Peter Roney

{{short description|Scottish footballer}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2023}}

{{Use British English|date=November 2017}}

{{Infobox football biography

| name = Peter Roney

| image =

| caption =

| birth_date = {{birth date|1886|1|15|df=y}}

| birth_place = Knightswood, Scotland

| death_date = {{death date and age|1930|8|25|1886|1|15|df=y}}

| death_place = Scotstoun, Scotland

| height = 5ft 9in

| position = Goalkeeper

| youthyears1 =

| youthclubs1 =

| years1 =

| clubs1 = Petershill

| caps1 =

| goals1 =

| years2 = {{0|0000}}–1905

| clubs2 = Strathclyde

| caps2 =

| goals2 =

| years3 = 1905–1906

| clubs3 = Cambuslang Hibernian

| caps3 =

| goals3 =

| years4 = 1906–1907

| clubs4 = Ayr

| caps4 = 18

| goals4 = 0

| years5 = 1907–1909

| clubs5 = Norwich City

| caps5 = 53

| goals5 = 0

| years6 = 1909–1915

| clubs6 = Bristol Rovers

| caps6 = 178

| goals6 = 1

| years7 = {{0|0000}}–1919

| clubs7 = Ayr United

| caps7 = 0

| goals7 = 0

| years8 = 1919–1921

| clubs8 = Albion Rovers

| caps8 = 10

| goals8 = 0

| years9 = 1921

| clubs9 = Ashington

| caps9 =

| goals9 =

| totalcaps =

| totalgoals =

}}

Peter Roney (15 January 1886 – 25 August 1930) was a Scottish professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper for Southern League clubs Norwich City and Bristol Rovers prior to the First World War.

Footballing career

Roney began his footballing career in Scotland with Petershill, Strathclyde and Cambuslang Hibernian,{{Cite web |title=N to Z. |url=http://bristolroversmemorabilia.weebly.com/n-to-z.html |access-date=29 June 2023 |website=The Bristol Rovers History Group |language=en}} before moving to Scottish League Second Division club Ayr in October 1906.{{Cite web |title=We Will Remember Them |url=https://www.bristolrovers.co.uk/news/2022/november/remembrance-day/ |access-date=15 January 2023 |website=www.bristolrovers.co.uk |language=en-gb}} He moved to England in May 1907 and joined Southern League First Division club Norwich City. Two years later, Roney joined divisional rivals Bristol Rovers and became one of the first goalkeepers to score a goal,{{Cite web |title=Goalscoring Goalies |url=http://www.goalkeepersaredifferent.com/keeper/scoreframe.htm |access-date=6 January 2010 |website=Goalkeepers are Different}} when he scored from the penalty spot in the club's final match of the 1909–10 season.Byrne & Jay (2003), p.90 As of {{LastMonth}}, Roney is the only goalkeeper to have scored for Bristol Rovers.Byrne & Jay (2003), p.91 He made a total of 178 Southern League appearances during his six-year stint with the club.Byrne & Jay (2003), p.492 Roney finished his career after the First World War with Ayr United, Albion Rovers and Ashington.{{Cite book |last=Litster |first=John |title=Record of Pre-War Scottish League Players |publisher=PM Publications |location=Norwich}}

Personal life

Roney was born at Knightswood Hospital, Scotland in January 1886. He married his wife Violet in 1909 and at the time of the 1911 census he had one son, Kenneth.{{Cite web |date=1911 |title=Census of England and Wales, 1911 |url=http://search.findmypast.co.uk/record?id=gbc%2f1911%2frg14%2f15040%2f0249&parentid=gbc%2f1911%2frg14%2f15040%2f0249%2f1 |url-access=subscription |access-date=22 January 2016 |via=Findmypast}} Whilst a player with Bristol Rovers, the family lived in Eastville.

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.{{Cite news |title=Peter Roney {{!}} Service Record |language=en-US |work=Football and the First World War |url=https://www.footballandthefirstworldwar.org/peter-roney-service-record/ |access-date=12 November 2018}} He later transferred to the Machine Gun Corps. 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, 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". It was reported in November 1919 that Roney was seriously ill at home in Ashington.

{{Quote |quote=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. |author=Peter Roney, March 1917{{Cite web |last=Hudson, John |date=30 December 2008 |title=From football pitch to battlefield |url=http://www.thisisbristol.co.uk/news/football-pitch-battlefield/article-575600-detail/article.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120523181910/http://www.thisisbristol.co.uk/football-pitch-battlefield/story-11258152-detail/story.html |archive-date=23 May 2012 |access-date=6 January 2010 |website=This is Bristol |publisher=Bristol Evening Post}}}}

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 war service.{{Cite web |title=Roney Peter Norwich City 1907 |url=https://www.vintagefootballers.com/product/roney-peter-image-2-norwich-city-1907/ |access-date=18 April 2020 |website=Vintage Footballers |language=en-GB}} 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.{{Cite news |date=11 November 1921 |title=For Peter Roney |work=Western Daily Press |url=http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000264/19211111/049/0005 |url-access=subscription |access-date=21 January 2016 |via=British Newspaper Archive}}

Roney died on 25 August 1930 in Scotstoun, Scotland, at the age of 43.

References

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Sources