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Alfred Barker
Alfred Barker
from Wikipedia

Alfred J. Barker[1] (1873–1940) was an English association football manager who managed Stoke between 1908 and 1914.[1]

Key Information

Career

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Barker was born in Stoke-upon-Trent and became a referee for the Football League and was also a supporter of his local team Stoke.[1] He retired from officiating in 1907 and when Stoke suffered financial meltdown in 1907–08 which led to the club being liquidated and leaving the Football League, Barker and a number of wealthy supporters got together and bought the club back from the brink of extinction.[1] They formed a new company re-branded Stoke Football Club (1908) Limited with Barker being appointed secretary-manager.[1] Barker's impressive efforts led to Stoke being included for re-election but lost out to Tottenham Hotspur and their exit from the Football League was sealed.

Barker placed Stoke in the Birmingham & District League for the 1908–09 season.[1] With Stoke wanting to gain a quick return to League football they joined the Southern Football League in 1909–10. Stoke scored 167 goals in 1910–11 as they gain promotion to the Southern League Division One and won the Birmingham & District League.[1] However, despite much expectation being placed on the team they found that Division One was much tougher than they had expected and were relegated back to Division Two in 1912–13 and after Stoke failed to gain an instant return in 1913–14 Barker took most of the criticism from the supporters.[1] Both Barker and chairman A. Hurst stepped down in the Summer of 1914 it was a sad way to see such key figures, responsible for saving the club, leave in such circumstances.[1]

Managerial statistics

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Managerial record by club and tenure
Team From To Record
P W D L Win %
Stoke[1] May 1908 April 1914 256 130 35 91 050.8
Total 256 130 35 91 050.8

Honours

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Alfred Barker is an English-born New Zealand physician and photographer known for his pioneering documentation of the early European settlement of Christchurch through photography, creating one of the most important visual records of colonial Canterbury. Born on 5 January 1819 in Hackney, London, Barker trained as a surgeon at King's College, London, and practised medicine in England before emigrating to New Zealand in 1850 as the surgeon aboard the Charlotte Jane, one of the First Four Ships carrying settlers to the Canterbury region. Arriving in Lyttelton on 16 December 1850, he became the primary doctor on the Canterbury Plains during the formative years of the settlement, managing a demanding practice that included innovative use of chloroform in surgery. Following the death of his wife Emma in 1858, he largely retired from active medical work while continuing as registrar of births, deaths, and marriages. Barker began photography in the mid-1850s, producing hundreds of images using the wet-plate collodion process despite technical challenges on the frontier. His work includes tender family portraits, self-portraits spanning from 1858 until shortly before his death, views of Christchurch's growth, local events, and domestic scenes; he also designed a mobile darkroom buggy to facilitate outdoor processing. These photographs are valued for their authenticity and historical detail, offering rare insights into early colonial life. Beyond medicine and photography, Barker engaged with intellectual pursuits, contributing to discussions on Darwinism, aeronautics, and architecture, and serving briefly on the Canterbury provincial council. He died in Christchurch on 20 March 1873 from meningitis, leaving a legacy preserved in major collections including the Canterbury Museum.

Early life

Birth and family background

Alfred Charles Barker was born on 5 January 1819 in Hackney, London, England. He was the fifth child and fourth son of Joseph Gibbs Barker, a wealthy London linen merchant who later became an evangelist, and Sarah Pritchett Bousfield. His family descended from a fifteenth-century gentry line, the Barkers of Aston, Claverley, in Staffordshire, and more recent prosperous Birmingham merchants. He was privately schooled at Hereford. At age 21 he entered the medical faculty of King's College, London. He graduated as a surgeon in 1845 and on 1 July 1845 married Emma Bacon at the parish church of St John, Hampstead. He practised medicine at Matlock Bath and Rugby before deciding to emigrate to New Zealand.

Career

Alfred Barker practised medicine in England after training as a surgeon at King's College, London. In 1850, he emigrated to New Zealand as the surgeon aboard the Charlotte Jane, one of the First Four Ships, arriving in Lyttelton on 16 December 1850. In the early years of the Canterbury settlement, he served as the primary physician on the Canterbury Plains, managing a demanding practice and pioneering the use of chloroform in surgical procedures. Following the death of his wife Emma in 1858, Barker largely retired from active medical practice but continued serving as registrar of births, deaths, and marriages. In the mid-1850s, he began photography using the wet-plate collodion process and produced hundreds of images documenting family life, Christchurch's development, local events, and colonial scenes. He designed a mobile darkroom buggy to enable outdoor processing despite frontier challenges. There is no evidence of involvement in cinema or film, as Barker died in 1873, well before the emergence of motion pictures. No film credits exist for Alfred Barker (1819–1873), the New Zealand physician and photographer. The content previously in this section pertains to a different individual of the same name and has been removed due to factual inaccuracy.

Family connections

Little is known about Alfred Barker's extended family beyond his wife Emma, who died in 1858. No reliable sources document siblings or other relatives connected to the film industry or other fields mentioned in prior versions of this section.

Known limitations in records

Unresolved biographical details

No major biographical details of Alfred Charles Barker remain unresolved in available sources. His life is well-documented, including birth on 5 January 1819 in Hackney, London; marriage to Emma Bacon in 1845; eight children; emigration to New Zealand in 1850; medical practice as the primary doctor in early Canterbury; pioneering photography from the mid-1850s using the wet-plate collodion process; intellectual contributions; and death on 20 March 1873 in Christchurch from meningitis. Authoritative accounts cover his family, career, and legacy comprehensively, with photographs preserved in collections such as the Canterbury Museum. Resolving any minor details would require consultation of primary archives, but no significant gaps affect understanding of his contributions to colonial Canterbury.
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