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Arsenal History | ![]() |
1886 "Royal Arsenal" is Born
About 113 years ago in approximately October 1886, the arrival of two Nottingham
Forest players Fred Beardsley and Morris Bates was the catalyst that David Danskin
from Kirkcaldy in Fife needed to create a works football team at the Woolwich
Arsenal. Fifteen players were recruited, and all contributed towards the purchase
of their first football. As one of the workshops within the Arsenal was called
Dial Square, the name was chosen to represent the team.
The first game of the new club was against a team called Eastern Wanderers on
the 11th December 1886. the game was played on a piece of open ground that someone
had found on the Isle of Dogs. Apparently the pitch (if it could be called that)
was shapeless with one portion being described as a ditch by some and as an
open sewer by others.. Still, history says that Dial Square won the game 6-0.
This result filled the players with enthusiasm and resulted in a meeting at
the Royal Oak, next to Woolwich Arsenal Station, on Christmas day 1886.
The meeting was called to solve three major problems.
These problems were, a shortage of name, kit and somewhere to play. Apparently,
no-one was happy with the name Dial Square, and a combination of Royal Oak and
Woolwich Arsenal resulted in the regal sounding name Royal Arsenal which was
met by approval from all. The decision for choice of kit was almost as easy,
Fred Beardsley wrote to Nottingham Forest asking for help. Forest generously
sent Beardsley a complete set of red shirts and a ball. Plumstead Common recreation
area as home venue was the third decision arrived at on that fateful Christmas
day.
1888 Royal Arsenal move from Plumstead Common to Manor
Field
Manor Field is affectionately re-named Manor Ground for purposes of grandness!
1890 Royal Arsenal win their first trophies!
Royal Arsenal won the Kent Senior Cup, the Kent Junior Cup, and more significantly,
the London Charity Cup. The latter was concluded with a 3-1 win over Old Westminsters
at the Manor Ground in front of 10,000 people.
1891 Royal Arsenal move again
After the cup successes of 1890, Royal Arsenal decided to move just across Plumstead
High Street, to a new ground which already had a stand, terraces and dressing
rooms - the Invicta.
1891 Name changed to "Woolwich Arsenal"
1896 Record Defeat!
Woolwich Arsenal suffer 0-8 defeat at the hands of Loughborough
1900 Record Victory!
Woolwich Arsenal get revenge by thrashing Loughborough 12-0
1904 Woolwich Arsenal Promoted!
The arrival of Harry Bradshaw as manager in 1901 resulted in a 4th position,
followed by 3rd, and 2nd in 1904 gaining Woolwich Arsenal promotion to the Football
League First Division.
1913 Woolwich Arsenal Are Highbury bound....
Woolwich Arsenal were relegated after only winning three games all season. Exactly
how Highbury came into reckoning when a move was decided upon is not known.
In the end though, Woolwich Arsenal paid a massive £20,000 for a mere 21-year
lease and agreed not to stage any matches on Good Friday and Christmas Day (due
to the property being leased from St Johns College of Divinity)(these restrictions
were lifted in 1925 when the club paid another £64,000 to buy the whole site
outright). The following year, the serious work started on the ground. The pitch
was levelled (the north end had to be raised eleven feet, the south lowered
five), a new grandstand was partially built and turnstiles and terracing installed.
It cost another £80,000. Cash at the time though was so short that the builder
agreed to take a percentage of the gate money until he was paid for his work.....
1914 "Arsenal"
Name changes from "Woolwich Arsenal" to "Arsenal" .
