Walter Tranter

Walter Tranter
Personal information
Full name Walter Rogers Tranter
Date of birth September 1874
Place of birth Middlesbrough, England
Date of death September 1945
Place of death Romford, Essex, England
Playing position Left-back
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1897–1899 Thames Ironworks 21 (0)
1899–1900 Chatham ? (?)
1900 West Ham United 4 (0)

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.


Walter Rogers Tranter (1875–1945) was an English association football player.

Born in Middlesbrough, Tranter played as a left-back for Thames Ironworks, the team that would later become West Ham United. The club handbook described him as a player that "rushes in where others feared to tread".[1] He was a part of the team that won the London League during the 1897-98 season, and captained the side to the Southern League Second Division championship in 1898-99. He then left to play for Chatham, but returned to the newly renamed club, along with teammate Albert Kaye, for the 1900-01 season. He played in the inaugural game for the new club, a 7-0 battering of Gravesend on 1 September 1900, and made a further three Southern League appearances for West Ham that season. His last two games for the club were in the FA Cup Qualifying Round 4 against New Brompton, which went to a replay on 21 November 1900.

Personal life

Walter Tranter's father was Isaac Rogers Tranter, who was the Captain of the Fire Brigade Company in Thornaby-on-Tees.[2] Walter married three times, having several children with his first two wives, both of whom predeceased him. One of his grandchildren is former Leeds United left-winger Michael O'Grady. One of his great-grandchildren is Commonwealth Games Bronze medallist in swimming, Alyson Jones.

At the time of the 1911 census, Walter lived with his second wife Phoebe in Thornaby-on-Tees and worked in the shipyard as a "plater". The household included two children from his first marriage to Hannah and three more from his second. Phoebe died in 1914 and Walter married Isabel Rowell in 1917. There were no more children. At some point they moved to Romford, Essex, Walter dying there in 1945, followed by Isabel in 1959.

References

  1. Robert Lodge, ed. (2007). The Little Book of West Ham. Carlton Books. ISBN 978-1-84442-092-6.
  2. "Local article on Thornaby Fire Co.".
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