Joseph Gettins Explained

Joseph Gettins
Fullname:Joseph Holmes Gettins[1]
Birth Date:19 November 1873
Birth Place:Middlesbrough, England
Death Place:East Molesey, England
Position:Centre forward
Clubs1:Brentford
Clubs2:Millwall Athletic
Years1:1894–1895
Caps1:0
Goals1:0
Clubs3:Middlesbrough
Clubs4:Millwall Athletic
Clubs5:Corinthian
Clubs6:Millwall Athletic
Years7:1899
Clubs7:Middlesbrough
Caps7:3
Goals7:0
Clubs8:Millwall Athletic
Years9:1900
Clubs9:Middlesbrough
Caps9:3
Goals9:1
Clubs10:Millwall Athletic
Years11:1902
Clubs11:Middlesbrough
Caps11:4
Goals11:0
Clubs12:Millwall

Joseph Holmes Gettins OBE, DSO, BA (19 November 1873 – 6 June 1954) was an English amateur footballer who played as a centre forward. He is best remembered for his association with Millwall Athletic and he played in the Football League for hometown club Middlesbrough.

Club career

Millwall Athletic

An amateur centre forward, Gettins' longest association was with Millwall Athletic, playing for the club in multiple spells between 1892 and 1904, by which time the club was simply known as Millwall.[2] He scored an impressive 69 goals in 71 appearances with the club and won the 1894–95 and 1895–96 Southern League titles back to back, in addition to two United League titles and two FA Cup semi-finals.

Middlesbrough

Gettins appeared for hometown club Middlesbrough in four spells and was a part of the club's 1894–95 FA Amateur Cup-winning team. He also helped the club to the 1896–97 Northern League title and played in Middlesbrough's first ever Football League match against Lincoln City on 2 September 1899.[3]

Brentford

Gettins had a short spell with non-League club Brentford during the 1894–95 season and his student friends inadvertently created the club's Bees nickname, by chanting Borough Road College's war-cry "buck up Bs" at a match. He made three cup appearances for the club.[4]

Representative career

Gettins was one of 14 players included in Corinthian squad which toured South Africa in 1897, the first English team to play outside Europe.[5]

Personal life

Gettins served as a captain (being promoted to a temporary major for a time) in the Royal Army Service Corps Territorial Force during the First World War. He was awarded the DSO in 1918. Before and after the war, Gettins worked in various teaching roles at Isleworth School, Borough Road College, Reading University and Liverpool University. In 1920, he returned to the army and became Chief Education Officer of the Army Education Corps and later commanded the Army School of Education, having risen to the rank of lieutenant colonel by the time of his retirement in 1933.[6] Gettins was awarded an OBE in 1933.

Career statistics

Club! rowspan="2"
SeasonLeagueFA CupOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Brentford1894–953[7] 030
Middlesbrough1899–1900[8] Second Division300030
1900–01Second Division310031
1902–03First Division400040
Total10100101
Career total1010030131
  1. Book: Joyce, Michael . Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939 . Tony Brown . 2012 . 978-1905891610 . Nottingham . 109.
  2. Book: Martinez, Dolores . Football: From England to the World . Mukharji . Projit B. . Routledge . 2015 . 978-1138883536 . 10–13.
  3. Web site: Lincoln City v Middlesbrough, 02 September 1899 . 3 August 2015.
  4. Book: 100 Years Of Brentford . Brentford FC . 1989 . 0951526200 . White . Eric . 353.
  5. Web site: Corinthian Tours . 3 August 2015 . Corinthian-Casuals Football Club.
  6. Book: Terret, Thierry . Sport, Militarism and the Great War: Martial Manliness and Armageddon . Mangan . J.A. . Routledge . 2012 . 978-0415699167 . 221.
  7. 2 appearances in Middlesex Senior Cup, 1 appearance in West Middlesex Cup
  8. Web site: Joseph Gettins . 10 January 2017 . 11v11.com.

Honours

Millwall Athletic

Middlesbrough