Charles Wollaston Explained

Charles Wollaston
Fullname:Charles Henry Reynolds Wollaston
Birth Date:1849 7, df=y
Birth Place:Felpham, England
Death Place:London, England
Position:Forward
Clubs1:Oxford University
Clubs2:Lancing Old Boys
Years3:1870–1880
Years4:1880–????
Nationalyears1:1874–1880
Nationalteam1:England
Nationalcaps1:4
Nationalgoals1:1

Charles Henry Reynolds Wollaston (31 July 1849 – 22 June 1926) was an English footballer who played as a forward for Wanderers and England. He won the FA Cup five times with Wanderers, becoming the first player to do so. Wollaston was born in Felpham, Sussex and died in Westminster.[1]

Football career

Wollaston's first appearance of note was playing for the Oxford (University) Amalgamation club (while at Trinity College against Wanderers in December 1868.[2] Wollaston first appeared for the Wanderers in February 1872,[3] and his second game for the club was in the FA Cup semi-final against Queen's Park the next month.[4] He played in the inaugural FA Cup Final in 1872 and scored in the second half of the 1873 final.[5] In all he won five winner's medals, the first player to achieve this feat.[6] [7] Arthur Kinnaird, James Forrest and Patrick Vieira are the only other players with five FA Cup winning medals,[8] [9] and all of them are only bettered by Ashley Cole, who has won the FA Cup six times, beating the record in 2010.[10] [11] In Wanderers' 1874 FA Cup first round match against Farningham, Wollaston scored four goals in a 16–0 victory for Wanderers; the match was Wanderers biggest ever win. Wollaston had previously scored hat-tricks in 1872 against Clapham Rovers and in 1873 against Civil Service.

In 1879, Wollaston became Wanderers' club secretary,[12] and was also the club's captain.[13] In total, Wollaston played ten seasons for Wanderers and became the club's second top scorer, before joining Clapham Rovers in 1880/81. He earned four caps for England, scoring one goal.[14] Wollaston captained the national side against Scotland in 1880; he was the eighth English team captain.[15] Wollaston is also recorded as having refereed an 1884 match between Old Westminsters and Wednesbury Town.[16]

In 2013, Wollaston was included on a special London Tube map released by the Football Association to celebrate its 150th anniversary. The map replaced station names with famous footballers.[17]

Honours

Wanderers

International goals

Scores and results list England's goal tally first.

Cricket career

Wollaston is known to have appeared in a total of 13 cricket matches between 1863 and 1869, although he did not play any first-class matches. He made appearances for Lancing College, FH Birley's XI, Oxford University freshman, and an Etceteras team.[19] [20] His first recorded appearance was for Lancing College against Brighton College at the Royal Brunswick Ground; Wollaston made scores of 6 and 12 in the match.[21] Wollaston made a half-century in a match for FH Birley's XI against S Pelham's XI,[22] and his last known match was for an Etceteras team against a Perambulators team, in which he scored 9 and 29*, and took one wicket.[23] [24]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Charles Wollaston. CricketArchive. 2016.
  2. report . Sportsman . 5 December 1868 . 6.
  3. Wanderers v 1st Surrey Rifles . Sportsman . 17 February 1872 . 6.
  4. Association Challenge Cup . Sportsman . 5 March 1872 . 3.
  5. News: Wanderers v. Oxford University, Match for the Association Challenge Cup. London Daily News. 6. 31 March 1873. British Newspaper Archive. subscription .
  6. Book: Matthews, Tony. Football Firsts. 2006. Capella. 1-84193-451-8.
  7. Book: Encyclopedia of British Football. Cox. Richard William. Russell. David. Vamplew. Wray. 211. Routledge. September 2002. 9780714652498.
  8. Book: Motson, John. Motson's FA Cup Odyssey: The World's Greatest Knockout Competition. Anova Books. September 2005. 9781861059031.
  9. Book: Morgan, Johnny. The Football Lover's Companion. Summersdale . September 2011. 9780857656261.
  10. Web site: The FA Cup's Greatest Defenders. ESPNFC.com.
  11. Web site: Chelsea's Ashley Cole Wins Record-Setting Sixth FA Cup. Goal.com.
  12. Web site: The forgotten story of ... the first FA Cup winners – Will Buckley. Will Buckley. The Guardian. 30 October 2009. 29 February 2016.
  13. News: Football. London Daily News. 20 October 1879. British Newspaper Archive. subscription .
  14. Book: Cavallini, Rob. The Wanderers – Five Times F.A. Cup Winners. 67. Dog N Duck Publications. June 2005. 9780955049606.
  15. Book: Brown, Paul. The Victorian Football Miscellany. Superelastic. May 2013. 9780956227058.
  16. News: Old Westminsters v. Wednesbury Town. Athletic News. 23 January 1884. British Newspaper Archive. subscription .
  17. Web site: Footballing icons 'rename' London's Underground. ITV News. 3 October 2013.
  18. Web site: Cole on brink of Cup record. Mark Fleming. 29 May 2009. The Independent.
  19. Web site: Miscellaneous Matches Played by Charles Wollaston (13). CricketArchive. 2016. 29 February 2016.
  20. News: Cricket. Oxford Journal. 8. 17 April 1869. British Newspaper Archive. subscription .
  21. Web site: Brighton College v Lansing College. CricketArchive. 2016.
  22. Web site: FH Birley's XI v S Pelham's XI. CricketArchive. 2016.
  23. Web site: Etceteras v Perambulators. CricketArchive. 2016.
  24. News: Perambulators v. Etceteras. Oxford Journal. 8. 8 May 1869. British Newspaper Archive. subscription .