Sam Baum
Samuel Baum (4 May 1914 – 19 June 2002) was an English professional footballer who played as a right winger in the Football League. Born in Sunderland, he spent most of his career with Bolton Wanderers, including two spells at the club, and had loan periods at Darwen and South Shields.[1] In March 1938, he signed for Port Vale two minutes before the transfer deadline and went on to make three appearances for the club in the Third Division North during the 1937–38 season.[2] He died in Bolton in June 2002.[3]Early life
Upbringing in Sunderland
Samuel Baum was born on 4 May 1914 in Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, England. Little is known about his family origins, though he grew up in a working-class industrial area dominated by the shipbuilding industry, where parental occupations typically involved labor in the yards or related trades. Biographical details on his family remain limited. Sunderland during the interwar period was a hub of shipbuilding, but the region suffered severe economic hardships from three major depressions that hit the industry, leading to widespread unemployment and poverty among the working class.[4] These conditions influenced local communities. Baum's initial exposure to football occurred through local schools and community pitches in Sunderland, a city with deep roots in North East England's football culture, where clubs like Sunderland A.F.C. had established a passionate fanbase and tradition since the late 19th century.[5] This environment helped nurture his interest in the sport during his formative years.Entry into football
Baum began his football journey in the local amateur scene of Sunderland during the late 1920s and early 1930s. These experiences honed his skills as a right winger. Scouts from professional clubs took notice of his talent, leading to a trial with Bolton Wanderers. Baum joined Bolton Wanderers as an amateur, allowing him to balance football with other work while continuing to develop under the club's coaching staff. His performances in reserve and friendly games impressed the management, and by 1936, at the age of 22, he signed his first professional contract with the Second Division side. The signing came without a reported transfer fee, typical for promising amateurs from northern leagues at the time, marking Baum's transition to full-time professional football.Club career
Bolton Wanderers
Sam Baum joined Bolton Wanderers in the mid-1930s as a right winger, integrating into the squad primarily through the reserve team during the 1936–37 First Division season.[2] The club, under manager Charles Foweraker, endured a challenging campaign, finishing 20th in the league with a record of 10 wins, 14 draws, and 18 losses, which underscored their mid-to-lower table struggles and limited opportunities for emerging players.[6] Baum's development occurred mainly in the reserves, where he trained under the era's coaching staff and competed in the Central League, but he received no first-team exposure due to stiff competition from established wingers like Ray Westwood, who anchored the flanks for the senior side.[7] This depth in the position, combined with the team's precarious standing, restricted pathways for young talents like Baum to the starting lineup. By 1937, Baum's circumstances at Bolton led to a loan move away from the club, paving the way for further opportunities elsewhere before his permanent transfer to Port Vale in March 1938, just before the transfer deadline.[2]Darwen and South Shields
In 1937, Sam Baum was loaned to Darwen from Bolton Wanderers. Darwen competed as an amateur club in the Lancashire Combination, a regional league centered in Lancashire that featured semi-professional and amateur teams during the interwar period.[8] Baum subsequently moved to South Shields around the 1937–38 season, joining the club in the North Eastern League, a competitive regional competition for northern English teams outside the Football League.[9] Lower-division and non-league football in this era often required players to balance part-time commitments with demanding travel schedules, exacerbated by the economic hardships of the Great Depression, which limited resources for clubs and individuals alike.[10]Port Vale
Baum transferred to Port Vale from Bolton Wanderers in March 1938 on a free transfer.[2] As a right winger, he served as a backup option and made three sporadic appearances during the 1937–38 Third Division North season.[2] Port Vale finished 15th in the 22-team division with 38 points, securing their status without needing re-election, though the club was later transferred to the newly formed Third Division South ahead of the 1938–39 campaign.[11] Baum was released by the club in May 1938 at the season's end, as football schedules faced growing uncertainty from the looming threat of war.[2]Later life
Post-retirement activities
Baum's professional football career concluded around 1939, as the outbreak of the Second World War led to the suspension of the English Football League on 3 September 1939, shortly after the start of the 1939–40 season.[12] This interruption effectively ended competitive league play for the duration of the conflict, with regional wartime leagues and cup competitions taking its place, though Baum did not feature in documented guest appearances for any clubs during this period. Post-war, limited records exist on his civilian pursuits, but he resided in the Bolton area until his later years.Death
Sam Baum died on 19 June 2002 in Bolton, England, at the age of 88.[13] While specific details on the cause of death were not publicly detailed, it occurred naturally in old age.Career statistics
League appearances
Sam Baum's professional league career was brief, spanning just one season in the top flight and a handful of games in the lower divisions during the pre-war era of English football. In the 1930s, the Football League consisted of two upper tiers—the First Division and Second Division—covering professional clubs across England and Wales, while the Third Division was split into northern and southern sections to accommodate regional teams and reduce travel costs.[14] Baum, a right-winger, made no first-team appearances for Bolton Wanderers in the 1936–37 First Division season, remaining in the reserves before his free transfer to Port Vale in March 1938. At Port Vale, he featured in three matches in the 1937–38 Third Division North, scoring no goals; these sporadic outings came late in the campaign following his arrival, with no notable opponents, disciplinary issues, or substitutions recorded, as the latter were rare in that period.[2]| Season | Club | Division | Appearances | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1936–37 | Bolton Wanderers | First Division | 0 | 0 |
| 1937–38 | Port Vale | Third Division North | 3 | 0 |
Overall summary
Sam Baum's professional playing record was limited to three league appearances without scoring any goals, all occurring during his short tenure with Port Vale in the Third Division North in 1938. These sporadic outings as a right-winger represented his only documented first-team experience in the Football League, highlighting a career that never fully materialized at the senior professional level. While exact figures for reserve and non-league games remain elusive due to incomplete historical records from the era, Baum's earlier involvement with Bolton Wanderers' reserve team and loans to non-league clubs Darwen and South Shields likely accounted for dozens of additional matches, providing essential experience in lower-tier and regional competitions before his Port Vale move. In the context of late-1930s English football, Baum's minimal league tally was not uncommon for fringe players or those on the cusp of breaking through, as the Football League's structure favored established squads and competition for places was intense. Wingers of the period typically featured in 20-40 league games per season if regular starters, but many journeymen like Baum accumulated far fewer due to injuries, form, or transfers. The outbreak of World War II in September 1939 profoundly disrupted careers across the sport, suspending official league and cup competitions until 1946 and compelling thousands of players—including Baum—to enlist in military service, effectively halting professional progression for those in their prime. This wartime interruption meant Baum, who was 25 at the war's start, missed potential years of development, aligning his trajectory with countless others whose records were truncated by national service and regional wartime leagues. Baum received no major honors during his playing days, though his reserve work at Bolton Wanderers may have included unreported youth or internal team achievements typical of the time, such as Central League fixtures for reserves. No specific youth statistics are available from public records.| Period | Club | Level | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mid-1930s | Bolton Wanderers | Reserve/Professional | Two spells, primarily reserves; no first-team appearances. |
| Late 1930s | Darwen (loan) | Non-league | Gained match experience; exact games unknown. |
| Late 1930s | South Shields | Non-league | Contributed to team efforts; exact games unknown. |
| 1938 | Port Vale | Third Division North | 3 league appearances, 0 goals. |