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Queen honours ex-England keeper Bert Williams

BBC Published Jun 12, 2010 Reviewed Jul 2, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Bert Williams raised more than £100,000 for the Alzheimer's Society.
more than 100000 GBP · Alzheimer's Society donations
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Citation-ready fact
Bert Williams was honoured for more than seven decades of service to charity and football.
more than 7 decades · service to charity and football
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Citation-ready fact
Bert Williams played 28 matches for England.
28 matches · England appearances
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Citation-ready fact
Bert Williams played more than 400 times for Wolves.
more than 400 times · Wolves appearances
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Citation-ready fact
Bert Williams played for Wolves between 1945 and 1959.
1945 · start of Wolves career1959 · end of Wolves career
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Citation-ready fact
Bert Williams was appointed MBE in the Queen's Birthday Honours list.
1 MBE · appointment
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England's 1950 World Cup goalkeeper, Bert Williams, has been appointed MBE in the Queen's Birthday Honours list.

The 90-year-old, who played more than 400 times for Wolves, was honoured for services to football and charity.

The retired goalkeeper, from Shifnal, Shropshire, described it as the "icing on the cake" of a wonderful life.

Williams, who played in the infamous 1-0 defeat against the USA at the 1950 World Cup, has raised more than £100,000 for the Alzheimer's Society.

Williams, a former petrol tank factory welder who left school at 14, was honoured for more than seven decades of service to charity and football.

He played 28 matches for England during a career in which he won both the FA Cup and the League Championship.

Williams, who was born in Bradley, near Bilston, West Midlands, in 1920, played for Walsall's first team aged just 16 and went on to play for Wolves between 1945 and 1959.

At 5ft 9in (1.75m) tall, the former England goalkeeper earned his nickname of "The Cat" while starring in a victory over Italy in the late 1940s.

He began raising money for charity while still playing professionally and continued his fundraising efforts after his retirement.

Williams organised celebrity cricket matches until age forced him to switch to other ways of helping good causes.

Asked how he felt after being appointed MBE, he replied: "I am thankful, I am grateful and I am proud - I am a very, very lucky and fortunate person.

"It's very rare that people's dreams come to fruition.

"I was fortunate I had very, very good parents and I consider myself to be the luckiest bloke in the world.

"As a lad, you have a dream, you visualise yourself as a famous bloke and you never think it can happen to you.

"I realise how fortunate I have been and this latest thing has just crowned it all."

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