Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Pat Flanagan (English footballer)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Full name
  
John 'Pat' Flanagan

Playing position
  
Inside forward

Died
  
August 31, 1917

Date of birth
  
1891

Years
  
Team

Height
  
1.68 m

Name
  
Pat Flanagan

Position
  
Inside forward

Date of death
  
unknown

Role
  
English footballer


Pat Flanagan (English footballer) Pat Flanagan The42


Place of birth
  
Preston, Lancashire

John Thomas "Pat" Flanagan (20 September 1889 – 31 August 1917) was an English footballer.

Career

Flanagan played youth football for Stourbridge before joining Norwich City in 1908 and moving to Fulham in 1909. In December 1910 joined Woolwich Arsenal (both clubs being owned by the same man, Sir Henry Norris, at the time). Flanagan made his debut on 11 February 1911 and over the next few seasons played in every forward position.

During the 1912–13 season Flanagan finished joint-top league goalscorer (with Charles Lewis) in the First Division. The next season 1913–14 he finished as Arsenal's top scorer with twelve league goals and one FA Cup goal, in the club's first season at Highbury. In total he had scored 28 goals in 121 league and cup appearances for Arsenal.

Flanagan was dropped by Arsenal at the end of 1914–15 and spent the next two seasons as a bit-part player during the First World War. He retired after an injury in 1917. Flanagan enlisted in the British Army under the Derby Scheme in December 1915, before returning to his reserved occupation as an artillery shell machinist at the Royal Arsenal. He was later mobilised into the Army Service Corps in February 1917 and posted to 816th M.T. Company in German East Africa. Flanagan died of dysentery at the 52nd (Lowland) Casualty Clearing Station in Mingoyo on 31 August 1917.

References

Pat Flanagan (English footballer) Wikipedia