How Football Began A Global History of How The World's Football Codes Were Born (PDFDrive)
How Football Began A Global History of How The World's Football Codes Were Born (PDFDrive)
How Football Began A Global History of How The World's Football Codes Were Born (PDFDrive)
each other has been one of sporting history's great grey areas, dominated by
hearsay and invention. No longer. Tony Collins’ cool and illuminating How
Football Began brings range, precision and sources to bear on the matter. As
is often the case, the truths that emerge are infinitely more interesting than
the myths they dispel.’
David Goldblatt, Author of The Ball is Round: A Global
History of Football and The Game of Our Lives
HOW FOOTBALL BEGAN
Tony Collins
First published 2019
by Routledge
2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN
and by Routledge
711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business
© 2019 Tony Collins
The right of Tony Collins to be identified as author of this work has been
asserted by him in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright,
Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or
utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now
known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in
any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing
from the publishers.
Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or
registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation
without intent to infringe.
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
A catalog record for this book has been requested
ISBN: 978-1-138-03874-5 (hbk)
ISBN: 978-1-138-03875-2 (pbk)
ISBN: 978-1-315-17721-2 (ebk)
Typeset in Bembo
by Apex CoVantage, LLC
The cover of the paperback version of this book is based on the cover of
the 1867 Routledge Handbook of Football.
CONTENTS
List of plates ix
Introduction 1
Bibliography182
Index200
PLATES
How did football start? Why did the modern codes of football – Association,
American, Australian, Canadian, Gaelic, Rugby League and Rugby Union –
all emerge within barely a generation during the nineteenth century? And
why did association football eclipse all of them to become a truly global
game?
These questions are the starting point for How Football Began. It charts
the rise of football from its origins, through the creation of the first clubs,
its emergence as a mass spectator sport to it becoming a world game on the
eve of World War One. It explains why football divided into Association
and rugby codes, and how the rugby code itself split into league and union,
Australian, American, Canadian and Gaelic. It discusses the false starts of
women’s football and the obstacles women faced to play the game. And it
examines the ways in which soccer spread across Europe and Latin America
before World War One.
As the different varieties of the game expanded across the world they
were shaped by the same fault-lines. Wherever it was played, football was
haunted by divisions over amateurism and professionalism, and how to
respond to the challenge of becoming a mass spectator sport. Nationalism,
whether the unacknowledged everyday British nationalism of much of the
game or the explicit nationalism of Gaelic football, was etched into DNA of
2 Introduction
the sport. Myth-making and invented traditions were common to all forms
of football, as the game developed a narrative that would give it legitimacy
and a role in the cultural life of its nation.
Moreover, the book aims to emphasise the incredible speed at which
football emerged and became part of everyday life. In the space of two
generations at the end of the Victorian era the sport went from a handful
of clubs to become part of the lifeblood of millions of people around the
world. No form of entertainment had ever risen so rapidly in such a short
space of time. Football’s ‘shock of the new’ prefigured that of the cinema
and pop music in the twentieth century. The sport had become an integral
part of capitalism’s second industrial revolution, a mass entertainment spec-
tacle that seemed to replicate the competition and vicissitudes of everyday
life in the great industrial cities.
How Football Began also takes a different perspective to most histories of
the football codes, because it looks at football as the Victorians did: as a sin-
gle game that was played under different rules. The huge differences we see
today in the various types of football did not exist in Victorian times. Until
around 1880 it was common for players and teams to switch between one
set of rules and another, sometimes on a weekly basis. As a new social phe-
nomenon that transformed the leisure lives of millions of men and women,
football had the same cultural and economic impact on society regardless of
the shape of the ball or the number of players in a team.
It also offers a new approach by treating football as a transnational phe-
nomenon, and in particular as a product of the British Empire and the wider
Anglophone world. From its inception, football in the nineteenth century
was part of an English-speaking world that was shrinking due to the inven-
tion of the telegraph, the steam ship and the mass-circulation press. Discus-
sions, reports and news about football circulated across national boundaries.
In America, Walter Camp studied the rulebooks of the different codes of
football around the world. Melbourne’s William Hammersley visited the
Football Association in the 1880s to persuade them to try Australian Rules.
Albert Baskerville corresponded with American football administrators
before leading his pioneering New Zealand rugby league team to Britain
in 1907. During World War One female Australian Rules players in Perth
could read about women soccer players in Preston. From its inception in
the mid-nineteenth century, football saw itself as part of the transnational
culture of the British Empire, and from the early twentieth century its foot-
print quickly became global.
Most of all, the book will unravel the social and economic reasons for
the game’s rise throughout the world and to seek to explain why the game
came to mean so much to so many people, how it could bring people
Introduction 3
together and tear them apart, make women sing for joy and make grown
men weep openly on the streets.
It is not just about football. It is about the society that created it and
which football in turn helped to fashion.
Note
1 Arnold Bennett, The Card (London: Methuen, 1911), p. 134.
1
THE FAILURE OF THE FOOTBALL
ASSOCIATION
‘one or two London clubs’ should ‘frame rules for one universal game’.3 An
animated discussion ensued, with letters from current and former pupils
of Harrow, Charterhouse, Winchester and Rugby schools, each largely
agreeing with the sentiment but emphasising the superiority of their own
school’s code of rules.4 Joining the debate, the Sporting Gazette backed the
call for a single set of rules, arguing:
where would be the interest in the [cricket] contests between the elev-
ens of Surrey, Sussex, Kent,Yorkshire, Nottingham and Cambridgeshire
if the representatives of these counties has their own private opinion
respecting the laws of the game and the duties of umpires?5
Despite this animated debate, when the meeting finally convened at the
Freemason’s Tavern none of the public schools were represented, with the
exception of Charterhouse, whose football captain Benjamin Hartshorne
told the delegates that his school wouldn’t join the new organisation
until the other public schools did. This boycott did not merely deprive
the new association of prestige. It also made the framing of a set of com-
monly accepted rules almost impossible. Each of the leading English public
schools – Eton, Harrow, Charterhouse, Rugby,Winchester,Westminster and
St Paul’s – played football according to its own unique set of rules. Eton
even had two codes. One for its ‘Wall Game’ played against a wall in a nar-
row strip of land five metres wide and 110 metres long, and another for the
Field Game, played on a more familiar open pitch. Each school differed in
its concept of offside, the extent to which the ball could be handled, the
method of scoring, the shape and size of the ball, and much else besides.
A school’s method of playing football was a matter of intense pride to past
and present pupils, and ideas about the rules of the game were a symbol of
each school’s sense of superiority.
The formation of the FA was not the first attempt to design a single code
of rules for football. In 1856 the Cambridge University Foot Ball Club,
which appears to have been set up in 1846 by former pupils of Eton, Har-
row, Rugby and Shrewsbury, had printed a set of rules based on the princi-
ple of taking the best of each school’s rules.6 These eleven rules allowed any
player to catch the ball and prescribed a liberal offside rule that put a player
onside if there were three defenders between him and the goal. These rules
gained no support outside of the university and did not deter students from
forming separate university clubs devoted to Eton (in 1856), Harrow (1863)
and Rugby (1857) football rules. In 1859 the editor of Bell’s Life suggested
adopting a single code of rules for football (he proposed those of the Eton
field game) but quickly abandoned the suggestion after receiving ‘many
other letters on this subject by public schoolmen, but they are so mixed up
6 The failure of the Football Association
with abuse of each other that we consider them better unpublished, and
the correspondence closed’.7 Other writers, such as the Uppingham School
headmaster J.C. Thring, the journalist John Dyer Cartwright and a number
of pseudonymous authors also campaigned for football to be played under
a universal set of rules.8
All of the men who gathered at the Freemason’s Tavern had been edu-
cated in the traditions of public school football.9 Their aim was to find a
way of framing the schoolboy rules that would allow them to play as adults
and popularise the sport among like-minded young middle-class men, thus
ensuring that football became part of the social and business networks of
the growing professional classes. But now it came to deciding on a univer-
sal code the delegates were hamstrung. Not only did they know that their
decisions would be ignored by the public schools, but they themselves were
no less divided about how to codify a commonly accepted set of rules.
At least three of the ten clubs in attendance, Blackheath Football Club
(FC), Blackheath Proprietary School and the Blackheath-based Perce-
val House, were well-known adherents of Rugby’s School’s football rules.
Barnes FC, the club of the FA’s founding secretary, Hull-born solicitor
Ebenezer Cobb Morley, regularly played under rugby rules, as did the Civil
Service club. Indeed, it was not unusual for adult clubs to play under differ-
ent rules from week to week in order to have regular matches. Moreover,
each delegate was committed to his own ideas about the best way to play
football. So when they re-convened in November to discuss the rules they
became embroiled in discussions about the efficacy of crossbars, the desir-
ability of ‘fair catching’ and the dangers of unrestrained deliberate kicking of
shins, otherwise known as hacking. Such was the intensity of the discussion
that it was decided to hold a further, third meeting the following week to
arrive at the ‘final settlement of the laws’.10
But the next meeting settled nothing. The draft set of rules presented
to that third meeting by Ebenezer Morley was something of a football
Frankenstein’s monster, hurriedly bolting together various features of the
different public school codes. Rule 9 allowed players ‘to run with the ball
towards his adversaries’ goal if he makes a fair catch or catches the ball on
the first bound’, while Rule 13 permitted a player catching the ball directly
from a kick or on its first bounce to pass it by hand to another player.These
were two of the key elements of football as played at Rugby School, as was
Rule 10, which allowed defenders to ‘be at liberty to charge, hold, trip or
hack’ the ball-carrier.Yet the very next rule stated that ‘neither tripping nor
hacking shall be allowed’.11
If this wasn’t baffling enough, the meeting then plunged into further
confusion when Morley, supported by John Alcock, whose education
The failure of the Football Association 7
long process of trial and error that association football, as the FA’s version of
football was called, came to resemble modern soccer.
Having failed in its mission to unite all football clubs under one set of
rules, the FA’s fortunes plummeted. At its first anniversary, the FA minute
book noted that ‘no business was conducted’ and its committee did not
meet again until February 1866. By 1867 membership numbered just ten
clubs, barely half the nineteen that were members in December 1863.17
When John Alcock’s younger brother Charles published the first edition
of his Football Annual in 1868 he recorded thirty clubs using the FA’s rules
but forty-five playing Rugby School rules, despite the fact that no govern-
ing body yet existed for rugby-playing clubs. To no-one’s great surprise, or
interest, at the FA’s 1867 annual meeting Morley suggested that they ‘should
seriously consider that night whether it were worthwhile to continue the
association or dissolve it’.18 However, the other five delegates at the meet-
ing were not quite as pessimistic as Morley and concluded that it would be
worthwhile for the association to continue.
Their optimism was vindicated. Within a generation, the FA’s brand of
football would become a social, cultural and commercial juggernaut, the
most popular sport the world had ever known. But it would also be almost
unrecognisable to that small group of men who had met at the Freemason’s
Tavern.
Notes
1 Sporting Gazette, 10 October 1863.
2 Attendees listed in Bell’s Life in London, 31 October 1863. The advertisement
appears in the 17 October issue. For the documentary record of the FA’s rules
and committee minutes, see Tony Brown, The Football Association 1863–83:
A Source Book (Nottingham: Soccerdata, 2011).
3 ‘Etonensis’, The Times, 5 October 1863.
4 The Times, 6, 7, 9 and 10 October 1863.
5 Sporting Gazette, 10 October 1863.
6 The flimsy history of early football at Cambridge can be found in Graham
Curry, ‘The Trinity Connection: An Analysis of the Role of Members of Cam-
bridge University in the Development of Football in the Mid-Nineteenth Cen-
tury’, The Sports Historian, vol. 22 (November 2002), 46–74.
7 Bell’s Life, 2 and 16 January 1859.
8 See, for example, Graham Curry, ‘The Contribution of John Dyer Cartwright
to the Football Rules Debate’, Soccer and Society, vol. 4, no.1 (Spring 2003),
71–86. Thring and other pseudonymous authors can be found in the Sporting
Gazette, October to December 1863, passim.
9 For biographical details of the founders, see Any Mitchell, The Men Who
Wrote the Laws of Association Football at www.scottishsporthistory.com/sports-
history-news-and-blog/the-men-who-wrote-the-laws-of-association-football,
accessed 21 December 2017.
The failure of the Football Association 9
The high social status of the men who formed the FA in 1863 would have
come as a surprise to most of those who had played the game in previous
centuries. Before the industrial revolution football was largely seen as plebe-
ian entertainment, a folk practice that was played regularly on religious hol-
idays and rural festivals.The first written reference to it in Britain appears to
be William Fitzstephen’s preface to his 1174 biography of Thomas à Becket,
which describes a Shrovetide game of ball between London apprentices. In
the first decade of the fourteenth century Nicholas Farndon, the lord mayor
of London, banned football because it caused ‘certain tumults’, and in 1365
Edward III declared a national ban on football and handball because they
distracted the population from archery practice.2 Richard II re-imposed the
ban in 1388, stating that ‘servants and laboured shall have bows and arrows,
and use the same on Sundays and holidays, and leave all playing at ball
whether handball or football’. It was the same in Scotland, where the first
four King Jameses all banned the sport. Yet by Shakespeare’s time, football
had become such a part of national culture that references to it in literature
were not uncommon, perhaps most notably in King Lear when the Earl of
Kent taunts a servant as a ‘base football player’.
Before the beginning 11
Britain was just one of many countries around the world that throughout
history have played games we today would call football. In France, ‘soule’
occupied much the same place in popular culture as football did in Britain,
while in Italy ‘Calcio Fiorentino’ became a major feature of life in Flor-
ence as part of the celebrations of Epiphany and Lent in the fifteenth and
sixteenth centuries. But these were merely the most well-known European
versions of the game. The simple truth is that most cultures in most regions
of the world have played games with a ball that is propelled by hand and
foot towards some form of goal. From the Americas to Aboriginal Australia,
humans have found limitless pleasure, unbounded fascination and deep sat-
isfaction in playing and watching these games, which they may or may not
have called football. In China, Cuju, or Ts’u Chu, emerged from a form of
military training as a ceremonial game of the royal court under the Han
Dynasty and survived in various forms for 1,500 years.Women occasionally
played and apparently in its later years professionals were engaged to play
the game. But as with many ancient sports, Cuju was a largely ceremonial
game, played at the gatherings of the elite. Others, like Ulama and the vari-
ous ball games of Mesoamerica, had a religious or ritual significance. But
none of these games were either a direct ancestor or an inspiration for the
12 Before the beginning
modern games of football; humanity’s endless desire to play with a ball has
always been shaped by the social and economic characteristics of the society
it created.
In Britain, traditional football was a product of the rhythm and structures
of life in a rural society. Matches were staged as local customs during the
ebbs and flows of an agricultural economy. Festival games held across Brit-
ain and Ireland at Christmas or Shrovetide were often occasions for teams
of hundreds to attempt to carry, kick and throw a ball to goals at either
end of a village or town. The Derby Shrovetide game reputedly involved
1,000 men, the Sedgefield game 800, Diss Common in Norfolk 600, while
at Alnwick in Northumberland 200 men lined up for the annual match.
With such numbers, the playing was similarly large. Goals were three miles
apart for the Ashbourne game in Derbyshire, at Workington they were set
at Curwen’s Hall at one end of the town and the harbour at the other, while
Whitehaven’s goals were set at the docks and a wall outside of the town.
With local pride at stake, few rules and often challenging terrain to navigate,
including rivers and streams, the risks of physical injury were considerable,
further contributing to football’s reputation for violence and disorder.3
But this was not the only type of football to be played. Some were far
more organised and based on clearly defined rules. In 1729 Derbyshire
played Gloucestershire in Islington for five guineas; sixty years later the
stakes had increased somewhat when Cumberland played Westmoreland in
a twenty-two-a-side match at London’s Kennington Common for a thou-
sand guineas.4 In East Anglia from the fifteenth to the eighteenth century
‘camp-ball’ was played on dedicated pitches, known as ‘camping closes’
where ten- or fifteen-a-side teams fought to carry the ball to their oppo-
nents’ goal.5 ‘Hurling to goals’ was played in Cornwall between teams of
fifteen to thirty players and, like camp-ball, allowed forms of blocking (not
unlike modern American football) and required a player to throw the ball
to a teammate when tackled.6 Nor was traditional football always entirely
restricted to men. In October 1726 women played a six-a-side match on
Bath’s bowling green, married women played unmarried in Inveresk in
Midlothian in the late 1700s, and as late as 1866 and 1888 women took part
in the annual Uppies versus Doonies match at Kirkwall in Orkney Islands.7
Although many of the larger matches required the support of the local
landowners, the large numbers who gathered to play or watch often aroused
suspicion or concern in the authorities. As early as 1480 villagers protested
against the enclosure of land in Bethersden in Kent by occupying it and
playing with ‘foteballes’.8In 1649 fears that a royalist revolt lay behind ‘a great
Foot-ball play near Norwich, where the people were very tumultuous and
Before the beginning 13
disorderly’ proved well founded when part of the crowd declared for Charles
I.9 And as the enclosure of common lands intensified in the eighteenth cen-
tury, football again became a pretext for crowds to gather in protest, such as at
White Roding, Essex, in 1724, or at Kettering in 1740 when a match served
as a pretext for the attempted destruction of a local mill.10 From its earliest
times in Britain, football was always, as noted by the early chronicler of sport
Joseph Strutt, ‘much in vogue among the common people of England’.11
By the time that Strutt wrote this in 1801 football was increasingly under
attack from the economic and social forces that were transforming Britain
from a rural agricultural society into an urban industrial power. Enclosures
of common lands led to more than 6 million acres of land taken into private
ownership between 1750 and 1830, sweeping away many of the traditional
customs and leisure activities of village life. As a Suffolk vicar explained in
1844, his parishioners now had
no village green or common for active sports. Some thirty years ago,
I am told, they had a right to a playground in a particular field, at
certain seasons of the year, and were then celebrated for their football;
but somehow or other this right has been lost and the field is now
under the plough.12
In countless other towns and villages strenuous efforts were made by busi-
nessmen, religious evangelicals and moral reformers to stamp out football
games that caused town centres to close or violated the Sabbatarian’s sense
of good order.This was formalised in 1835 when the Highways Act banned
football being played on roads.
