Bill Harvey (footballer, born 1908) explained

Bill Harvey
Fullname:William Arthur Harvey
Birth Date:2 May 1908
Birth Place:Chopwell, England
Death Place:Wakefield, England
Position:Forward
Youthyears1:
Years1:
Clubs1:Chopwell Institute
Years2:
Clubs2:Annfield Plain
Years3:
Clubs3:Eden Colliery Welfare Joyce lists Eden CW between Annfield Plain & Barnsley, but newspaper sources have him signing from A.P. -->
Years4:1929–1932
Clubs4:Barnsley
Caps4:42
Goals4:12
Years5:193?–1935
Clubs5:Eden Colliery Welfare
Years6:1935–1937
Caps6:14
Goals6:4
Years7:1937–1938
Caps7:28
Goals7:14
Years8:1938–1939
Caps8:14
Goals8:7
Years9:1939
Clubs9:Stockton

William Arthur Harvey (2 May 1908 – 1978) was an English footballer who played as a forward. He scored 23 goals from 70 appearances in the Football League for Barnsley, Chesterfield and Darlington. He also played for a variety of non-league clubs, mainly in the north-east of England. These included Chopwell Institute, Annfield Plain, Eden Colliery Welfare, Boston United,[1] and Stockton.

Personal life

Harvey was born in Chopwell, County Durham,[1] to Michael Harvey, a coal miner, and his wife Esther. At the time of the 1911 Census, the family were living in Blackhall Mill, Chopwell, and the two-year-old Willie was the youngest of six surviving children.[2] In 1931, he married Sarah, sister of his Barnsley teammate John Wallbanks.[3] [4]

He was one of many footballers refused unemployment benefit after football was classified as a seasonal occupation; those normally employed in seasonal work were ineligible for benefit unless they had worked during their off-season. Harvey's brothers-in-law Fred and Jimmy Wallbanks faced the same predicament.[5]

Harvey died in Wakefield, Yorkshire, in 1978 at the age of 70.[1] [6]

Football career

Harvey began his football career with hometown club Chopwell Institute. His performances earned him selection for Durham in inter-county amateur competition in 1927.[7] While on the books of his next club, Annfield Plain of the North-Eastern League, he was selected for the Rest of the League team for the annual match against the reigning champions. He scored 23 league goals in the 1928–29 season before, in March 1929, making his first move into the Football League with Second Division club Barnsley.[8]

He scored 12 goals from 42 league appearances, the last of which came in the 1931–32 season.[1] He played more often for Barnsley's reserve team in the Midland League, and in a match against Wombwell in March 1932, suffered a fractured skull.[9] He was given a free transfer at the end of the season,[10] and returned to his home town.[5]

Harvey dropped out of league football for some time. When he returned, signing for Chesterfield in May 1935, he was reported to have scored 40 goals since Christmas for Eden Colliery Welfare in the North-Eastern League.[11] He spent the season as backup to Maurice Dando, contributing 4 goals – a hat-trick in a 5–0 defeat of Wrexham and the only goal of the home fixture against Lincoln City – from 14 league matches as Chesterfield won the Third Division Northern Section title.[12] For the reserves, he scored at least 26 goals in Midland League competition.[12] For the new season at the higher level, Chesterfield brought in Walter Ponting to play at centre-forward, and Harvey spent the whole season in the reserves, for whom he scored at least 34 goals.[13] Although he was available for transfer, no league club were prepared to meet the fee, so he again dropped out of the Football League, joining Midland League club Boston United for 1937–38.

He had scored nine times against that club for Chesterfield's reserves in the previous two seasons, including five in a 7–1 win in March 1936.[12] [13] With Wilf Notley established at centre forward, Boston used Harvey either at inside forward or at outside right,[14] from which position he reportedly missed shooting chances because of his unwillingness to cut inside;[15] nevertheless, he produced 14 goals from 28 Midland League matches.[16] He contributed the ninth goal to Boston's biggest FA Cup win, by 10 goals to nil against Bilsthorpe Colliery in the Preliminary Round.[17] Boston re-signed him for 1938–39,[18] but in August 1938 he returned once more to the Football League with Darlington.[19]

