Percy Barnfather Explained

Percy Barnfather
Fullname:Percy Barnfather[1]
Birth Date:1879 12, df=yes
Birth Place:Byker, England
Death Place:Westminster, England
Height:
(depending on source quoted)
Position:Outside right
Youthclubs1:Throckley
Years1:1900–1903
Clubs1:Wallsend Park Villa
Years2:1903–1904
Clubs2:Barnsley
Caps2:27
Goals2:3
Years3:1904–1906
Clubs3:New Brompton
Caps3:39
Goals3:4
Years4:1906
Clubs4:Southampton
Years5:1906–1907
Clubs5:West Stanley
Years6:1907–1909
Clubs6:Croydon Common
Caps6:25
Goals6:16
Years7:1909–1910
Clubs7:Norwich City
Caps7:32
Goals7:4
Years8:1910–1911
Clubs8:Croydon Common
Caps8:15
Goals8:10
Years9:1911–1912
Clubs9:West Stanley
Years10:1912–1916
Clubs10:Croydon Common
Caps10:81
Goals10:18
Years11:1919–1920
Clubs11:Merthyr Town
Caps11:4
Goals11:0

Percy Barnfather (17 December 1879 – 18 December 1951) was an English professional footballer, who made 265 appearances and scored 85 goals in all competitions as an outside right for Croydon Common, before and during the First World War.

Playing career

An outside right, Barnfather joined Second Division club Barnsley in 1903 and made 25 appearances during the 1903–04 season, scoring four goals.[2] In June 1904, he joined Southern League First Division club New Brompton and remained at Priestfield for two seasons. After a non-playing spell with Southampton,[3] he spent the 1906–07 season back in his native northeast with North Eastern League club West Stanley.

Barnfather returned to the Southern League to join Second Division club Croydon Common in August 1907 and aside from a spell with Norwich City and a second spell with West Stanley, he spent the majority of the remainder of his career with the Robins. Barnfather's professional career with Croydon Common came to an end at the end of the 1914–15 season, by which time he had made 140 appearances and scored 48 goals during three spells at The Nest. He finished his career with a short spell at Southern League First Division club Merthyr Town during the 1919–20 season, under manager and former Croydon Common teammate Harry Hadley.

Personal life

Barnfather was born in Byker and attended Welleck Road School in Newcastle. He was a plumber and engineer by trade and was married with three children. After retiring from football, Barnfather worked in a clerical role in the Ministry of Supply. He died of stomach cancer in 1951 and is buried in Croydon.[4]

First World War

In December 1914, four months after the outbreak of the First World War, Barnfather enlisted as a private in the Football Battalion of the Middlesex Regiment.[5] Through the course of his service, he rose from private to captain and won the Military Cross in 1918.[6]

Career statistics

Club! rowspan="2"
SeasonLeagueFA CupTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Barnsley1903–04Second Division27300273
New Brompton1904–05[7] Southern League First Division17420194
1905–06Southern League First Division22020240
Total39440434
Croydon Common1907–08Southern League Second Division13210142
1908–09Southern League Second Division1214912115
Total25161013517
Norwich City1909–10Southern League First Division32420344
Croydon Common1910–11Southern League Second Division1510231713
Croydon Common1912–13Southern League Second Division15440194
1913–14Southern League Second Division30810318
1914–15Southern League First Division36620386
Total1214419414048
Merthyr Town1919–20Southern League First Division400040
Career total2235527425059

Honours

Croydon Common

Notes and References

  1. Book: Joyce, Michael . Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939 . Tony Brown . 2012 . 978-1905891610 . Nottingham . 18.
  2. Web site: Biographies – Percy Barnfather . 20 November 2017 . Croydon Common Football Club.
  3. Book: Brown, Tony . The Definitive Gillingham F.C.: A Complete Record . Soccerdata . 2003 . 1-899468-20-X . 24–25.
  4. Book: Riddoch, Andrew . When the Whistle Blows: The Story of the Footballers' Battalion in the Great War . Kemp, John . Haynes Publishing . 2011 . 978-0-85733-103-8 . 327.
  5. News: The Story of the Footballers' Battalions in the First World War . en-US . Football and the First World War . 20 November 2017.
  6. Web site: 36 Supplement To The Edinburgh Gazette, January 2, 1918 . 20 November 2017.
  7. Web site: Gillingham FC Career Details – Percy Barnfather . 20 November 2017 . Gillingham FC Scrapbook.