Not all footballers went quietly. Attempts to stop Derby’s Shrovetide
football match being played were regularly frustrated by determined
opposition before it was finally repressed in the 1850s. Football games
continued to be played informally in streets, at festivals and during holi-
day times such as wakes. The 1842 Royal Commission on Children in
Mines and Manufactories noted that football was played widely in the
West Riding coal fields. These types of football were essentially traditional
rural recreations, which persisted in a similar way to quoits, cudgels and
Maypole dancing. Occasionally organised football matches did take place
in the first half of the nineteenth century. In 1829 a fifteen-a-side match
was played for prize money of £6 between the Leicestershire villages of
Wigston and Blaby. Rochdale staged games between teams dubbed the
‘Body Guards’ and the ‘Fear Noughts’ in the 1840s. On Good Friday 1852
a match between Enderby in Leicestershire and Holmfirth in West York-
shire was played for £20 at Sheffield’s Hyde Park.13 But these were one-off
14 Before the beginning
reported Bell’s Life, which went to say that the aim of the club ‘was to restore
the equally healthful game of football to that district’.17
The position of football before the 1850s can best be gauged by the
fact that sports weeklies such as Bell’s Life, The Field and dozens of local
daily newspapers carried regular reports of cricket, boxing, horse racing and
many other sports – but almost nothing on football. Newspaper coverage
of the game was confined to short and highly irregular reports or adver-
tisements. But that should not be surprising. Outside of the public schools,
football was essentially an informal leisure practice or folk custom that had
no connection to the highly organised sport of the late Victorian era.18
Insofar as we know anything about the games that were played then, there
is nothing to suggest any connection between them and modern football’s
rules, playing styles, organisation or cultural meaning. When football did
emerge as a mass spectator sport in the last third of the nineteenth century
it had been reinvented. Outward appearances can often lead to continuities
Before the beginning 15
being imagined where none exist.The fact that a penguin walks upright on
its hind legs does not make it an ancestor of humans.
How could football fail to become a major spectator sport before 1860?
Why was it that when cricket, boxing and horse racing codified their rules
and became commercial spectator attractions in the eighteenth century,
football remained a marginal sport? Unlike these sports, football lacked the
aristocratic patronage of the ‘Fancy’ – the leisured rich who provided the
financial backing to sport in the Georgian era – and was not viewed as a sport
that could be commercially exploited through gambling. Its lowly social sta-
tus and reputation for violence precluded its developing like cricket because
young aristocrats would simply not play alongside the common people. Its
ephemeral nature made it unsuitable for gambling, the engine that drove the
transformation of cricket, boxing and other eighteenth-century sports. And
in striking contrast to the Victorian era, there were no clubs formed to play
football, underlining its lack of appeal to the emerging associational cul-
ture of the urban middle classes. Without aristocratic patronage or middle-
class social networks, there was no force that could standardise the rules of
football or impose a governing structure, as the Marylebone Cricket Club
(MCC) had done in cricket or the Jockey Club in horse racing.
Moreover, the most popular and therefore the most commercialised
sports of the Georgian era were based on individual professionals: the boxer,
the jockey, the pedestrian walker or runner and the cricket professional.
With the exception of cricket, eighteenth- and early nineteenth–century
sport was based on individuals competing against each other. And even
though cricket is a team game, its dominance by aristocratic amateurs on
and off the field, together with the fact that no more than a handful of pro-
fessionals were employed by teams, meant that it did not need a large market
of regular paying spectators to financially sustain its teams. The economic
basis for the development of the modern football codes – a large popula-
tion with significant leisure time and disposable income, plus a national
transport and communication network to facilitate playing and promoting
the game – would not emerge in Britain until the last three decades of the
nineteenth century.
Notes
1 Sir Walter Scott, The Lifting of the Banner, written in 1815 for a football match
between Ettrick and Yarrow.
2 The best summary of the early history of football games remains Francis P.
Magoun’s ‘Football in Medieval England and in Middle-English Literature’,
American Historical Review, vol. 35, no. 1 (October 1929), pp. 33–45, from which
this paragraph’s references are taken.
16 Before the beginning
3 Hugh Hornby, Uppies and Downies: The Extraordinary Football Games of Britain
(London: English Heritage, 2008).
4 Daily Journal, 13 September 1729; Issue 2710.The Cumberland match is recalled
in Bell’s Life, 7 October 1849.
5 Edward Moor, Suffolk Words and Phrases: or, An Attempt to Collect the Lingual Local-
isms of that County (London: Woodbridge, 1823), pp. 63–6. David Dymond, ‘A
Lost Social Institution: The Camping Close’, Rural History, vol. 1, no. 2 (Octo-
ber 1990), pp. 165–92.
6 Richard Carew, Survey of Cornwall (1710) (London: Faulder edition, 1811), p. 197.
7 Mist’s Weekly Journal, 8 October 1726. Bolton Chronicle, 28 February 1846. John
D.M. Robertson, The Kirkwall Ba’. Between the Water and the Wall (Edinburgh:
Dunedin Academic Press, 2005), pp. 115–21.
8 Heather Falvey, Custom, Resistance and Politics: Local Experiences of Improvement in
Early Modern England (unpublished PhD thesis, University of Warwick 2007),
p. 360.
9 Severall Proceedings in Parliament, 28 November 1650–5 December 1650.
10 Derek Birley, Sport and the Making of Britain (Manchester: Manchester Univer-
sity Press, 1993), p. 115. E.P. Thompson, ‘The Moral Economy of the English
Crowd in the Eighteenth Century’, Past & Present, vol. 50, no. 1 (1971), p. 116.
11 Joseph Strutt, The Sports and Pastimes of the People of England (1801) (London:
Methuen edition, 1903), p. 93.
12 Quoted in Eric Hobsbawm, Industry and Empire (London: Weidenfeld & Nicol-
son, 1968), p. 79.
13 Leicester Chronicle, 14 February 1829. Bell’s Life, 26 December 1841, 2 Janu-
ary 1842 and 28 March 1852.
14 Adrian Harvey, Football: The First Hundred Years (Abingdon: Routledge, 2005),
pp. 60–1 and 64. Graham Curry has made similar observations in ‘The Origins
of Football Debate: Comments on Adrian Harvey’s Historiography’, Interna-
tional Journal of the History of Sport, vol. 31, no. 17 (2014), p. 2160.
15 Nottingham Review, 14 October 1842. The best account of this decline remains
Robert Malcolmson, Popular Recreations in English Society 1700–1850 (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1973), pp. 138–45.
16 Bell’s Life, 26 December 1847.
17 Bell’s Life, 7 October 1849.
18 For a contrary view see Peter Swain, ‘The Origins of Football Debate: Football
and Cultural Continuity, 1857–1859’, International Journal of the History of Sport,
vol. 35, no. 5, pp. 631–49.
3
THE GENTLEMAN’S GAME
There was, however, one section of British society where football had
become hugely popular during the first half of the nineteenth century: its
elite private schools. By the time of the Great Reform Act of 1832, which
gave the vote to the middle classes, football was on its way to becoming an
essential part of the education of young men educated at Britain’s public
schools, as the elite private schools were known. Eton, Charterhouse, Harrow,
Rugby, Westminster and Winchester each developed their own distinctive
versions of the game. The undermining of football’s plebeian traditions by
the industrial revolution allowed the public schools and the middle classes to
embrace football as a symbol of the new ideology of Muscular Christianity.
Freed from the physical and social dangers of playing football against
those they saw as their social inferiors, these upper-middle class school-
boys took up the game with gusto. This should not be surprising. Public
schools were often located in places where folk football had a long history.
In the town of Rugby in the English midlands, for example, football had
been played every New Year’s Day since the early 1700s and as late as 1845
‘six tailors of Rugby’ challenged teams in the area to a match for a prize
of £5.2 For school authorities, football was welcomed as an outlet for the
18 The gentleman’s game
excess physical energies of adolescent youths. For the boys, the violence
with which they played was a source of pride: ‘the savage “rouge” or the
wild broken bully, would cause a vast sensation amongst our agricultural
friends’, an Old Etonian remembered in the 1860s.3
By the middle of the nineteenth century, the public schools had imbued
football, and also cricket, with a moral purpose and educational role that
would have been unthinkable in the gambling-obsessed Georgian era. The
ethos that underpinned Britain’s elite schools was Muscular Christianity,
which placed vigorous and masculine physical activity at the centre of its
character-building outlook. At root it was an expression of British nation-
alism, rendering the teachings of the Church of England into a credo that
both justified and maintained the principles of the British Empire. Thomas
Arnold, the headmaster of Rugby School from 1828 to 1841, had popu-
larised a Muscular Christian educational philosophy that sought to create
‘healthy minds in healthy bodies’ which, although he personally had no
interest in sport, valued games as importantly as academic studies. Healthy
minds were those seen as free of sin and moral weakness, and vigorous
football was promoted as a reliable antidote to the great triangular fear of
the Victorian public schools: masturbation, effeminacy and homosexuality.
‘Every school ought to regard it as part of its duty to and mission to rid itself
almost entirely of delicate complexions, narrow chests and feeble limbs’,
declared Loretto headmaster and prominent Scottish rugby official H.H.
Almond.4 Football therefore came to be seen as a vital part of the training
of the boys and young men who would grow up to lead the government,
industry and empire.
Other than two teams, two goals and a ball, every school’s football rules
were unique. Even the ball was not uniform: Eton’s ball was round but much
smaller than a modern soccer ball, Harrow’s resembled a large cushion and
Rugby’s was an irregular ovoid. Offside differed, in that Harrow and Rugby
deemed any attacking player in front of the ball to be offside, whereas the
Eton game deemed a player to be onside if there were at least three defend-
ers between him and the goal. Almost all schools allowed a ball in the air
to be caught with the hands but Eton only allowed the hands to be used to
knock the ball down. When the ball went over the touchline, play at Eton
and Winchester was restarted with a form of scrum, known as a ‘bully’ and
a ‘hot’, respectively, at Harrow and Winchester by kick-in and at Rugby by
a right-angled throw-in. A ball that went behind the goal line resulted in a
bully in front of goal at Eton, a kick for goal at Rugby or a kick-out by
the defending side at Harrow and Charterhouse. To complicate matters, the
‘Wall Game’ version of Eton football consisted of little more than endless
scrummaging as the ball was slowly propelled back and forth against a wall
The gentleman’s game 19
towards rarely reached goals. All schools decided matches solely by goals,
except for the Eton field game, which also counted ‘rouges’, the equivalent
of a try in the Rugby game.5
The rules of the Rugby School version of football were printed for the
first time in 1845, and those for the Eton field game appeared in print in
1847. But these circulated only among boys of the two schools and had little
influence on the spread of public school football into the wider population.
The book that played a major role in expanding the popularity of football
was not a rulebook but a novel, Tom Brown’s Schooldays. Written by Thomas
Hughes, an old boy of Rugby School, it was published in 1857. Based on
his own experiences of life at Rugby, Hughes’ book depicted the values of
Muscular Christianity as a boy’s adventure yarn, replete with trials of cour-
age and tests of character, a portrait of a saintly Thomas Arnold, and stern
warnings against bullying, effeminacy and ‘funk’, as cowardice was known.
Hughes’ book portrayed football as a school for moral education and char-
acter building through the simple technique of writing the most thrilling
descriptions of a football match yet committed to print.
It was a runaway best-seller. A guide for boys about to be packed off to
boarding school, a yardstick by which parents could judge a school and a
handbook for aspirational private schools, Tom Brown made football not
only morally respectable but also fashionable. It brought Rugby School
and its version of football to a new, national audience. This prestige was
enhanced several-fold in 1864 when the Clarendon Commission published
the report of its inquiry into the state of England’s leading public schools.
It lauded Rugby above all other schools, declaring it as ‘a national institu-
tion, as being a place of education and a source of influence for the whole
Kingdom’.6 Thanks to a best-selling novel and a Royal Commission seal of
approval, the Rugby version of football was now identified in the public
mind with morality, education and excitement.
This was the reason why Rugby School’s football survived and flourished
as an adult sport. None of the other public school codes of football survived
outside of their native environments, despite the social prestige of the insti-
tutions that produced them. Although elements of Eton and Harrow’s rules
were incorporated into the rules of the FA, the FA’s game was very different
to that seen on any public school playing field. Rugby’s sense of separateness
from other schools’ football was heightened by the crusading moral certitude
that the school imbued in its pupils, causing ‘Old Rugbeians’, as its former
pupils were known, to disdain those who did not share its traditions.This was
a not unimportant factor when it came to understanding the opposition to
its style of football. Antipathy to Rugby School football rules often reflected
public hostility to the widely perceived arrogance of its alumni.
20 The gentleman’s game
The enthusiasm for football among public schoolboys often did not
diminish as they began their adult lives. The game that had meant so much
to them at school now became the focus of their adult recreation. The
mid-1800s were a period of widespread concern about the health hazards
of living in the rapidly growing but dirty and polluted industrial cities. The
sedentary lifestyles of the new legions of office-bound lawyers, account-
ants, clerks and other administrators of the burgeoning capitalist economy
spurred the formation of gymnasia, athletic clubs and football teams. And, as
with the other male clubs, these new football clubs constituted an entirely
masculine kingdom. They provided a respite from the new world of Victo-
rian middle-class domesticity, offering young men a haven from women,
children and family duty, while giving them the opportunity to display an
overtly masculine physicality in defiance of contemporary fears of soft-
ness and effeminacy. Football was not only fashionable, it had also become,
perhaps more importantly, respectable. Between the publication of Tom
Brown’s Schooldays in 1857 and the formation of the FA at the end of 1863,
numerous football clubs would be formed by privately educated young
men, including Edinburgh Academicals (1857), Sheffield (1857), Liverpool
(1857), Blackheath (1858), Richmond (1861), Wanderers (1859), Manches-
ter (1860), Crystal Palace (1861), Lincoln (1862), Bradford (1863), Royal
Engineers (1863) and the Civil Service (1863).
Although football supporters have long debated which was the ‘first’
adult club to be formed, the reality was that the sudden creation of clubs
to play football in the 1850s and 1860s was part of a burgeoning new
associational world of social and business networks of the Victorian middle
classes. Between 1830 and 1870, fifteen of what would become seen as the
most prestigious elite gentleman’s clubs were formed in London, such as
the Garrick Club (1831), East India Club (1849) and the Hurlingham Club
(1869). In the provinces, the same social clustering took place, and as can
be seen from the previously mentioned roll-call of football clubs formed
in industrial cities, the game was one of its most conspicuous beneficiaries.
Perhaps the earliest example of these new middle-class football clubs was
that formed in Edinburgh by John Hope in 1824. He had played football at
Edinburgh’s High School and, on moving to what is now Edinburgh Uni-
versity and discovering that the game wasn’t played there, formed his own
‘football’ club. Composed largely of young Edinburgh solicitors, Hope’s
club lasted for seventeen years playing internal matches against each other.7
This would be the initial pattern for all clubs of the mid-Victorian era.
Liverpool members would divide into Rugby and Cheltenham old boys
versus the rest, Bradford played captain’s side versus secretary’s side, and
many clubs played fair versus dark, married against single, and when all else
The gentleman’s game 21
from home so long as we could get a game of some sort’, would have been
widely endorsed. Hull’s first away match was under FA rules at Lincoln in
1866 and, despite being known as a rugby club, they regularly played against
FA sides, so much that when the Nottinghamshire Guardian called for the for-
mation of a Midlands football association, it included Hull alongside Not-
tingham, Lincoln and Newark as one of the leading clubs of the region.10
Stoke Ramblers, the forerunner of Stoke City, played Sheffield rules against
clubs in Derbyshire and South Yorkshire, and rugby matches against the
Congleton and Leek clubs in their first season. Sale FC committed them-
selves in 1870 to play association and rugby on alternate Saturdays.11 Even
rugby-playing Bradford still set aside two Saturdays a season on their fixture
list for ‘association practice’ as late as 1873. Like Blackheath, London’s Civil
Service FC was a founder member of both the FA and the RFU. Manches-
ter FC, arguably Lancashire’s most socially prestigious rugby club, entered
the FA Cup in 1877. Clapham Rovers were so successful at both rugby
and association that they were not only a founding member of the RFU in
1871 but also won the FA Cup in 1880. The fluid nature of the rules of the
game at this time and the lack of what might be termed ‘code-patriotism’ is
exemplified by Bramham College, a small private school in West Yorkshire.
It played its own code of rules (which had soccer-style goals, rugby’s offside
and ‘fair catch’ rules, and allowed the ball to be propelled forward by the
runner bouncing the ball in front of him, as in Australian Rules) and was an
early member of the FA, but its old boys were founders of Bradford, Hud-
dersfield and Hull rugby clubs.12
Ultimately, the vast majority of footballers just wanted to play a game –
and codes of rules were merely a means to this end.
Notes
1 Anonymous poem, ‘The Rugby Union Game’, The Goal, 27 December 1873.
2 Jennifer Macrory, Running with the Ball: The Birth of Rugby Football (London:
Collins, 1991), p. 14, and Bell’s Life, 21 December, 1845.
