Joe Mercer
Personal information
Full name Joseph Powell Mercer[1]
Date of birth (1889-07-21)21 July 1889[2]
Place of birth Higher Bebington, England[2]
Date of death 1927 (aged 3637)[2]
Height 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)[2]
Position(s) Centre half
Youth career
1908–1909 Burnell's Ironworks
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1909–1910 Ellesmere Port
1910– Nottingham Forest 150 (6)
0000–1921 Ellesmere Port
1921–1922 Tranmere Rovers 15 (1)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Joseph Powell Mercer (21 July 1889 – 1927) was an English professional footballer who made 150 appearances in the Football League for Nottingham Forest as a centre half.[1][3] He was the father of footballer and manager Joe Mercer.[2]

Personal life

Mercer worked as a bricklayer before and during his professional football career.[2] He married Ethel Breeze in June 1913 and had four children, the oldest being future footballer and manager Joe Mercer.[2] On 16 December 1914, four months after the outbreak of the First World War and the day after the Football Battalion of the Middlesex Regiment was established, Mercer and Nottingham Forest teammates Tommy Gibson and Harry Iremonger travelled down to London to enlist.[4] He was posted to the front on 17 October 1915.[2] At the front, Mercer was promoted to sergeant,[5] but sustained wounds to the head, leg and shoulder and was captured by the Germans in Oppy on 28 April 1917.[2][6] He was held in camps at Douai, Bad Langensalza, Giessen and Meschede and returned home in January 1919.[2] In the post-war years, Mercer attempted to resume his football career and continued working as a bricklayer.[2] He died in 1927, of health problems caused by gas inhalation in the trenches a decade earlier.[7]

Career statistics

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
Club Season League FA Cup Total
Division Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Nottingham Forest 1910–11[8] First Division 13 0 1 0 14 0
1911–12[8] Second Division 36 3 1 0 37 3
1912–13[8] 37 0 2 0 39 0
1913–14[8] 35 2 2 0 37 2
1914–15[8] 29 1 2 0 31 1
Career total 150 6 8 0 158 6

References

  1. 1 2 Joyce, Michael (2012). Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939. Nottingham: Tony Brown. p. 202. ISBN 978-1905891610.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Royden, Mike. "Joe Mercer and the Football Battalion" (PDF). Retrieved 9 June 2018.
  3. "Mercer Joe Nottingham Forest 1914". Vintage Footballers. Retrieved 25 December 2018.
  4. "EFL Remembers: Royal British Legion – the story of Joe Mercer". www.efl.com. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  5. Joe Mercer on Lives of the First World War
  6. "The Story of the Footballers' Battalions in the First World War". Football and the First World War. Retrieved 14 December 2015.
  7. Riddoch, Andrew; Kemp, David (2010). When the Whistle Blows: The Story of the Footballers' Battalion in the Great War. Sparkford, Yeovil, Somerset: Haynes Publishing. p. 264. ISBN 978-0857330772.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 "Joe Mercer". The City Ground. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
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