter-in-law)|Tom Waterhouse (grandson)|Charles Waterhouse (brother)}}

| education = North Sydney Boys High School

| alma_mater = University of Sydney

}}

William Stanley Waterhouse (22 January 1922 – 22 November 2019) was an Australian bookmaker, businessman and barrister. Waterhouse was also Tonga's honorary Consul-General in Australia.{{cite journal | last =Van Fossen | first =Anthony | year =2006 | title = A New Howard Hughes: John Meier, Entrepreneurship, and the International Political Economy of the Bank of the South Pacific (Ivan Molloy and Ron Reavall, eds.) | journal = The Eye of the Cyclone Book 2: Governance and Stability in the Pacific |volume = 2| pages = 9–10 | publisher =Noosa Heads, Queensland: The University of the Sunshine Coast and Rock Mountain Publishing | url =http://www98.griffith.edu.au/dspace/bitstream/10072/16441/1/41874_1.pdf| accessdate = 2008-02-27}}

Early years and background

Waterhouse was educated at Greenwood Primary School and North Sydney Boys High. He completed an Arts/Law degree at Sydney University in 1948.

Bookmaking career

He had worked as a bookmaker's clerk since 1938 with his father, who was first licensed as a bookmaker in 1898. Waterhouse became a barrister in 1948 but took leave of absence in 1954 after the sudden death of his brother and partner, Charles, and never returned, making bookmaking his full-time career. He worked his way on to the 'rails' (the Australian higher-class, higher-stake betting ring at a racetrack, as compared to bookmakers of the 'paddock'), and rose to be reputed the world's biggest bookmaker and gambler in 1968.{{cite book|first=Bill|last=Waterhouse|title=What Are the Odds? The Bill Waterhouse Story|location=North Sydney|publisher=Knoff|year=2009|isbn=978-1-74166-630-4|type=hardback|pages=519}}{{Self-published source|date=May 2013}}{{Self-published source|date=May 2013}}

He engaged in betting duels with giant punters such as Frank Duval (Hong Kong Tiger), Filipe Ismael (The Filipino Fireball) and Ray Hopkins.{{cite news|url=http://www.smh.com.au/news/horseracing/gambling-man-waterhouse-happy-to-stick-to-the-rails/2005/07/28/1122143966482.html|first=Bill|last=Waterhouse|title=Gambling man Waterhouse happy to stick to the rails|work=The Sydney Morning Herald|date=29 July 2005|accessdate=16 May 2013}}{{Self-published source|date=May 2013}}{{Self-published source|date=May 2013}} A man of large stature, he was dubbed 'Big Bill' and 'king of the bookies', remaining at the top for over 20 years. Waterhouse often turned over more than the tote.{{Self-published source|date=May 2013}}

As the high-profile patriarch of the Waterhouse racing dynasty, he ran his own racing newspaper The Referee and later wrote his own regular newspaper column for The Daily Telegraph, Sunday Telegraph and the Sun. Media coverage of him included articles in The Bulletin, the former National Times, The Sydney Morning Herald Good Weekend and in TV specials such as A Big Country and an interview by David Frost.{{Self-published source|date=May 2013}}

Waterhouse represented the Sydney betting ring in Melbourne for a decade from 1959 and also was the first bookmaker to represent Australia at Royal Ascot and other leading English courses in 1967–1968.{{Self-published source|date=May 2013}} In 1968, the Victoria Racing Club changed its rules to disallow bookmakers operating in other states fielding on-course bets in Victoria, initiated in part as a result of allegations against Waterhouse that he was taking illegal off-course bets, subsequently dismissed by a Magistrate.{{cite news|url=http://www.heraldsun.com.au/archive/news/no-better-mentor-for-bookie/story-e6frf8wx-1111117925088|title=Bill Waterhouse no better mentor for bookie |first=Ron|last=Reed|work=Herald Sun|date=3 November 2008|accessdate=16 May 2013}}

