33-1269: Henshall is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Alex Henshall (born 1994), English footballer Audrey Henshall (1927–2021), British archaeologist Daniel Henshall (born 1982), Australian actor Douglas Henshall (born 1965), Scottish actor Hugh Henshall (1734-1816), English civil engineer Horace Henshall (1889-1951), English footballer James Henshall (1907-1969), English footballer James Alexander Henshall (1836-1925), American author John Henry Henshall (1856-1928), English artist May Dexter Henshall (1867–1962), American educator, clubwoman, and librarian Nicholas Henshall (born 1962), Anglican dean Michael Henshall , English Church of England bishop Paul Henshall (born 1977), British actor Richard Henshall (born 1984), English musician Ruthie Henshall (born 1967), British singer, dancer and actress Samuel Henshall (1764/5–1807), English clergyman, writer and inventor of type of corkscrew Scott Henshall (born 1975), British fashion designer See also [ edit ] David Henshall Emerging Artist Prize , an Australian award for glass art [REDACTED] Surname list This page lists people with
66-526: A 2–0 win against Uruguay , and helping England to reach the quarter-final stage. Braintree Town F.C. Braintree Town Football Club is a professional football club based in Braintree, Essex , England. They are currently members of the National League , the fifth tier of English football, and play at Cressing Road . The club was formed on 24 September 1898 as Manor Works , the works team of
99-510: A month's loan for Bristol Rovers of League Two. According to Rovers manager John Ward , Henshall "[came] looking for an opportunity to get his career going again". Manchester City had high hopes for him, and the ambitious Henshall hoped to use the loan spell to "ignite his career in the Premier League". Ward described him as "quite direct in his play and [liking] to run at defenders." He made his debut two days later, replacing Ryan Brunt in
132-402: A month. He made his Blackpool debut the next day as a 61st-minute substitute for Connor Oliver in a 1–0 win over Millwall . After one more appearance, Henshall returned to his parent club after suffering a knee injury. At the end of the season, McCarthy said that although he felt Henshall should have been in the first-team squad more often, he had shown a positive attitude and the opportunity
165-428: A one-month loan deal. He made his club and Football League debut the next day, replacing Jay O'Shea in the 53rd minute of a 1–0 defeat at home to League Two leaders Gillingham . He made his first start three days later in a goalless draw with Aldershot Town , and was replaced at half-time by Jack Lester . On 28 March, his loan deal was extended until the end of the season. On 17 October 2013, Henshall signed on
198-415: A permanent contract with the latter in 2014. A loan to Blackpool preceded a couple of months with Scottish Premiership club Kilmarnock in 2016. He then played non-league football with Margate , Braintree Town , Nuneaton Town and Darlington before returning to Nuneaton in 2019. He represented England at the 2011 European Under-17 Championships and at the 2011 FIFA U-17 World Cup . Henshall
231-677: A positive start to his City career, winning the penalty that began an 8–0 rout of Empor Berlin by City's under-18 team in a pre-season tour of Germany in July 2010. City coach Scott Sellars said that Henshall "was a real threat – he looks like a real talent". He appeared for City's under-19s in both seasons of the NextGen Series before going out on loan . After reported interest in January 2013 from Coventry City in taking Henshall came to nothing, he joined Chesterfield on 22 February on
264-491: Is different from Wikidata All set index articles Alex Henshall Alex Charles Henshall (born 15 February 1994) is an English footballer who plays as a winger for Southern League club Melksham Town . Henshall began his football career with hometown club Swindon Town before joining Manchester City as a 16-year-old. He spent spells on loan with Chesterfield , for whom he made his Football League debut, Bristol Rovers and Ipswich Town before signing
297-529: The Conference Premier . The next four seasons saw the club reach the FA Cup for the first round, losing to Tranmere Rovers , Newport County , Chesterfield and Oxford United in successive seasons. In 2015–16 they finished third in the renamed National League, qualifying for the promotion play-offs. Despite winning the first leg at Grimsby Town 1–0, they lost the home leg 2–0 after extra time. In 2016–17
330-622: The Crittall Window Company , from which they gained their nickname Iron . The new club took over the fixtures of the recently defunct Braintree F.C. in the North Essex League , and also took on most of the former club's players. They left the league in 1900, but returned in 1901. They won the title in 1905–06, 1910–11 and 1911–12, also winning the Mid-Essex League in 1909–10 and 1910–11. In 1911 they also joined Division 2A of
