Albert Alexander (Junior): MCFC Chairman

Back in the late 1960s there was a popular Manchester City chairman whose family had been involved with the club since the very beginning of the club. That was Albert Alexander. Here’s a profile I wrote in 2012 on him. It’s about 900 words long and is free to read. Enjoy!

Albert Alexander was the second generation of the Alexander family to play a prominent role in the development and history of Manchester City.  His father, also Albert, had been involved with the Club from the 1890s and had held various positions including vice-chairman, and even manager for a spell in 1925-26.

Like his father, the younger Albert dedicated his life to the Blues.  Inevitably, he spent most of his boyhood watching the Club develop and, as he grew, he became more involved with behind the scenes work at the Club’s first home Hyde Road.  He was a member of the Ground Committee which performed crucial activities such as stewarding and ground maintenance.

Alexander also managed the Club’s A team and provided support in whatever way necessary to ensure the Blues succeeded.  He was more than happy to work through the ranks and take on any duty necessary.  His son Eric, who was Chairman in the early 1970s, remembers that his father had suffered during the First World War but that didn’t stop him from putting his energies into the Blues:  “He was a very good footballer and cricketer but he was gassed in the Great War and had to give it up.  It affected him throughout his life, although it’s fair to say he recovered enough to fulfil a happy normal life apart from playing of course. 

“He took up golf, but his love for football was such that he started the ‘A’ team at City.  He started it in 1921 and ran it through until 1963.  He enjoyed working with the youngsters and developing them.  He gained an awful lot of satisfaction from that, particularly when players like Matt Busby developed their skills and style as part of the ‘A’ team.”

Ultimately, after many years of loyal service Alexander became a City director.  This came after the Blues became aware that Manchester United were hoping he would join their board.  It is highly likely Alexander would have turned the Reds down, and it was appropriate that he became a director at Maine Road.  It was an honour he deserved for years of dedication to the City cause.

While director he felt the passion all fans feel for the Blues and he also felt the pain and worries during the Club’s struggles in the early Sixties.  He wanted better and, in 1965 as fans demonstrated following City’s lowest attended League game, he came out to face them and talk with them about his hopes and ambitions for the Club.  He apologised for City’s appalling decline.  It says much about his courage and the respect fans had for him that they dispersed.  It is doubtful whether any other director would have been respected in this manner at such a low point.

Understandably, Alexander who was City’s Chairman by this point wanted to see his side successful and later that summer he appointed Joe Mercer as manager.  It was a brave decision as Mercer had been out of work for a year and had suffered a stroke at Aston Villa.  Other names, such as former City hero Peter Doherty and Liverpool manager Bill Shankly, had been expected to be appointed by the media, so this move could easily have been seen negatively.

Alexander guided City through the successful years of the Mercer-Allison period and was probably the first Chairman to be hugely popular with fans.  Everyone seemed to love ‘Little Albert’ as Mercer dubbed him.

Many of City’s achievements during these years were dedicated to Alexander by Mercer, while journalist Bill Fryer commented in 1970:  “He is highly revered in the game and by the public, and I have no doubt good deals have been done for City out of Albert’s friendships because in reality the whole of football is a ‘club’.”

Sadly, despite the Chairman’s popularity, his final years saw him suffer at the hands of the 1970 takeover battle.  Alexander found out about the takeover when he received a knock on his door at breakfast one day.  It was a complete shock to him.

The takeover destroyed much that was good about City at this point, including the Mercer-Allison partnership.  However, it is rarely mentioned how the takeover affected Alexander, the man who had guided City with distinction through some dark days when no one else wanted to know.  He had taken the Club from the lowest point it had experienced since joining the League, to a position of strength with trophies galore.  Those bidding for control wanted the glory, Alexander’s motives were somewhat different – like all true fans he wanted City no matter what. 

Alexander stood down as Chairman and was made Life President – an honour first given to Lawrence Furniss seven decades earlier, proving the significance of this recognition.  Unfortunately, Alexander’s health was deteriorating by this point and he passed away soon after.

Manchester City owes a great deal to the dedication of Albert Alexander and the other members of his family.  The Alexanders helped guide the Blues from the 1890s through to the reign of Peter Swales, and in some ways on via the continuing involvement of Eric Alexander (still a regular attendee until his death in 2019).  Their contribution should never be forgotten.

If you enjoy all the free material on my website and would like to support my research and keep this website going (but don’t want to subscribe) then why not make a one-time donation (or buy me a coffee). All support for my research is valued and welcome. It allows me to keep some free material available for all. Thanks.

