Aubrey Scriven Explained

Aubrey Scriven
Fullname:Aubrey Scriven
Birth Date:7 July 1904
Birth Place:Highley, Shropshire, England
Death Place:Birmingham, England
Height:[1]
Position:Outside left
Youthclubs1:Highley Boys' Club
Years1:–1923
Clubs1:Warmsworth
Years2:1923
Years3:1923–1927
Caps3:52
Goals3:9
Years4:1927–1932
Caps4:105
Goals4:37
Years5:1932–1934
Clubs5:Bristol City
Caps5:54
Goals5:12
Years6:1934–1935
Goals6:13
Years7:1935–1940

Aubrey Scriven (7 July 1904 – 30 April 1988) was an English professional footballer who played as an outside left for Birmingham, Bradford City and Bristol City in the Football League.[2] He also played non-league football for Warmsworth, Denaby United, Worcester City and Brierley Hill Alliance.

Life and career

Scriven was born on 7 July 1904 in Highley, near Bridgnorth in Shropshire, to William Scriven, a roadman in a coal mine, and his wife Rose Ann.[3] [4] He played football for Highley Boys' Club[5] before moving to Warmsworth, West Riding of Yorkshire, where he helped the village team win the Doncaster Amateur League title in 1922–23.[6] According to the South Yorkshire Times of September 1923, "he is fast, has good ball control, centres accurately and shoots strongly from all angles. When he gains complete confidence in himself he should be one of the most dangerous wingers".[6] He signed for Denaby United of the Midland League ahead of the 1923–24 season, and his performances attracted attention from clubs at a higher level. He was ever-present in senior competition for Denaby until, at the end of November, he joined Football League First Division club Birmingham for an undisclosed fee.[6]

Scriven began his Birmingham career with the reserve team in the Central League.[6] He made his Football League debut on 7 September 1924, replacing Ted Linley at outside left for the home match against Bolton Wanderers which Birmingham won 1–0.[7] He kept his place for a couple of months before Linley took over, and then returned to the side for the last month of the season, during which he scored twice.[7] Inconsistency meant he never established himself as a first-team regular.[5] Over the next two seasons, he shared the position with players including Ernie Islip, Jack Russell and Billy Thirlaway, taking his appearance total to 60, of which all but one were made in league matches, with 9 goals.[7]

Scriven signed for Bradford City in May 1927,[8] as part of a £400 deal that also took Islip to the club.[9] He made 105 appearances in the Football League, scoring 37 goals, as well as scoring once from 6 FA Cup matches,[10] and left the club in May 1932 to join Bristol City.[8]

He spent two seasons with Bristol City, during which he scored 17 goals from 67 appearances in all competitions,[11] of which 54 appearances and 12 goals came in the Third Division South.[2] He also scored in the final as Bristol City won the 1933–34 Welsh Cup, beating another English club, Tranmere Rovers, 3–0 in a replay after the original match was drawn.[12] Scriven moved into non-league football with Worcester City in 1934.[5] In his only season with the club, he scored 13 goals in the Birmingham & District League,[13] and then joined Brierley Hill Alliance, where he remained until retiring from football during the war.[5]

Scriven ran the Bell Inn, in Livery Street, central Birmingham. His wife, Lily née Gunn, and their 10-year-old daughter, Audrey Jean, were killed when the city centre was bombed in October 1940 during the Birmingham Blitz.[14] Scriven remarried in 1942, to Vera Thompson. After the war, he worked as a maintenance man at Monument Road Baths in Ladywood, Birmingham.[15] He died in Birmingham on 30 April 1988, aged 83.[16] [17]

Honours

Bristol City

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: "Blues" News. The Official Programme of Birmingham Football Club, Ltd. . 4 . 30 August 1924 . Birmingham F.C. . 13 October 2016 . The Everton Collection.
  2. Joyce, p. 233
  3. Web site: William Jeffrey Scriven, Highley, Shropshire, England . registration . England and Wales Census, 1911 . 6 October 2019 . FamilySearch.
  4. Joyce, p. 233
  5. Matthews, pp. 122–123.
  6. News: Denaby winger's transfer. Aubrey Scriven goes to Birmingham . South Yorkshire Times . Doncaster . 30 November 1923 . 13 October 2016 . ConisbroughAndDenabyHistory.org.uk.
  7. Matthews, pp. 166–69.
  8. Frost, p. 406.
  9. News: Town Legends . Huddersfield Daily Examiner . 1 November 2005 . 13 October 2016.
  10. Frost, p. 388.
  11. Web site: Player information: Aubrey Scriven . CityStats.org.uk . 13 October 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161013221623/http://www.citystats.org.uk/playerdetail.asp?id=632 . 13 October 2016 . dead.
  12. Web site: Welsh Cup Final 1933/34 . Welsh Football Data Archive . 6 October 2019.
  13. Web site: Worcester City All Time Player Statistics . Worcester City FC Archive . https://web.archive.org/web/20110708091717/http://wcfcarchive.bravehost.com/atpla.htm . 8 July 2011.
  14. Web site: Civilian: Scriven, Lily E . none. and Web site: Civilian: Scriven, Audrey Jean . Commonwealth War Graves Commission . 6 October 2019.
  15. Web site: Aubrey Scriven, 1942 . registration . England and Wales Marriage Registration Index, 1837–2005 . 6 October 2019 . FamilySearch.
    News: Clarke: Again 'no' for Blues . Tom . Duckworth . Sports Argus . Birmingham . 5 August 1967 . 5.
  16. News: Family Announcements: Deaths . Birmingham Mail . 4 May 1988 . 10 . Newspapers.com.
  17. Web site: Aubrey Scriven, May 1988 . registration . England and Wales Death Registration Index 1837–2007 . 6 October 2019 . FamilySearch.