1949–50 Gillingham F.C. season explained

Season:1949–50
Chairman:Charles Cox
League:Southern League
Division One
League Result:5th
Cup1 Result:Second Round
Cup2:Southern League Cup
Cup2 Result:Second Round
League Topscorer:Harry Williams (18)
Season Topscorer:Harry Williams (18)
Highest Attendance:TBC
Lowest Attendance:TBC
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Pattern So1:_white_hoops
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Prevseason:1948–49
Nextseason:1950–51

During the 1949–50 English football season, Gillingham F.C. played in the Southern League Division One. It was the fourth season of the club's third spell in the league.

Gillingham also competed in the FA Cup, reaching the second round.

Background and pre-season

Gillingham had been among the founder members of the Football League Third Division in 1920, which was renamed the Third Division South when a parallel Third Division North was created a year later. In 18 seasons between 1920 and 1938, the team consistently struggled, only finishing in the top half of the league table three times. They finished in the bottom two on five occasions, requiring them to apply each time for re-election to the League. The club's fifth application was unsuccessful; Ipswich Town of the regional Southern League received more votes than Gillingham from the Football League's other member clubs in the ballot following the 1937–38 season and thus secured election to the Third Division South.[1] Gillingham initially took Ipswich's place in the Southern League; when competitive football resumed after the Second World War, Gillingham played in the more localised Kent League for one season before returning to the Southern League in the 1946–47 season and winning the championship twice in three seasons.

Archie Clark was the team's manager, a post he had held since 1939. The club signed several new players, including Harry Williams and Billy Bates, both forwards, from Tottenham Hotspur and Watford respectively. Williams was signed after he scored a hat-trick in a pre-season trial match.[2] Joe Millbank, a half-back, was signed from Queens Park Rangers; he had been made available for transfer by his former club and valued at £5,000, but because Gillingham played outside the Football League they were not required to pay any fee to sign him.[3] Jack Day, a goalkeeper who had played for Gillingham between 1946 and 1948, rejoined the club after short and unsuccessful spells with Football League clubs Fulham and Brighton & Hove Albion, The team wore Gillingham's usual kit of blue shirts and white shorts.

Southern League Division One

August–December

Gillingham began the season with a 3 - 0 defeat away to Gravesend & Northfleet on 20 August. Williams and Bates made their debuts for the club, as did Fred Collier, a full-back, and Victor Cook, a goalkeeper; it would prove to be the only match Collier played for Gillingham. Four days later, the team played their first game of the season at their home ground, Priestfield Stadium, against Hastings United. Day replaced Cook in goal. In an extremely one-sided game, Gillingham won 8 - 0; Williams scored six goals, the most scored by a Gillingham player in a single game since Hughie Russell scored nine times in a 12 - 1 victory over Gloucester City in November 1946.

Gillingham's final three games of 1949 took place within four days.

January–May

Gillingham's first game of 1950 was at home to the Welsh team Lovell's Athletic.

Gillingham finished in fifth place in the Southern League Division One, 16 points behind champions Merthyr Tydfil.

League match details

Key
Results
scope=colDatescope=colOpponentsscope=col Resultscope=col class=unsortableGoalscorersscope=colAttendance
20 August 1949scope=rowGravesend & Northfleet (A)0 - 34,915
24 August 1949Hastings United (H)8 - 0Williams (6), Carr, Forrester7,568
27 August 1949Gloucester City (H)6 - 1Williams (2), Warsap (2), Carr, Russell (pen.)9,164
3 September 1949Hereford United (A)1 - 1Carr5,548
7 September 1949Hastings United (A)1 - 2Carr1,995
14 September 1949Chelmsford City (H)2 - 2Carr, Briggs7,772
17 September 1949Cheltenham Town (H)3 - 1Briggs (2), Kingsnorth (pen.)8,580
21 September 1949Chelmsford City (A)1 - 1Warsap6,500
24 September 1949Colchester United (A)1 - 2Williams10,918
1 October 1949Cheltenham Town (A)2 - 1Carr, Russell3,213
8 October 1949Torquay United Reserves (H)1 - 1Williams9,312
15 October 1949Worcester City (A)1 - 2B. Burtenshaw4,464
29 October 1949Dartford (A)1 - 2Forrester5,883
5 November 1949Kidderminster Harriers (H)4 - 2B. Burtenshaw (2), Forrester, Russell5,937
19 November 1949Worcester City (H)2 - 0Russell (2)9,479
3 December 1949Bedford Town (H)1 - 0Potter (o.g.)7,945
24 December 1949Gloucester City (A)1 - 3Williams3,253
26 December 1949Tonbridge (H)3 - 0C. Burtenshaw, Russell, Briggs10,381
27 December 1949Tonbridge (A)1 - 2Briggs6,756
31 December 1949Yeovil Town (H)0 - 111,577
7 January 1950Lovell's Athletic (H)2 - 0Carr, B. Burtenshaw7,571
14 January 1950Bedford Town (A)1 - 1B. Burtenshaw3,954
28 January 1950Torquay United Reserves (A)2 - 1Williams (2)1,962
4 February 1950Gravesend & Northfleet (H)4 - 2Williams, Russell, B. Burtenshaw, Forrester11,158
11 February 1950Exeter City Reserves (H)4 - 1Russell, B. Burtenshaw, Carr, Williams7,609
25 February 1950Lovell's Athletic (A)2 - 2B. Burtenshaw, Williams500
4 March 1950Barry Town (A)3 - 0B. Burtenshaw (2), Williams171
9 March 1950Chingford (A)2 - 1B. Burtenshaw, Russell307
11 March 1950Bath City (H)1 - 1Carr7,749
15 March 1950Hereford United (H)4 - 0McGuire, Carr, C. Burtenshaw (pen.), Williams6,000
25 March 1950Yeovil Town (A)1 - 2Russell
1 April 1950Guildford City (H)0 - 07,973
5 April 1950Headington United (H)2 - 0Forrester (2)4,086
7 April 1950Weymouth (H)1 - 1Briggs9,233
8 April 1950Chingford (H)4 - 1Hales (2), Kingsnorth, Warsap6,277
12 April 1950Kidderminster Harriers (A)2 - 0Hales, C. Burtenshaw
15 April 1950Exeter City Reserves (A)1 - 5Briggs
17 April 1950Merthyr Tydfil (A)0 - 4
22 April 1950Headington United (A)3 - 1Briggs (2), Forrester5,500
24 April 1950Weymouth (A)0 - 2
26 April 1950Dartford (H)2 - 0Russell, Kingsnorth (pen.)4,000
28 April 1950Barry Town (H)1 - 0Carr3,423
29 April 1950Colchester United (H)6 - 1Hales (3), Warsap, Russell, Briggs4,875
1 May 1950Bath City (A)1 - 3B. Burtenshaw
3 May 1950Merthyr Tydfil (H)3 - 1Russell, Warsap, Carr8,126
6 May 1950Guildford City (A)1 - 4Piper