1919 Promotion Again!
Henry Norris engineers Arsenal Promotion to Division 1 at expense of Tottenham
despite being 5th in Division 2! :-) In 1919 the Football League decided to
extend the First Division from 20 to 22 clubs. The usual procedure had been
to simply re-elect the bottom clubs from the previous season and to promote
the top clubs from the Second Division. This indeed was what almost everyone
assumed (and were told) would happen. By chance, two other London clubs, Chelsea
and Tottenham had finished 19th and 20th in the First Division in 1915, with
Arsenal finishing 5th in the Second. When the League AGM was convened, Norris'
strategy became clear. It must have been agreed with League President John McKenna,
a close friend of Norris and the owner of Liverpool in advance (Manchester United
came 17th in Division 1 after rigging their last game (2-0) against Liverpool
to finish above Chelsea). Firstly, Chelsea were detached from Tottenham and
their position taken separately. There was no vote, and the fact that Chelsea
would have finished third from bottom in 1915 had Liverpool beaten United in
the fixed match undoubtedly influenced the meeting. MeKenna proposed that they
be re-elected on the nod and this was accepted. Then Derby and Preston, first
and second in the Second Division in 1914-15, were elected into the First Division
without debate. Then came the bombshell. McKenna made a brief speech recommending
that Arsenal be given the remaining First Division place because of their service
to the league and their longevity , particularly pointing out that Arsenal had
been in the League 15 years longer than Tottenham. To this day, it is impossible
to explain what actually went on at that AGM. The arguments for Arsenal's promotion
were complete nonsense. The committee took their vote, and Arsenal received
18 votes out of a possible 41, while Tottenham only received 8. Additionally,
for many years there were rumours of significant amounts of money changing hands,
but to this day, nothing has ever been proven. Hence, Arsenal were promoted
from 5th place in the Second Division while neither 4th, or 3rd had a realistic
chance in the vote, and Tottenham were relegated...... This moment started a
feud between the two clubs that has continued on ever since!
1925 Herbert Chapman becomes Arsenal's Manager
Arsenal advertised their manager's job in "The Athletic News" on 11th May
1925. Herbert Chapman however had already been approached for the job. Henry
Norris (by now) the Arsenal Chairman offered him £2,000 a year to take the job,
easily the highest salary in the game, and Chapman needed little persuading!
Some of Herberts inovations included changing "Gillespie Road" underground train
station to "Arsenal". This was an amazing coup at the time, because it resulted
in millions of tickets, maps and signage being changed and was actually a huge
operation. To this day, Arsenal are the ONLY football team to have a station
named after them. Herbert also advocated flood-lighting, artificial pitches
and instigated placing numbers on players backs.
1930 Arsenal WIN
the F.A. Cup Final for the first time
Saturday 26th April 1930. After 44 years, Arsenal finally achieved their first
success. It was the day that Arsenal wrote themselves into the record books.
The 55th F.A. Cup Final saw Arsenal defeat Huddersfield Town (the dominant team
of the late 20's) 2-0 infront of a crowd of 92,488 with goals from Alex James
in the 17th minute and Jack Lambert in the 83rd minute. The team was: Preedy,
Parker, Hapgood, Baker, Seddon, John, Hulme, Jack, Lambert, James, Bastin. The
game will also be remembered for the vivid image of the airship Graf Zeppelin
flying 2,000 feet above Wembley during the first half, and King George handing
over the trophy. The victory signalled the start of a period when Arsenal completely
dominated English football and gained recognition worldwide during a remarkable
era.
The Road to the First F.A. Cup | ||||
OPPOSITION ROUND VENUE SCORE SCORERS | ||||
Chelsea | 3RD | Home | 2-0 | Lambert, Bastin |
Birmingham City | 4TH | Home | 1-1 | Jack |
Birmingham City | (R) | Away | 1-0 | Baker |
Middlesborough | 5TH | Away | 2-0 | Lambert, Bastin |
West Ham Utd | 6TH | Away | 3-0 | Lambert(2), Bastin |
Hull City | SF | Leeds | 2-2 | Jack, Bastin |
Hull City | (R) | A.Villa | 1-0 | Jack |
Huddersfield Town | FINAL | Wembley | 2-0 | Lambert, James |
1931 Arsenal WIN the Football League Championship for the first time
1930-31 was a massive success for the Gunners from start to finish. Arsenal
established a record points total at the time with 66 points, while they scored
an remarkable 127 goals. They also beat Grimsby Town 9-1 at Highbury (this result
still stands as their biggest ever in the First Division). They only lost four
games, and had an identical home and away record of 14 wins, 5 draws and 2 defeats.
