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Harry Chambers

English footballer and manager


English footballer and manager

FieldValue
nameHarry Chambers
imageHarry Chambers.jpg
captionHarry Chambers in 1915
full_nameHenry Chambers
birth_date17 November 1896
birth_placeWillington Quay, England
death_date
death_placeShrewsbury, England
height1.77 m
positionStriker
youthyears11912–1913
youthclubs1Willington United Methodists
youthyears21913–1915
youthclubs2North Shields Athletic
years11915–1928
clubs1Liverpool
caps1339
goals1151
years21928–1929
clubs2West Bromwich Albion
caps240
goals24
years31929–1933
clubs3Oakengates Town
years41933–1934
clubs4Hereford United
nationalyears11921–1923
nationalteam1England
nationalcaps18
nationalgoals15
manageryears11929–1933
managerclubs1Oakengates Town

Henry Chambers (17 November 1896 – 29 June 1949) was an England international footballer who played in the Football League for Liverpool and West Bromwich Albion.

Life and playing career

Born in Willington Quay, Northumberland, England, Harry was a schoolboy international at age eleven when he attended Willington Board School. After school he played for North Shields Athletic, Kings Park (on loan), Belfast Distillery (wartime guest) and Glentoran (wartime guest) before he was signed, from North Shields, for the Reds by manager Tom Watson in April 1915, just before the suspension of league football due to the outbreak of the First World War. He enlisted in Irish infantry regiment The Connaught Rangers, with whom he served until invalided out of the army in 1917.

He had to wait 4 years to make his debut until 30 August 1919 in a First Division match at Valley Parade, a game Liverpool won 3–1 against Bradford and in which Chambers opened his Anfield goalscoring account.

After scoring on his debut he went on to establish himself as the undisputed goal king of Anfield in the immediate post-war years. Topping the club's goalscoring charts for the next five seasons, his shooting prowess was instrumental in Liverpool winning back-to-back League Championships in 1922 and 1923, he scored 41 times in 72 appearances during this spell averaging a goal every games. In total he scored 151 goals in 338 appearances for Liverpool including a memorable hat-trick in a 5–1 win over Everton at Anfield in October 1922.

The left-footer nicknamed 'Smiler' was selected by England on 8 occasions scoring 5 goals, his international debut came on 14 March 1921 in a 0-0 British Championship draw with Wales at Ninian Park, Cardiff, his first goal for his country came in a 2-0 friendly victory over Belgium at the Oscar Bossaert Stadion, Molenbeek-Saint-Jean, Brussels on 21 May 1921, Chambers best game for his country came on 22 October 1921 in a British Championship match at The Hawthorns, West Bromwich, it was against Ireland and he scored both goals in the 2–0 victory.

Harry was allowed to leave and in April 1928, aged 32, he signed for West Bromwich Albion where the forward who scored a goal every games for the Reds was converted to a centre-half! Before he retired from the professional game he went on to be player-manager for Oakengates Town (1929-1933), at the same time as running a local public house called The Stafford Arms, and represent Hereford. Even after retiring Chambers, who was employed for the last ten years of his life at the factory of Messrs Sankey's in nearby Hadley, could not stay away from the game he loved and continued to play for Shropshire team Oakengates right up until his death at Shrewsbury in 1949 aged 52. He was buried at Wombridge Parish Church near Oakengates.

Career details

  • Liverpool F.C (1915–1928) † 338 appearances, 151 goals - Two First Division Championships winners medals (1922 and 1923) †Although Chambers signed in 1915 he was unable to make his debut until the opening day of the 1919/20 season due to outbreak of World War I of 1914/18.
  • England (1921–1923) 8 caps, 5 goals

References

References

  1. Junius. (22 August 1921). "First Division prospects. Liverpool". Athletic News.
  2. (1 July 1949). "Death of Harry Chambers - Played Football for England". Shrewsbury Chronicle.
  3. (26 July 2013). "County boasts a long history of clubs that have now gone. Football teams that glittered then faded.". Shropshire Star.
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