About: Peter Roney   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Peter Roney was a goalkeeper who played for Rovers in the years preceding the First World War, joining in 1909 from Norwich City and staying until league football was suspended due to the conflict. He was the first, and so far only, goalkeeper to score for The Gas in a league match. Roney was never the same again after the conflict, and he died aged just 43 on 25 August 1930 in Clydebank. (Sources: Bristol Rovers Football Club: The Definitive History 1883-2003, From football pitch to battlefield (Bristol Evening Post, 30 December 2008)

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Peter Roney
rdfs:comment
  • Peter Roney was a goalkeeper who played for Rovers in the years preceding the First World War, joining in 1909 from Norwich City and staying until league football was suspended due to the conflict. He was the first, and so far only, goalkeeper to score for The Gas in a league match. Roney was never the same again after the conflict, and he died aged just 43 on 25 August 1930 in Clydebank. (Sources: Bristol Rovers Football Club: The Definitive History 1883-2003, From football pitch to battlefield (Bristol Evening Post, 30 December 2008)
sameAs
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:bristolrove...iPageUsesTemplate
DOD
  • 1930-08-25(xsd:date)
Birthplace
  • Rutherglen
Deathplace
  • Clydebank
DOB
  • 1887-01-15(xsd:date)
Nat
  • sco
leftto
  • 17(xsd:integer)
clubs
apps
  • 178(xsd:integer)
Photo
  • Peter Roney.jpg
Pos
  • Goalkeeper
Fullname
  • Peter Roney
datejoined
  • 1909(xsd:integer)
joinedfrom
dateleft
  • 1915(xsd:integer)
abstract
  • Peter Roney was a goalkeeper who played for Rovers in the years preceding the First World War, joining in 1909 from Norwich City and staying until league football was suspended due to the conflict. He was the first, and so far only, goalkeeper to score for The Gas in a league match. During the war he joined the 17th Middlesex Batallion, known as the footballers' batallion and the subject of the book When The Whistle Blows by Andrew Riddoch and John Kemp. He did not fare well on the battlefield however and he developed what is now known as posttraumatic stress disorder, then called shell shock because it was thought to be due to damage to the brain caused by the shockwaves from exploding shells. Of his experiences in the trenches, Roney wrote in 1917 "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". On the prospect if his return to football, he wrote in a letter home "the sole topic now is 'Will I play for the Rovers when this war is finished?' It all depends on what Fritz has to say. Anyway, I'm living in hope of playing for the old club again, and very soon". Unfortunately he was never able to play again, it being reported in 1919 that he had suffered "such experiences during the war that he is unlikely to be heard of again in professional football". Roney was never the same again after the conflict, and he died aged just 43 on 25 August 1930 in Clydebank. (Sources: Bristol Rovers Football Club: The Definitive History 1883-2003, From football pitch to battlefield (Bristol Evening Post, 30 December 2008)
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