He made a goalscoring debut in the Football League Jubilee Fund match against local rivals Hartlepools United,[20] but Tom Feeney was preferred when the league season started.[21] Darlington did not select him at centre forward until mid-October, moving Feeney to right half; Harvey marked the occasion by scoring twice away to Hull City, but his club lost 3–2.[22] He kept his position for the 3–1 win against Lincoln City, in which he was fouled for a penalty kick converted by Mike Boyle and then scored the third goal himself.[23] By the end of the season, Harvey had played only 14 times in the league, and scored 7 goals;[1] in all matches, including cup competitions and the North-Eastern League team, he contributed 36 goals. He began the 1939–40 season with Stockton, newly elected to the North-Eastern League,[24] just before league football was suspended for the duration of the Second World War.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Joyce, Michael . Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939 . SoccerData . Nottingham . 118 . 2004 . 978-1-899468-67-6.
  2. Web site: Image. and Web site: 1911 England, Wales & Scotland Census Transcription 11 Fife Terrace Blackhall Mill Ebchester Durham, Chopwell, Durham, England . subscription . . Willie Harvey. Age: 2. Census reference: RG14PN30528 RG78PN1750 RD557 SD4 ED21 SN118 . 11 November 2014.
  3. Web site: England & Wales marriages 1837–2008 Transcription . subscription . Findmypast . William A Harvey. Marriage quarter: 4. Marriage year: 1931. Spouse's last name: Wallbanks. District: Gateshead. County: Durham. Volume: 10A. Page: 1710 . 19 August 2015.
  4. News: Sporting news of the day reviewed . Argus . Sunderland Echo . 20 February 1932 . 9 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive.
  5. News: No play or pay. Footballers refused the dole . Daily Mail . Hull . 21 May 1932 . 7 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive . At Chopwell Exchange the players whose money is stopped included Fred and Jim Wallbanks, of Scarborough and Norwich City respectively, brothers of Jack Wallbanks, the Barnsley centre forward. Billy Harvey, of Barnsley, who was brought up with the Wallbanks' family, also failed to get the benefit. Several of the players concerned have only left their clubs through the clubs' inability to pay summer wages..
    News: Seasonal occupation. Sunderland footballers' dole claims refused . Sunderland Echo . 21 May 1932 . 1 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive . Unemployment benefit is now being refused to professional footballers who have not been retained by their clubs or who are not receiving summer wages. This rule is made under the Anomalies Act Regulations which came into force last October and under which benefit is not allowed to people normally employed in seasonal occupation..
  6. Web site: Chesterfield FC: Football League players, 1921 to 2017 . XLSX . cfchistory.com . Stuart Basson . 6 May 2017 . 20 July 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170906225736/http://www.cfchistory.com/Stats--records/Player/1921-2017.xlsx . 6 September 2017 . dead . dmy-all .
  7. News: County amateurs . Northern Daily Mail . West Hartlepool . 23 December 1926 . 5 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive.
    News: Durham Football Association . Yorkshire Post . 24 February 1927 . 4 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive.
  8. News: Players on the move . Yorkshire Evening Post . 16 March 1929 . 8 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive.
  9. News: Sports snaps . Daily Mail . Hull . 28 March 1932 . 7 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive.
  10. News: Sporting news of the day reviewed . Argus . Sunderland Echo . 12 May 1932 . 10 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive.
  11. News: New players . Derbyshire Times . 10 May 1935 . 11 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive.
  12. Web site: Chesterfield FC, 1935–6 . XLSX . cfchistory.com . Stuart Basson . 20 July 2017.
  13. Web site: Chesterfield FC, 1936–7 . XLSX . cfchistory.com . Stuart Basson . 20 July 2017 . 29 June 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210629225641/https://www.cfchistory.com/Stats%20%26%20records/line-ups/1931-1941/1936-7.xlsx . dead .
  14. Web site: Boston United's Season 1937/8 . bufc.drfox.org.uk . Ken Fox . 20 August 2015.
  15. News: Grantham held at home . Grantham Journal . 6 November 1937 . 3 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive.
  16. Web site: Season 1937/8 – Statistics . bufc.drfox.org.uk . Ken Fox . 20 August 2015.
  17. Web site: Boston United 10–0 Bilsthorpe Colliery . bufc.drfox.org.uk . Ken Fox . 20 August 2015.
  18. News: Chelsea player for Boston . Lincolnshire Echo . 1 July 1938 . 6 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive.
  19. News: Under the searchlight . Argus . Sunderland Echo . 9 August 1938 . 9 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive.
  20. News: Darlington lead . Northern Daily Mail . West Hartlepool . 20 August 1938 . 8 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive.
  21. News: 'Pools' side to meet Carlisle . Sentinel . Northern Daily Mail . West Hartlepool . 25 August 1938 . 7 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive.
  22. News: Leading clubs have bad day in the league . Yorkshire Post . 17 October 1938 . 16 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive.
  23. News: Everton play like champions . Yorkshire Post . 24 October 1938 . 15 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive.
  24. News: Park Drive 'derby' rivalry . Sentinel . Northern Daily Mail . West Hartlepool . 7 June 1939 . 7 . subscription . British Newspaper Archive.