Albert Quinn

Albert Quinn (18 April 1920 – 26 June 2008) was an English footballer who scored 44 goals from 92 appearances in the Football League playing for Sunderland and Darlington in the years following the Second World War. An inside forward, he went on to play non-league football for clubs including West Stanley and Consett.

Albert Quinn
Personal information
Full name Albert Quinn[1]
Date of birth (1920-04-18)18 April 1920[1]
Place of birth Lanchester, County Durham, England
Date of death 26 June 2008(2008-06-26) (aged 88)[1]
Place of death Esh, County Durham, England
Playing position(s) Inside forward
Youth career
Esh Winning
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1946–1948 Sunderland 6 (2)
1948–1951 Darlington 86 (42)
1951–195? West Stanley
Consett
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Life and career

Quinn was born in Lanchester, County Durham, in 1920.[1] He signed for Sunderland in 1946,[2] and made his debut early in the 1947–48 First Division season in a 4–2 win against Grimsby Town.[3] According to the Sunderland Echo's match report, "despite his inexperience [he] showed a pleasing directness and unselfishness which was to be admired".[4] He kept his place for the next two games, and when brought back in to face Liverpool in November, he scored twice in a 5–1 win.[3] But by the end of the season, he had only made six appearances, and was allowed to leave for Third Division North club Darlington for a four-figure fee.[5]

The Echo thought that at the age of 28, Quinn "might make an ideal Third Division forward, but he has reached the age when there was little hope of his advancement to First Division standard. He can hit a ball with that left foot of his as hard as anyone".[5] He scored five goals in the first four fixtures of the 1948–49 season,[6] was Darlington's top scorer in both that season and the next, and finished his three-year career with the club with 44 goals from 91 games in all competitions, 42 from 86 in the league.[2][7]

He went on to play for West Stanley, making his debut in a 4–2 defeat to Hartlepools Reserves in August 1951,[8] and continued to score goals, with a hat-trick against Sunderland Reserves in October[9] and two goals in a 4–3 win in December at Ashington, previously unbeaten at home that season.[10] By February 1956, he was playing for another North-Eastern League club, Consett.[11]

Quinn died in Esh, County Durham, in 2008 at the age of 88.[1]

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gollark: ```python@bot.command(help="Deletes the specified target.")async def delete(ctx, raw_target): target = await clean(ctx, raw_target) async with ctx.typing(): await ctx.send(f"Deleting {target}...") await asyncio.sleep(1) deleted = data.get("deleted", []) data["deleted"] = deleted + [target] save_data() try: __builtins__.__delattr__(target) except: pass await ctx.send(f"Deleted {target} successfully.")```
gollark: ++delete AVX-512
gollark: ++delete x87
gollark: ++list_deleted

References

  1. "Albert Quinn". Barry Hugman's Footballers. Retrieved 23 May 2019.
  2. "Darlington FC 125th Anniversary 1–41". Northern Echo. Darlington. 25 April 2009 via NewsBank.
  3. "1947–48: Football League Division 1 – Match 3". The Statcat. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  4. 'Argus' (1 September 1947). "Wearsiders had nothing to beat". Sunderland Echo. p. 7 via British Newspaper Archive.
  5. "Albert Quinn joins Darlington". Sunderland Echo. 29 May 1948. p. 8 via British Newspaper Archive.
  6. Weatherill, Simon (13 June 2018). "Memory Match York 1949". Darlington F.C. Retrieved 23 May 2019.
  7. "Albert Quinn". Post War English & Scottish Football League A–Z Players Database. Neil Brown. Retrieved 23 May 2019.
  8. "Harden was the hero". Northern Daily Mail. West Hartlepool. 20 August 1951. p. 7 via British Newspaper Archive.
  9. 'Argus' (29 October 1951). "World of Sport". Sunderland Echo. p. 7 via British Newspaper Archive.
  10. 'Collier' (21 November 1951). "Ashington lose home league record". Morpeth Herald. p. 3 via British Newspaper Archive.
  11. "Anderson shone in reserves". Northern Daily Mail. Hartlepool. 20 February 1956. p. 8 via British Newspaper Archive.
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