Charles was elected Secretary of the Port Adelaide Football Club in 1922.[1] He was awarded Life Membership of the club in 1937.[2]
During his 22 years as secretary the team played in 14 grand finals and won 5 premierships, missing the finals once in 1933. During his time as secretary of Port Adelaide he also managed the South Australian representative team.
Death and tributes
On 5 May 1948, Charles Hayter collapsed at a Largs Bay bus stop at 9pm. He was taken to the Royal Adelaide Hospital and died at midnight. Earlier that night, he told Port Adelaide captain Lew Roberts that he had never felt better.[3][4]
His funeral was attended by more than 5,000 people who lined the streets. Port Adelaide players marched ahead of the hearse, led by captain Lew Roberts. Port Adelaide players and members of the Returned Serviceman's League acted as pallbearers.[5]
He was described upon his death by the Barrier Miner newspaper of Broken Hill as "Australia's best known football personality".[3]Thomas Hill, secretary of the South Australian National Football League, said of Charles "he was the greatest worker and kindest man the game has ever had. I never knew anybody who would go further out of his way to do a good turn".[4]
In 1953, the Port Adelaide club rooms were re-fitted and named in Hayter's honour. The remodelling and extension of the clubrooms cost £1,600, but most of the work was carried out voluntarily. At the time, they gave Port Adelaide the "best headquarters appointments of all Clubs". They included "a committee room, first aid room, kitchen servery, property office, secretary's office and players change rooms with adequate locker space, five showers and a big plunge bath". Most of the decoration was in the Port Adelaide colours of black and white, and Charlie's name was engraved in glass, surrounding a magpie, the clubs' emblem.[10]