3 Quoted in Richard Sanders, Beastly Fury: The Strange Birth of British Football
(London: Bantam, 2009), p. 75.
4 H.H. Almond, ‘Athletics and Education’, Macmillan’s Magazine, vol. 43 (Novem-
ber 1880–April 1881), p. 292.
5 C.W.Alcock (ed.), The Football Annual 1870 (London: Lilywhite, 1870), pp. 73–5.
Steven Bailey, ‘Living Sports History: Football at Winchester, Eton and Harrow’,
The Sports Historian, 15 (May 1995), pp. 2–31.
6 Report of the Commissioners on the Revenues and Management of Certain Colleges and
Schools, British Parliamentary Papers. Public Schools and Colleges,Volume XX,
Education, General 9. 1864, p. 266.
The gentleman’s game 23
football rules, they wrote to all of the public schools asking for a copy of
their football rulebooks.2 Having compared the rules of each school, the
club picked out those elements it liked, combined them with its own ideas
and in October 1858 voted to adopt what would become known as the
Sheffield rules of football.
Over the past two decades or so, these rules have become soccer’s version
of the William Webb Ellis myth. Just as rugby union promoted the myth of
Ellis picking up the ball and running with it during a game of football at
Rugby School in 1823 – without a shred of evidence – to explain the birth
of rugby, so too have soccer fans pointed to the Sheffield football rules as
being the true origins of the modern game.3 Uncomfortable with the fact
that what is often called the ‘people’s game’ was founded by the upper-
middle class administrators of the Football Association, many soccer sup-
porters have looked to Sheffield rules as a pure kicking and non-handling
form of football untouched by the public schools. But such a belief, like
the Webb Ellis myth, has no foundation in reality. This can be seen when
the wording of the 1858 Sheffield rules is compared to those of a leading
English public school [in brackets]:
1 Kick off from the middle must be a place kick. [vi. Kick off from middle
must be a place.]
2 Kick-out must not be from more than twenty-five yards out of goal. [vii.
Kick out must not be from more than ten yards of our goal if a place-
kick, not more than twenty-five yards if a punt, drop or knock on.]
3 Fair catch is a catch direct from the foot of the opposite side and entitles
a free kick. [i. Fair catch is a catch direct from the foot.]
4 Charging is fair in case of a place kick, with the exception of kick off, as
soon as a player offers to kick, but may always draw back unless he has
actually touched the ball with his foot. [ix. Charging is fair in case of a
place kick, as soon as the ball has touched the ground.]
Far from Sheffield rules being free of public school influence, the rules in
brackets are direct quotations from the 1845 Laws of Football Played at Rugby
School.
The links between Sheffield and Rugby School rules go even deeper.
Sheffield’s Rule 8, forbidding the ball from being picked up from the
ground, was common among rugby clubs and appears in the 1862 Rugby
School rules. Moreover, Sheffield rules did allow the ball to be handled by
outfield players. Rule 3 allowed catching with hands if the ball was caught
on the full in what was known as a ‘fair catch’, a term still in use in Ameri-
can football and which became known as a ‘mark’ in rugby and Australian
26 Sheffield
of the 1867 Youdan Cup final, which was won by Hallam FC, who scored
two rouges to Norfolk FC’s nil. Bell’s Life described Hallam’s first rouge:
After half an hour’s play the ball was kicked by Elliott, not through the
goal, but just over it, and was touched down by Ash in splendid style,
after running round two opponents before getting to the ball, thus
securing a rouge.
Notes
1 Sporting Life, 30 January 1867.
2 Adrian Harvey, Football: The First Hundred Years (Abingdon: Routledge, 2006),
p. 95.
30 Sheffield
3 For example, John Goulstone claims that ‘one could quite convincingly trace
soccer’s main ancestral line before 1867 back to Sheffield in 1857’ in his Foot-
ball’s Secret History (Catford: 3–2 Books, 2001), p. 50, while Adrian Harvey and
Peter Swain believe that Sheffield ‘both saved and created the rules of the [asso-
ciation] game’ in ‘On Bosworth Field or the Playing Fields of Eton and Rugby?
Who Really Invented Modern Football?’ International Journal of the History of
Sport, vol. 29, no. 10 (2012), p. 1427.
4 The Sheffield rules can be found in Harvey, Football, The First Hundred Years,
pp. 97–8. The 1845 Rugby School rules are in Jennifer Macrory, Running with
the Ball: The Birth of Rugby Football (London: Collins, 1991), on pages 86–9 and
subsequent rule amendments on pages 96–101.
5 Sheffield FC, Notebook of Match Reports mss, entry for 9 May 1863. York-
shire Evening Post, 8 December 1900. C.W. Alcock (ed.), John Lilywhite’s Foot-
ball Annual (Lilywhite: London, 1868). Sheffield & Rotherham Independent, 6
March 1876.
6 Sheffield Rules reprinted in Harvey, Football, The First Hundred Years, p. 117.
Youdan Cup report in Bell’s Life, 9 March 1867. Match report in Bell’s Life, 23
December 1860. The rouge was also used a method of scoring in Nottingham
football as late as the 1869–70 season; see match reports in the Nottingham Daily
Express, 15 January 1869 and 7 March 1870.
7 See for example the report on the Nottingham versus Sheffield match in Not-
tinghamshire Guardian, 2 February 1866.
8 Dennis Smith, Conflict and Compromise: Class Formation in English Society 1830–
1914 (London: RKP, 1982), pp. 51–5. E.P. Thompson, ‘Time, Work-Discipline
and Industrial Capitalism’, in Customs in Common (Harmondsworth: Penguin,
1993), pp. 374–5. D.A. Reid, ‘The Decline of Saint Monday 1766–1876’, Past &
Present, vol. 71, no. 1 (1976), pp. 76–101.
9 Rob Light, Cricket’s Forgotten Past: A Social and Cultural History of the Game in the
West Riding, 1820–70 (Unpublished PhD thesis, De Montfort University, 2008),
pp. 40–3.
10 Light, Cricket’s Forgotten Past, p. 93 and pp. 61–2.
11 Nottinghamshire Guardian, 6 January 1865.
12 See Andrew Dawes, The Development of Football in Nottinghamshire c.1860–1915
(Unpublished PhD thesis, De Montfort University, 2017) and Graham Curry
and Eric Dunning, ‘The “origins of football debate” and the Early Develop-
ment of the Game in Nottinghamshire’, Soccer and Society, vol. 18, no. 7 (2015),
pp. 866–79.
5
THE END OF THE UNIVERSAL
GAME
In the year 1871, eight years after the formation of the Association, the
Football Rugby Union [sic] came into existence on the lines of the
FA. These two institutions soon embraced all the football players of
the United Kingdom. Thus, though one general code of rules for uni-
versal adoption was not realised, two codes were . . . brought into exist-
ence and universally adopted.
—R.G. Graham, FA secretary, 18991
Sheffield may have been the first city to develop a recognisably modern
football culture, but it was merely the first cuckoo of a football spring that
would soon blossom across all industrial towns and cities in Britain. A few
miles north of Sheffield, football clubs were formed by privately educated
young men in Bradford, Leeds, Hull and Huddersfield, and the popularity
of the game among the middle classes became such that the first repre-
sentative football match of any type was played in Leeds in 1870 when
Yorkshire played Lancashire. Although played under rugby rules, the York-
shire team included five players from Sheffield FC. The social tenor was
indicated by the advertisement for the match that appeared in the York-
shire Post: ‘Lancashire will be represented by Gentlemen from Manchester,
Rochdale, Preston, Burnley and other towns.Yorkshire by Gentlemen from
Bradford, Huddersfield, Hull, Sheffield and Leeds’. In Lancashire, former
pupils of Eton and Rugby schools formed the first clubs in Liverpool and
Manchester, followed by Sale (1861), Swinton (1866) and Rochdale (1867),
each one established by young business and professional men who were
32 The end of the universal game
Rugby rules’, because those were the rules played by all of the local sides.6 In
much of the north, not to play rugby rules would mean not to play football.
Football’s growth in popularity among the provincial middle classes in
the 1860s largely passed the FA by. In contrast, the number of clubs play-
ing Rugby School rules, or a modified version of them, continued to rise.
The FA’s existential crisis of 1867 stimulated it to seek new members and
it wrote to all football clubs, including those at public schools, appealing for
them to ‘aid’ – not even join – it in establishing ‘a universal code accord-
ing to which all matches may be played’.7 The rule changes of 1867, which
brought the FA closer to the Eton and Harrow games, were motivated by
Charles Alcock as being ‘the only step to inducing the public schools to
join them’.8 The fluidity of football rules at the time can be seen by the let-
ter’s reference to ‘a universal code’ and by the fact it was also sent to Rugby
School. The school declined to join but replied asking if the FA was also
interested in establishing a common set of rules for clubs following Rugby’s
football traditions. This was not a mistake on their part. Even as late as 1870
FA secretary Charles Alcock appealed ‘to all footballers alike, whether they
be of the hacking or non-hacking persuasion’ to join the FA to ‘effect a
code of rules that shall unite all the various differences under one recog-
nised head’ and create ‘one universal game’.9 Rugby School’s request does
not appear to have been followed up, but Alcock's letter more than fulfilled
its purpose when Westminster and Charterhouse schools both joined the
FA, two of twelve schools which affiliated in response to the letter.
Was the revival of the FA due to ‘the successful nature of football activity
in Sheffield [that] encouraged the FA to continue at a time when its offi-
cials were considering disbanding the organisation’, as some historians have
argued?10 In reality the FA’s leaders paid little heed to their northern com-
patriots. When a London FA team played Sheffield FC in 1866 the match
was played under the FA’s rules. Sheffield FC delegate William Chesterman
attended the FA’s 1867 annual general meeting and proposed three amend-
ments to the FA rules, one of which was in support of the rugby-style rouge,
all of which were decisively voted down. Instead, the FA went in precisely the
opposite direction and sought to bring their game more in line with those
public schools that played ‘non-handling’ football. It was E.C. Morley’s Barnes
FC, not the Sheffield club, that proposed banning the use of hands to knock
down the ball, a significant step towards a ‘hands-free’ version of football.11
The reality was that Sheffield had very little influence over the FA. Over the
next decade the Sheffield clubs were forced to accept its leadership and aban-
don almost all of their unique rules before being absorbed by the FA in 1878.
The FA underwent further changes in 1868, when its committee was
enlarged from four to ten members.This was not merely a numerical increase
34 The end of the universal game
H.H. Almond, was the ‘parent code’ and the FA had no right to claim to
be representing the Scottish nation. Stung by the FA’s impertinence, rugby
clubs on both sides of the border began to organise.
Two weeks after the second FA international, the captains of Scotland’s
five leading rugby clubs challenged rugby players in England to an inter-
national match to take place in Glasgow or Edinburgh.15 Soon after that,
Benjamin Burns and Edwin Ash, the secretaries of the Blackheath and
Richmond clubs, respectively, published an appeal in Bell’s Life to ‘the sup-
porters of Rugby Football’ to meet and ‘join with us in framing a code of
rules to be generally adopted’.16 A month later, on 26 January 1871, thirty-
two delegates representing twenty rugby-playing clubs met at the Pall Mall
Restaurant in London’s Charing Cross and in little more than two hours
agreed a constitution and appointed a committee of three old Rugbeians
to draft what they referred to with typical pomposity as ‘the Laws of the
Game’. The Rugby Football Union had been founded. Two months later,
on 27 March, 8,000 people assembled at Edinburgh’s Raeburn Place to
watch Scotland defeat England in the first rugby international. The honour
of the Scottish nation was upheld, and the position of rugby as its most
important code of football was re-established. Or so it seemed.
PLATE 3
Soccer or Rugby? The 1872 England versus Scotland rugby international
(The Graphic, 24 February 1872)
36 The end of the universal game
Alcock’s ambition for the FA had not been sated however. In the same
month that Burns and Ash had issued the call for a rugby union, the FA
organised a North versus South match, once again seeking to capitalise on
existing regional rivalries while emphasising that the FA was a truly national
organisation. But Alcock’s biggest initiative came on 20 July 1871 when the
FA Committee met and backed his proposal that ‘a Challenge Cup should
be established in connection with the Association, for which all clubs should
be invited to compete’. Cup tournaments in public schools at this time
were commonplace – in the 1870 Football Annual, Alcock noted that Eton,
Harrow Rugby, Cheltenham and Haileybury all staged knock-out competi-
tions for teams in their respective schools – and the aim of the FA Cup was
to stimulate interest in the game among young men in the professions and
increase the attractiveness of the FA to unaffiliated football clubs.
The new competition was endorsed by the clubs on 16 October and
a little over three weeks later, on 11 November 1871, the first round of
the Football Association Challenge Cup kicked off with fifteen teams.17
Two matches in the first round resulted in walkovers when their opponents
failed to turn up. Queen’s Park were awarded a bye in the first two rounds
and so did not play a game in the tournament until the semi-finals, which
they drew 0–0 with Alcock’s Wanderers FC in Glasgow. They then with-
drew from the competition when faced with a mid-week journey down to
London for the replay. Wanderers therefore met the Royal Engineers in the
final, dominating the game and running out 1–0 winners, thanks to a goal
after fifteen minutes from Morton Betts, who like Alcock was an Old Har-
rovian. Scoring the winning goal was just about the only thing Alcock did
not do, although he did have one effort disallowed. He not only captained
the Wanderers side, but the final, like the England versus Scotland matches,
was also staged at Surrey cricket club’s Kennington Oval. The FA Cup was
truly his creation.
The consequences of Alcock’s initiative would eventually revolutionise
football, yet this was neither the intention of, nor apparent to, him or the
other leaders of the FA at the time. But what was completely clear to all
was that the Association and Rugby organisations were going their own
separate ways. Football was now irrevocably split. There would never be a
universal game.
Notes
1 R.H. Graham, ‘The Early History of the Football Association’, Badminton Maga-
zine,VIII (1899), p. 87.
2 Collins, Rugby’s Great Split, pp. 11–12. For Stoke, see Martyn Dean Cooke and
Gary James, ‘Myths,Truths and Pioneers:The Early Development of Association
Football in the Potteries’, Soccer and Society, vol. 19, no. 1 (2018), pp. 9–10.
The end of the universal game 37
Wanderers 2–1 in the final. Every week, tens of thousands played the game
and hundreds of thousands more paid to watch it. Almost 700 young men
were engaged as full-time professional players with Football League clubs,
each of which was run as a commercial operation and were organised into
leagues that ensured high-quality matches every Saturday afternoon for
their paying customers.3 National and local newspapers alike employed
journalists solely to report on the daily doings of the sport, almost every
town had a Saturday night newspaper devoted to the day’s football activity,
and railway companies ran excursions that criss-crossed the country taking
players and supporters to and from matches. No longer the game of exclu-
sive gentlemen’s clubs, the association game was now the sport of the multi-
millioned masses. It had, as Eric Hobsbawm would note, become ‘a sort of
lingua franca’ of working-class men the length and breadth of Britain.4
In contrast, rugby had no national cup tournament. In 1877 Calcutta FC
had disbanded and donated a trophy as ‘a challenge cup to be annually com-
peted for by all rugby union clubs’ on the lines of the FA Cup. The RFU
declined the suggestion because of ‘difficulties of all clubs playing together’,
and instead awarded the ‘Calcutta Cup’ to the winners of the annual
England versus Scotland match.5 It was a decision that would play no small
part in rugby’s reversal of fortune. By 1895, rugby’s clubs still numbered in
the hundreds; with few exceptions its crowds could not compare with those
of soccer, and the RFU had also forbidden league competitions. Worst of
all, there were now two rugby unions – the RFU and the Northern Union
(which would become known as rugby league) – the result of a bloody
decade-long battle fought over the legalisation of payments to players that
shattered the game into separate middle- and working-class constituencies.
Any rugby player who played the northern game was banned for life by the
RFU from ever playing the union code again. In the war of the football
codes, rugby was the indisputable loser.
A generation after the FA’s attempt to create a single universal game,
Britain now had three versions of football. Not only had the face of football
utterly changed, but it had happened with startling rapidity. The 1870s saw
the game leave the world of exclusive gentleman’s clubs to become a sport
played and watched by all classes.The 1880s saw it further transmogrify into
a commercial juggernaut that commanded the attention of millions. And
just when people thought it could not become any more popular, its appeal
expanded yet further. Like the railways in the 1830s or the internet in the
2000s, the normally slow alchemy of historical change was compressed into
a few short years, transforming the rocks of public school football into the
diamonds of mass spectator sport.
This new football was a product of Britain’s second industrial revolu-
tion, the result of railways transforming travel and industry and technologies
40 From the classes to the masses
with surprise and pleasure the faces of old school companions, who
had long since renounced active and vigorous exercise, and resigned
themselves to the dust and dyspepsia of business; but who . . . have
From the classes to the masses 41
Many football clubs – including Derby County, Preston North End, Halifax
and Widnes – were the product of cricketers’ desire to continue playing
sport after the summer had ended. Like the early development of football in
Sheffield and Nottingham, the link with cricket also provided football clubs
with the administrative models with which to organise the sport. In 1874,
Yorkshire’s five leading football clubs came together to form the Yorkshire
County Football Club. Shortly after, in 1875, the Birmingham District FA
was founded to bring together ten local sides. It was followed within eight-
een months by the creation of county associations in Shropshire, North
Staffordshire and Walsall and District. As in cricket, these associations also
The
PLATE 4 Goal: launched in 1873 as probably the first dedicated football weekly
42 From the classes to the masses
these became the means by which football was transformed into a mass
spectator sport.
