The graveyard photo shows the last resting place of Joseph Davies, who played for Everton during the season that they became founder members of the Football League. He was born on 27 June 1869, at St Martins in North West Shropshire and baptised at Preesgwyn Methodist Chapel. His parents, also born in St Martins, were Harriet and Stephen Davies, the latter a blacksmith at the local coal mine.
The 1881 census shows the family as living in Chirk Bank Row in Weston Rhyn, where Joseph, along with his two brothers were still at school. On leaving education behind, he began working at the local colliery and was playing for Chirk AAA from where he joined Everton in November 1888. It is possible that he continued to live at home because he could catch a train from the tiny local Railway Station (now closed) to Chester and change on to a train that would take him to Liverpool – although the journey was still long and tedious.
The young Welshman was thrust straight in to an Everton forward line at outside left, that was changing virtually from week to week. He made his debut on 1 December 1888 against West Bromwich Albion at Stoney Lane, where the home side won by four goals to one. Nevertheless, after being switched to the right wing, he took to the field against Stoke on a dark and gloomy day at the Victoria Ground. The score was standing at 0-0 when the referee, owing to the onset of darkness, stopped the game after eighty minutes and the players left the field. (The game was not replayed.)
Davies was then replaced at Preston by John Angus, who had recently joined Everton from the Third Lanarkshire Rifle Volunteers, but was back in the side for the visit of Stoke and scored in 2-1 win. He then kept his place for the visit of Preston North End where a capacity crowd looked on as Everton where beaten by two goals to nil. Davies took part in the next three Football League games, where Everton failed to register a single point, and then scored his second goal for the club in a 3-1 win over Blackburn Rovers in the final game of the season. He then became the first player, on the Everton register, to win an International cap.
Joseph Davies, like his Everton team mate George Farmer before him, had been born in Shropshire but accepted the invitation to play for Wales and made his debut on 15 April, 1889, in a 0-0 draw against Scotland at the Racecourse Ground in Wrexham. Two weeks later he won his second cap when he played for Wales against Ireland in Belfast.
Joseph Davies played his final game for Everton at Manchester, in a friendly against Newton Heath, and was not retained by the club when the season came to an end. He returned to play football with Chirk where he gained another two International caps before going on a great odyssey that would eventually bring him back to Shropshire.
In 1891 Joe Davies signed for the Football Alliance club Ardwick, where he remained until 1894, having in the meantime helped them to become members of the Football League. During his time in Manchester he gained another two caps for Wales. He next crossed the Pennines to join Sheffield United and added another three International caps to his collection before re-joining Ardwick, who were now playing as Manchester City, where again he was selected for Wales.
Davies then moved to London where he joined Southern League outfit Millwall Athletic and, for the tenth time, he was capped for Wales. Two seasons later he transferred to Reading and was playing there when on 26th Apri, 1898, he made a final appearance for his country against England at the Arms Park in Cardiff. Davies then made a brief re-appearance at Manchester City before ending his professional playing career with Football League Division Two side, Stockport County.
Joseph Davies, centre, with his Welsh team mates. Seated in the foreground is Charlie Parry of Everton
Davies returned to his home in Shropshire where, in all probability, he worked underground at Ifton Heath Colliery and settled back to life with in community at Weston Rhyn. In 1907 he married Millicent Hardy and the couple settled at 15 Trevor Cottages, Rhoswiel where they raised a family of four children. Davies spent the rest of his working life in the coal mining industry and had obtained the position of Colliery Storekeeper when he retired. On 29 June 1939, his wife Millicent died and was buried at Weston Rhyn Cemetery in the same grave as the mother of her husband, Harriet.
Joseph Davies continued to live at Trevor Cottages until November 1954, when he had a bad fall and was first admitted to hospital in Oswestry and then transferred to Copthorne in Shrewsbury, where he died on 6 November aged 85 years old. The inquest that followed revealed that the cause of death had been a fractured femur. The news of his death was recorded in the local newspapers, which made no reference to his long and distinguished football career. His four children, and their families attended his funeral, to see him buried alongside his wife.