Harry Morris (footballer, born 1897)

[3][4][5] He also played League football for Fulham, Brentford, Millwall, Swansea Town and Clapton Orient.

After being spotted by Phil Kelso scoring prolifically for local Hackney Marshes side Vicar of Wakefield,[6][7] Morris joined Second Division club Fulham in May 1919.

[1] Morris dropped back down to the Third Division South to transfer to Swindon Town in June 1926 for a £110 fee.

[19] In 1955, 22 years after leaving the County Ground, Morris applied for a coaching role with the club, but was rejected.

[6] In a poll to celebrate the Football League's 125th anniversary, Morris was voted Swindon's greatest-ever player by the club's supporters.

[3] Morris transferred to Third Division South club Clapton Orient in July 1933 and scored eight goals in 13 appearances during the 1933–34 season.

[3][8] Morris wound down his career in non-League football with Southern League club Cheltenham Town.

[7] Morris was married to Edith and had a son, Jack and a daughter, Estelle, who died from polio in 1937 at the age of eight.

[21] The family emigrated to the United States after the war, with Harry and Edith working for the British Information Services in New York City.