Archie Hunter
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Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Archibald Hunter | ||
Date of birth | [1] | 23 September 1859||
Place of birth | Joppa, Ayrshire, Scotland | ||
Date of death | 29 November 1894[1] | (aged 35)||
Place of death | Aston, Birmingham, England | ||
Position(s) | Forward[1] | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
? | Ayr Thistle | ? | (?) |
1878–1890 | Aston Villa | 73 | (42) |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Archibald "Archie" Hunter (23 September 1859 in Joppa, nr. Ayr, Scotland – 29 November 1894 in Aston, Birmingham, England), was the first captain of Aston Villa to lift the FA Cup, in 1887. He was one of Victorian football's first household names.
Hunter played at Third Lanark, Ayr Thistle, and Aston Villa, whom he signed for in August 1878, just four years after their formation. His Aston Villa career began 10 years before the commencement of the first Football League season. In his league career (1888–1890) he played 73 matches scoring 42 goals.
Despite being one of the greats of the 19th century game, Hunter never fulfilled his dream of playing for Scotland against England. This is because at the time the Scottish Football Association had a policy of not picking 'Anglo-Scots' (i.e. Scots who played in the English League).
Hunter originally came to Birmingham planning to sign for Calthorpe FC, but after failing to locate them was persuaded to sign for Villa instead after hearing of Aston Villa's Scottish connections. Hunter later recalled in his memoirs;
Aston Villa to me as a club that had come rapidly to the fore and asked me to become a member of it. I hesitated for some time, but at last my friend told me that a "brother Scot," Mr. George Ramsay, was the Villa captain and that decided me. Mr. Ramsay was a Glasgow man and had exerted himself very considerably to bring the Villa team into the front rank.
— Archie Hunter, Triumphs of the Football Field
He was idolized by the crowds and became the first player to score in every round of the FA Cup in Villa's victorious 1887 campaign.
Archie Hunter was a prince of dribblers. It was not an unusual performance of his to start at the half way mark, and dribble through the whole of the opposing team! he would not lose the ball until he had literally dribbled it between the posts.
— Association Football And The Men Who Made It (1906)
During a Football League match against Everton in 1890 Hunter suffered a heart attack and collapsed. He never played again, and died at the age of 35. It is said that, on his death-bed, he asked to be lifted up one last time to see the crowd going to Perry Barr (then Villa's home).
His brother Andy also played for Villa, and scored their first ever FA Cup goal.
In 1998, Archie Hunter was inducted into the English Football League's list of 100 legends.
The headstone on his grave reads:
This monument is erected in loving memory of Archie Hunter, the famous captain of Aston Villa, by his football comrades and the club as a lasting tribute to his ability on the field and his sterling worth as a man.
References
- ^ a b c "Archie Hunter Bio". Aston Villa Player Database.
External links