Choose an amount

£2.50
£5.00
£7.50

Or enter a custom amount

£

Your contribution is appreciated.

Donate

Subscribe to get access – Annual

Read more of this content when you subscribe today. It costs £20 a year to subscribe (it works out £1.67 a month) or £3 if you’d like to sign up a month at a time. Annual subscribers get full access for as long as you subscribe (you can always try it for a month). It’s worth bearing in mind that the 2010 Manchester A Football History cost £24.95 and all subscribers will be able to access all of that for as long as they are a subscriber (plus all the other stuff of course).

Subscribe to get access – Monthly

It costs £3 a month to subscribe a month at a time. Why not give it a try! Monthly subscribers get access to everything posted since 1 October 2022 for as long as you subscribe.

The 1950s: Season Ends With A Victory

On this day (29 April) in 1959 Manchester City’s season ended with a 3-1 victory over Leicester City with goals from Joe Hayes, Billy McAdams (photographed) and Ray Sambrook. You can read more on this season for City below. It’s a 1,500 word article on the 1958-59 season which should put this game and result in to context. Enjoy!

This is a subscriber article and you can read it by subscribing below.

Subscribe to get access

Read more of this content when you subscribe today. It costs £3 per month or you can subscriber for the discounted annual rate of £20 per year. Each subscriber gets access to everything posted so far, including PDFs of a couple of my books.

The 1950s: The 1958-59 Season

The new series on Manchester City in the 1950s continues today with this 1,500 word article on the 1958-59 season. Enjoy!

This is a subscriber article and you can read it by subscribing below.

Subscribe to get access

Read more of this content when you subscribe today. It costs £3 per month or you can subscriber for the discounted annual rate of £20 per year. Each subscriber gets access to everything posted so far, including PDFs of a couple of my books.

The 1950s: Starting Tomorrow!

Starting tomorrow I’ll be posting a series of articles on Manchester City in the 1950s. It will be similar to the series I’ve posted on the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s etc. The series will start with a subscriber article on the 1949-50 season – a season that saw Bert Trautmann make his City debut.

Les McDowall

Now that Pep Guardiola has managed his 500th Manchester City game (yes, I know he’s been ill and missed games but he’s still the manager when they occurred) here’s a brief look at the only manager ahead of his record at the club, Les McDowall (note: Les missed some games on scouting missions, so similar to Pep’s missed games?). Enjoy!

Les McDowall

June 1950 – May 1963

Previously:  Impressive wing-half for City during 40s.

Took Over From: Jock Thomson, who left in February 1950 as City headed towards relegation, but it is believed Wilf Wild with Fred Tilson filled the void between managers.

Inherited: Bert Trautmann, Roy Clarke, Joe Fagan & Johnny Hart.

Players Brought In Included: City’s talented forward Don Revie & inspirational captain Roy Paul.  Also Alex Harley & Peter Dobing.

Best Buy: For his role in the Revie Plan and long term commitment to the City cause – Ken Barnes.

Youngsters He Gave Debuts To: Joe Hayes, Dave Wagstaffe, John Benson, Neil Young, Alan Oakes & Glyn Pardoe.

First Game: Preston North End 2 City 4 (City scorers George Smith 2, Roy Clarke and Dennis Westcott), 19 August 1950, attendance 36,294.

High Points: Winning promotion during his first season; FA Cup finalists in 1955 & FA Cup winners in 1956 (and finishing fourth that season).

Coaches: Thirties stars Fred Tilson & Laurie Barnett.

Tactics: Became noted for tactical innovations such as the Revie Plan (although people assume this to be Revie’s idea the name came from the fact he was the key player; it had previously operated in the Reserves with Johnny Williamson in the role).  The Plan revolutionised City’s play and led to the mid-fifties success.   

Last Game: West Ham United 6 City 1 (City scorer Alan Oakes), 18 May 1963, attendance 16,602.

Season By Season Record:

