Colin Hampton

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Full name Colin McKenzie Hampton[1]
Date of birth (1888-09-01)1 September 1888[1]
Place of birth Brechin, Scotland
Date of death 17 January 1968(1968-01-17) (aged 79)[2]
Colin Hampton
Personal information
Full name Colin McKenzie Hampton[1]
Date of birth (1888-09-01)1 September 1888[1]
Place of birth Brechin, Scotland
Date of death 17 January 1968(1968-01-17) (aged 79)[2]
Place of death Stracathro, Scotland[2]
Height 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)[3]
Position(s) Goalkeeper
Youth career
Brechin Arnot
–1906 Brechin Hearts
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1906–1907 Brechin Rovers
1907–1909 Brechin City
1909–1914 Motherwell 134 (0)
1914–1925 Chelsea 79 (0)
1925 Brechin City 9 (0)
1925–1926 Crystal Palace 3 (0)
International career
1912 Scottish League XI 1 (0)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Colin Hampton MM (1 September 1888 – 17 January 1968) was a Scottish professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper in the Football League for Chelsea and Crystal Palace.[1] He also played in the Scottish League for Motherwell and hometown club Brechin City.[4] He made one appearance for the Scottish League XI in 1912.[5]

Hampton's second cousin Harry was also a footballer and the pair played together at Brechin City.[6] In August 1915, one year since the outbreak of the First World War, Hampton enlisted in the Royal Field Artillery, but by December he had become a gunner in the Motor Machine Gun Service.[7] Three months later he was promoted to corporal while serving with the 28th Battery.[2] By 1918 he had risen to the rank of sergeant and was serving as a machine gunner in the Machine Gun Corps (Motors) in Mesopotamia.[8] Hampton was taken prisoner by the Ottoman Army later that year when his armoured car was wrecked by shellfire.[8] During the march to Constantinople, he and his fellow prisoners were released after the armistice was declared and he was awarded the Military Medal in 1919.[7] He was demobilised in May 1919.[8] After the war, Hampton ran a confectionery shop in Brechin and worked in a factory in Coventry and as a special constable during the Second World War.[9] He died of emphysema at Stracathro Hospital in January 1968.[2]

Career statistics

Honours

References

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