Peter Roney (15 January 1887 – 25 August 1930) was a Scottish professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper for Norwich City and Bristol Rovers prior to the First World War.
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | (1887-01-15)15 January 1887 | ||
Place of birth | Rutherglen, Scotland | ||
Date of death | 25 August 1930(1930-08-25) (aged 43)[1] | ||
Place of death | Clydebank, Scotland | ||
Position(s) | Goalkeeper | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
0000–1906 | Cambuslang Hibernian | ||
1906–1907 | Ayr | 18 | (0) |
1907–1909 | Norwich City | 69 | (0) |
1909–1915 | Bristol Rovers | 178 | (1) |
0000–1919 | Ayr United | 0 | (0) |
1919–1921 | Albion Rovers | 10 | (0) |
1921 | Ashington | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Roney began his footballing career in Scotland with Cambuslang Hibernian, before moving to Scottish League Second Division club Ayr in 1906.[1] He moved to England in 1907 and joined Southern League First Division club Norwich City.[2] Two years later, Roney joined divisional rivals Bristol Rovers and became one of the first goalkeepers to score a goal,[3] when he scored from the penalty spot in the club's final match of the 1909–10 season.[4] As of October 2022, Roney is the only goalkeeper to have scored for Bristol Rovers.[5] He made a total of 178 Southern League appearances during his six-year stint with the club.[6] Roney finished his career after the First World War with Ayr United, Albion Rovers and Ashington.[1]
Roney was born in Rutherglen, Scotland in January 1887.[1] He married his wife Violet in 1909 and at the time of the 1911 census he had one son, Kenneth.[7]
In 1914 Roney joined the 17th Middlesex Battalion, better known as the Football Battalion, with whom he served as a private in the First World War.[8] He later transferred to the Machine Gun Corps.[8] He found the realities of war difficult to cope with and the mental traumas that he suffered meant that he only briefly returned professional football,[1] it being reported in 1919 that he had undergone "such experiences during the war that he is unlikely to be heard of again in professional football".[9]
You could hear the Germans talking and singing among themselves as though there was no war on at all. Then all of a sudden our artillery would send them a reminder, and then all you could hear were cries of agony. I've nearly turned grey listening to the groans of the wounded.
— Peter Roney, March 1917[9]
His plight became a matter of concern to Bristol Rovers in 1921 when he was said to have been "down on his luck", "[lying] on a bed of sickness" and suffering from severe rheumatism as a result of his time fighting in the war.[2] The directors of the football club donated ten guineas (£10.10s) to him and arranged for a collection to be made at a Southern League match between Bristol Rovers and Norwich City, his two former clubs.[10]
Roney died on 25 August 1930 in Clydebank, Scotland, at the age of 43.[1]