The appeal of playing in the FA Cup and the regional competitions of
both codes led to increasing numbers of clubs joining the FA or RFU. The
importance of victory in cup tournaments meant that clubs had to spe-
cialise in one code or the other to maximise their chances of winning, and
as a consequence the Sheffield FA found itself squeezed between the two
national organisations. Sheffield joined the FA with hopes of converting
it to their own rules but the FA proved impervious. For Sheffield, games
against London and Glasgow were the highlight of the local season, but
differences in the rules left these matches unsatisfactory as a true test of
intercity pride. Sheffield’s insistence on only one defender – who could be
the goalkeeper – between the goal and the attacking players, as opposed to
London and Glasgow’s three defenders, essentially meant its game had no
offside rule. Eventually, the Sheffield FA abandoned its own rulebook and
adopted the FA’s rules. Football had discarded the last of its local variations
and was now consolidated around the twin poles of the FA and RFU.
It was no coincidence that four of the most important football centres
of the 1880s – Sheffield, Leeds, Birmingham and Glasgow – were also the
cities that experienced the highest percentage annual population growth
in the second half of the nineteenth century.10 Like Sheffield, Birmingham
was a city of small industrial, predominantly engineering, factories, where
working practices such as Saint Monday were difficult to suppress and left
a strong sense of entitlement to leisure among skilled workers.11 Leeds and
Glasgow were cities of large-scale factory-based industry, whether it be the
woollen trade and engineering in Leeds or shipbuilding and heavy engi-
neering in Glasgow. As people flocked to these cities in search of employ-
ment, an entertainment industry emerged to provide amusement outside
of work. Music halls, which had emerged in London in the 1850s, domi-
nated the leisure landscape by the 1880s, by which time every major town
and city had at least one ‘palace of varieties’.12 The brewing industry also
expanded rapidly, building new pubs of unprecedented size and luxury.13
Mass literacy boosted the popularity of local and regional newspapers,
which responded by publishing Saturday night entertainment specials –
one of the earliest being Birmingham’s Saturday Night, which first appeared
in 1882 – that soon became devoted to sport and especially to the after-
noon’s football results. And as well as the fortunes of the top sides, much
of that newsprint space was devoted to local tournaments and junior clubs.
This explosion of interest in the game was made possible by the increased
leisure time and rising standard of living of the industrial working class.Tex-
tile workers in northern England, such as in the future cradles of football
in the cotton towns of Lancashire and the woollen producers of West York-
shire, had secured a two o’clock end to work on Saturdays in 1850, and
the August Bank Holiday was made law the following year. In 1874 parlia-
ment passed another Factory Act that made the one o’clock end to work
on Saturdays the norm. The impact of this reduction in working time was
described by Moses Heap, a Lancashire cotton spinner:
for a while we did not know how to pass our time away. Before it had
been all bed and work; now in place of seventy hours a week we had
fifty-five and a half. It became a practice, mostly on Saturdays, to play
football and cricket, which had never been done before.14
From the early 1870s, wages also began to rise and provided work-
ing people with disposable income to spend on leisure, adding a fur-
ther stimulus to the development of the entertainment industry. But this
increased spending power and leisure time did not automatically mean
that football would become the sport of the working class.15 Writing
about the early 1870s in York, Jack Shaw, one of York FC’s pioneering
players, recalled that
all the sport in which the working men of York seemed interested
was rabbit coursing. Hundreds of them used to assemble on the
Knavesmire [one of York’s main public spaces] on a Saturday after-
noon to indulge in this so-called sport and when they saw the football
players they made jeering references to the ‘silly fools who kicked the
ball about in the wet’.16
teams with Old Harrovians and manual workers playing Harrow School
rules, while the Pilkington works rugby team in St Helens on Merseyside
contained both shop-floor workers and the heirs to the Pilkington for-
tune.18 Such workplace-based teams were created by employers as an early
form of what became known as ‘welfare capitalism’, using sport to foster a
sense of corporate unity and esprit de corps.
In a similar way, the Anglican church viewed football as the apple to tempt
working-class youths away from idleness, crime and immorality, and towards
Christian duty. The list of football clubs that emerged from church organi-
sations is a roll-call of subsequently famous clubs of all codes: Aston Villa,
Bolton Wanderers, Everton, Northampton Saints, Leeds Rhinos, Wakefield
Trinity, to name just a handful.The vast majority of these new working-class
footballers remained steadfastly inured to the church’s appeal to piety, and
church clubs usually succumbed eventually to the exigencies of competitive
football and abandoned their evangelical mission. Not even the spiritual
power of the Anglican church could now stand in the way of football.
Within fifteen years of the first FA Cup final, soccer would be domi-
nated by clubs that drew their players and supporters from the industrial
proletariat. In rugby, the very same process would break the game into two
hostile camps. In both soccer and northern rugby, the game’s tactics, rules
and culture were transformed by the invention and enthusiasm of working-
class people. This was recognised by contemporary commentators, such as
A.A. Sutherland, the football columnist of the weekly Clarion, who in 1893
celebrated the contribution of the working class to football over the previ-
ous two decades:
The prosperity and popularity of the game dates from the time the
working man commenced to interest himself in it, both physically and
mentally. His success at the game may not be quite suitable to the tastes
of the Corinthian, but it is nevertheless a fact that since he poked his
nose into the recreation, football has come on in leaps and bounds.19
Notes
1 ‘A Londoner’, ‘Metropolitan Football’, in Rev. Frank Marshall (ed.) Football:The
Rugby Union Game (London: Cassell, 1892), p. 329.
2 Bell’s Life, 7 January 1871. Membership figures from RFU minute books, 1871–
75 and C.W. Alcock, The Football Annual (London: Lilywhite, 1874).
3 Professional player figures from Tony Mason, Association Football and English
Society 1863–1915 (Brighton: Harvester, 1981), p. 38, and Matthew Taylor, The
Leaguers: The Making of Professional Football in England, 1900–1939 (Liverpool:
Liverpool University Press, 2005), p. 85.
46 From the classes to the masses
Nowhere could the face of modern football be seen more clearly than in
Glasgow. If Sheffield’s football culture of the 1860s was the first cuckoo of
the football spring, Glasgow’s football culture from the 1870s blossomed
into the most glorious summer to create the archetypal football city. Its
population doubled to over 760,000 between 1851 and 1901, and it became
home to almost 20 per cent of Scotland’s entire population.2 The rapid
growth of the shipbuilding industry – by 1913 the city was producing more
shipping tonnage than the entire national output of Germany or the United
States – and other engineering trades saw working-class living standards rise
between a third and a half.
Organised football was probably first played in the city in 1864 under
rugby rules at Glasgow Academy, the city’s elite private school. In 1866,
the school’s old boys formed the Glasgow Academicals club, following
the creation of the West of Scotland club the previous year. Both sides yet
again emerged from cricket clubs. Association rules were brought to the
city in 1867 when Queen’s Park FC was founded, again by privately edu-
cated young professional men. In 1871 Queen’s Park joined the FA and in
1872 organised the first official Scotland versus England soccer match at
48 Glasgow
Glasgow’s Hamilton Crescent cricket ground. This was to prove the catalyst
for soccer’s immense popularity in the city.
Over the next fifteen years, Scotland won nine and England just two
of their encounters. It was not merely that Scotland won, but the exuber-
ant manner in which they did it. Between 1876 and 1882, the scorelines
read 3–0, 3–1, 7–2, 4–5, 5–4, 6–1, 5–1. It wasn’t until 1888 that England
managed their first win in Glasgow. Every Scotland versus England match
was played in Glasgow, and consequently the city became co-terminus not
merely with the association game but also with Scottish identity itself. From
1906 onwards, there would never be less than 100,000 people attending
Scotland versus England matches, none of which would be lost by Scotland,
and these matches would make up five of the six matches in Britain that
drew more than 100,000 spectators.3 In contrast, with the exception of a
desultory rain-sodden 0–0 draw with England in 1873, the Scottish Rugby
Union team kept itself to its Edinburgh heartland, with the result that rugby
in Glasgow stood loftily aloof from the explosion of interest in football in
the city; a mere eleven rugby clubs were formed in the city between 1874
and 1900.4
Yet by 1890 there were hundreds of soccer clubs playing in every corner
of Glasgow, with major club matches regularly attracting crowds in excess
of 10,000, and many more for important cup matches.The city had become,
in the words of Keith Angus in 1880,
a veritable home for football. Few but those who have been pre-
sent at the Scottish matches can realise the extraordinary enthusi-
asm displayed by the spectators. Thousands and thousands witness
even minor contests, and consequently the contrast is wonderful to
one accustomed to the sprinkling of onlookers at a metropolitan
contest.5
By the early 1900s, Glasgow’s three major football stadia – Hampden, Ibrox
and Parkhead – could together accommodate over 300,000 spectators,
almost half of the city’s population of 762,000.6 Nor was it just as spec-
tators that football captured the imagination of the population. Matthew
McDowell has calculated that by 1900 a soccer club existed for every 160
males aged between 15 and 29 living in central Scotland.7
The passion that gripped urban Scots for soccer was facilitated by the
works of the municipal age. The trams that had been introduced to the city
in 1871 allowed players and spectators to travel across the city to play and
support their teams. The public parks that had been created provided ample
space for the playing of football, not to mention the name for Queen’s
Glasgow 49
Park FC. And the local press provided the daily sustenance for the unend-
ing conversations about the game throughout the workshops and offices of
the city. In 1884 the Scottish Athletic Journal claimed sales of 20,000 a week,
undoubtedly a factor in the Glasgow Herald publishing its first local Saturday
sports’ edition that year, the first of many the city would see.8
Other industrial regions could boast similar levels of interest to that
in Glasgow, but none could match the completeness with which football
enveloped the city. In 1886, 20,000 people crammed themselves into the
Yorkshire Cup semi-final between Halifax and Batley, larger than any FA
or Scottish FA Cup final crowd thus far.9 In Birmingham, its Saturday Night
newspaper in 1883 could list 107 local clubs of sufficient standing to war-
rant a place in its unofficial merit tables, alongside seven local cup competi-
tions.10 But Glasgow was unique in its huge number of clubs, the immensity
of its crowds and, lacking any rivalry from rugby or cricket, the complete
identification of the city with soccer. Moreover, because the Scottish
national team played almost all its home matches in the city, usually result-
ing in the defeat of the English, the identification of Glasgow, Scotland and
soccer became one and indivisible. National, local and, given the dominance
of the sport by working-class players and spectators by the 1880s, class pride
became intertwined so much so that Glasgow was Scottish football. If Paris
was the capital of the nineteenth century, as Walter Benjamin described it,
Glasgow was the football capital of the age, setting the template not only
for the world football cities such as Rio de Janeiro, Buenos Aires, Milan or
Barcelona, but also providing the archetype for the relationship between
football and the city.
Glasgow’s experience underlined a deeper truth about football’s appeal.
As its economy expanded, people moved into the city in search of work. It
was a city of immigrants, from Ireland, England, and the Scottish country-
side. In 1881 almost half of its population had been born outside of the city.
As people poured into Glasgow’s tenement blocks, football provided Sat-
urday afternoon entertainment they could share with their neighbours and
workmates, strengthening the collective bonds of local solidarity. Up until
the legalisation of professionalism in 1893 by the Scottish FA, it was quite
likely that the players they cheered also lived and worked alongside them,
further enhancing a sense of belonging. Local patriotism and civic pride
could be expressed on an almost continual basis through football, whereas
outside of the stadium it was usually confined to elections or war-time.11
But football also brought something that was new. For perhaps the first
time in human history since the age of the Roman colosseum, one could
pay a small amount of money to experience extremes of emotion. For two
hours or so, the world of work and daily life could be set aside while the
50 Glasgow
spectator rode a collective roller-coaster of intense highs and lows, joy and
despair, exultation and frustration. People did not merely watch football
from the terraces, they experienced it alongside thousands of other people.
Unlike the theatre, the concert or the music hall, football allowed participa-
tion for both the player and the audience. The spectator chose a side and
then, through shouting, singing, chanting, cheering and booing with their
fellow fans, sought to affect the outcome of the match. The win or loss was
felt as intensely by the fan as it was by the player.
The weekly cycle of matches meant that the game could be discussed
throughout the week, anticipating the new experience of the following
weekend. Even the sheer size of the crowds that attended matches became
part of its unique and new appeal. ‘Monster crowds’ were not unknown for
great civic or political occasions, but football offered the opportunity to be
part of a huge collective throng, with its unconscious rhythms, spontaneous
flows and sense of belonging, every other week. Such a level of personal
involvement was something that no other form of entertainment could
provide. Indeed, it allowed the spectator to experience intense emotions
that, outside of matters of life and death, would be unavailable to them in
everyday life. The constant military references in sports reports were not
just an expression of the jingoism of the times but also an attempt to con-
vey an emotional palette that most people would only experience in war-
time. But football replicated the potency of those feelings without harm or
repercussion.
Although the game offered the most visceral experience, this ‘commodi-
fication’ of the emotions was not unique to football and could also be seen
in many of the newly commercialised forms of leisure of the late nineteenth
century.The ‘sensation novel’, in which the reader was drawn into worlds of
sex, murder and insanity, sought to stimulate the emotions, a phenomenon
given additional impetus with the rise of the Gothic novel, perhaps most
famously with the success of Bram Stoker’s Dracula in 1897. The growth of
the popular press and the attention it paid to murders, especially the Jack the
Ripper killings of 1888, also sought to capitalise on this stimulation of emo-
tion. For the well-heeled middle classes, opera offered the same emotional
intensity at a somewhat higher price. But until the rise of the cinema and
popular music in the twentieth century, nothing could compete with the
ability of football to offer a capsule moment of intense emotion without
consequence.12
The unique and multi-faceted appeal of football of whatever code led to
an exponential growth in the numbers of people attending matches in the
last two decades of the Victorian era. Barely 2,000 people watched Wander-
ers’ victory over the Royal Engineers in the 1872 FA Cup Final.The crowd
Glasgow 51
wouldn’t reach five figures until Blackburn Rovers’ second successive win
in 1885. But from then on attendances ballooned, reaching 45,000 in 1893
and 101,000 in 1901. Scottish crowds reached five figures as early as 1877,
when Vale of Leven prevailed over Rangers in an epic final that was drawn
twice, and expanded to over 40,000 for the first time in 1892. Although
rugby’s Yorkshire Cup final outdrew the FA Cup final until the mid-1880s,
the civil war that fractured rugby effectively scuppered its ability to attract
crowds approaching six figures until the inter-war years.
Glasgow’s impact on the game was as great on the field as it was off
it. The intensity of its competitions forged highly skilled players and cre-
ated a style of play based on team-work, combination and close passing
that became known as the ‘scientific’ game. Reflecting everyday life in the
factories, shipyards and working-class communities of the region, collectiv-
ity underpinned the Scottish way of football. As the regular victories over
England demonstrated, Scottish players and tactics were far more advanced
than the individual play of the English public schools or the long-ball game
of the Sheffield clubs.13
This did not go unnoticed by the ambitious association clubs of Lanca-
shire. In January 1878, Glasgow’s Partick FC travelled down to play Darwen
in the heart of Lancashire’s cotton district, the third match that the two
sides had played over the previous two years. A few months later, at the
start of the following season, Partick’s Fergus Suter and James Love joined
the Lancastrians. It was widely suspected that both were being paid by the
club. When Suter then transferred to Blackburn Rovers at the end of the
1879–80 season, no-one was in any doubt.14
Football was on the cusp of another revolution.
Notes
1 R.M. Connell, ‘The Association Game in Scotland’, The Book of Football (Lon-
don: Amalgamated Press., 1906), p. 45.
2 Figures and much of the detail of this chapter can be found in Peter Bilsbor-
ough’s outstanding The Development of Sport in Glasgow, 1850–1914 (MLitt the-
sis, University of Glasgow, 1983).
3 The other being the drawn 1901 FA Cup final Between Tottenham and Shef-
field United at Crystal Palace.
4 Bilsborough, Development of Sport in Glasgow, p. 111.
5 J. Keith Angus, The Sportsman’s Year Book (London: Cassell, 1880), p. 19.
6 Bill Murray, The Old Firm (Edinburgh: John Donald Publishers, 1984), p. 35.
7 Matthew L. McDowell, A Cultural History of Football in Scotland (New York:
Edwin Mellen Press, 2013), p. 14.
8 Bilsborough, Development of Sport in Glasgow, p. 236. Murray, The Old Firm, p. 47.
9 Athletic News, 1 June 1886.
52 Glasgow
Football is played more scientifically than it ever was, and that is solely
due to the fact that in a professional team the men are under the control
of the management and are constantly playing together.
—William Suddell, Preston North End manager, 18871
Scottish villages has tended, in no small degree, to brutalise the game’.7 Cup
competitions therefore tended to undermine the informal social codes that
had previously governed the sport. As a Birmingham FA committee mem-
ber bemoaned in 1884, cups were ‘the root of the evil’ of professionalism.8
So it did not come as a surprise that when the first reports of men being
paid or offered employment to play football appeared in the late 1870s,
the leaders of both codes felt something had to be done. The concern was
heightened by the fact that the popularity of the sport was based on its
appeal to civic identity, and this appeared to be threatened by what was
known as the ‘importation’ of players from outside the area. To counteract
the threat of paid players, the initial impulse of both codes of football was,
once again, to follow the lead of cricket.
