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John Priestley

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Full name
  
John 'Jock' Priestley

Playing position
  
Half Back

Discovered
  
Oxygen

Role
  
Philosopher

Place of birth
  
Glasgow, Scotland

Name
  
John Priestley

Date of birth
  
19 August 1900

Years
  
Team


John Priestley httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons99

Died
  
February 6, 1804, Pennsylvania, United States

Parents
  
Mary Swift, Jonas Priestley

Books
  
The Discovery of Oxyge, Experiments and Observati, A History of the Corruptio, The Rudiments of English, The History and Present S

Similar People
  
Antoine Lavoisier, Carl Wilhelm Scheele, Henry Cavendish, Jan Ingenhousz, Jan Baptist van Helmont

Date of death
  
January 1980 (age 79)

John Priestley (19 August 1900 – January 1980) was a Scottish professional footballer who played for St Johnstone, Chelsea and Grimsby Town before retiring from football.

Contents

John Priestley Joseph Priestley Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Playing career

John Priestley Joseph Priestley English clergyman and scientist

Bornnin Glasgow, Priestley started his career with St Johnstone in Scotland before moving South of the border to join Chelsea in May 1920 at the age of nineteen. He spent eight years with the West London club until 1928 when he signed for Grimsby Town, who would go on to be promoted to Division One the following year.

Chelsea

John Priestley Combustion Aquinas Reads

Priestley didn't make his debut for the Blues until a year after he joined the club, playing in a 0-0 draw away at Blackburn Rovers on the 2nd May 1921. He wouldn't make another appearance for Chelsea until Boxing Day 1922, missing the 1921/22 season completely. Turning out for the Pensioners in a 4-0 win at Nottingham Forest, Priestley made a further 22 appearances during the season, scoring his first goal for the club in a 3-0 win against Bolton Wanderers in front of a crowd of 20,000 at Stamford Bridge.

The 1923/24 season saw Priestley make 42 appearances for Chelsea, scoring twice in victories against Middlesbrough and Manchester City, though he was unable to help the London club stave off relegation to the old Division Two.

In the following season, Priestley would again feature heavily for Chelsea as the side finished 5th in Division Two, missing out on promotion by 10 points. The 1925/26 campaign proved to be more fortuitous for the Scottish Half Back as he quadrupled his goal tally from the previous year, despite making only six more appearances in all competitions for Chelsea, helping them to a 3rd-place finish in the league come the end of the season.

Priestley bettered his scoring record the following season, having his most prolific year for the Blues with 7 goals in 44 appearances. He netted twice from the penalty spot in a 2-1 win over Clapton Orient on New Years Day 1927 and scored twice again as Chelsea beat Bradford City a month later on the 5th February.

Though he only made 18 appearances in his last season (1927–28) on the King's Road, Priestley still pitched in with four goals, netting his last double in a 5-2 win against Bristol City at Stamford Bridge. This would be Chelsea's only victory after January 1928 with Priestley in the team as the side finished 3rd in Division Two, missing out on promotion once again.

References

John Priestley Wikipedia