Charlie Wilson (footballer, born 1895) explained

Charlie Wilson
Fullname:Charles Wilson
Birth Date:30 March 1895
Birth Place:Atherstone, England
Death Date:May 1971 (aged 76)
Death Place:Stafford, England
Height:[1]
Position:Centre forward
Years1:1913–1914
Years2:1914–1918
Caps2:0
Goals2:0
Years3:1919–1922
Clubs3:Tottenham Hotspur
Caps3:55
Goals3:27
Years4:1922–1925
Clubs4:Huddersfield Town
Caps4:99
Goals4:57
Years5:1925–1930
Clubs5:Stoke City
Caps5:156
Goals5:112
Years6:1930–1932
Years7:1933
Clubs7:Wrexham
Caps7:0
Goals7:0
Years8:1934
Years9:1935
Totalcaps:310
Totalgoals:196

Charles Wilson (30 March 1895 – May 1971) was an English footballer who played in the Football League for Tottenham Hotspur, Huddersfield Town[2] and Stoke City.[3] [4]

Career

Wilson was born in Atherstone, Warwickshire and began his career with local non-league side Atherstone Town before joining Southern League side Coventry City just before the outbreak of World War I.[4]

After being demobbed he played six times for Tottenham Hotspur in the 1918–19 season, although for reasons unknown he decided to hide his identity. In four of these games he played under the name of "C. Williams" being described as a "clot from the Midlands" and in the other under the pseudonym of "C. Forshaw". Only in the sixth did he finally take to the field as Charlie Wilson. With the war over the Football League returned and Wilson scored a hat-trick on his Spurs debut proper in a 3–0 victory over South Shields at Horsley Hill in September 1919.[5] He scored 11 goals for Spurs in the 1919–20 season helping them claim the old Second Division title.[4]

He scored 9 goals in 1920–21 and 11 in 1921–22 witch prompted Huddersfield Town manager Herbert Chapman to bring Wilson to Leeds Road. He soon became a key member of Towns all conquering 1920s side as he scored 16 goals in 1922–23 as Huddersfield finished in 3rd position.[4] He then scored 20 goals in 1923–24 and 24 in 1924–25 as Huddersfield claimed the First Division title. However, with Huddersfield on their way to a third straight title Wilson picked up an injury early in the 1925–26 season and so decided to put him up for sale.[4]

Stoke City manager Tom Mather persuaded Wilson to join the Victoria Ground side and he joined Stoke along with his Huddersfield Town teammate, Joey Williams. The pair could not prevent Stoke slipping to relegation to the Third Division North.[4] In 1926–27 Wilson's quality in front of goal proved too much for Third Division defences as he racked up 26 goals as Stoke won the title with ease. Back in the Second Division for 1927–28 Wilson had a fine season scoring a club record 38 goals. He continued to be top scorer hitting 22 in 1928–29 and 20 in 1929–30 becoming the first Stoke player to reach 100 league goals. He struggled with injury in 1930–31 scoring 10 in 16 games and left the club at the end of the season.[4]

After leaving Stoke he played non-league football with Stafford Rangers whilst keeping the Doxey Hotel. He later played for Wrexham, Shrewsbury Town and Alfreton United before later becoming landlord of the Noah's Ark pub in Stafford. He died in May 1971 at the age of 76.[4]

Career statistics

Source:

ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Tottenham Hotspur1919–20Second Division127241411
1920–21First Division20900209
1921–22First Division2111522613
1922–23First Division200020
Total5527766233
Huddersfield Town1922–23First Division2613533116
1923–24First Division3118223320
1924–25First Division3824103924
1925–26First Division420042
Total99578510762
Stoke City1925–26Second Division11300113
1926–27Third Division North3125313426
1927–28Second Division4032464438
1928–29Second Division3122003122
1929–30Second Division2720102820
1930–31Second Division1610311911
Total156112118167120
Career Total3101962619337215

Honours

Tottenham Hotspur
Huddersfield Town
Stoke City

Notes and References

  1. News: Few big transfers in the First Division of the Football League. Tottenham Hotspur . The Vagrant . Athletic News . Manchester . 21 August 1922 . 5.
  2. 99 Years & Counting – Stats & Stories – Huddersfield Town History
  3. Book: Matthews, Tony. The Encyclopaedia of Stoke City. 1994. Lion Press. 0-9524151-0-0. 216.
  4. Book: Stoke City 101 Golden Greats. 2002. Desert Islands Books. 1-874287554.
  5. Web site: Tottenham Football/ Premier League debut scorers.