A quality all-rounder who averaged 40 with the bat and took 101 wickets at 24.1 as a spin bowler throughout his district career,[1] Lowry was selected for Victoria in its non-Sheffield Shield first-class cricket fixture against Tasmania at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in 1937/38, scoring 62 in his first innings and being run out for three in his next.[2] However, this was his only first-class match, and he was never selected to a Sheffield Shield match.
As a footballer in 1937 for Prahran, Lowry was a premiership player and won a VFA Medal as league best and fairest playing primarily as a centre,[3] and occasionally as centre half forward.[4] On the back of this effort, Lowry was signed by League club St Kilda, and he made his debut in the opening game of the 1938 season. He soon also made the switch from Prahran to St Kilda in cricket, joining St Kilda from the 1939/40 season.
Lowry spent just over eight years playing football at St Kilda. He was a star centreman when fit and available,[5] but due to a combination of regular injuries and service with the Second Australian Imperial Force during World War II,[6] he was limited to just 53 senior appearances. After playing the opening match of the 1946 season for St Kilda, he sought to leave and was cleared to VFA club Sandringham,[7] where he was part of the club's inaugural premiership team at the end of that season.[8]
Lowry retired from football in mid-1947 due to injury,[9] as well as from district cricket after 131 first XI games. He continued playing subdistrict cricket as playing coach of Malvern for the next two seasons,[10][11] before finishing his career playing cricket and occasional football for Mornington.[12]