League

1950-51 P 42            W 19   D 14    L 9      GF 89 GA 61 Pts 52             

1951-52 P 42            W 13   D 13    L 16    GF 58 GA 61 Pts 39             

1952-53 P 42            W 14   D 7      L 21   GF 72 GA 87 Pts 35             

1953-54 P 42            W 14   D 9      L 19    GF 62 GA 77 Pts 37             

1954-55 P 42            W 18   D 10    L 14    GF 76 GA 69 Pts 46             

1955-56 P 42            W 18   D 10    L 14    GF 82 GA 69 Pts 46             

1956-57 P 42            W 13   D 9      L 20    GF 78 GA 88 Pts 35             

1957-58 P 42            W 22   D 5      L 15    GF 104 GA 100 Pts 49       

1958-59 P 42            W 11   D 9      L 22    GF 64 GA 95 Pts 31            

1959-60 P 42            W 17   D 3      L 22    GF 78 GA 84 Pts 37            

1960-61 P 42            W 13   D 11    L 18    GF 79 GA 90 Pts 37            

1961-62 P 42            W 17   D 7      L 18    GF 78 GA 81 Pts 41            

1962-63 P 42            W 10   D 11    L 21    GF 58 GA 102 Pts 31

 2 points for a win

FA Cup

1950-51 P 1  W 0     D 0      L 1      GF 0   GA 2   Reached 3rd round

1951-52 P 2  W 0     D 1      L 1      GF 3   GA 6   Reached 3rd round

1952-53 P 3  W 1     D 1      L 1      GF 9   GA 6   Reached 4th round

1953-54 P 2  W 1     D 0      L 1      GF 5   GA 3   Reached 4th round

1954-55 P 6  W 5     D 0      L 1      GF 10 GA 4   Reached final

1955-56 P 7  W 6     D 1      L 0      GF 11 GA 4   FA Cup winners

1956-57 P 2  W 0     D 1      L 1      GF 5   GA 6   Reached 3rd round

1957-58 P 1  W 0     D 0      L 1      GF 1   GA 5   Reached 3rd round

1958-59 P 2  W 0     D 1      L 1      GF 3   GA 4   Reached 3rd round

1959-60 P 1  W 0     D 0      L 1      GF 1   GA 5   Reached 3rd round

1960-61 P 4  W 1     D 2      L 1      GF 4   GA 4   Reached 4th round

1961-62 P 2  W 1     D 0      L 1      GF 1   GA 2   Reached 4th round

1962-63 P 3  W 2     D 0      L 1      GF 3   GA 2   Reached 5th round

League Cup

1960-61 P 2  W 1     D 0      L 1      GF 3   GA 2   Reached 3rd round

1961-62 P 1  W 0     D 0      L 1      GF 2   GA 4   Reached 2nd round

1962-63 P 6  W 3     D 2      L 1      GF 10 GA 12 Reached 5th round

TOTAL (League & cup fixtures)

P591   W220  D127  L244   GF 1049        GA 1135

Trophies Won: FA Cup (1956) 

Other Competitive Fixtures: 1 Charity Shield game

They Said:  “Les McDowall was very much an old school manager – shirt & tie, office type.  You rarely saw him but when you did it was usually when he was unveiling one of his new tactical plans.  We had one where we played with 5 at the back and I had a number 7 shirt on.  He would probably have excelled in today’s game because he was absolutely driven with tactical formations.”  Defender Bobby Kennedy talking in 2005.

Followed By: George Poyser

After City: Became Oldham Athletic manager shortly after leaving City.  Died in August 1991 at the age of 78.

MCFC Reserves 1958-59 and 1959-60

I’ve recently been asked about two players who were on Manchester City’s books, so thought I’d post a few details about them here, along with the Reserve line-ups for both 1958-59 and 1959-60. These make interesting reading, especially when attendances are checked.

I don’t have much on them but the players were Sand Wann and George Greenall. Wann joined City on 25/6/58 from Luncarty Juniors (Dave Ewing’s old team too!) and left City on 9/5/1960, joining St Mirren. George Greenall left City on 4/4/1960. My notes are not clear but George either went to Oldham or Southampton.

These images show the starting 11 for every MCFC Central League game in 1958-59 and 1959-60:

1958-59 Manchester City Reserves, Central League Starting 11
1959-60 Manchester City Reserves, Central League Starting 11

In 1959-60 George made 5 Central League appearances and Wann made 8. In 1958-59 Greenall played 2 and Wann 4.

Wann’s Central League games over both seasons were:

21/3/59 v Blackpool

11/4/59 v Barnsley

18/4/59 v Huddersfield

25/4/59 v Wolves

22/8/59 v Wolves

29/8/59 v Sheff Wed

31/8/59 v Chesterfield

5/8/59 v Aston Villa

19/3/60 v WBA

6/4/60 v Blackburn

15/4/60 v Bolton

23/4/60 v PNE

If you would like to support this website then why not subscribe or donate to keep it running? Details on how to subscribe appear lower down this page.

If you enjoy all the free material on my website and would like to support my research and keep this website going (but don’t want to subscribe) then why not make a one-time donation (or buy me a coffee). All support for my research is valued and welcome. It allows me to keep some free material available for all. Thanks.

Choose an amount

£2.50
£5.00
£7.50

Or enter a custom amount

£

Your contribution is appreciated.

Donate