Background
Haworth was born in Accrington, Lancashire in 1876 and was the nephew of England international George Haworth.
Haworth was born in Accrington, Lancashire in 1876 and was the nephew of England international George Haworth.
After playing amateur football as a youth, he was appointed manager of Accrington Stanley in 1897. He was in charge of the team for 13 years, leading them to two Lancashire Combination titles, before moving to nearby Burnley in July 1910. Accrington Stanley
As a teenager, Haworth played amateur football for local club Meadow Bank, where he later became secretary.
Later the same year, he was named secretary of the club
At the time, club secretaries were in charge of first-team duties such as coaching and signing players. Under the stewardship of Howarth, Accrington Stanley were transformed into one of the foremost non-league clubs in Lancashire, winning the Lancashire Combination in the 1902-1903 season.
The following campaign, the team finished as runners-up before again claiming the league title in the 1905-1906 season. He went on to manage the club for 13 years before leaving in the summer of 1910.
Burnley
Haworth was appointed secretary–manager of Football League Second Division side Burnley in July 1910, replacing Richard Wadge, who had taken care of first-team affairs since the death of Spen Whittaker in April 1910.
During his first summer in charge, he signed Burnley"s first foreign player, German defender Max Seeburg. Soon afterwards, he changed the colour of Burnley"s strip as he considered the green kit to be unlucky. He opted to change the colours to claret and blue, to match the strip of reigning Football League champions Aston Villa.
Towards the close of the 1910-1911 season, Haworth pulled off his first major signing when he persuaded England centre forward Bert Freeman to join the club from Everton.
The following season, Haworth guided the team to a third-placed finish in the Second Division, narrowly missing out on promotion. That year, the team finished second in the league to gain promotion to the First Division.
In the club"s first season in the top-flight of English football since 1900, he led the side to third place in the league, just three points off the title. He also guided the team to an unprecedented FA Cup run, where they conceded only four goals in eight matches.
The team ended the 1914-1915 season in fourth place in the First Division before football in England was interrupted for four years by the First World War.
Upon the return to competitive football, Burnley finished runners-up in the league. The 1920-1921 season started disappointingly for the side, but he eventually led the team to a 30-match unbeaten run to become Champions of England for the first time in 1921. On 4 December 1924, he became the second successive Burnley manager to die while in office when he died of pneumonia.
Burnley
Football League champions: 1920-1921
Football League runners-up: 1919-1920
FA Cup winners: 1914.
In 1897, he merged the club with North East Lancashire Combination side Accrington Stanley and became a member of the Accrington Stanley committee.