Jack Lambert also set up an Arsenal record of 38 League goals in a season.
Champions | |||||||
P | W | D | L | F | A | PTS | |
Arsenal | 42 | 28 | 10 | 4 | 127 | 59 | 66 |
1932 Arsenal open new West Stand
The West Stand cost £45,000 and was officially opened by the Prince of Wales
(later the Duke of Windsor) on the 10th December 1932. It was actually first
used on the 12th November for a game against Chelsea (Arsenal won 1-0) and was,
by a large margin, the grandest and most expensive structure on any league ground
at the time. It incorporated three flats, an electronic lift, and had 4,100
seats and the lower lever, which was originally all standing, could in theory
hold another 20,000. While the West Stand was being built, a story that has
become a bit of folk-lore at Highbury occurred. Local inhabitants were encouraged
to bring along their rubbish to help in the process of raising up the banking
on all four sides of the ground. One coal merchant backed up too close to the
hole in the North Bank and saw his hourse and cart disappear into the cavity.
The animal was so badly injured that it had to be destroyed and it is buried
where it fell, in the middle of the North Bank terracing.
1933 Herbert
Chapman's New Shirts Herbert Chapman decides before the Liverpool game at Highbury to add white sleeves to our red shirts to add distinction |
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.
1933 / 4 / 5 Arsenal win THREE consecutive Championships!
Arsenal were awarded a crest by the Football League for this achievement that
still hangs outside the Directors' offices in Highbury's East Stand to this
day.
The Final Standings for the three glorious Football League Championship years
were as follows:
Champions
|
|||||||
P
|
W
|
D
|
L
|
F
|
A
|
PTS
|
|
Arsenal |
42
|
25
|
8
|
9
|
118
|
61
|
58
|
Arsenal |
42
|
25
|
9
|
8
|
75
|
47
|
59
|
Arsenal |
42
|
23
|
12
|
7
|
115
|
46
|
58
|
1934 / 5 Ted Drake breaks Arsenal scoring record
Ted Drake scored 42 League goals. He scored 4 goals against Birmingham, Chelsea
(and in the next game) Wolverhampton and Middlesborough. His mere hat-tricks
came against Liverpool, Tottenham and Leicester City. He also scored 1 goal
in the F.A. Cup. against Brighton and Hove Albion and 1 goal against Manchester
City in a 4-0 Charity Shield victory, bringing his seasons total to 44 goals.
1935 Highbury Record Attendance
On the 9th March 1935 Arsenal welcomed visitors Sunderland to Highbury.
Unfortuanately the 73,295 RECORD ATTENDANCE were only thrilled with the cramped
conditions as the final score was 0-0.
1935 Ted Drake scores 7!!
On December 14th 1935 Ted Drake Scored all SEVEN goals in Arsenal's 7-1 victory
against Aston Villa at Villa Park in Birminham. The record still stands to this
day as the greatest number of goals scored in a Football League First Division
(Premier League) game by an individual. For the first quarter hour Villa were
the better team, but at half-time they went in 3-0 down and Drake had a hat-trick.
All the goals were classic Arsenal - a long ball from Pat Beasley for Drake
to run on to, a long pass from Bastin which Drake picked up and ran with to
the edge of the area before scoring, and a rebound from a Pat Beasley shot from
the wing. At the end of an hour Drake had a double hat-trick and Arsenal were
6-0 up. This time the goals came from a mistake from Villa centre half Tommy
Griffiths, who assumed a ball was going over the dead ball line only to see
it rebound off the post for Drake, another pass from Bastin to Drake and an
instant return from a bad goalkeeping clearance.
