An inside right, Townsend joined Athenian League club Hayes from Isleworth Town as a 17-year-old in 1935.[3] He had a prolific two seasons in front of goal for the club, scoring 64 goals in 52 appearances.[3] He departed Church Road at the end of the 1936–37 season.[3]
Brentford
Townsend initially joined hometown First Division club Brentford as an amateur during the second half of the 1936–37 season and signed a professional contract at the end of the campaign.[4] He spent the 1937–38 season in the club's reserve team and scored 19 goals in his first 15 London Combination appearances.[4] With the first team struggling in the First Division during the first half of the 1938–39 season, manager Harry Curtis gave Townsend his professional debut for a match versus Huddersfield Town on Christmas Eve 1938 and he scored the winner in a 2–1 victory.[5] The subsequent signing of Tommy Cheetham limited Townsend's chances of making a breakthrough into the first team,[4] but he finished the 1938–39 season with four goals in five appearances.[5]
The break-out of the Second World War in September 1939 saw competitive football suspended for the duration of the war.[4] During the war, Townsend scored 102 goals in 120 appearances,[4] a record which included four hat-tricks and one double hat-trick.[6] He also guested for a number of clubs and returned to Football League action in the 1946–47 season,[4][7][8][9] scoring 9 goals in 33 games in a disastrous campaign, which saw the Bees relegated to the Second Division.[5] Townsend departed Brentford in May 1947, after making 41 appearances and scoring 14 goals in competitive matches while at Griffin Park.[4]
Bristol City
Townsend and Brentford teammates Dai Hopkins and Frank Clack signed for Third Division South club Bristol City in June 1947.[1][4] He had a happy two seasons with the club, scoring 50 goals in 80 appearances and topping the Third Division South goalscoring charts in his first season.[4][8] He formed a formidable goalscoring partnership with Don Clark, though the pair's exploits failed to bring any success in the league.[10][11]
Millwall
Townsend joined Third Division South club Millwall in July 1949 and made just five appearances and scored one goal during the 1949–50 season.[1][12]
While a player with Guildford City, Townsend combined his playing duties with that of first team coach.[3]
Hayes
Townsend returned to Hayes as manager in 1952, taking over from former Brentford teammate George Wilkins.[3] He presided over a mediocre 1952–53 Athenian League campaign, before being replaced by Wilkins.[3]
Ashford Town
Townsend had a spell as assistant manager of Ashford Town during the 1953–54 season.[3]
Maidenhead United
Townsend was appointed manager of Corinthian League club Maidenhead United in 1954.[3] He presided over the first period of success in the club's history,[16] winning two Berks & Bucks Senior Cups, the Corinthian League Memorial Shield and the league title in his final season with the club.[3][17] Townsend departed the Magpies in 1958.[3]
Slough Town
Townsend joined Corinthian League club Slough Town as manager in 1958.[3] With a number of his former Maidenhead United players in his squad, Townsend had a frustrating time with the club, failing to challenge in the league and finishing as runners up in the Berks & Bucks Benevolent Cup in 1959–60, though he managed to win the Southern Combination Cup in 1958–59.[18] After finishing bottom of the Corinthian League in the 1960–61 season, Townsend was released as manager.[3]
Return to Maidenhead United
Townsend rejoined Maidenhead United as manager in 1964.[3] Now managing at Athenian League Premier Division level, Townsend failed to manage the Magpies to success in the league, though he won his third Berks & Bucks Senior Cup with the club in 1966.[9] He resigned in 1969 and was honoured with a place in the club's Hall of Fame in 2005.[3] As of September 2014, Townsend's 473 matches in charge of Maidenhead is more than any other of the club's managers.[19]
Personal life
Townsend served for six years with the Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry during and after the Second World War.[3] After retiring from football, Townsend was a London-based sales representative for both Carborundum and Tex Abrasives before retiring in May 1982. Townsend lived in Seaford before his death in 1997.[2][10]