Consequently, in late November 1879 the Yorkshire Rugby Union com-
mittee decided that
But the MCC’s definition of an amateur was simply a player who took
‘no more than his expenses for a match’. This was deliberately vague – in
reality, an amateur cricketer was by definition a gentleman, a term easy to
understand but impossible to define – and it did nothing to resolve the
issue.9 Likewise, the Lancashire FA also turned to cricket’s rules to stem the
flow of imported players from Scotland. In 1882 it adopted cricket’s County
Championship qualification rules and insisted that players born outside of
Lancashire were not eligible to play in the Lancashire Cup until they had
lived in the county for two years.10
Both the association and rugby codes of football took the same approach
to payments to players at this time. The differences that emerged in the
mid-1880s had not yet appeared. Some historians have suggested that it was
Charles Alcock’s experience as secretary of Surrey CCC that gave the FA a
more flexible approach to professionalism than that of the RFU, while soci-
ologists have argued that the FA had a more patrician leadership than the
RFU, so they did not feel ‘status anxiety’ when confronted with working-
class professionals.11 But initially soccer’s leaders were more determined to
fight the danger than the RFU. Only in Yorkshire, where the cup tourna-
ment had become widely popular, did the rugby authorities take measures
to combat the problem. The RFU itself did not seriously debate the issue
until 1886, possibly because the lack of a national rugby cup competition
The coming of professionalism 57
meant that its leading clubs did not play against clubs suspected of paying
their players. However, in soccer there were numerous discussions about the
issue and in 1882 the FA passed a resolution declaring that
But it was already too late to stop it. Barely eighteen months later, the issue
came to a head when Upton Park, a London gentlemen’s club, drew 1–1
with Preston North End in the fourth round of the FA Cup. Upton Park
appealed against the result, claiming that Preston had fielded paid players,
contrary to the 1882 resolution. When confronted with the charges, Pres-
ton’s secretary William Sudell cheerfully admitted that they had found jobs
for their players and that this was standard practice in Lancashire. The class
element behind the dispute was illustrated by the Preston Guardian, which
pointed that ‘no working man can be an amateur football player. A working
man cannot afford to absent himself from work in order to take part in a
game without remuneration’.13 Preston were suspended from the FA but,
seeing the writing on the wall, Alcock proposed that the FA legalise profes-
sionalism. He was in a minority so, at the urging of the FA’s assistant secre-
tary N.L. Jackson, a journalist like Alcock and also something of a sporting
entrepreneur, a committee was set up to consider the matter. The urgency
of the issue was underlined shortly after when the FA suspended Burnley
for exactly the same offence.14
Jackson’s committee reported back in June 1884 and recommended that
payments be allowed to players who took time off work to play, known as
‘broken-time payments’, but outlawing all other forms of payment on pain
of expulsion from the FA. Just as drastically, it also suggested that only English
players should be allowed to play in the FA Cup. It was not only supporters
of the public school ethos who opposed professionalism. The Birmingham
FA also vigorously objected to paying players, not least because they feared
that their players would be picked off by rich Lancashire clubs, a concern
shared by the Sheffield FA.15 Tellingly, Birmingham’s concerns about profes-
sionalism did not extend to Aston Villa captain Archie Hunter, who hap-
pened to be one of the first Scotch professors to make his way south.
However, as the attitude of William Sudell demonstrated, the Lancashire
clubs were not passively prepared to accept the strictures of the FA. News
of Preston’s suspension was met by Lancashire clubs voting that ‘a northern
58 The coming of professionalism
the opposite on the field. In April 1885 Queen’s Park lost 2–0 to Black-
burn Rovers in that season’s FA Cup final. It would be the last time that a
gentleman’s club would ever play in the final. Indeed, with the exception
of the Slough-based Swifts club the following year, they would be the last
such club to appear even in the semi-finals. This was the culmination of a
trend that had emerged in 1882 when Blackburn Rovers became the first
northern side to appear in the final. They lost 1–0 to Old Etonians but the
following season their local rivals, Blackburn Olympic, upheld the pride of
the town with an extra-time 2–1 win over the Etonians, and the cup stayed
in Blackburn for the next four years as Rovers completed a hat-trick of
wins. The age of the professional had arrived, and there would be no turn-
ing back.
that their sides turn professional to remain competitive and uphold local
honour. ‘If we cannot depend upon native talent, then by all means let us
have some of these stray Scotchmen who can be picked up so easily by our
neighbours’, wrote one Middlesborough supporter in 1889. ‘Has the noble
game, now that it has got such a hold on the public, to die out, and have we
to dwindle into a fourth rate club after all our grand achievements?’ Such
was the clamour for professionalism that a new professional club, Middles-
borough Ironopolis, was created in opposition to the hesitancy of the Mid-
dlesborough FC.24
Some clubs found the financial pressures of professionalism too much to
bear. In the 1892–93 season Everton paid £3,529 and Blackburn Rovers
£2,156 in wages alone, figures way beyond the reach of those sides outside
of the successful elite.25 Blackburn Olympic found it impossible to survive
as a second professional side in a relatively small town – Blackburn’s popula-
tion in 1891 was just 120,000 people – as eventually did Middlesborough
Ironopolis. In Manchester, both of its Football League sides, Ardwick and
Newton Heath, collapsed under extensive debts in 1894 and 1902, respec-
tively, leading to them being reformed as Manchester City and Manchester
United. Newton Heath was bought by local brewing magnate J.H. Davies
for £500 and effectively became a subsidiary of his Manchester Breweries,
perhaps the most prominent example of the close relationship that devel-
oped between professional football and the brewing industry, one for the
primary providers of capital for ground developments, stadium advertising
and players’ jobs for numerous clubs across Britain.
For many, professionalism brought untold sums of money into the club’s
coffers. Everton made a profit in every season bar one between 1891 and
1914. Liverpool, the side created when Everton split into two in 1892 over a
financial dispute, also recorded a profit every season from 1900. In London,
its belated football boom led to the creation of Chelsea by sporting entre-
preneur Gus Mears, a purely business proposition that returned profitable
seasons from 1908 to 1915, including a gargantuan £22,826 in 1908. By the
1890s it had become common for clubs to become limited liability com-
panies. This made it easier to raise funds for capital investment and to adopt
an organisational model that was appropriate for the substantial enterprises
they had now become.26 No-one could now be in any doubt that football
was now a business.
But the adoption of professionalism had also led to a subtle but fun-
damental change to soccer. Amateur sport was based on status, hierarchy
and deference. The authority of governing bodies like cricket’s MCC, rug-
by’s RFU and soccer’s FA rested ultimately on their social status – they
had appointed themselves the governing bodies of their respective sports.
The coming of professionalism 63
Notes
1 William Suddell, Preston North End manager in 1887, quoted in Neil Carter,
The Football Manager (Abingdon: Routledge, 2006), p. 18.
2 Saturday Night (Birmingham), 13 December 1884.
3 Gwyn Prescott, The Birth of Rugby in Cardiff and Wales: ‘This Rugby Spellbound
People’ (Cardiff: Ashley Drake Publishing Ltd, 2011), pp. 42–69.
4 Tony Mason, Association Football and English Society 1863–1915 (Brighton: Har-
vester, 1981), p. 72. The Yorkshireman, 10 January 1885.
5 Tony Collins and Wray Vamplew, Mud, Sweat and Beers: A Cultural History of
Sport and Alcohol (Oxford: Berg, 2002).
6 For examples of amateur regulations, see appendix two of Wray Vamplew, Pay Up
and Play the Game (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988), pp. 302–7.
7 The Athlete, 29 September 1884, quoted in Steven Tischler, Footballers and Busi-
nessmen:The Origins of Professional Soccer in England (New York: Holmes & Meier,
1981), p. 45.
64 The coming of professionalism
Although women were firmly excluded from all versions of the game
on the pitch, they were still a significant presence off the pitch. Few reports
of major matches failed to note the significant presence of ‘ladies’. As early
as the first Yorkshire versus Lancashire match in 1870 the press had noted
the ‘large number of the fair sex’ in attendance, and as the sport’s popu-
larity exploded, women were an integral part of football crowds. In both
codes, women could be found in the grandstands, where higher admission
charges created a middle-class enclave, and on the terraces, where they were
often admitted for free, allowing working-class women more opportunity
to attend.5
Don’t imagine that all the spectators were men, for they were not.
Indeed, the female element was very largely represented and the com-
ments from this portion of the gathering were as numerous and as
critical as those of their brothers, husbands and fathers,
The growth of women’s football must also be seen in the industrial con-
text of World War One. Many of the factories that formed sides were also
noted for the militancy of their workforce. In Glasgow,William Beardsmore’s
engineering factory dominated the east end of Glasgow and took the initia-
tive in organising women’s football from 1917, including non-representative
Scotland versus England matches.20 It was also one of the most militant fac-
tories in an already militant city. Following a strike in March 1916, the chief
shop steward, future MP David Kirkwood, was arrested and deported to
England. Across the city in Govan, the previous year had seen over 20,000
households take part in a rent strike. The bringing together of women to
play and watch football was seen by the employers as a way of defusing class
tensions.The same point can be made about the Vickers’ engineering facto-
ries in Barrow and Sheffield, both of which had a reputation for militancy
and established well-known women’s teams in the aftermath of strikes in
1916. In Australia, where women began to play Australian Rules football
for war-time charities at the same time as in Britain, the game was encour-
aged by notoriously anti-trade union and pro-conscription companies such
as the Boan Brothers’ department stores and the Commonwealth Clothing
Factory.21 From the perspective of the employers, it was hoped that women’s
football would be a patriotic antidote to rising levels of class conflict, espe-
cially after the October Revolution of 1917.
When the war ended, women’s soccer seemed to be primed to become
even more popular. For major charity matches, five-figure crowds could be
attracted, including a famous 53,000 crowd at Everton’s Goodison Park on
26 December 1920 that watched Dick, Kerr’s defeat local side St Helens
Ladies 4–0 in support of ex-servicemen’s charities. This was not far short
of the 59,964 who watched Everton men’s side take on West Bromwich
Albion later that week on New Year’s Day.22 In a much more limited way,
women also played rugby union in Cardiff and Wellington in New Zea-
land, rugby league in New South Wales and Auckland, and Australian Rules
in Perth and Victoria. In France, a modified form of rugby called Barette
became popular among women and continued throughout the 1920s, and
soccer also continued to be played in small pockets throughout the 1930s.
In September 1921 over 20,000 people turned out to watch the Metropoli-
tan Blues and Sydney Reds women’s rugby league sides play each other in
Sydney.23
It was not to last. Women’s football of whatever code was viewed by
the footballing authorities as nothing more than a charitable fund-raising
exercise. Even the huge crowd for the Dick, Kerr’s match at Goodison
Park got barely a single column inch in the Lancashire Daily Post, Preston’s
local newspaper. Despite the number of women’s sides across the country,
Kicking against the pricks 71
Initially it was felt that the ban on using FA-affiliated grounds would make
little difference. ‘The decision of the FA does not affect us very seriously
unless our firm decide to ban the game’, said Miss Long, the captain of the
Strand Corner House side. Alice Kell, the Dick, Kerr’s captain, attacked the
FA’s insinuation of financial wrongdoing and defended the broken-time
payments she and her teammates received: ‘it was absolutely impossible for
working girls to afford to leave work to play matches . . . [and she] saw not
the slightest reason why they should not be recompensed for loss of time’.27
72 Kicking against the pricks
PLATE 6 Women footballers defy the FA ban: match programme for Stoke versus Dick,
Kerr’s in 1923
Less than a fortnight after the FA decision, fifty-seven clubs met in Black-
burn to form the English Ladies’ Football Association.28 In March 1922 the
English Ladies’ FA Cup kicked off with twenty-three sides. But the men
who led the ELFA – the president was Stoke’s Len Bridgett and only one
of the five vice-presidents was a woman – were businessmen who hoped to
Kicking against the pricks 73
emulate the financial success of the women’s game during the war.Yet with-
out the legitimacy of patriotic charitable fund-raising, the women’s game
struggled to pay its way. Unable to succeed commercially and weighed
down by male chauvinist scorn, the ELFA lasted little more than a year, and
mass participation in women’s football withered.
Dick, Kerr’s and a handful of other teams continued as itinerant sides and
women played other football codes sporadically over the next decades, but it
would not be until the 1960s that, facilitated by workplace recreational pro-
vision and inspired by the rise of the women’s liberation movement, large
numbers of women began to play the football code of their choice once
again. And once again, just as during World War One, the impetus came
largely from working-class women.
Notes
1 Hull Daily Mail, 28 October 1895.
2 Blackburn Standard, 28 May 1881.
3 Nottinghamshire Guardian, 20 May 1881.
4 Manchester Guardian, 22 June 1881. Liverpool Mercury, 27 June 1881.
5 For more on East Lancashire soccer crowds see Robert Lewis, ‘ “Our Lady Spe-
cialists at Pikes Lane”: Female Spectators in Early English Professional Football,
1880–1914’, International Journal of the History of Sport, vol. 26, no. 15 (2009),
pp. 2161–81.
6 The Yorkshireman, 3 March 1883.
7 Salford Reporter, 2 June 1888. Yorkshire Evening Post, 29 November 1902.
8 Cardiff Times, 2 April 1887. Hull Daily Mail, 11 April 1887. I am grateful to
Dr Victoria Dawson for drawing my attention to this.
9 The details of the Sunderland events are at www.donmouth.co.uk/womens_
football/1889.html (accessed 27 June 2017), which also mentions the 1887
Wakefield match, although I have not been able to locate a newspaper report
for it.
10 For more on sport and rational dress, see Jihang Park, ‘Sport, Dress Reform and
the Emancipation of Women in Victorian England: A Reappraisal’, International
Journal of the History of Sport, vol. 6, no. 1 (1989), pp. 10–30.
11 Maidenhead Advertiser, 17 April 1895, quoted in James F. Lee, The Lady Footballers:
Struggling to Play in Victorian Britain (Abingdon: Routledge, 2008), p. 109.
12 San Francisco Call, 21 & 26 December 1897. I am grateful to Dr Brian Bunk for
bringing this to my attention.
13 Quoted in Jennifer Curtin, ‘Before the “Black Ferns”: Tracing the Beginnings
of Women’s Rugby in New Zealand’, International Journal of the History of Sport,
vol. 33, no. 17 (2016), p. 2075.
14 The Yorkshireman, 18 December 1889.
15 The FA banned matches between women’s and men’s teams in August 1902.
Football Association, minutes of the FA Council, 25 August 1902, National
Football Museum, Manchester. I am grateful to Dr Alex Jackson for pointing
this out.
74 Kicking against the pricks
16 Alethea Melling, ‘Ladies’ Football’: Gender and the Socialization of Women Football
Players in Lancashire 1916–1960 (PhD thesis, University of Central Lancashire,
2000), p. 34.
17 Wendy Michallat, ‘Terrain de lutte: Women’s Football and Feminism in “Les
anneés folles” ’, French Cultural Studies, vol. 18, no. 3 (2007), pp. 259–76.
18 Melling, ‘Ladies’s Football’, p. 54.
19 Victoria S. Dawson, Women and Rugby League: Gender, Class and Community in
the North of England, 1880–1970 (PhD thesis, De Montfort University, 2017).
20 Jessica Macbeth, Women’s Football in Scotland: An Interpretive Analysis (University
of Stirling PhD, 2004), pp. 104–8.
21 Rob Hess, ‘Missing in Action? New Perspectives on the Origins and Diffusion
of Women’s Football in Australia during the Great War’, International Journal of
the History of Sport, vol. 31, no. 18 (2014), pp. 2330–3.
22 Lancashire Daily Post, 28 December 1920. Over 31,000 saw Dick, Kerr’s defeat
Bath Lady Footballers 12–0 at Old Trafford on 8 January 1921, Bath Chronicle,
15 January 1921.
23 Katherine Haines, ‘The 1921 Peak and Turning Point in Women’s Football His-
tory: An Australasian, Cross-Code Perspective’, International Journal of the History
of Sport, vol. 33, no. 8 (2016), pp. 828–46; Peter Burke, ‘Patriot Games: Women’s
Football During the First World War in Australia’, Football Studies, vol. 8, no.
2 (2005), 5–19; Charles Little, ‘ “What a Freak-Show They Made!”: Women’s
Rugby League in 1920s Sydney’, Football Studies, vol. 4, no. 2 (2000), pp. 25–40;
Jennifer Curtin, ‘More than Male-Gazing: Reflections of Female Fans of Rugby
Union in New Zealand, 1870–1920’, International Journal of the History of Sport,
vol. 32, no. 18 (2015), pp. 2123–34; Barbara Cox, ‘The Rise and Fall of “The
Girl Footballer” in New Zealand in 1921’, International Journal of the History of
Sport, vol. 29, no. 3 (2012), pp. 444–71; Rob Hess, ‘Playing with “Patriotic Fire”:
Women and Football in the Antipodes During the Great War’, International Jour-
nal of the History of Sport, vol. 28, no. 10 (2011), pp. 1388–408.
24 Lancashire Daily Post, 6 December 1921.
25 Football Association, Minutes of the Emergency Committee, 4 October to 28
November 1921 and 29 November to 12 December 1921. National Football
Museum, Manchester.
26 Football Association, Minutes of meeting of the Consultative Committee, 5
December 1921, held at the National Football Museum, Manchester.
27 Lancashire Daily Post, 6 December 1921.
28 For more on ELFA, see Patrick Brennan’s excellent site at www.donmouth.
co.uk/womens_football/elfa.html.
10
RUGBY FOOTBALL
A house divided
Only six months after the legitimisation of the bastard [of profession-
alism] we see two professional teams left to fight out the final [FA] cup
tie.To what does this all end? Why this – gentlemen who play football
once a week as a pastime will find themselves no match for men who
give up their whole time and abilities to it. How should they? One by
one, as they find themselves outclassed, they will desert the game and
leave the field to professionals.
