Career
He went on to have a league career at Colchester United. Charlton Athletic
Following the cessation of the Second World War, there was no League football in 1945-1946. The FA Cup was the main competition to be played this season.
To make up for the lack of quality matches, all FA Cup rounds from round one up to and including the quarter-finals were made two-legged ties (rather than the traditional single matches) with the aggregate score determining who went through to the next round.
Poplar born Turner was a 22-year-old Royal Air Force officer who played part-time for Charlton Athletic, making a total of nine appearances in Charlton"s run to the final, in which they played ten matches. After easy victories over Wolverhampton Wanderers, Preston North End (against whom Turner scored three goals in the two legs) and Brentford (another three goals), Charlton met Bolton Wanderers in the semi-final.
Bolton were still suffering from the after-effects of the Burnden Park disaster in which 33 spectators were killed as a result of overcrowding. Turner played no significant part in the final itself, whereas his (unrelated) namesake, Bert Turner, scored for both sides, conceding an own goal on 85 minutes, which he cancelled out from a free-kick a minute later.
Colchester United
In 1947, Turner was signed for Colchester United by manager Ted Fenton who was endeavouring to build a side capable of obtaining election from the Southern League into the Football League.
Turner made 36 appearances in Colchester"s inaugural Football League season, scoring twelve goals, but injury restricted him to only nine further appearances, and he retired from football in the summer of 1951, although he did subsequently return to the Southern League with Headington United. Club
Charlton Athletic
FA Cup Runner-up (1): 1945-1956
Colchester United
Southern Football League Runner-up (1): 1949-1950
Southern Football League Cup Runner-up (2): 1947-1948, 1948-1949.