Taylor was born in the Sheffield suburb of
Fulwood in May 1912, although he spent his formative years in
Birley Carr very close to the Sheffield Wednesday ground. He rapidly gained a lifelong love of the club, slipping into the ground to see the final few minutes of games when the gates were opened. Taylor started his working life in a law office, but in 1929, at the age of 17, he was appointed by Wednesday as office boy to the manager
Bob Brown on a wage of seven shillings and sixpence a week. Wednesday had won the
First Division championship in the
1928–29 season and it is said the appointment was a reward to the manager for this. In November 1934 Taylor was promoted to the post of assistant secretary when
Joe McClelland, caretaker manager and former assistant to Brown, departed the club. Taylor remained in this role until 1942. Part-time football during the
Second World War saw Wednesday having to make financial savings, and team manager
Jimmy McMullan was told that his contract would not be renewed for 1942. Club chairman William Turner reshuffled the remaining staff, and Eric Taylor was given the additional job of part-time manager of team affairs. It seems that Taylor’s rise to team manager was only to be a temporary appointment until the end of the war; he had never played or coached league football. However, he made a good impression in the job and led Wednesday to the final of the North
Football League War Cup in 1943, losing to
Blackpool over two legs. At the end of the war club chairman William Fearnehough rewarded Taylor with a new contract and the title of Secretary/Manager on 14 June 1945. ==Secretary / manager==