He ended by promising the RFU would ‘throttle the hydra’ with ‘no mercy
but iron rigour’.2 Until this point the only action the RFU committee had
ever taken against professionalism was the unspoken refusal to pick Wake-
field Trinity’s Teddy Bertram for representative teams, but soccer’s short
experience with professionalism caused the leaders of the RFU to abandon
76 Rugby football
their previous policy of turning a blind eye and undertake a scorched earth
policy to resolve the problem.3
At its 1886 annual general meeting the RFU outlawed any form of pay-
ment to players for playing or training, with the exception of second-class
rail fares for travel to matches. Players were banned from working for a club
or for any member of that club. Rugby union was now a strictly amateur
sport, and any person or club violating its grandly titled ‘Laws As To Profes-
sionalism’ faced a ban from the sport. As if to underline its class bias, when
a Yorkshire delegate to the meeting pleaded that ‘the very existence of his
club, composed almost entirely of working men, would be threatened if
they were held to the letter of the new laws’, Bradford’s Harry Garnett,
Budd’s successor as RFU president, bluntly replied, ‘if working men desired
to play football, they should pay for it themselves, as they would have to do
with any other pastime’.4
The stridency of the language used by rugby’s supporters of amateurism
reflected a rising sense of panic among public school footballers about the
consequences of the FA’s decision. FA committee member N.L. Jackson,
who had seconded Charles Alcock’s motion that the FA legalise profes-
sionalism, changed his mind and advocated the most lily-white amateurism.
He became one of the principal organisers of the opposition to the north-
ern rugby clubs’ demands for broken-time payments and, more famously,
the organiser of Corinthians FC, the touring amateur soccer club which
demanded the strictest amateurism while at the same time requiring con-
siderable expenses payments for the right to play against them.5 Jackson’s
entrepreneurial spirit meant that the Corinthians became one of the few
gentleman’s clubs that played socially mixed sides.The social divide between
middle-class sides and working-class clubs, whether professional or amateur,
became an unbridgeable gulf. Middle-class clubs retreated into their own
networks in an attempt to recreate the football world of the early 1870s.
In 1893 the FA Amateur Cup was started to provide a competition
for amateur sides, but when that was quickly overwhelmed by amateur
working-class sides, the gentlemen retreated further and in 1903 started the
Arthur Dunn Cup exclusively for teams of old boys of private schools. Four
years later, frustrated at what they saw as the FA’s refusal to act against pro-
fessionalism, 500 club representatives from London and the South East met
in July 1907 to form the Amateur Football Association (AFA), dedicated to
upholding socially exclusive soccer for those
Viewing itself as soccer’s analogue to the zealous amateurs of the RFU, the
AFA quickly discovered that without control of its sport, amateur rigour
was nothing more than self-enforced marginalisation. It crept back into the
FA in January 1914.7 By then, the war against professionalism in soccer had
long been lost.
In rugby however, the game remained firmly in the hands of the opponents
of professionalism. In the north of England, rugby had experienced some of the
explosive growth seen in soccer. Indeed, in late Victorian Britain, soccer and
rugby were two parts of a single social phenomenon. Exactly the same social,
cultural and economic processes took place in each code. With the exception
of a handful of clauses in their rulebooks, soccer and rugby were viewed by
the press and the public as two variants of the same sport. Newspapers and
magazines covered them both under the generic heading of ‘Football’, journal-
ists, officials and supporters referred to each version as ‘football’, and all players,
regardless of whether they could legally handle the ball, were referred to as
‘footballers’. Only the aficionado cared about which set of rules were employed
to engage the teams and to attract the public to the thrill of the spectacle.
Even by the early 1890s, rugby could still be compared favourably to
its round-ball rival in terms of crowds and public interest. When in 1893
the Inland Revenue investigated the finances of football, it chose to exam-
ine the accounts of Aston Villa and Bradford rugby club, arguably the two
richest clubs in football. The leading rugby clubs made covert payments
to players that could be compared to the legal wages of contracted soccer
professionals – England rugby international three-quarter Dicky Lockwood
appears to have been paid £1 per match by Heckmondwike in 1887, which
was significantly more than the eleven shillings per away match that Shef-
field Wednesday paid their players when they turned professional in the
same year. And regardless of the status of their players, rugby clubs had to
make the same investments in grounds and facilities as their soccer cousins.
In Yorkshire where, outside of Sheffield and Middlesborough, rugby ruled
supreme, the leading clubs felt exactly the same pressures as the top soccer sides.
In May 1889, inspired by the success of the Football League’s first season,Wake-
field Trinity called for the formation of a ‘Yorkshire Football League’ to ensure
regular high-quality competitive rugby. But whereas soccer’s Football League
and the other minor leagues were created quickly without any intervention
from the Football Association, it took three years of intense wrangling between
the clubs and the rugby authorities before the Yorkshire Senior Competition, as
the league was named, kicked off.The league question had become one of the
battlefields in rugby’s decade-long war over professionalism.8
The RFU’s 1886 decision to become a purely amateur organisation
marked the start of an all-out assault against the threat to the gentlemanly
control of rugby. Unlike soccer, where the discussion about professionalism
78 Rugby football
was compressed into just three years, the long debate in rugby was not
resolved until 1895, allowing the arguments and their practical implications
to be fully drawn out. Much of the short debate in soccer focused on the
threat posed to sport by ‘imported’ players and commercialism, which it was
thought would undermine the spirit of genuine competition.This view was
shared both by clubs threatened by richer rivals, which animated much of
the Birmingham FA’s initial opposition to the proposals of the richer Lan-
cashire clubs, and by defenders of the public school ethos who understood
that commercialism would inevitably loosen the grip of the gentlemanly
clubs. This was also how the debate began in rugby, but as it unfolded it
peeled back the underlying fears of working-class domination of sport.
Indeed, once the amateur tocsin had been sounded, class prejudice flowed
freely.‘The Rugby game, as its name implies, sprang from our public schools’,
wrote the international cricketer and Cambridge University rugby ‘blue’
Frank Mitchell. ‘It has been developed by our leading London clubs and
universities; and why should we hand it over without a struggle to the hordes
of working men players who would quickly engulf all others?’9 The fact that
rugby was fracturing along class rather than North-South lines was high-
lighted by the fact that Mitchell had been born and educated in Yorkshire.
And it was in the White Rose county that the campaign against pro-
fessionalism was waged most mercilessly. Two dozen trials of players and
clubs for violations of the RFU’s amateur regulations took place between
1887 and 1894, resulting in the suspensions of leading players such as
England international John Sutcliffe, who promptly switched to soccer, and
of senior clubs such as Leeds and Wakefield Trinity. The slightest indiscre-
tion was pursued: JW Moore of Leeds and George Broadbent of Holbeck
were investigated for receiving wedding presents from their club. Even
Leeds Parish Church’s rugby club was suspended in January 1890 for its
numerous professional sins.
Unsurprisingly, this unceasing auto-da-fé did little to extend rugby’s
appeal in the face of soccer’s burgeoning popularity. But for many in the
RFU leadership, the popularity of rugby was indeed the problem. Not-
ing that ‘the Rugby game is losing ground among the working class and
Association spreading in its place, owing to the pecuniary advantages to be
reaped from the latter game’, the Football Annual’s review of the 1888–89
season said that ‘the loss of followers to the grand old game is regrettable,
yet looking at the present state of all professional sports we cannot but think
that this possible loss is far preferable to legalising professionalism’.10
Most people in northern rugby thought the opposite. Wakefield Trinity’s
call for the formation of a rugby league in 1889 was based on the desire to
reverse the sport’s declining fortunes, as were the repeated calls by Lancashire
clubs for a cup tournament for the county, where rugby was being forced out
of its traditional hotbeds of Liverpool and Manchester due to the appeal of
Rugby football 79
soccer’s cup and league competitions. Calls emerged for rugby’s rules to be
made more attractive, such as reducing the number of players from fifteen to
thirteen. Most significantly, in February 1889, Halifax called for the RFU to
allow players to be compensated for taking time off from work to play the
game, so-called broken-time payments.This was a deliberate attempt to avoid
the financial chaos that full professionalism had brought to many soccer clubs
and to revive the informal practices of the northern clubs before the imposi-
tion of amateurism in 1886. But the RFU refused to compromise and at its
1893 annual general meeting, thanks to a well-organised campaign orches-
trated in part by N.L. Jackson, it decisively rejected broken-time payments.
The RFU’s hostility to payments for players was not merely based on
its dislike of the development of soccer since 1885. Britain since the early
1880s had changed dramatically. A huge upsurge in industrial militancy
and working-class self-confidence had taken place, highlighted by the great
dockers’ strike of 1889 that led to the rapid growth of militant ‘new union-
ism’ and the foundation of the Independent Labour Party in Bradford in
1893. This was the crucial factor in the contrasting attitudes of the FA and
the RFU to professionalism. Soccer’s 1884–85 debate took place in a period
of relative social harmony, but rugby’s dispute over broken-time payments
became a proxy for wider concerns about the rise of the working class. If
rugby players in the north wanted to be paid, a correspondent to the York-
shire Evening Post argued, they should
start a union of their own, where they can quarrel amongst them-
selves, find employment for the many out of work, and indulge in
strikes, trades unions, and a general disinclination for honest work so
dear to the average north country working man.11
were constantly called upon to lose their wages in order to play for their
county or their club and at the same time they were debarred from
recompense for the loss of time involved.Why should not the working
man be able to play the game on level terms with the gentleman?12
Having won a decisive victory in 1893, the leaders of the RFU went on
the offensive, suspending leading clubs such as Huddersfield,Wigan and Sal-
ford. The two sides prepared themselves for the inevitable split, the catalyst
for which was the RFU’s declaration that it would amend its rules so that
clubs could be suspended for accusations of professionalism and would have
to prove their innocence before being reinstated.This was too much for the
northern clubs, who realised that they would be picked off one by one by
80 Rugby football
the RFU, and so, on 29 August 1895, twenty-one clubs met at the George
Hotel in Huddersfield and resigned from the RFU to create the Northern
Rugby Football Union. By the turn of the century, almost all rugby clubs in
its Lancashire and Yorkshire heartlands had joined the rugby league, as the
new organisation would become known. There were now three codes of
football in England, and rugby’s dominance of the football world was noth-
ing more than an increasingly distant memory.
PLATE 7 Rugby on the verge of split: cartoon satirising the RFU’s suspension of Hud-
dersfield (Yorkshire Owl, 15 November 1893)
Rugby football 81
Notes
1 Yorkshire Owl, 4 October 1893.
2 Arthur Budd, ‘The Rugby Union Game’, in The Football Annual (London: Lily-
white, 1886), p. 52.
3 Collins, Rugby’s Great Split, pp. 53–4.
4 Yorkshire Post, 5 October 1886.
5 For the debate on the Corinthians, see Yorkshire Post, 4 October and 13
December 1893.
6 L.A.M. Fevez letter in The Sportsman, 6 March 1906.
7 The full story of the AFA can be found in Dilwyn Porter, ‘Revenge of the
Crouch End Vampires: The AFA, the FA and English Football’s “Great Split”,
1907–1914’, Sport in History, vol. 26, no. 3 (2006), pp. 406–28.
8 Tony Collins, Rugby’s Great Split (London: Frank Cass, 1998), pp. 62–3.
9 Frank Mitchell, ‘A Crisis in Rugby Football’, St James’s Gazette, 24
September 1897.
10 An Old Player, ‘The Rugby Union Game in 1888–89’, in The Football Annual
(London: George Bell & Sons, 1890).
11 Yorkshire Evening Post, 30 September 1893.
12 Leeds Mercury, 21 September 1893.
11
MELBOURNE
A city and its football
By the time that modern football codes began to emerge in the 1860s,
Britain stood unchallenged as the most powerful nation on earth. It had
conquered more than 8 million square miles of territory, exerted political
and economic influence over a significant section of what remained, and by
1870 commanded an empire that produced almost a quarter of the world’s
gross domestic product. From its birth, football became a symbol of the self-
confidence and self-satisfaction of British imperial nationalism.2
‘What! Talk of danger to British boys! To the descendants of those men
who were at Waterloo and Trafalgar?’ exclaimed a youthful footballer in
Rugby School’s New Rugbeian magazine.3 At the FA’s founding meeting,
Blackheath’s F.M. Campbell told the delegates if they banned hacking from
football, it would ‘do away with all the courage and pluck of the game, and
I will be bound to bring over a lot of Frenchmen, who would beat you
with a week’s practice’. It was during the Napoleonic Wars at the start of the
nineteenth century, when ideas of ‘British fair play’ first emerged to counter
the French Revolution’s ‘Liberty, Equality, Fraternity’, that sport became
Melbourne 83
fused with British nationalism. Cricket and boxing were elevated from mere
games into metaphors for the British character and way of life. And within a
generation, football had also become, in the words of the Yorkshire Post, one
of ‘those important elements which have done so much to make the Anglo-
Saxon race the best soldiers, sailors and colonists in the world’.4
Across the British Empire, this nationalist ideology was articulated by
Muscular Christianity and carried across the English-speaking world by
Tom Brown’s Schooldays. In the Empire’s white settler colonies – Australia,
Canada, New Zealand and South Africa – Tom Brown quickly acquired the
status of a cultural bible. Despite living thousands of miles from what they
referred to as the ‘Mother Country’, these colonists were proudly British in
all but geography and rushed to embrace the message of the book, making
it a best-seller across the empire. As soon as copies arrived from London,
the Sydney Morning Herald was lauding its tone ‘so hearty, its good sense so
strong and so thoroughly national, its morality so high, and yet so simple
and practical, that . . . we venture to prophesy for it an extended and per-
manent popularity’.5 In the southern state of Victoria – Australia was until
1901 a collection of individual colonies rather than a single nation – Mel-
bourne’s Argus newspaper chided readers who did not understand the value
of football: ‘let those who fancy there is little in the game, read the account
of one of the Rugby matches which is detailed in that most readable work,
Tom Brown’s Schooldays, and they will speedily alter their opinion’.6
Although more than 13,000 miles from London, the economic and cul-
tural integration of the Australian colonies with the Mother Country meant
they functioned as a ‘suburb of Britain’, in the words of the economist
Lionel Frost.7 Football emerged in Melbourne at the same time as it did in
Britain as a seamless part of the same social process. Many of the city’s young
middle-class men had been educated in British public schools, returning
home with great enthusiasm for the now fashionable football. One typical
example was Tom Wills, the son of one of Victoria’s biggest landowners,
who had been sent to Rugby School as a 14-year-old in 1850. Not much
of a scholar, he distinguished himself on the cricket field and his name can
still be seen today in the school cricket pavilion as a captain of the first XI.
Back home in Australia, in 1858 Wills wrote to Bell’s Life in Victoria –
itself an antipodean clone of Bell’s Life in London – bemoaning the lack of
exercise for cricketers in the winter months. ‘Rather than allow this state of
torpor to creep over them, and stifle their now supple limbs, why can they
not, I say, form a foot-ball club, and form a committee of three or more
to draw up a code of laws?’, he suggested, in just the same way as many of
his cricketing contemporaries were advocating in Britain.8 Almost a year
later in May 1859, Melbourne Football Club was formed and Wills, school-
teacher Thomas Smith, and two journalists, William Hammersley and J.B.
84 Melbourne
however much they were changing, had been founded centuries earlier and
already had their own distinctive cultures. But in Melbourne, football was
appeared at the same time that the city itself was in the process of being
born. Rather than merging with a city’s pre-existing culture as in Brit-
ain, the game was an organic part of Melbourne culture, as integral to the
pulse of the city as its climate and geography. Football encompassed all of
Melbourne’s classes, from Scotch College’s elite upper-class schoolboys to
Collingwood’s unskilled labourers who had to queue to find work every
morning. Nowhere, not even in Glasgow, was football so completely inter-
twined with the life of a city.
Such was the gravitational pull of Melbourne that nearby cities were
drawn into its football orbit. In the neighbouring state of South Australia,
Adelaide’s first football club had been formed in 1867 and played its own
version of football. But as the city grew and developed business and trade
links with Victoria, South Adelaide FC argued that ‘it was possible that
someday an inter-colonial [between Australian states] football match might
be played, and it was desirable in that case that South Australian players
should play the game as it was played in other colonies’. In 1877, the clubs
of the South Australian Football Association voted to adopt the same rules
as Melbourne clubs – and it was this prospect of intercolonial football that
helped spur the formation of the Victorian Football Association later that
year.12 Two years later, footballers in Hobart, the capital of Tasmania, initially
rejected a request for a match from Melbourne’s Hotham (now North Mel-
bourne) club in the hope that a proposed British football tour would take
place. Although hopes for the British tour evaporated, the enthusiasm for
matches against visiting teams did not diminish, and to enable them to play
their neighbours, Hobart football clubs voted to abandon their own rules
and adopt those played in Victoria.13
Melbourne’s position as the main entrepôt to the south island of New
Zealand also saw its football code being played in the future stronghold of
rugby, establishing a presence in the 1870s that was not finally extinguished
until World War One.14 Sydney, and the northern state of Queensland,
remained largely immune, partly because it looked down on the upstart city
to its south, but also because rugby had already laid down stronger roots, and
the Southern Rugby Union, the forerunner of the Australian Rugby Union,
was created in 1874. Soccer, although widely played, lacked the Melbourne
game’s deep roots or rugby’s imperial links and was unable to achieve the
cultural significance or national importance of its two rival codes.
There was one other factor that made Melbourne football unique. It was
the only city in the world that maintained its own code of rules. Unlike Shef-
field, which had abandoned its rules to become part of the FA, Melbourne’s
rulebook became the basis for a national sport. The fact that Wills and his
86 Melbourne
colleagues began drawing up their rules four years before the creation of the
FA – and more than a decade before the RFU – meant the Melburnians
did not have to defer to a football governing body in the Mother Country,
unlike in cricket where the authority of London’s MCC was unchallenged.
