John Chevallier (born 1857)

John Barrington Trapnell "JB" Chevallier (10 January 1857 – 17 February 1940) was an English amateur footballer who played as a forward for Old Etonians, before taking over the family business, Aspall Cyder.

JB Chevallier
Personal information
Full name John Barrington Trapnell Cheavllier
Date of birth (1857-01-10)10 January 1857
Place of birth Aspall, England
Date of death 17 February 1940(1940-02-17) (aged 83)
Place of death Aspall, England
Position(s) Centre-forward
Youth career
Eton College
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1876–80 Cambridge University
1879–85 Old Etonians
1883–85 Derby County
1885–86 Ipswich Town
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Early life and education edit

Chevallier was born in Aspall, Suffolk, the eldest son of Reverend Charles Henry Chevallier and Isabella Frances Cobbold,[1] and won a scholarship to Eton College in 1868.[2] He was the Eton football captain in 1875–76, his most notable appearance being against FA Cup semi-finalists Swifts in December.[3]

In 1876, he went up to King's College, Cambridge,[4] where he played football for the university.[5] He was awarded a first class degree in the mathematics tripos in 1880.[6]

Football career edit

Old Etonians edit

In 1878, Chevallier joined joined the Old Etonians, and made his competitive debut for the old boys in the first round of the 1878–79 FA Cup. The Etonians were drawn to play the cup holders, Wanderers, who had won the cup in five out of the seven years since the tournament was inaugurated, but Alfred Kinnaird had by now left the Wanderers for the Old Etonians, and, in a major surprise, the Old Boys won 7–2.[7]

Chevallier scored the only goal in the Etonians' second round win over Reading,[8] and was one of the two centre-forwards in the Etonians XI which beat Clapham Rovers 1–0 in the 1879 FA Cup final.[9]

The following season, in February 1880, Chevallier scored a hat-trick for Cambridge University in a 6–1 friendly win over the Rovers.[10] Three weeks later the Rovers gained a revenge by knocking the Etonians out of the Cup; Chevallier was not playing, as in the 1879–80 FA Cup, he provided his services to his university, which lost to Royal Engineers in the first round.[11]

Perhaps because of this defeat, for 1880–81 he pledged his loyalty to the Old Etonians, and was a regular in the Old Boys' runs to the final in 1880–81 and 1881–82, playing anywhere along the forward line; he picked up a runners-up medal in 1881 and a winners' medal in 1882 playing on the right side. His only goal in the competition in those runs came against Herts Rangers in the former season, when the Rangers stopped playing, expecting a foul to be given, but Chevalier played to the signal.[12]

He continued playing for the Old Etonians in the 1884–85 FA Cup, scoring three goals in three matches (at Luton Wanderers in the first round,[13] in a replay win against Brentwood in the second,[14] and against Middlesbrough in the third).[15]

Derby County edit

At the start of the 1883–84 season, Chevallier had joined the new Derby County club, having become a schoolmaster at the local Repton School. Whilst at Derby he scored in the club's first home game and also notched a hat-trick at Nottingham Forest.[16] However, to the club's disappointment, Chevallier preferred to play for his old school in the Cup, his decision justified by Derby's 7–0 defeat in the first round to Walsall Town.[17]

Ipswich Town edit

1884–85 marked the last time Chevallier played in the FA Cup, as his father died in 1885, and Chevallier left his role at Repton to take over the family business. He joined the local football club, Ipswich Town, and played one match for the club in the Suffolk Senior Cup.[18] In later years he acted as an umpire on behalf of the club.[19]

Post-football career edit

Chevallier ran Aspall until his death in 1940; one of his key innovations was to replace the wooden screw in the 1728 apple press with a new metal replacement. He also served as a Justice of the Peace[20] and as a director of the Mid-Suffolk Light Railway.[21] During the First World War he served in the Volunteer corps.[22]

On his death at home in February 1940, he left an estate worth £8,105 (£4,113 net) to his three daughters, with £50 left to his "cyder maker" George Sparrow and £50 to his housekeeper Anne Powell.[23]

Footballing honours edit

Old Etonians

References edit

  1. ^ England Census. Aspall Parish. 1861. p. 168.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ "A well-known Suffolk agriculturalist". Bury Free Press: 7. 24 February 1940.
  3. ^ "Swifts v Eton College". Eton College Chronicle: 936. 15 December 1875.
  4. ^ "The Oxford and Cambridge School Examinations". Morning Post: 6. 3 September 1875.
  5. ^ "Cambridge University v Clapham Rovers". Sporting Life: 1. 8 November 1876.
  6. ^ "The mathematical tripos". Lynn News & County Press: 8. 7 February 1880.
  7. ^ "Wanderers v Old Etonians". Sportsman: 4. 11 November 1878.
  8. ^ "Reading v Old Etonians". Field: 787. 21 December 1878.
  9. ^ "Football - Old Etonians v Clapham Rovers". Reading Mercury: 5. 5 April 1879.
  10. ^ "The Clapham Rovers at Cambridge". Cambridge Independent Press: 8. 14 February 1880.
  11. ^ "Royal Engineers v Cambridge University". Sportsman: 4. 14 November 1879.
  12. ^ "Old Etonians v Herts Rangers". Field: 208. 12 February 1881.
  13. ^ "report". Luton Reporter: 5. 15 November 1884.
  14. ^ "Old Etonians v Brentwood". Sportsman: 4. 24 December 1884.
  15. ^ "Old Etonians v Middlesbrough". Field: 6. 31 January 1885.
  16. ^ "#207, John Barrington (JB) Trapnell CHEVALLIER". Cobbold Family Tree. Retrieved 30 November 2023.
  17. ^ "Derby County v Walsall Town". Derbyshire Daily Telegraph: 3. 10 November 1884.
  18. ^ "JB Chevallier". Pride of Anglia. Retrieved 30 November 2023.
  19. ^ "Ipswich Town v Newmarket". Suffolk and Essex Free Press: 3. 27 March 1889.
  20. ^ "Family". Aspall. Retrieved 30 November 2023.
  21. ^ "Directors of the MSLR – JB Chevallier". Mid-Suffolk Light Railway. Retrieved 30 November 2023.
  22. ^ "A well-known Suffolk agriculturalist". Bury Free Press: 7. 24 February 1940.
  23. ^ "Legacy to my cyder maker". Diss Express: 4. 7 June 1940.