Thomas Strachan

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Thomas Strachan
Personal information
Full name Thomas Strachan
Date of birth c. 1860
Place of birth Blackburn, England
Date of death ?
Place of death Padiham, England
Position(s) Forward
Youth career
–1881 Witton
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1881–84 Blackburn Rovers
1884–85 Burnley
1885–86 Blackburn Rovers
1886–87 Witton
1887–88 Darwen
1888–89 Blackburn Olympic
1889 Witton
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Thomas "Tot" Strachan was a footballer who won the FA Cup with Blackburn Rovers in 1886. His surname was also rendered as Strahan.

Personal life[edit]

Strachan was the son of a Thomas Strachan, a joiner, and Mary Strachan. His exact birth date is not known, but census records show he was born in about 1860.

Football career[edit]

He generally played as centre-forward[1] and was known for his pace.[2]

Strachan had a varied career with various Lancastrian clubs. He started out at Witton, before being poached by the wealthy Blackburn Rovers, the club most adept at finding ways around the rules on professionalism thanks to its backers providing sinecure jobs for footballers; Strachan was found employment as a "cotton twister".[3] He made his debut for Rovers in a 7–0 win over Bolton Wanderers in October 1881.[4]

In 1883–84, he was a regular in the Rovers side, and played in most of the rounds of the club's Cup run to the final, as well as in the side which won the Lancashire Senior Cup final by beating Blackburn Olympic.[5] However, he was replaced by Joe Sowerbutts for the final.[6] He at least had the consolation of the club giving him £10 17/5 as a wediding present (more than the club gave to Fergus Suter),[7] but he finished the season guesting for Great Lever,[8] and in 1884–85 joined Burnley,[9] just as the F.A. took a more stringent line on professionalism. Burnley was one of several Lancastrian sides to withdraw from the 1884–85 FA Cup as a result.[10]

Blackburn Rovers however had continued to find ways around the ban on professionalism, whilst still claiming to be staunch amateurs, and for the 1885–86 season, with Great Lever making moves to sign Strachan,[11] the Rovers instead swooped to bring him back. He scored in the 2–0 win at Clitheroe in the first round of the 1885–86 FA Cup,[12] and next scored in the semi-final win over Swifts, bundling a cross from Sowerbutts through the goal.[13] Strachan also played in both the original final and the replay win against West Bromwich Albion, although he was now playing on the right-wing.[14]

After finally picking up a Cup-winners' medal, for 1886–87 he re-joined the newly-ambitious Witton,[15] by which time he was playing on the right,[16] but only stayed there for a season before joining Darwen.[17] In 1888 he joined the moribund Blackburn Olympic,[18] and on the final collapse of that club returned yet again to Witton,[19] although he does not seem to have played after appearing in a 5–0 defeat at Sheffield Wednesday.[20]

Post-football life[edit]

Strachan was something of a local celebrity and joker; on one occasion, when he mistook a finger-bowl for a drink, he claimed that he had tasted "woss soup, many a time".[21]

Strachan was married to Elizabeth Smith on 24 February 1883.[22] The couple had a son, Herbert, in 1900, by which time they were living in Padiham and Strachan was still working as a twister.[23] His exact birth and death dates are unknown; he does not appear in the 1911 census.

Honours[edit]

References and notes[edit]

  1. ^ "Peeps into the past". Burnley Express: 11. 24 November 1923.
  2. ^ "The speed question". Burnley News: 2. 25 October 1913.
  3. ^ Civil Parish of Witton. England Census. 1881. p. 14.
  4. ^ "History of the Blackburn Rovers football club". Blackburn Standard: 7. 27 January 1894.
  5. ^ "Lancashire Cup - Final Tie". Liverpool Daily Post: 7. 24 March 1884.
  6. ^ "report". Sportsman: 4. 31 March 1884.
  7. ^ "Annual meeting of the Rovers club". Preston Herald: 7. 31 May 1884.
  8. ^ "Football and cricket notes". Blackburn Standard: 3. 3 May 1884.
  9. ^ "Burnley v Bolton Wanderers". Burnley Express: 3. 13 September 1884.
  10. ^ "The Football Association and the Lancashire Clubs". Sheffield Daily Telegraph: 8. 16 October 1884.
  11. ^ "En passant". Athletic News: 1. 4 August 1885.
  12. ^ "report". Blackburn Standard: 4. 31 October 1885.
  13. ^ "English Cup - Semi-final". Athletic News: 3. 16 March 1886.
  14. ^ "The Football Association Challenge Cup - The Final Tie". Sporting Life: 4. 12 April 1886.
  15. ^ "Blackburn football prospects". Athletic News: 7. 24 August 1886.
  16. ^ "The Lancashire lads struggle for the English Cup". Athletic News: 5. 29 November 1887.
  17. ^ "Darwen at Hurst". Cricket and Football Field: 3. 10 September 1887.
  18. ^ "En passant". Athletic News: 1. 4 September 1888.
  19. ^ "Football prospects: the coming season". Lancashire Evening Post: 2. 31 August 1889.
  20. ^ "Wednesday v Witton". Sheffield Independent: 7. 23 September 1889.
  21. ^ "History of the Blackburn Rovers football club". Blackburn Standard: 2. 21 April 1894.
  22. ^ Marriage solemnized at St Martin's Church in the Parish of Witton. Blackburn: Blackburn St Mark Parish Register. 24 February 1883. p. 238.
  23. ^ Civil Parish of Padiham. England Census. 1901. p. 16.