George Thornewell Explained

George Thornewell
Fullname:George Thornewell
Birth Date:8 July 1898
Birth Place:Romiley, England
Death Place:Derby, England
Height:[1]
Position:Outside right
Youthclubs1:St. Dunstan's
Youthclubs2:Normanton United
Clubs1:Rolls-Royce
Clubs2:Nottingham Forest (war guest)
Clubs3:Coventry City (war guest)
Years4:1919–1927
Clubs4:Derby County
Caps4:275
Goals4:23
Years5:1927–1929
Clubs5:Blackburn Rovers
Caps5:41
Goals5:4
Years6:1929–1932
Clubs6:Chesterfield
Caps6:84
Goals6:10
Years7:1932
Clubs7:Newark Town
Totalcaps:400
Totalgoals:37
Nationalyears1:1923–1925
Nationalteam1:England
Nationalcaps1:4
Nationalgoals1:1

George Thornewell (8 July 1898 – 6 March 1986) was an English international footballer, who played as an outside right.

Early and personal life

Born in Romiley, Cheshire, Thornewell and his widowed mother moved to Derby when he was eight months old.[2] His father was a railway inspector, and his mother was a cleaner at the railway office.[2] George was the youngest of eight children, one of whom died as an infant.[2] He had a daughter out of wedlock in 1915, and married in 1921.[2] He worked as a fitter at Rolls-Royce and joined the Royal Air Force in July 1918.[2]

Career

He spent his early career with Sunday school teams St. Dunstan's and Normanton United, before playing for the works team of Rolls-Royce in Derby.[2] During World War I he guested for Nottingham Forest and Coventry City, before signing for Derby County in May 1919.[2] He moved to Blackburn Rovers in December 1927, Chesterfield in August 1929, and Newark Town in February 1932.[2] [3]

For Chesterfield he scored 10 goals in 84 Football League games.[4]

He earned four caps for England between 1923 and 1925, scoring on his debut.[2]

Later life and death

In November 1928 he began running The White Hart Hotel in Duffield, living there with his wife and daughter.[2] He died in Derby on 6 March 1986, aged 87.[2]

Notes and References

  1. News: The lure of promotion. Derby County . Athletic News . Manchester . 13 August 1923 . 6.
  2. Web site: England Players - George Thornewell. www.englandfootballonline.com.
  3. Book: S. Basson. 1998. Lucky Whites and Spireites. 1874427038.
  4. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20120329032402/http://www.chesterfield-fc.co.uk/staticFiles/fd/49/0%2C%2C10435~150013%2C00.xls. Football League players, 1921 to 2009. Excel spreadsheet. Stuart. Basson. Chesterfield F.C.. 18 February 2010. 29 March 2012. 23 June 2021. dead. dmy-all.