363-747: The Essex & Suffolk Border League , remaining in the league until 1928. In 1921 they were renamed Crittall Athletic to be more closely identified with their parent company. After winning Division Two (Western) in 1922–23 and 1923–24, they were promoted to the Senior Division of the Border League in 1925. In 1928 they joined the Spartan League , and in 1935 were founder members of the Eastern Counties League , although they also continued to play in
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#1732869169539396-536: The FA Trophy . In June 2017, Henshall signed for Nuneaton Town of the National League North . Manager Tommy Wright said he was excited not only about the player's "reputation and pedigree" but also because he wanted "to be the manager that gets this talent and potential back out of him so that he can hit the heights he should have done by now." Henshall made six league starts in the first couple of months of
429-646: The Isthmian League , although it was an effective drop of two divisions. They were promoted as runners-up in their first season , and repeated the feat the following season . After three seasons in Division One they were promoted to the Premier Division with a third-place finish in 2000–01 . They won the Premier Division in 2005–06 to earn promotion to the Conference South . The season also saw them reach
462-581: The substitutes for a Football League Trophy match against Exeter City in October 2009, and had hoped to bring him on if Swindon were "comfortable", but the match went to extra time and penalties : had Henshall come on, he would have become the club's youngest debutant, at 15 years, 233 days. He attracted attention from major Premier League clubs, and in June 2010, once he finished school, he signed for Manchester City for an undisclosed fee. He made
495-413: The surname Henshall . If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that link by adding the person's given name (s) to the link. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Henshall&oldid=1250189231 " Category : Surnames Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description
528-476: The 2016–17 season without a club. He trained with Yeovil Town to maintain his fitness, and in December 2016 joined up with Margate . He played just one National League South match, against Welling United , before moving up a division by signing for Braintree Town in early January 2017. In what remained of the season, he made seven National League appearances, all but one off the bench, and another three in
561-410: The 63rd minute of a 1–0 defeat at home to Wycombe Wanderers . In the following game, on 22 October, he scored his first senior goal in a 2–1 defeat away to Accrington Stanley . That was his last appearance for Rovers: Ward thought "he was not going to force his way into [his] team." Henshall joined Championship club Ipswich Town on 24 March 2014 on a youth loan until the end of the season . He
594-665: The Border League at the end of the 1954–55 season. In 1959–60 they won the league and League Cup double. They switched to the Greater London League in 1964, and then to the Metropolitan League in 1966. They were renamed Braintree & Crittall Athletic in 1968, and after winning the League Cup in 1969–70, the club returned to the Eastern Counties League again. In 1981 all links with Crittall were severed and
627-452: The Border League. They won the Border League in 1935–36 and both the Border League and the Eastern Counties League in 1936–37, but then left the Eastern Counties League to join the newly established Essex County League . The new league folded after a single season (in which Crittall were runners-up) and the club returned to the Eastern Counties League. After World War II the Eastern Counties League did not resume in 1945, so Crittall joined
660-653: The Eastern Division of the London League instead. After finishing second in their first season, they were promoted to the Premier Division. They were invited to rejoin the Eastern Counties League in 1947, but turned the offer down and remained in the London League, where they won the League Cup twice before returning to the Eastern Counties League in 1952. In 1954 they turned professional, but financial problems forced them to revert to amateur status and drop back down into
693-587: The Fair Field, now the site of the town hall, library and bus station. They moved to Spaldings Meadow in Panfield Lane in 1903. In 1923 the club moved to a new ground on Cressing Road which had been built by their parent company. Due to problems with the pitch in 1975, the club were forced to play matches at several other venues, including Heybridge Swifts ' Scraley Road (a single match on 26 April arranged at such short notice that many fans arrived at Cressing Road for
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#1732869169539726-575: The National League South. In the subsequent play-offs they defeated Bath City 1–0 in the quarter-finals and Chelmsford City 3–2 in the semi-finals before beating Worthing 4–3 in the final to earn another promotion back to the National League. Braintree Town reserves joined Division One of the Eastern Counties League in 2012, remaining in the league until the end of the 2018–19 season. After being founded, Manor Works initially played at
