Football |
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Did your ancestor play football, perhaps as a schoolboy, in a local amateur team, or even as a professional footballer. This page provides links to the main pages on this site relating to Football.
Can you help identify the players? |
The club won the Apsley Charity Cup in 1897-8, 1898-9, 1899-1900 and 1903-4 |
If you know of web sites which contain a pre-WW1 Hertfordshire football photographs, preferably with names, tell me about it and I can add a link from this page. |
Books |
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The History of Watford Football Club | ||||
100 Years: A History of School Football in St Albans | ||||
Redbourn Memories has many Football Club Photographs |
Newspaper Cuttings |
The Hitchin Football Club 1865-1911 (various cuttings & links with Football Association)
See Ludgrove, Monken Hadley, for information on a school where three different England Football Captains taught.
When was Football first played in Hertfordshire?
From Hertfordshire Genealogy News, 14th November, 2012
When was the first "football" match played in Hertfordshire? One of the problems is that the accounts that survive from the past often fail to mention the everyday activities of the ordinary people and football is no exception. The first description of what might today be called a football match was written by William FitzStephen in approximately 1170. While visiting London he noticed “after dinner all the youths of the city goes out into the field for the very popular game of ball.” He also pointed out that every trade had their own football team: “The fathers, and the men of wealth come on horseback to view the contests of their juniors, and in their fashion sport with the young men; and there seem to be aroused in these elders a stirring of natural heat by viewing so much activity and by participation in the joys of unrestrained youth.” Two centuries later a monk wrote that football was a game “in which young men ... propel a huge ball not by throwing it into the air, but by striking and rolling it along the ground, and that not with their hands but with their feet.” The monk claimed that the game was “undignified and worthless” and resulted in “some loss, accident or disadvantage to the players themselves."Early in the 14th century Edward II banned the playing of football and several later monarchs took similar actions and we can be pretty certain that the game was played in Hertfordshire, but there are no early direct references to the game.
At the HALH Symposium on Sport in Hertfordshire David Short described a different approach - which was to try and track down old football fields by looking at old field names. He noted that a field in Ashwell listed in the tithe map was called "Football Close" and was able to trace the name to a terrier of 1628. Searching other similar records revealed another "Football Close" at Baldock mentioned in a 1568 deed. However another term, dating back to Saxon times, may well indicate places where games such of football could have been played. The name "Plaistowe" could well comes from the Saxon words for "battle place" and it would seem could be used for what we would now call a sports field. David found a "Plaistowe" in Hertford dating back to 1461, Another at Yardley dating back to 1630 and one is listed in Norton's Survey of Barley which dates to around 1600. In listening to the talk I got the impression that most were or the order of two acres and close to the parish church.
February 2012 | Ludgrove link | |
July 2012 | Batford Juniors Picture | |
November 2012 | Newsletter extract | |
May 2015 | Watford Schoolboys' Shield |