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Stewart Calderwood

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stewart Calderwood
Personal information
Date of birth 3 December 1905
Place of birth Linwood, Scotland[1]
Date of death 1973 (aged 67–68)
Place of death Cambuslang, Scotland
Position(s) Full back
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Rutherglen Glencairn
1926–1939 Partick Thistle 344 (9)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Stewart Calderwood (3 December 1905 – 1973) was a Scottish footballer who played as a full back (either right or left side); his only club at the professional level was Partick Thistle, where he spent twelve seasons (all in the top division), making 420 appearances for the Jags in all competitions and scoring 9 goals.[2] He was on the books for a thirteenth year without playing before signing provisionally with Queens Park Rangers in England on a free transfer, aged 33; however, the outbreak of World War II meant he never made a competitive appearance for the West London club. He served in the Royal Air Force during the conflict.[2]

Calderwood played in the 1930 Scottish Cup Final which Partick Thistle lost to Rangers after a replay,[3] but did manage to claim winner's medals in the Glasgow Merchants Charity Cup in 1927 and 1935,[4][5] and the Glasgow Cup in 1934.[6] It is also recorded that he received a medal from the one-off Glasgow Dental Hospital Cup in 1928 (this was sold at auction in 2011);[7] he did not take part in the final itself but did play in the semi-final.[8] He was selected for one edition of the Glasgow Football Association's annual challenge match against Sheffield but received no further representative honours.[1][9]

References

  1. ^ a b John Litster (October 2012). "A Record of pre-war Scottish League Players". Scottish Football Historian magazine.
  2. ^ a b Calderwood, Stewart, Partick Thistle History Archive
  3. ^ The Cup Final | Rangers Win Replay at Hampden, The Glasgow Herald, 17 April 1930
  4. ^ Rout of the Rangers in the Charity Cup Final, The Sunday Post, 15 May 1927, via Partick Thistle History Archive
  5. ^ Queen's in too big a hurry, The Sunday Post, 12 May 1935, via Partick Thistle History Archive
  6. ^ Partick Thistle Win The Glasgow Cup, The Glasgow Herald, 15 October 1934, via Partick Thistle History Archive
  7. ^ Medal in nine carat gold, the reverse inscribed Glasgow Dental Hospital Cup, Won By Partick Thistle FC, 11th December 1928, Stewart Calderwood, The Saleroom
  8. ^ Football | Partick Thistle, 2; Rangers, 0 | Glasgow Dental Hospital Cup–Final Tie, The Glasgow Herald, 11 December 1928, via Partick Thistle History Archive
  9. ^ Player Representative Honours, Partick Thistle History Archive
This page was last edited on 4 May 2024, at 18:56
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