Waterhouse was cleared of rumours surrounding the doping of Melbourne Cup co-favourite, Big Philou in 1969, when it was shown by Australian Jockey Club (AJC) officials he was not working on the race, by then being a Sydney bookmaker and did not stand to lose on Big Philou in the doubles business run by his staff.{{Self-published source|date=May 2013}}

Waterhouse was the father of bookmaker Robbie Waterhouse, and the father-in-law of horse trainer Gai Waterhouse. In 1984 Waterhouse and his son Robbie lost their bookmakers' licenses when it was alleged they had 'prior knowledge' of the Fine Cotton ring-in{{cite news|first=Glenn|last=Davis|url=http://www.racingandsports.com.au/racing/rsNewsArt.asp?NID=46668&story=Remembering_Fine_Cotton|title=Remembering Fine Cotton|agency=Australian Associated Press|work=Racing and Sports|date=15 August 2004}} and the AJC revoked their licenses, before waiting for the results of the Queensland police inquiry into the ring-in. However, it was never alleged they had any involvement in the actual ring-in.{{Self-published source|date=May 2013}} Waterhouse always maintained his innocence.

He was reinstated as a bookmaker in 2002 at 80 years of age when he announced he was coming back to train his grandson, Tom Waterhouse, as the fourth-generation Waterhouse bookmaker. They became Australia's largest on-course bookmakers in 2007 and 2008.{{Self-published source|date=May 2013}}

In 2013, Waterhouse expressed his regret over the public acrimony between Gai Waterhouse, Tom Waterhouse, and John Singleton, as a result of the More Joyous affair.{{cite news|url=http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/superracing/bill-waterhouse-breaks-his-silence-on-the-spat-between-gai-waterhouse-and-john-singleton/story-fn67rc85-1226635222379|title=Bill Waterhouse breaks his silence on the spat between Gai Waterhouse and John Singleton|first=Ray|last=Thomas|work=The Sunday Telegraph|location=Australia|date=4 May 2013|accessdate=16 May 2013}}

Interests outside bookmaking

Waterhouse was also a successful commercial and residential property developer and hotelier, building the first strata-titled home unit development in New South Wales and the top hotel licensee in Australia in the 1960s.{{Self-published source|date=May 2013}}

Other ventures have included mining licences and international betting shops.{{Self-published source|date=May 2013}}

His diplomatic post of Honorary Consul-General for the Kingdom of Tonga arose from a friendship at Sydney University's Law School with the young heir to the throne of Tonga. He has received several awards from Tonga including the Grand Cross of Queen Salote, from King George Tupou V in 2009.{{Self-published source|date=May 2013}}

Waterhouse wrote his autobiography, What Are The Odds? which was published by Random House in 2009 and a new edition published in 2010. It was sold out in both hardcover and paperback.{{Self-published source|date=May 2013}}

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • Monash Biographical Dictionary of 20th-century Australia, entry p. 538
  • {{cite book|first=John|last=Ellicott|title=Waterhouse & Smith: The Rise To Power of Two Racing Dynasties|publisher=Hardie Grant Books|location=Prahran, Vic.|year=2008|pages=303|type=hardback |isbn=9781740665100}}
  • {{Citation | author1=New South Wales Racing Appeals Tribunal | author2=Waterhouse, Robbie | author3=Waterhouse, Bill | author4=Clarke, Garry | author5=Australian Jockey Club | title=In the matter of the Racing Appeals Tribunal Act and in the matter of appeals by Messrs Garry Clarke, John Gough, Robert James Hines, Peter McCoy, Robert William Waterhouse and William Stanley Waterhouse against decisions of the Committee of the Australian Jockey Club on 30th November, 1984 | publication-date=1985 | url=http://trove.nla.gov.au/work/18895308 }}
  • {{cite book|first=Kevin|last=Perkins|title=The gambling man|publisher=Polynesian Press|location=Nuku'alofa, Tonga|year=1990|pages=569|type=paperback |isbn=9822210019}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Waterhouse, Bill}}

Category:1922 births

Category:2019 deaths

Category:Australian bookmakers

Category:Horse racing in Australia

Category:Australian businesspeople

Category:People educated at North Sydney Boys High School