Harry Davies (footballer, born 1904) explained

Harry Davies
Fullname:Harold Augustus Davies
Birth Date:29 January 1904
Birth Place:Gainsborough, England
Death Place:Blurton, Stoke-on-Trent, England
Height:[1]
Position:Inside-forward
Clubs1:Bamfords Athletic
Years2:1922–1929
Clubs2:Stoke City
Caps2:225
Goals2:68
Years3:1929–1932
Clubs3:Huddersfield Town
Caps3:55
Goals3:17
Years4:1932–1938
Clubs4:Stoke City
Caps4:164
Goals4:24
Years5:1938–1939
Clubs5:Port Vale
Caps5:44
Goals5:4
Totalcaps:488
Totalgoals:113

Harold Augustus Davies MM (29 January 1904 – 23 April 1975) was an English footballer who played in the Football League for Huddersfield Town, Port Vale and most notably, Stoke City. A creative inside-forward, he played 513 games in the league and FA Cup, scoring 122 goals. His father, also called Harry, was also a professional footballer.[2]

He spent seven seasons with Stoke from 1922 to 1929, helping the club to the Third Division North title in 1926–27. He then spent two seasons with Huddersfield Town, and featured in the 1930 FA Cup final defeat to Arsenal. He made a return to Stoke in February 1932 and spent another six seasons at the Victoria Ground, helping the club to the Second Division title in 1932–33. Having scored 101 goals in 411 matches for the "Potters" in his two spells, he was traded to Port Vale in February 1938. He retired in April 1939 and later fought in World War II.

Playing career

Davies was born in Gainsborough and attended Queen Elizabeth's High School. His father was a professional footballer who played for Doncaster Rovers, Gainsborough Trinity, Hull City and Wolverhampton Wanderers. The family moved to Staffordshire after Harry Senior retired, and Harry Junior followed his father into playing football.[2] He was spotted by Stoke City playing for Bamfords Athletic in the Uttoxeter amateur league. He was quickly thrust into first-team action with Stoke struggling to stay afloat in the First Division. He scored in his second appearance against West Bromwich Albion to earn Stoke their first win of the 1922–23 season, but it failed to avert the slide and ended with Stoke being relegated after finishing four points from safety.[2] He became a key player in the 1923–24 season in a side which challenged for a return to the top flight, finishing as second-highest scorer to Jimmy Broad.[2] A poor run form towards the end of the season saw Stoke miss out promotion and instead to finish a disappointing sixth place. Although a first-choice player in 1924–25, Davies was hampered by injuries, and an unsettled and inexperienced Stoke side only avoided relegation by a single point.[2] Stoke failed to learn in 1925–26 and were relegated to the Third Division North. Stoke bounced back quickly in 1926–27 and won the divisional title relatively easily, with Davies scoring a career-best of 17 goals. He played regularly in the side for the next two seasons before he joined Huddersfield Town in 1929.[3] He played for the "Professionals" in the 1929 FA Charity Shield.[4]

The "Terriers" were looking to recapture their form under manager Herbert Chapman, which saw them dominate English football in the early 1920s and saw Davies as a replacement for England international Clem Stephenson who had become manager. In his first season with Town, Davies top scored with 10 goals and played in the 1930 FA Cup final as Huddersfield lost 2–0 to Arsenal.[2] Following that set-back he fell out of favour at Leeds Road and Stoke manager Tom Mather wasted no time in bringing him back to the Victoria Ground in February 1932.[2] Davies' return was met with approval by the club's supporters and was key in helping Stoke to win Second Division title in 1932–33.[2] He linked up well with Stanley Matthews and when Bob McGrory stepped into managing the reserves, Davies was handed the captaincy. Back in the First Division, Davies was a key member of an exciting Stoke attack, and he became only the second player to pass 100 goals after Charlie Wilson.[2]

With Davies' career coming to an end, he joined local rivals Port Vale – along with a small fee, for Tommy Ward in February 1938.[5] He played 15 Third Division North games at the end of the 1937–38 season, claiming two goals.[5] He scored twice in 29 league games in the 1938–39 campaign, as the "Valiants" switch into the Third Division South meant that he had scored a goal in all four divisions of the Football League.[5] Davies retired in April 1939.[5]

After football

Davies retired from playing just before World War II and he earned a Military Medal while serving with the Royal Army Service Corps.[2] After the war he became owner of the Priory hotel in Abbey Hulton and then the Plume of Feathers in Barlaston.[2] He also became a very good snooker player and competed in regional tournaments.[2]

Media career

Davies was one of the first players to write a newspaper column. He was paid sixpence a word, which at 200 words a column gave him a total of £5 a week, equalling his footballing wage.

Career statistics

Source:

+ Appearances and goals by club, season and competitionClubSeasonDivisionLeagueFA CupOtherTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Stoke City1922–23First Division24500245
1923–24Second Division31910329
1924–25Second Division26800268
1925–26Second Division3010233213
1926–27Third Division North3915324217
1927–28Second Division4011424413
1928–29Second Division3510103610
Total22568117236!75
Huddersfield Town1929–30First Division3010203210
1930–31First Division24700247
1931–32First Division100010
Total55172057!17
Stoke City1931–32Second Division14400144
1932–33Second Division31421335
1933–34First Division32630356
1934–35First Division35510365
1935–36First Division29451345
1936–37First Division23100231
Total16424112175!26
Port Vale1937–38Third Division North1520000152
1938–39Third Division South2921041343
Total4441041495
Career total48811325941517123

Honours

Stoke City

Huddersfield Town

Notes and References

  1. News: The lure of promotion. Stoke . Athletic News . Manchester . 13 August 1923 . 6.
  2. Book: Stoke City 101 Golden Greats. 2002. Desert Islands Books. 1-874287554.
  3. 99 Years & Counting – Stats & Stories – Huddersfield Town History
  4. News: Derby Daily Telegraph . Professionals v. Amateurs – selected teams for annual match . 26 September 1929 . 21 March 2016 . 10. British Newspaper Archive.
  5. Book: Kent, Jeff. Port Vale Personalities. Witan Books. 79. 1996. 0-9529152-0-0.
  6. Book: Matthews. Tony. The Legends of Stoke City. 18 December 2008. Breedon Books. Derby, United Kingdom. 978-1-85983-653-8. 54–5.