The son of Matthew Minogue (1868-1899),[1] and Ellen Minogue (1868-1896), née Madden,[2] Daniel Thomas Minogue was born at Bendigo on 4 September 1891.
He married Ann Marion Morrison (1893-1968) on 30 March 1921.[3]
Minogue was considered a courageous, or perhaps reckless, centre half-back. On one occasion he sustained a broken collarbone playing for Collingwood Football Club in the first minute of the 1911 VFL Grand Final and then played out the entire match.
Unhappy at Collingwood's treatment of his friend and former teammate, Jim Sadler, during the war, Minogue demanded a transfer to Richmond on his return from AIF service during World War I[7][8] created ill feeling and he had to stand out of competition for twelve months in order to secure the transfer.
^"Former skipper Dan Minogue, a close friend who worked with Sadler at the South Melbourne gasworks, had become intensely unhappy with what he felt had been the club’s unfair treatment of his mate. It was never clearly articulated, but he seems to have believed that Sadler wasn’t given the opportunities he deserved across 1916-17. So even though Sadler’s retirement letter betrayed no bitterness, Minogue was furious. And his fury festered while serving his country in France during the First World War. So deep-seated was Minogue’s anger that, when he came home in 1919, he stunned the football world by refusing to play with Collingwood, opting instead for Richmond." (Jim Sadler (1908-1917), at Collingwood Forever)
Richardson, N. (2016), The Game of Their Lives, Pan Macmillan Australia: Sydney. ISBN978-1-7435-3666-7
Ross, J. (ed), 100 Years of Australian Football 1897–1996: The Complete Story of the AFL, All the Big Stories, All the Great Pictures, All the Champions, Every AFL Season Reported, Viking, (Ringwood), 1996. ISBN0-670-86814-0
Ross, John (1999). The Australian Football Hall of Fame. Australia: HarperCollinsPublishers. p. 98. ISBN0-7322-6426-X.