- Arthur Wharton
Infobox Football biography
playername = Arthur Wharton
fullname = Arthur Wharton
dateofbirth = 28 October 1865
cityofbirth = Jamestown
countryofbirth = Gold Coast
dateofdeath = death date and age|1930|12|13|1865|10|28
cityofdeath =Edlington ,South Yorkshire
countryofdeath =England
height =
position = Goalkeeper/Winger
years = 1885-1886
1886-1888
1889-1894
1894-1895
1895-1897
1897-1899
1899-1901
1901-1902
clubs = Darlington
Preston North End
Rotherham Town
Sheffield United
Stalybridge Rovers
Ashton North End
Stalybridge Rovers
Stockport County
caps(goals) = ? (?)
? (?)
? (?)
1 (0)
? (?)
? (?)
? (?)
6 (0)Arthur Wharton (28 October 1865 – 13 December 1930) is widely considered to be the first black professional association football player in the world.cite web | url=http://www.100greatblackbritons.com/bios/arthur_wharton-andrew_watson.html| title=Arthur Wharton | work=100 Great Black Britons ] [cite book | author=Phil Vasili | title=The First Black Footballer, Arthur Wharton, 1865-1930: an absence of memory" | id=ISBN 0-7146-4903-1 ] cite web | url=http://www.furd.org/default.asp?intPageID=25 | title=Arthur Wharton| work=Football Unites, Racism Divides ] Though not the first black player outright - the amateur Andrew Watson predated him - Wharton was the first black professional and the first to play in the
Football League .Biography
Wharton was born in Jamestown, Gold Coast (now
Accra ,Ghana ), his father was half-Grenadian and half-Scottish, and his mother was a half-Scottish member of the Ghanaian royalty. He moved to England in 1882, to train as aMethodist missionary , but soon abandoned this in favour of becoming a full-time athlete.Wharton was an all-round sportsman - in 1886, he set a then world record of 10 seconds for a 100 yard sprint in the AAA championship. He was also a keen cyclist and
cricket er, playing for local teams inYorkshire andLancashire . However, he is best remembered for his exploits as a footballer; while he was not the first black footballer in theUnited Kingdom — leading amateur and Scotland internationalAndrew Watson predates him by eleven years — he was the first black footballer to turn professional.Wharton started as an amateur playing as a
goalkeeper for Darlington, where he was spotted by Preston North End. He joined them as an amateur, and was part of the team that reachedFA Cup semi-finals in 1886-87. Though part of "The Invincibles" of the 1880s,cite book |last= Taw |first= Thomas | title= Football's Twelve Apostles: The Making of The League 1886-1889 |year= 2006 |isbn=1-905328-09-5 |pages=pp. 17] he left Preston in 1888 to concentrate on his running, and thus was not part of the team that subsequently wonthe Double in 1888-89.cite web | url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/tyne/roots/2003/10/arthur_wharton.shtml | title=Arthur Wharton: The first Black Footballer | work=BBC ]He returned to football in 1889, joining Rotherham Town, signing as a professional. In 1894 he moved to Sheffield United, though he was understudy to regular first-team goalkeeper William "Fatty" Foulke. During the 1894-95 season, Wharton played three games for Sheffield United, against Leicester Fosse, Linfield and Sunderland — the latter being a First Division game, making Wharton the first black player to play in the top flight.
In 1895 he left for Stalybridge Rovers but after falling out with the management moved to Ashton North End in 1897. Ashton went bankrupt in 1899, and he returned to Stalybridge Rovers, before seeing out his career playing for Stockport County of the Second Division in 1901-02. As well as playing in goal, he would also occasionally feature outfield as a winger. He never won a major honour in the game during his career, nor was he capped at international level.
After retiring from football in 1902, he continued to play cricket and run competitively. In 1915 he moved to
Edlington ,South Yorkshire to work as a labourer in acolliery . He also joined the localHome Guard duringWorld War I . However, he gradually descended into destitution andalcoholism and died penniless in 1930. He was buried in an unmarked grave in Edlington.Legacy
His grave was given a headstone in 1997 after a campaign by anti-racism campaigners "Football Unites - Racism Divides" for recognition of Wharton's achievements. In 2003 Wharton was inducted into the
English Football Hall of Fame in recognition of the impact he made on the game. There is now a campaign to have a statue erected in Darlington to acknowledge his achievements. [ [http://www.arthurwharton.com Arthur Wharton] at www.arthurwharton.com]References
Further reading
*Phil Vasili, "The First Black Footballer, Arthur Wharton, 1865-1930: an absence of memory" (ISBN 0-7146-4903-1)
*Phil Vasili "Colouring Over the White Line. The History of Black Footballers in Britain" (ISBN 1-84018-296-2)External links
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A752410 BBC h2g2 entry]
* [http://www.nationalfootballmuseum.com/Hall%20of%20Fame/arthurwharton.htm English Football Hall of Fame Profile]
* [http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/SLAwhartonA.htm Article on Spartacus Educational]
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