- Arthur Alfred Brown
Arthur Alfred Brown (
15 March 1859 –1 July 1909 ) was an English footballer who played for Aston Villa in the 1880s. He was their first international player, making three appearances for England in 1882. Throughout his career he was known as "Digger" Brown.Playing career
Brown was born in
Birmingham , the elder brother ofAlbert Arthur Brown who would also go on to have a career as a footballer with Aston Villa. Arthur began his career playing for local junior sides including Aston Cross, Aston Unity and Aston Comrades before joining the most senior club in the area, Aston Villa in 1878. His initial spell at Villa only lasted a few weeks before he left to join Mitchell St George's.Two years later, after spells with Birchfield Trinity and Birmingham Excelsior, he re-joined Aston Villa. His favoured position was at
inside right but he could play on either wing. Contemporary reports described him as "sturdy, though small, he could dribble through opponents with astonishing ease and grace." [The Villa News and Record,1 September 1906 ]His first England cap came against Ireland on
18 February 1882 when he played alongside his Villa colleagueHoward Vaughton . England's 13–0 victory is still the team's largest ever win; the Villa forwards "totally dominated" [cite book |last= Gibbons|first= Philip|authorlink= |title= Association Football in Victorian England - A History of the Game from 1863 to 1900|year= 2001|publisher= Upfront Publishing|pages=pp.63-64|isbn=1-84426-035-6] scoring nine goals between them, with Vaughton scoring five and Brown four. [cite web | title=Ireland 0 - England 13, Match summary | url=http://www.englandstats.com/matchreport.php?mid=14 | publisher=www.englandstats.com| accessdate=2008-01-16] Brown "seemed set for a lengthy career" [cite book | author=Graham Betts| title=England: Player by player | publisher=Green Umbrella Publishing | year=2006|pages=p.50| isbn=1-905009-63-1] but, although he played in the two other 1882 internationals against Wales and Scotland (both of which resulted in defeats) he was never again selected for England. His international career spanned 23 days, in which he played three matches scoring four goals.His club career was before the inception of
The Football League and all Brown's club games were in friendlies and in theFA Cup . During his Villa career he played 22 FA Cup matches, scoring 15 goals, often playing alongside his team captain,Archie Hunter . By 1886, ill-health had forced Brown to retire and he therefore missed out on the inaugural Football League season.He continued to keep up an interest in Villa's affairs until he died on
1 July 1909 , aged 50.References
External links
*Englandstats|id=166|name=Arthur Alfred Brown
* [http://www.englandfc.com/Profiles/php/PlayerProfileByName.php?id=165 England profile]
* [http://web.telia.com/~u27301997/179.html Aston Villa profile]
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