Bobby Browne (footballer, born 1912)

Irish footballer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroIrish footballer
PlacesUnited Kingdom
wasAthlete Football player Association football player
Work fieldSports
Gender
Male
Birth9 February 1912, Derry, County Londonderry, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom
Death1 January 1994 (aged 81 years)
The details

Biography

Robert James Browne (known as Bobby Browne) (9 February 1912 - 1994) was a former Irish footballer who played as a wing half. He was one of ten children of Catherine and John, and his youngest brother Leonard was killed when HMS Firedrake was sunk.

Born in Derry, Ireland, Browne began his career with his local team, Derry City FC. There, he won a North-West Senior Cup and represented the Irish League in 1935. However, the Leeds United manager of the 1930s, Billy Hampson, seemed to have a predilection for young Irish talent, and one of the first he brought to Elland Road was Derry-man, Browne. It took a £1,500 fee to prise the talented wing-half from Derry in October 1935, and he went on to make well over a hundred appearances in the Leeds first-team.

Browne was capped six times for Ireland, with all caps coming between 1935 and 1938 whilst he was at Leeds.

When the Football League resumed in 1946, Browne was 34 years old, and he played one more season with Leeds before finishing his League career with York City, although he subsequently joined Thorne Colliery as player-manager. Later, Browne joined the coaching staff at Halifax Town, and was briefly caretaker manager in October and November 1954.

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