759-419: The campaign, but his season was disrupted by injury, worsened by what Wright later described as a misdiagnosis, and he left the club before his contract ended. After Henshall returned to fitness ahead of the 2018–19 season, Wright continued his mission by signing him for his new employers, National League North club Darlington , citing "unfinished business". He made 24 league appearances without scoring, and
792-495: The club reached the second round of the FA Cup for the first time after beating Eastbourne Borough in the first round; they eventually lost 5–2 to Millwall in the second round. They were relegated from the National League at the end of the season after finishing in the bottom four. The 2017–18 season saw Braintree finish sixth in the National League South. In the play-offs they defeated Hemel Hempstead Town and Dartford to reach
825-745: The club was renamed Braintree F.C. , before adopting their current name a year later. They won their second Eastern Counties League title in 1983–84 and retained it the following season. In 1986–87 they won the Essex Senior Trophy and the following season they won the League Cup. In 1991 Braintree moved up to the Southern Division of the Southern League . In 1996 the club asked the FA to switch leagues to reduce their travelling. After initially being refused, they were allowed to move to Division Three of
858-473: The final, in which Henshall played 67 minutes before being substituted. He scored his first goal for the side on 27 February 2011, in a 2–2 draw with host nation Portugal in the Algarve tournament. He played in all of England's games at the 2011 UEFA Under-17 Championships , helping them reach the semi-finals. He also represented England at the 2011 FIFA U-17 World Cup , playing in the final group-stage game,
891-464: The final, in which they beat Hampton & Richmond Borough 4–3 on penalties to earn promotion back to the National League. However, they were relegated to the National League South the following season after finishing second-from-bottom of the National League. In 2022–23 the club won the Essex Senior Cup , beating Concord Rangers 2–0 in the final. The following season saw them finish fifth in
924-489: The first round of the FA Cup for the first time, eventually losing 4–1 at Shrewsbury Town . Braintree qualified for the promotion play-offs in their first season in the Conference South, but lost 1–0 to Salisbury City in the final. They also reached the play-offs the following season , but lost to Eastbourne Borough in the semi-finals. In 2010–11 they finished as Conference South champions, earning promotion to
957-505: The summer of 2021 he dropped down to Division One Central to play for Wantage Town . In December 2022, Henshall signed for Melksham Town . Henshall made his England under-16 debut on 15 October 2009, in a 1–0 win against Wales , and appeared twice more at that level. He made his debut for the under-17 team on 3 August 2010, in a 5–0 win against Finland in the first round of the Nordic Tournament. England beat Sweden 2–1 in
990-674: Was born and raised in Swindon , Wiltshire, and joined the youth setup of his hometown Football League club, Swindon Town , at the age of eight. He was a member of the Swindon Town team that reached the quarter-final of the 2009 Milk Cup Junior Section, scoring a hat-trick against Maccabi Tel Aviv 's youngsters, and shared the Player of the Tournament award with Hallam Hope of eventual winners Everton . Swindon manager Danny Wilson named him among
1023-572: Was released at the end of the season, after which he signed for Nuneaton Borough of the Southern League Premier Division Central. On 27 November 2019, he joined Swindon Supermarine on a month's loan until 28 December. On 3 January 2020, he signed permanently with Swindon Supermarine and his contract with Nuneaton was terminated. In the curtailed 2020–21 season he played for Southern League Premier Division sides Stratford Town and Banbury United for short spells. In
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1056-597: Was released by Manchester City when his contract expired. Despite having made no first-team appearances during his loan spell, Henshall joined Ipswich Town on a two-year contract on 27 June 2014. He said it was an easy decision because he liked working for manager Mick McCarthy and felt the club was making good progress. He made his debut on 12 August, starting in a League Cup match which Ipswich lost 1–0 to League One team Crawley Town in extra time. Having made five appearances for Ipswich, Henshall joined their Championship rivals Blackpool on 9 January 2015 on loan for
1089-460: Was still there. By September, he had been made available for transfer, and at the end of the January transfer window, his contract was terminated by mutual consent. On 30 March 2016, Henshall signed for Scottish Premiership club Kilmarnock , agreeing a contract until the end of the season. He played just twice, and was released at the end of his contract. Having turned down options "thinking [he] would get something better", Henshall went into
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