Walter Gowers


Walter Gowers was a professional rugby league and footballer who played in the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s. He played representative level rugby league for Great Britain, and Lancashire, and at club level for Rochdale Hornets, and St Helens, as a goal-kicking, and club level association football for Preston [North End F.C.|Preston North End], as a full-back.

Playing career

Club career

Born in Wigan, Gowers played amateur rugby league for local club Platt Bridge before signing with Rochdale Hornets during the 1922–23 [Northern Rugby Football League season|1922–23 season].
In 1926, during a period of unemployment, he signed for association football club Preston North End, playing as a fullback for their reserve team.
Gowers had a brief spell with St Helens before retiring from rugby league in 1937. He came out of retirement aged to play one match for Rochdale Hornets against Wigan at Central Park, Wigan on Saturday 12 January 1946.
Walter Gowers holds Rochdale Hornets' "most appearances in a career" record with 456-appearances between 1922 and 1946, and Gowers also holds Rochdale Hornets' "most points in a career" record with 1497-points scored between 1922 and 1946. He previously held Rochdale Hornets' "most goals in a season" record with 109-goals during the 1933–34 Northern [Rugby Football League season|1933–34] season, this record was extended by Graham Starkey during the 1966–67 Northern [Rugby Football League season|1966–67] season.

Representative honours

Walter Gowers represented Great Britain in non-Test matches on the 1928 Great Britain rugby league tour of Australia and New Zealand, scoring 27-goals.
Walter Gowers represented Lancashire while at Rochdale Hornets, winning four County Championship medals.

Post-playing

After the Second World War, Gowers worked as a groundsman for Rochdale Hornets until 1957.
He died in Rochdale Infirmary on 11 September 1965, aged 62.

Personal life

Walter Gowers was the father of the rugby league footballer; Ken Gowers, and was the great-grandfather of the Middlesex [County Cricket Club|Middlesex] and England cricketer John Simpson.