Stay Signed In
Do you want to access your site more quickly on this computer? Check this box, and your username and password will be remembered for two weeks. Click logout to turn this off.
Stay Safe
Do not check this box if you are using a public computer. You don't want anyone seeing your personal info or messing with your site.
Full name Donald John Dearson
Date of birth May 13, 1914
Place of birth Ynysybwl, Wales
Date of death December 24, 1990 (aged 76)
Place of death Birmingham, England
Playing position Utility player
Birmingham City 131 0(17)
Coventry City 084 0(10)
Walsall 051 0(13)
Nuneaton Borough
Bilston
National team
1938–1939 Wales 003 000
Donald John "Don" Dearson (May 13, 1914 – December 24, 1990) was a
Welsh professional footballer who won three caps for his country and played for Birmingham City, Coventry City and Walsall.
Biography
Don Dearson was born in Ynysybwl, Glamorgan. He began his football career as an inside-forward with Barry and moved to First Division Birmingham in 1934.
By 1936–37 he had established himself as a first-team player. The following season he was joint top goalscorer, sharing the honour with Welsh international
colleague Wilson Jones. In the last full season played before the Second World War, he moved to half-back. He won three full caps for Wales in their last three pre-war internationals.
A qualified electrical engineer, he was in a reserved occupation during the war, and was available to represent his country in 15 wartime and victory international matches. Chosen to play against England at Birmingham's home ground,
St Andrews, in 1941, Dearson missed a penalty; Wales lost 2–1. He also
made 166 appearances for Birmingham in wartime football, including helping the club to the championship of the 1945–46 Football League South.
By the time the Football League proper resumed after the war, Dearson was past his best. He played another half-season for Birmingham as a fullback before moving to Second Division Coventry City and then to Walsall of the Third Division South, before finally giving up League football at the age of 37. He still played another couple of years of non-league football with Nuneaton Borough and Bilston.
After retiring from the game he worked for BSA and British Leyland, and died in Sheldon, Birmingham at the age of 76.
Honours
with Birmingham City
Football League South champions 1946.