Drake was controlling the ball perfectly, beating defenders at will and shooting
so accurately that the Villa Keeper, Merson, had no chance. It was the exhibition
of a complete centre forward. By this time the entire Villa half back line was
marking Drake, but it made little difference for his seventh shot actually hit
the bar and bounced down to be cleared. It was one of only two goal attempts
of the whole afternoon which missed it;s mark (the other was saved). Villa did
score once, but Drake had the final word in the last minute with yet anither
goal from a bastin cross-field pass; seven goals away from home with just nine
shots.
1936 Arsenal WIN the F.A. Cup Final for
the second time
Saturday 25th April 1936. Arsenal defeated Sheffield United 1-0 at Wembley
with a goal from Ted Drake in the 74th minute from a Cliff Bastin clearance.
Drake was unable to get off the floor after scoring the goal due to pain from
an injured knee. When he finally got up, he remained on the field without actually
taking part in the remainder of the game. The team for the final was: Wilson,
Male, Hapgood, Crayston, Roberts, Copping, Hulme, Bowden, Drake, James and Bastin.
Incidentally, Arsenal had previously been fined £250 by the Football League
for resting players (Roberts and Drake) and fielding less than their most competitive
team between F.A. Cup ties (once Arsenal found that they were unable to win
the First Division for the 4th consecutive time).
The Road to the Second F.A. Cup | ||||
OPPOSITION ROUND VENUE SCORE SCORERS | ||||
Bristol Rovers | 3RD | Away | 5-1 | Bastin(2), Drake(2), Bowden |
Liverpool | 4TH | Away | 2-0 | Bastin, Hulme |
Newcastle United | 5TH | Away | 3-3 | Bowden(2), Hulme |
Newcastle United | (R) | Home | 3-0 | Bastin(2), Beasley |
Barnsley | 6TH | Home | 4-1 | Beasley(2), Bastin, Bowden |
Grimsby Town | SF | H'field | 1-0 | Bastin |
Sheffield United | FINAL | Wembley | 1-0 | Drake |
1936 Arsenal open new East Stand
Arsenal opened their new East Stand for the game against Grimsby on 24th October
1936 (scintilating 0-0 draw). The main stand, though planned to be identical
to the West Stand, finally cost far more (£130,000). One reason for this was
because it had an expensive public frontage - the West Stand is built almost
entirely behind a row of houses and is effectively invisible from that side.
1938 The First Division Championship Returns to Highbury
The First Division Championship returned to Highbury for the 5th time in 8 years.
If you add the two F.A. Cups won in 1930 and 1936, an increadible 7 trophies
were won in the space of 9 years. The final points tally of 52 points was the
lowest ever to head a championship in a 42 game season! Once again, Ted Drake
was the highest scorer with 17 goals dispite missing 15 league games through
injury, while Cliff Bastin contributed 15 goals. This Championship signalled
the end of a quite remarkable era when Arsenal became the most recognised football
team in the world!! The final table for 1937/8 was:
Champions
|
|||||||
P
|
W
|
D
|
L
|
F
|
A
|
PTS
|
|
Arsenal |
42
|
21
|
10
|
11
|
77
|
44
|
52
|
1939 Hollywood comes to North London?!
The last game at Highbury before the Second World
War was against Brentford on the 6th May 1939 and Arsenal won 2-0 with goals
from Alf kirchen and Ted Drake, but it was MORE noteable for the fact that it
was used to make the film "The Arsenal Stadium Mystery". Brentford in unusual
change strip, played the fictional part of "The Trojans" and several Arsenal
personalities took part in the film, including Cliff Bastin, Tom Whittaker and
George Allison.
1939 - 45 World War 2 Claims 9 Arsenal Players....
The War was to prove a tragic time for a heavily bombed Highbury. No less
than 9 of the 42 professionals on the books in 1939 failed to survive it, the
highest loss of any club. The nine players to lose their lives were, Henry Cook,
Bobby Daniel, William Dean, Hugh Glass, Leslie Lack, William Parr, Sidney Pugh,
Herbie Roberts and Cyril Tooze.