If Wills and his compatriots had met ten years later, after the consolidation
of the English football codes had begun, it is quite possible that the city
would have been a stronghold of rugby or soccer. But without the direc-
tion of an authoritative governing body, the exigencies of competing in cup
competitions or the need to compete in internationals, Melbourne football
rules developed in something of a football Galapagos Island where isolation
caused the evolution of the sport to take its own unique path.
This also meant that Australian Rules had a relatively untroubled path
to professionalism. Two years after the Victorian Football Association had
introduced a formal league system in 1894, its best supported clubs broke
away in opposition to its proposals for greater revenue sharing and stricter
amateur restrictions, and formed the Victorian Football League (VFL).
Despite intense rivalry, the two leagues ran in parallel without the deep
ideological hostility that affected the rugby codes, and eventually the greater
economic strength of the VFL came to eclipse its parent association.
a player could only run with the ball if it was bounced or touched on
the ground regularly, originally ‘five or six yards’.25 But even this was not
unknown in other types of football in the 1860s. The 1864 rules of football
as played at Bramham College in West Yorkshire also had this rule. Carry-
ing the ball by hand was not permitted but the college’s football Rule 14
stated that ‘the ball may “bounced” with the hand, and so driven through
the opposite side’.26 This rule was in use at least two years before it was intro-
duced into the Australian game in 1866.
Moreover, emphasising how early football developed in similar ways
across the English-speaking world, a similar rule existed in Princeton Uni-
versity’s first football rules. As alumnus W.J. Henderson recalled in 1899,
Princeton’s own code did not allow players to run with ball in their hands:
You were positively forbidden to carry the ball in your hands a greater
distance than one yard. You must kick it, or else throw it upon the
ground, causing it to bound; and by catching it again and bouncing it
again, you might advance it.
And in a further similarity to the Melbourne game, the ball could not
be passed from the hands but had to be batted between players using a
closed fist.27
The Melbourne game was part of an international continuum of varia-
tions that stretched across the early football-playing world.The chosen rules
of Wills, Thompson, Hammersley and their Melbourne compatriots no
more represented a uniquely Australian view of football than the Sheffield
FA’s code reflected the distinctive characteristics of Yorkshire.The desire for
‘a game of our own’ was not an expression of Australian uniqueness but one
more example of the widespread frustration with the rules of football as
played at the various public schools, and an expression of the desire for a set
of rules that was both understandable and enjoyable to its players. Australian
Rules football was not a declaration of independence. It was a symbol of
Australia’s place in the British Empire.
Notes
1 Follower, ‘Australasian Football’, The Age [Melbourne], 27 June 1885.
2 This and the following chapter is largely based on my article, ‘National Myths,
Imperial Pasts and the Origins of Australian Rules Football’, in Stephen Wagg
(ed.) Myths and Milestones in Sports History (London: Palgrave, 2012), pp. 8–31.
3 The New Rugbeian, vol. 3, no. 8, November 1861, p. 296.
4 Yorkshire Post, 29 November 1886. For an excellent transnational analysis see
Patrick F. McDevitt, ‘May the Best Man Win’ Sport, Masculinity and Nationalism
in Great Britain and the Empire, 1880–1935 (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan,
2004).
Melbourne 89
Many there are who cry ‘we have too much sport in Australia’, but if the
[Australian Rules] League can use sport as the ladder-way to a higher
patriotism breathing loyalty to Australian institutions, high manly ideals,
and practical education, it is surely doing a service to our country.
—The Young Australia League, c. 19061
Waterloo’, wrote one Australian commentator about the value of the Mel-
bourne game.2 In 1908, addressing the sport’s 1908 Silver Jubilee carnival,
Australian prime minister Alfred Deakin quoted from Henry Newbolt’s
militaristic poem Vitai Lampada to proclaim that football prepared Austral-
ians to fight in Britain’s wars.
When the tocsin sounds the call to arms, not the last, but the first to
acknowledge it will be those who have played, and played well, the
Australasian game of football before they play the Australian game
of nation-making and nation-preserving to stand by the old land. [my
emphasis]3
This belief is based on the claim that Tom Wills was heavily influenced
by the Aboriginal ball game known as Marn Grook when he and his fellow
Melbourne FC members drew up their first rules of football. According to
nineteenth-century descriptions of Marn Grook written by white Euro-
pean colonists, the game featured high kicking and leaping for a ball. ‘The
ball is kicked high in the air, not thrown up by hand as white boys do, nor
kicked along the ground, there is general excitement who shall catch it, the
tall fellow stands the best chance’, wrote James Dawson in 1881. ‘When
the ball is caught it is kicked up in the air again by the one who caught it,
it is sent with great force and ascends as straight up and as high as when
thrown by hand’. 7 Such descriptions of punting the ball were combined
with accounts of Wills’ boyhood activities with Aboriginal children to claim
that the true origins of Australian football were in Aboriginal ball games.8
However, there is no evidence to suggest Wills was influenced by Abo-
riginal ball games. Gregory de Moore’s exhaustive biographical research
found no mention of them in any of his private or public writings. Quite
the opposite, as Wills favoured rules that followed those of Rugby School,
such as a cross bar between the goal posts and a designated kicker to take
kicks at goal.9 Moreover, the ‘high mark’ only started to become a signifi-
cant feature of Australian Rules in the mid-1870s, almost twenty years after
the first rules were drawn up. Even then it was not popular. In 1876 The
Footballer advised players to avoid ‘jumping for marks’ because it was danger-
ous.10 Loose scrummaging was a much more important part of the game
in its early years, and as late as the 1890s complaints were common that the
game was dominated by scrums.11
It is easy to see why the Wills/Marn Grook story of cultural exchange
between European colonists and Aboriginal peoples became popu-
lar. It offers a sanitised version of the genocidal reality of race relations in
nineteenth-century Australia.Wills’ own father, Horatio S.Wills, was respon-
sible for the murder of several Aboriginal people as he enforced his claim
to own the land they had lived on for generations.12 Like all sports, Austral-
ian football was no less racist than the society which nurtured it. One of
its most famous clubs, Essendon, was for most of its early history known
as ‘the blood stained n–s’. Aboriginal football clubs were often excluded
from local competitions and even the greatest of aboriginal footballers
faced racist taunts and humiliations.13 Doug Nicholls, a future governor of
South Australia, transferred from the Carlton club in the late 1920s because
his teammates claimed he smelled. The Marn Grook story views Aborigi-
nal involvement in Australian Rules football through the spectacles of the
twenty-first century, sanitising the racial politics of both the past and the
present, and inventing a tradition from which the modern game can claim
a moral authority.
More generally, Australian Rules’ shifting sense of its own past is perhaps
the most complex example of how a sport invents its own traditions. As
Eric Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger suggest in The Invention of Tradition,
invented traditions
that Sheffield football rules are the true precursor of modern soccer rules
reflects the belief that English soccer has been taken away from its authentic
working-class roots by businessmen and self-interested administrators.
The Tom Wills/Marn Grook story also illustrates the key characteristics
of invented sporting traditions. The first is that the founder of the sport
must have had minor rather than extensive involvement in it. Webb Ellis
had no involvement in rugby after he left school. Doubleday’s career in the
U.S. military was apparently untroubled by any entanglement with baseball.
Similarly Wills’ major contribution to the development of football took
place while he was secretary of the Melbourne Cricket Club. The lack of
substantive long-term engagement with the sport is an important factor in
such invented traditions because it opens narrative space for speculation and
supposition.
Second, the evidence to support the invented tradition is based on hear-
say or personal affirmation. Webb Ellis’ role was founded on nothing more
than the testimony of Matthew Bloxam, a Rugby School old boy who
did not know Webb Ellis and relied entirely on undocumented ‘enquiries’.
The Doubleday story was based on a letter by Abner Graves, who was a
5-year-old child in Cooperstown in 1839.Wills’ famous claim that Australia
now had ‘a game of our own’ is a recollection of his cousin H.C.A. Har-
rison some sixty years later. Claims that Wills’ boyhood interactions with
Aboriginal youths inspired his football rules also lack any evidence.16 And
in the case of Sheffield football, there is no evidence that the FA took any
notice of its rules. Again, the plasticity of the argument allows the story to
be fashioned according to the needs of the advocate.
The third common feature is these traditions emerge at pivotal moments
in the history of the sport. The Webb Ellis myth came to prominence
when rugby union felt the threat of working-class influence in the sport.
This led to rugby’s split of 1895, precisely the year the Old Rugbeian
Society declared Webb Ellis to be rugby’s inventor. The Doubleday myth
emerged in response to the 1908 Mills Commission report on the origins
of baseball. This was the period in which baseball was emerging from
labour relations turmoil and intra-league disputes, leading to the National
League’s alliance with the American League and the first World Series in
1903. In Australian Rules, the Wills/Marn Grook tradition gained trac-
tion in the early 2000s as the AFL sought to position itself as the national
football code of Australia.
Fourth, supporters of the invented tradition ultimately base their position
on an unverifiable belief rather than historical fact. ‘What these material-
ists are unable to understand is that not only are we unable to prove it, but
also that this fact does not bother us at all’ wrote the RFU’s official history
in response to those seeking proof of the Webb Ellis story. 17 Similarly, the
Australian Rules and football traditions 95
Notes
1 Australia Junior [Journal of the Young Australia League], no. 2, undated, c. 1906, p. 10.
2 Quoted in Leonie Sandercock and Ian Turner, Up Where Cazaly? (Melbourne,
1981), p. 33. See also W.F. Mandle ‘Games People Played: cricket and football in
England and Victoria in the Late-nineteenth Century’, Historical Studies, vol. 15,
no. 60 (April 1973), pp. 511–35.
3 Deakin’s speech of 28 August 1908 is reprinted in full in Richard Cashman,
John O’Hara and Andrew Honey (eds), Sport, Federation, Nation (Sydney, 2001),
pp. 111–13. For similar sentiments expressed by British Rugby Union writers
in the years before 1914, see Tony Collins, ‘English Rugby Union and the First
World War’, The Historical Journal, vol. 45, no. 4 (2002), pp. 797–817.
4 C.C. Mullen, History of Australian Rules Football from 1858 to 1958 (Carlton,
1958).The Scottish link is examined in John Williamson’s Football’s Forgotten Tour
(Applecross, 2003).There was an ‘Edinburgh Australasian Football Club’ formed
in 1886, but this played rugby football; see Otago Daily Times, 4 December 1888.
5 For the tours to Ireland, see Peter Burke, ‘Harry and the Galahs’, ASSH Bulletin,
no. 29, December 1998, 9–17. Barry O’Dwyer, ‘The Shaping of Victorian Rules
Football’, Victorian Historical Journal, vol. 60, no. 1, pp. 27–41, argues the case for
the Irish origins of the game, but see Blainey, A Game of Our Own, 2nd Edition
(Melbourne: Black Ink, 2003), pp. 187–96. for a debunking of this myth.
6 Much of the debate can be seen in the controversy surrounding Gillian Hib-
bins’ chapter in Geoff Slattery (ed.) The Australian Game of Football (Melbourne,
2008). Martin Flanagan defence, ‘Football Ebbs and Flow with Tide of Society’,
The Age (Melbourne), 9 August 2008.
7 James Dawson, Australian Aborigines:The Language and Customs of Several Tribes of
Aborigines in the Western District of Victoria, Australia (Melbourne, 1881), p. 85.
8 Perhaps the most representative example can be found in Martin Flanagan, ‘A
Battle of Wills’, The Age, 10 May 2008.
9 Greg de Moore, Tom Wills: His Spectacular Rise and Tragic Fall (Sydney, 2008),
p. 161 (for his support for a rugby-style cross bar and designated kicker), and
pp. 283–6 for lack of mention of Aboriginal ball games.As Rob Hess has pointed
out,Wills involvement in the 1868 Aboriginal cricket tour of the United King-
dom make it unlikely he would seek to disguise any aboriginal influence.
10 Blainey, pp. 118–22.
11 Blainey, pp. 64–5 and 227. For a discussion on scrummaging, See Robin Grow
‘From Gum . . . ’ in Hess, pp. 15, 30 and 78.
12 Gregory de Moore’s research has documented that H.S. Wills was ‘listed as hav-
ing murdered several aborigines’ in the western district of Victoria. Gregory de
Moore, In From the Cold: Tom Wills – A Nineteenth Century Sporting Hero (PhD
thesis,Victoria University, Melbourne, 2008), pp. 119–21.
13 For example, see the accounts of Aboriginal footballers in the 1920s and 1950s
in Richard Broome, Aboriginal Victorians: A History Since 1800 (Sydney, 2005),
pp. 224–5. For a post-war example, see Peter Read, Charles Perkins, A Biography
(Melbourne: Penguin revised edition, 2001), pp. 51–2.
14 Eric Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger (eds), The Invention of Tradition (Cam-
bridge, 1983), pp. 1–2.
15 For Doubleday, see Harold Seymour, Baseball: The Early Years (Oxford, 1960),
pp. 8–12 and James A. Vlasich, A Legend for the Legendary: The Origin of the
Australian Rules and football traditions 97
Baseball Hall of Fame (Wisconsin, 1990), pp. 162–8. For Webb Ellis, see Tony
Collins, Rugby’s Great Split (London: Frank Cass, 1998), pp. 5–8 and William
Baker, ‘William Webb Ellis and the Origins of Rugby Football’, Albion, vol. 13,
no. 2 (Summer, 1981), pp. 117–30. Douglas Booth his The Field (Abingdon,
2006), ch. 6, pp. 111–26, discusses sporting myths but in typical post-modern
fashion draws no distinction between actuality and invention.
16 In reality it was J.B. Thompson, one of the four Melbourne rule-framers who
used the phrase in the Victorian Cricketers’ Guide for 1859–60. See Hibbins and
Mancini, p. 18.
17 U.A. Titley and R. McWhirter, Centenary History of the Rugby Football Union
(London: Rugby Football Union, 1970), p. 9.
18 Quoted in Stephen Jay Gould, ‘The Creation Myths of Cooperstown’ in his
Triumph and Tragedy in Mudville (New York: Jonatahn Cape, 2003), p. 199.
19 Jim Poulter, From Where Football Came. . . (September 2007) at www.sporting
pulse.com/assoc_page.cgi?client=1-5545-0-0-0&sID=75914&news_task=D
ETAIL&articleID=5854332§ionID=75914 accessed 13.05, 25 May 2009.
20 The importance of the Doubleday myth to baseball’s Hall of Fame is described
in Vlasich, A Legend for the Legendary:The Origin of the Baseball Hall of Fame.
21 Eric Hobsbawm, ‘Mass Producing Traditions’, in Eric Hobsbawm and Terence
Ranger (eds) The Invention of Tradition (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1983), p. 271.
13
IRELAND
Creating Gaelic football
No movement having for its object the social and political advancement
of a nation from the tyranny of imported and enforced customs and man-
ners can be regarded as perfect if it has not made adequate provision for
the preservation and cultivation of the national pastimes of the people.
—Michael Cusack, 18841
Michael Cusack didn’t hang up his rugby boots until he was 35. A self-
described ‘sterling lover of the game’, in 1879 the burly forward had intro-
duced rugby football into the Dublin academy school he had established to
train the sons of the capital’s well-to-do. The school team joined the Irish
Rugby Football Union in 1880 but Cusack became frustrated by his side’s
lack of success and wound up the team the following year. But the experi-
ence didn’t dampen his enthusiasm for the game and he joined a local adult
rugby club, Phoenix FC. In his final season as a player he packed down for
Phoenix against Dublin University in the first-ever Leinster Senior Cup
competition match before retiring in 1882. From that point, he would
spend the rest of his life trying to destroy his first sporting love.
Rugby was the first modern football code to be played extensively in
Ireland. A club playing a game seemingly based on Rugby School rules was
formed at Trinity College Dublin as early as 1854 and by the early 1870s
Irish rugby clubs were sufficiently well established to host visiting clubs
from England and Scotland. In 1875 Ireland played its first international
match. It ended in an embarrassing defeat to England but the very fact that
Ireland 99
internationals could be played against the English and Scots gave rugby a
national prominence. In Leinster, Munster and Ulster, knock-out cup tour-
naments were established for the leading Catholic and Protestant private
schools.2
But Ireland was a very different place to the rest of that nineteenth-
century Anglophone world. In contrast to Australia, Canada, New Zealand
and English-speaking South Africa, the majority of the population did
not think of themselves as British or even as sharing a common set of
Anglo-Saxon cultural values. Indeed, the majority Catholic popula-
tion wanted some form of political and cultural independence from the
British crown, and during the mid-nineteenth century Ireland underwent
a ‘Gaelic Revival’. In 1877 the Society for the Preservation of the Irish
Language was formed to campaign for Irish to be taught in schools. Two
years later, widespread discontent about rent and land ownership among
Ireland’s impoverished tenant farmers led to the creation of the Land
League, based on the slogan of ‘the land of Ireland for the people of Ire-
land’. In 1882 the Irish nationalist MP Charles Stewart Parnell gave new
life to the ‘Land War’, as the struggle of the tenant farmers against their
landlords had become known, by establishing the Irish National League.
At the same time, he transformed the Home Rule League, a loose group-
ing of Irish MPs in the House of Commons, into the well-organised and
influential Irish Parliamentary Party. The Gaelic Journal, the first significant
bilingual journal in Ireland, also began publication in English and Irish in
1882. At the 1885 general election the Irish Parliamentary Party increased
its representation to eighty-five MPs and unequivocally had the support of
a large majority of the Irish population. The demand for separation from
Britain in politics and culture was growing increasingly loud. Rugby was
therefore born into an Ireland that was rejecting much of the British cul-
ture from which the game had emerged.
