Ted Widdowfield Explained

Ted Widdowfield
Fullname:Edward Widdowfield
Birth Date:25 March 1915
Birth Place:Hetton-le-Hole, England
Death Place:Newark-on-Trent, England
Position:Outside right, centre forward
Clubs1:Hetton Lyons Welfare
Years2:1933–1934
Clubs2:Bishop Auckland
Years3:1933–1935
Clubs3:Birtley
Years4:1935–1936
Caps4:5
Goals4:0
Years5:1936–1946
Caps5:83
Goals5:37
Years6:1946–1948
Clubs6:Ransome & Marles
Years7:1949–1950
Caps7:46
Goals7:20
Years8:1950–195?
Clubs8:Ransome & Marles

Edward Widdowfield (25 March 1915 – 8 November 1983) was an English professional footballer who played in the Football League for Huddersfield Town and Halifax Town. An outside right who became a centre forward, he also played non-league football for Hetton Lyons Welfare, Bishop Auckland, Birtley, Ransome & Marles and Peterborough United.

Life and career

Widdowfield was born in Hetton-le-Hole, County Durham, in 1915, a son of James Widdowfield, coal miner and local councillor, and his wife, Phillis née Pearson.[1] In his teenage years, he engaged in pedestrianismprofessional sprintingas well as playing football for his local team, Hetton Lyons Welfare, Bishop Auckland and Birtley. His goalscoring from the outside-right position earned him offers of trials with clubs including Birmingham, Burnley, Crystal Palace and Hartlepools United, and in October 1935, he signed for Huddersfield Town of the Football League First Division.[2] [3]

Widdowfield made his Football League debut on 2 November at home to Chelsea, replacing Tommy Lang.[4] Huddersfield won 2–0, and Widdowfield kept his place for the next three matches. Although the Leeds Mercury wrote that he "showed great promise in his few senior side games", he played only once more for the first team in the next twelve months, and moved on to Halifax Town of the Third Division North in November 1936.[5] [6]

Halifax Town's manager, Jimmy Thomson, had brought in Widdowfield for his pace and crossing ability, and he played regularly at outside right for his first few months at the club. He lost his place early in the 1937–38 season, and was put on the transfer list at his own request.[7] No move ensued, and in January 1938, Thomson tried Widdowfield at centre forward, a position that had been problematic since top scorer Albert Valentine had left six months earlier. In his 61 league matches before the Second World War brought an end to competitive football, he scored 34 goals, including all four as Halifax came back from 3–0 down to Accrington Stanley to win 4–3, and was the club's top scorer in both pre-war seasons[5]

Widdowfield married Isabella Stabler in 1935.[8] The 1939 Register lists him as a carpenter and footballer living in Chevinedge Crescent, Halifax, with his wife and child.[9] He served with the Halifax police during the Second World War before joining the Royal Air Force in 1941. When other duties permitted, he played football for Halifax Town in the wartime competitions and made one appearance in the first post-war edition of the FA Cup,[5] before leaving for the Newark, Nottinghamshire, area where he had settled. He played Midland League football for Ransome & Marles,[10] and spent the 1949–50 season with Peterborough United, scoring 20 goals from 45 Midland League matches,[11] before returning to Ransome & Marles, who had by then left the Midland League for the Central Alliance.[12]

Widdowfield remained in the Newark area, where he died in 1983 at the age of 68.

Career statistics

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Huddersfield Town1935–36First Division500050
1936–37First Division000000
Total500050
Halifax Town1936–37Third Division North18310193
1937–38Third Division North251100102611
1938–39Third Division North4023664629
1945–46Third Division North1010
Total833786109243
Peterborough United1949–50[13] Midland League4620344924
Career total1345711101014667

References

General

Specific

Notes and References

  1. Web site: James Widdowfield . 1911 England Census . RG14/30074 . Ancestry Library Edition . subscription.
    Web site: James Widdowfield . England and Wales Marriage Registration Index, 1837–2005 . FamilySearch . registration . 13 July 2020.
    Web site: Index entry . FreeBMD . Office for National Statistics . 13 July 2020.
  2. News: Under the Searchlight. Trial offers . Argus . Sunderland Echo . 7 June 1934 . 9.
  3. News: Signed for Huddersfield . Sunderland Echo . 16 October 1935 . 11.
  4. News: Widdowfield's debut for 'Town' . Leeds Mercury . 2 November 1935 . 11.
  5. Web site: Player search: Widdowfield, E (Ted) . English National Football Archive . 14 July 2020 . subscription.
  6. News: Bradford improving . Leeds Mercury . 14 November 1936 . 9.
  7. News: Shay man for transfer . Leeds Mercury . 15 October 1937 . 11.
  8. Web site: Edward Widdowfield . England and Wales Marriage Registration Index, 1837–2005 . FamilySearch . 14 July 2020 . registration.
  9. Web site: Edward Widdowfield . 1939 England and Wales Register . RG101/3402H KEOR . Ancestry Library Edition . subscription.
  10. Web site: 1947/48 . ilsonfootball . 14 July 2020.
  11. Web site: Posh Stars of the Midland League (Part 2 – M to Z) . The Posh Supporters' Trust . 29 April 2015 . 14 July 2020.
  12. Web site: 1950/51 . ilsonfootball . 14 July 2020.
  13. Web site: Ted Widdowfield: matches for Peterborough . Up The Posh . Chris Wilkinson . 14 July 2020.