Harry Parkes (footballer, born 1888)

This article is about the football manager. For the Aston Villa footballer, see Harry Parkes (footballer born 1920).
Harry Parkes
Personal information
Full name Harold Arnold Parkes[1]
Date of birth September 1888
Place of birth Halesowen, England
Date of death March 1947 (1947-04) (aged 58)
Place of death Basford, England
Height 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
Playing position Outside right
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Halesowen Amateurs
Coombs Wood
Halesowen
1906–1908 West Bromwich Albion 19 (4)
1908–1914 Coventry City
1914–19?? West Bromwich Albion 8 (0)
1920 Newport County 1 (0)
Teams managed
1919–1922 Newport County
1922–1927 Chesterfield
1927–1936 Lincoln City
1936–1938 Mansfield Town
1938–1939 Notts County
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.

Harold Arnold "Harry" Parkes (September 1888 – March 1947) was an English footballer and the manager of various football clubs in the 1920s and 1930s.

Playing career

Parkes attended Halesowen Grammar School and played for local sides Halesowen Amateurs, Coombs Wood and Halesowen before joining West Bromwich Albion in February 1906. His debut came against Notts County in March 1907 in the FA Cup and he played in the semi-final defeat against Everton later that season.

He left after falling out with the West Bromwich Albion management and joined Coventry City in May 1908. He played 170 league and cup games for Coventry, scoring 38 times before returning to West Bromwich Albion in May 1914. He was player-assistant manager of Albion during the war, while working in munitions. He retired from playing during the war due to cartilage problems.

Managerial career

In June 1919, Parkes was appointed as secretary-manager of Southern League Newport County and Parkes was forced to play in goal in an emergency in April 1920. They joined the expanded Football League in 1920, but County struggled. He became manager of Chesterfield in May 1922, leaving in April 1927 and taking up the manager's post with Lincoln City the following month. He led Lincoln to promotion in 1932, by virtue of winning Division Three North, but Lincoln were relegated again two years later. He left to manage Mansfield Town in May 1936, resigning in January 1938 to manage Notts County. He resigned in July 1939 and retired from football at the same time.

References

  1. Michael Joyce. Football League players' records 1888 to 1939. SoccerData. p. 203. ISBN 1-899468-67-6.
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