Partial league table

See main article: 1949–50 Southern Football League.

FA Cup

Gillingham entered the 1949 - 50 FA Cup at the fourth and final qualifying round stage; their opponents were another Southern League Division One team, Guildford City.

FA Cup match details

Key
Results
scope=colDatescope=colRoundscope=colOpponentsscope=col Resultscope=col class=unsortableGoalscorersscope=colAttendance
12 November 1949Fourth qualifyingscope=rowGuildford City (A)3 - 2C. Burtenshaw, Russell, Briggs7,227
26 November 1949Firstscope=rowHastings United (A)3 - 1Collins (pen.), Russell, C. Burtenshaw9,150
10 December 1949Secondscope=rowYeovil Town (A)1 - 3Russell (pen.)12,041

Southern League Cup

Gillingham lost to Colchester United in the second round of the 1949–50 Southern League Cup. The veteran forward Tug Wilson made his only appearance of the season in the second round match; it was the final game he played for Gillingham, a club he had joined as a teenager in 1936.

Southern League Cup match details

Key
Results
scope=colDatescope=colRoundscope=colOpponentsscope=col Resultscope=col class=unsortableGoalscorersscope=colAttendance
10 September 1949Firstscope=rowBarry Town (H)3 - 1Forrester, Briggs, Carr7,690
12 October 1949Secondscope=rowColchester United (H)0 - 1 (a.e.t.)6,639

Players

Charlie Marks made the most appearances, playing 49 times. Harry Williams was the team's top goalscorer, scoring 18 times in just 20 games.

Player statistics
PlayerPositionSouthern League
Division One
FA CupSouthern League CupTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
scope=rowFB 90000090
scope=rowFW 60002080
scope=rowHB 3003020350
scope=rowFW 251031112912
scope=rowGK 2802010310
scope=rowFW 181230002112
scope=rowFW 2633200295
scope=rowFW 361200113713
scope=rowFB 10000010
scope=rowHB 3503100381
scope=rowGK 20000020
scope=rowGK 1601010180
scope=rowFB 3703020420
scope=rowFW 3573021408
scope=rowFW 96000096
scope=rowFW 00001010
scope=rowHB 4233020473
scope=rowFB 4403020490
scope=rowFW 41000041
scope=rowHB 30000030
scope=rowHB 2310000231
scope=rowFW 10000010
scope=rowFW 321333203716
scope=rowFW 40001050
scope=rowFW 2160000216
scope=rowFW 191800102018
scope=rowFW 00001010
FW = FW}}|Forward, HB = MF}}|Half-back, GK = GK}}|Goalkeeper, FB = DF}}|Full-back

Aftermath

The Football League opted to increase the membership of each of the two Third Divisions from 22 to 24 clubs with effect from the 1950 - 51 season; Gillingham applied for one of the new places in the Third Division South and received the highest number of votes among the applicants, thereby returning to the Football League after 12 years.[4] Charles Cox, the club's chairman, told the press "It has been an uphill struggle to get back. Thank God we've done it. We must never find ourselves in that position again."

References

Works cited

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ipswich Town F.C. in Third Division. . 8 September 2022 . Newspapers.com. subscription . 31 May 1938.
  2. Web site: Clashing of seasons always bring 'chaos'. Essex Newsman-Herald . 24 May 2024 . Newspapers.com. subscription . 19 August 1949. J. C.. Chaplin. 4.
  3. Web site: How the money goes / Four at Chelmsford. . 24 May 2024 . Newspapers.com. subscription . 12 August 1949. 11.
  4. Web site: 4 More Clubs in League. Daily Telegraph. Frank. Coles . 9 September 2022 . Newspapers.com. subscription . 5 June 1950.