- Albert Alexander, Sr.
Albert Edward Burns Alexander Sr. was a figure in early 20th century English football who held a number of roles at Manchester City.
Alexander's connections with Manchester City go back to at least 1904. That year Manchester City reached the
FA Cup final for the first time. The club directors hired a horse-drawn carriage to make the journey to London, with Alexander as the driver. [cite book |last=James |first=Gary |title=Manchester City - The Complete Record |publisher=Breedon |location=Derby |date=2006 |id=ISBN 1-85983-512-0 p32] By the 1920s, Alexander was the club's vice-chairman, and had also formed and coached the "A" team, the club's first youth development side. [James, p241]In 1925 manager
David Ashworth resigned. Unable to find a suitable replacement, the directors selected the team by committee. Alexander led the panel with assistance from figures includingLawrence Furniss andWilf Wild . Under the Alexander-led committee the club achieved a record 6–1Manchester derby win, and reached the 1926 FA Cup Final, though City were defeated 1–0 by Bolton Wanderers. On26 April ,1926 ,Peter Hodge was appointed manager, and Alexander's period in charge came to an end.Alexander's son, also named Albert, was Manchester City chairman in the 1960s, and through Albert Jr. and his son Eric the Alexander family had a presence on the club board until 1972. [cite web |url=http://www.purelymancity.com/index.php/finances/board-shareholding-timeline |title=Board and Shareholding timeline|accessdate=2007-10-14 |publisher=Purely Man City]
References
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