One of those Irishman who had come to reject the British nationalism of
sport was Michael Cusack himself. His love of games led him to journalism
and, among many other publications, he wrote regularly for the Irish Sports-
man, The Irishman and United Ireland. In 1887, partly because of his unerring
ability to fall out with everyone, he began his own weekly, The Celtic Times.
As part of his increasingly nationalist outlook he joined the Society for the
Preservation of the Irish Language in 1882, by which time he had abandoned
his former love of rugby and cricket in favour of what he viewed as tradi-
tional Irish sport. In this, he saw himself as the sporting equivalent of cultural
nationalists seeking to preserve the Irish language, literature and culture.
It was this that animated his historic ‘A Word about Irish Athletics’ article
that he published in The Irishman and United Ireland on 11 October 1884.
100 Ireland
This rallying cry denounced ‘the tyranny of imported and enforced customs
and manners’ and called on the Irish people to
take the management of their games into their own hands, to encour-
age and promote in every way every form of athletics which is pecu-
liarly Irish, and to remove with one sweep everything foreign and
iniquitous in the present system.3
The following week the Irishman published a supportive letter from Mau-
rice Davin, arguably Ireland’s leading athlete. Whereas Cusack’s letter had
focused on athletics, Davin called for the revival of all Irish sports, especially
football and hurling:
Irish football is a great game, and worth going a very long way to see,
when played on a fairly laid-out ground and under proper rules. Many
old people say that hurling exceeded it as a trial of men. I would not
care to see either game now, as the rules stand at present. I may say
there are no rules, and, therefore, those games are often dangerous.
I am anxious to see both games revived under regular rules.4
Cusack and Davin issued a call for a meeting to discuss ‘the formation of
a Gaelic Association for the preservation and cultivation of our National
Pastimes and for providing rational amusement for the Irish people during
their leisure hours’, to be held at Hayes Hotel in Thurles on 1 November.5
Accounts vary, but it is generally accepted that Cusack and Davin were
joined at the meeting by five others.6 Together, they agreed to create the
Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA).
The men who formed the GAA were typical of those who became
leaders of the nationalist movements across Europe in the second half of
the nineteenth century. Confirming Eric Hobsbawm’s observation that ‘the
battle-lines of linguistic nationalism were manned by provincial journalists,
schoolteachers and aspiring subaltern officials’ three of the seven founding
GAA members, including Cusack, were journalists, one was a policeman
and another a solicitor’.7
The formation of the GAA was not simply a political act to create a spe-
cifically Irish nationalist sports organisation.8 Both Cusack and Davin were
genuinely concerned for the future of Irish athletics.The Amateur Athletics
Association (AAA) nominally regulated athletics in Ireland but it was seen to
be interested only in privately educated British sportsmen. Sport in Ireland,
believed Cusack and Davin, was badly organised and needed root-and-
branch reform in order for traditional Irish games to be revived.
Ireland 101
superiority of the foreigner’. Another Irish defeat the following year led him
to lament that ‘imported games have been a source of humiliation to us’.14
Shortly after the formation of the GAA, this antagonism to rugby came
into sharp focus in Cork. The Munster region was unique in Ireland for
having a rugby culture that, like South Wales and the North of England,
embraced all classes from labourers to lawyers. Predominantly played on
a Sunday with cup competitions at the heart of its season, rugby quickly
became a vehicle for popular civic pride in a way that sharply contrasted to
the more patrician-inflected rugby of Dublin and Belfast. But this popular-
ity also meant it was also affected by the great revival of nationalist feeling in
the 1880s and a number of rugby clubs quickly became identified with the
GAA. J.F. Murphy, a leading official of the Lee FC rugby club, even became
a vice-president of the GAA. At the start of the 1885–86 season Murphy
formed the ‘Munster National Football Association’ to play football under
his own Irish ‘national rules’.15
In reality, Murphy’s rules were a very slightly modified version of rugby
that sought to fill the vacuum in the GAA’s football rules. Cusack was not
fooled by Murphy’s claims to be playing the national game. Railing against
a ‘foreign faction’ in the GAA, he accused Murphy of wanting to ‘stick to
the games our masters permitted us to play when they had more control
over the national life of Ireland than they have at present’.16 When the Cork
delegates presented their ‘national rules’ to the GAA at its first annual gen-
eral meeting in October 1885, Cusack attacked the proposal as ‘undisguised
rugby’. Maurice Davin, the GAA chair, struck a more conciliatory note. He
argued that clubs should be allowed to play any type of football and still be
eligible to take part in GAA athletic meetings, but that football clubs play-
ing their own rules could not themselves become branches of the GAA. To
the Munster delegates, this implied that clubs like Murphy’s Lee FC, which
also had an athletics section, could remain in the GAA and still play their
own football code.17
Cork was not the only GAA area that initially played a type of rugby. In
1886 Wexford GAA’s county football championship was won by Rosslare,
who beat Crossabeg by three tries to two, a scoreline that was impossible
according to GAA football rules, which mentioned no such thing as a try.
Davin’s attempt at a compromise simply prolonged the increasingly frac-
tious debate until the GAA’s next general meeting in April 1886 resolved
the issue by expelling the Lee club from the GAA. It and the other Munster
Association clubs returned to rugby, while the Wexford results disappeared
from the record books.18
The Munster football controversy was a pivotal moment in the devel-
opment of the GAA’s code of football. By forcing the GAA to define
Ireland 103
exactly how its code of football was played and how it differed from rugby,
the debate was the catalyst for the codification of modern Gaelic football.
Over the course of the next eighteen months, three decisive rule changes
redefined Gaelic football in Ireland and laid the basis for the modern
game.19
The first was to restrict handling of the ball. The 1884 rules said nothing
about the use of hands by players, and this was a major reason why the Mun-
ster rebels thought their modified rugby was compatible with the principles
of the GAA. By 1888 the use of hands had been tightly constrained and the
new rules stated that it could be caught or hit with the hand but it could
not be carried or thrown. There could now be no running with the ball in
hand or passing it to teammates, as was allowed in rugby.20
Nor could there be bodily tackling. In 1886 ‘wrestling and handigrips [an
older term for hand-to-hand struggles]’ were outlawed. Although this has
been presented as removing traditional Irish wrestling features from football,
in reality it took the sport a further step from rugby by banning the tack-
ling of a player around the body. It also opened the game by removing the
potential for loose scrummages and mauls.
The third distinctive change was the 1886 introduction of ‘point posts’,
single posts placed twenty-one feet apart at either side of the goal. Like
soccer, and originally rugby, the only method of scoring at this time was
the goal. The difficulty in actually getting the ball through the posts meant
many matches ended up as 0–0 draws and concern was expressed that low-
scoring games were not attractive to spectators. The RFU overcame this in
the 1880s by making tries a method of scoring and eventually introducing a
points system. This course of action was precluded by the GAA’s antipathy
to rugby and so point posts were introduced. A ball that was kicked over
the goal line between the goal posts and the point posts scored a point. The
result of a match continued to be decided by the most number of goals, but
if both teams scored an equal number of goals, the match was decided by
the number of points scored.
In developing its own rules, the GAA did not try to recreate Irish football
as it existed the past.This was widely recognised at the time. One commen-
tator claimed that ‘Irish football as played prior to 1884 was quite a differ-
ent game from that known now as Gaelic football’ and GAA rules would
‘divest the game of all the interest it might possess for an Irish country
audience’.21 Yet there was nothing in previous versions of football played in
Ireland that could be identified as unique. The GAA was a product of the
late nineteenth century and needed a football code that could be played in
contemporary society, not the sprawling, haphazard folk football of earlier
centuries that disrupted work and inconvenienced trade. It therefore had to
104 Ireland
base its rule-making on the experience of other codes and the trial-and-
error process of actually playing football.
Once the distinctiveness of the game had been established, the GAA’s
rules evolved in response to the difficulties encountered by players or the
frustrations of spectators. The lack of goal-scoring opportunities became
a perennially acute issue. For example, in 1891 the fifty-five matches that
took place in Westmeath managed to record just thirty-five goals.22 To open
up the game, the size of teams was reduced to seventeen-a-side in 1892 and
to today’s fifteen-a-side in 1913. Adjustments were made to the size of the
goal and the distance of the point posts. Goals were assigned a points value,
initially five as proposed by Kerry in 1889 but reduced to three in 1896, and
matches would henceforth be won by the team scoring the most points.23
Although deeply hostile to rugby, the GAA was not averse to borrow-
ing from soccer. It essentially revived the FA’s original Rules 8, 9, 11 and
12, which allowed the ball to be caught or knocked down but not carried
or passed by hand.24 It also took soccer’s throw-in rule, in contrast to the
throw-in from rugby’s line-out, and borrowed the shape of soccer’s goals,
albeit making them slightly narrower. But it also came to resemble Austral-
ian Rules football. Neither had an offside rule. Neither allowed carrying the
ball but did allow it to be caught. And both introduced an additional set of
posts, the Australians preceding the Irish by twenty years.25
part of its football culture. Collingwood FC, based in industrial north Mel-
bourne, was supported by many Irish Catholics, while the popularity of
neighbouring Fitzroy FC among its Irish population earned the club the
nickname ‘The Fenians’.
Links with football in Ireland were common. Up until the 1870s,
matches of indeterminate rules against visiting Irish regiments often took
place in Melbourne, such as Hotham’s 5–0 drubbing of the 18th Royal Irish
Regiment in 1870.28 News from ‘home’ often included sporting chat. In
1887 the Sydney edition of the Freeman’s Journal published the GAA’s latest
set of football rules, while the following year The Tasmanian newspaper in
Launceston discussed recent developments in Gaelic football.29 Thus family
ties, military visits and the easy availability of news meant that sport played
a significant role in the cultural links between Irish citizens in Ireland and
Australia.
This can clearly be seen in hurling. As Pat Bracken’s painstaking research
has uncovered, hurling was played extensively by Irish communities in
Australia.30 At least twenty hurling clubs were active in Victoria between
1877 and the formation of the GAA in 1884. In April 1878 clubs around
Melbourne formed their own Victorian Hurling Club Association (VHCA)
and drew up a code of rules for the game. Among its members were clubs
in the Melbourne football hotbeds of Collingwood, Richmond, Prahan
and Brighton. The VHCA’s sixteen rules incorporated some of the features
of Australian Rules football, including the distinctive goal posts with no
cross bar and two accompanying side posts. When Maurice Davin came to
draw up the GAA’s rules, he used the same sized playing pitch, agreed that
twenty-one would be the maximum size of a team, and in 1886 included
the distinctively Australian second set of posts.31
Of course, this does not mean that the GAA simply copied the Austral-
ians. Rules for hurling were also drawn up in Ireland in the same period,
for example by clubs in Killimor (1869),Trinity College (1870) and Dublin
(1883).32 Rather, the similarities in rules highlights the transnational nature
of discussions about how to play the sport. The development of Gaelic
football’s distinctive rules was not simply an attempt to apply Irish nation-
alist principles to sport but was also influenced by what was happening in
football games across the English-speaking world.
Indeed, the transnational exchange of football knowledge between Ireland
and Australia may well have gone both ways. It was not until 1897 that the
Australian game awarded a point for a ball that went between the goal and
the behind posts (as they became known in Australia). The Australians also
moved their behind posts closer to the goal, emulating the twenty-one-foot
distance that the GAA had specified.33 Ironically, shortly after the Australians
106 Ireland
PLATE 9 Kerry GAA great Dick Fitzgerald’s 1913 handbook for Gaelic footballers
had replicated the Irish post rules, the GAA abandoned them, opting instead
in 1910 to extend the goal posts upwards in rugby style to award points for
kicks over the cross bar and to bring in soccer-style goal nets.34
By the time the GAA abolished point posts, its football rulebook had
grown from its original ten short points to twenty-one, with an additional
twenty-five explanatory notes.The claim of the great Kerry football captain
Dick Fitzgerald in his 1914 book How to Play Gaelic Football that ‘Gaelic
football is what might be called a natural football game . . . truly there is no
artificiality about our game’, was no more than wishful thinking.35 Far from
Ireland 107
Notes
1 Michael Cusack, ‘A Word about Irish Athletics’, The Irishman, 11 October 1884.
2 For the history of Irish rugby, see Liam O’Callaghan, Rugby in Munster (Cork:
Cork University Press, 2011) and Jean-Pierre Bodis, Le rugby d’Irlande: Identité,
territorialité (Bordeaux: Maison des sciences de l’Homme d’Aquitaine, 1993).
3 The Irishman, 11 October 1884.
4 The Irishman, 18 October 1884.
5 United Ireland, 8 November 1884.
6 Paul Rouse, Sport and Ireland: A History (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015),
p. 162.
7 E.J. Hobsbawm, Nations and Nationalism Since 1870 (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1990), p. 117.
8 Rouse, Sport and Ireland, pp. 162–5. More broadly, he takes issue with W.F. Man-
dle’s thesis in his The Gaelic Athletic Association and Irish Nationalist Politics: 1884–
1924 (London: Gill and Macmillan, 1987). See also Richard McElligott, Forging
a Kingdom:The GAA in Kerry 1884–1934 (Cork: Collins Press, 2013).
9 See, for example, Daily Journal, 17 August 1722. A.B. Gleason, ‘Hurling in Medi-
eval Ireland’, in Mike Cronin,William Murphy and Paul Rouse (eds) The Gaelic
Athletic Association 1884–2009 (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2009), pp. 1–14.
10 For the British suspicion of Irish football matches, see London Gazette, 4
April 1719.
11 Eoin Kinsella, ‘Riotous Proceedings and the Cricket of Savages: Football and
Hurling in Early Modern Hurling Ireland’, in Mike Cronin, William Murphy
and Paul Rouse (eds) The Gaelic Athletic Association 1884–2009 (Dublin: Irish
Academic Press, 2009), pp. 16–19. McElligott, Forging a Kingdom, pp. 62–4. More
generally, see James Kelly’s outstanding Sport in Ireland, 1600–1840 (Dublin:
Four Courts Press, 2014).
12 See Rouse, Sport and Ireland, p. 171 and Joseph Lennon, The Playing Rules of
Football and Hurling 1884–1995 (Gormanstown, 1997), p. viii.
13 The rules can be found in United Ireland, 7 February 1885.
14 Freeman’s Journal, 31 January 1885. United Ireland, 13 February 1886.
15 United Ireland, 31 October 1885. See also Liam O’Callaghan, Rugby in Munster:
A Social and Cultural History (Cork: Cork University Press, 2011), pp. 81–3.
16 United Ireland, 6 February 1886.
17 Freeman’s Journal, 2 November 1885.
18 Freeman’s Journal, 7 April 1886. For Wexford, see and Eoghan Corry, The History
of Gaelic Football (Dublin: Gill & Macmillan, 2010), ch. 1.
19 For more on the centrality of the Munster conflict to the development of
Gaelic football, see W.F. Mandle, The Gaelic Athletic Association and Irish National-
ist Politics 1884–1924 (London: Christopher Helm, 1987), pp. 32–4.
20 For all of these rule changes, see Joe Lennon, The Playing Rules of Football and
Hurling 1884–1995 (Gormanstown: Northern Recreation Consultants, 1997),
pp. 24–6.
108 Ireland
We trust that the chivalrous sense of fair play which the warrior heroes
Cucullain and Ferdiad displayed towards each other will animate our
Gaelic footballers and hurlers.
—Dick Fitzgerald, 19141
In one important sense, it did not matter what the rules of Gaelic football
were. Although the GAA rulebook now differentiated its own football from
rugby and soccer, the actual rules of the game appear to have made little
or no difference to its popularity. Almost from its founding in 1884, GAA
events, which usually staged a number of football contests between local
sides, were often capable of attracting crowds in excess of 10,000 spectators,
emulating the crowds seen at major soccer and rugby matches in England
at that time.
Whereas it had taken the British football codes two decades to reach this
level, the GAA had emerged from the Hayes Hotel in 1884 almost fully
formed as a mass spectator sport.The lateness of its birth meant it came into
a world in which a deep-going culture of spectator sport had taken root
over the previous two decades.The spread of literacy, newspapers and maga-
zines meant that by 1884 awareness of sport was part of daily life for great
sections of the Irish population. Even the fact that Ireland was a predomi-
nantly rural nation was no barrier to the popularity of football. Although it
lacked the urban population and industrial economy that existed across the
Irish Sea, Ireland was sufficiently integrated into the cultural and economic
life of the Victorian era that sports mania captured the imagination of the
110 Football and nationalism in Ireland
rural labourer in Laois just as easily as it had the textile factory hand in
Leeds or the miner in Leith.
Indeed, rural society may have given the GAA an advantage. The tradi-
tion of village sports and gatherings in Ireland had not been extinguished,
as had happened during the industrial revolution in Britain. After the
devastating impact of the Irish Famine of 1845–49, which killed around
800,000 people through starvation and disease, the popularity of Gaelic
sports could be seen as part of the collective recovery of rural communities,
which allowed the GAA to be embraced without controversy by Ireland’s
Catholic population.
The structure that the GAA adopted for its clubs and competitions was
far more important to its popularity than any particular set of rules under
which its rules might be played. From the start, the GAA organised its teams
on the principle of locality, usually based on the Catholic church parish, and
at a county level for representative matches. This meant it could immedi-
ately build on one of the cornerstones of modern football: the idea that a
team was a representative of local identity. Its appeal was amplified further
when in 1887 the GAA launched the All-Ireland Championships, height-
ening local rivalries, creating regional ones, and offering the opportunity,
for the first time in any Irish team sport, of national glory. This was a heady
cocktail that in Ireland only the GAA could provide.
The appeal of the GAA was also enhanced because, unlike the other
football codes, it staged its matches on Sundays.2 Whereas the leaders of
rugby union and soccer refused to play on Sundays, the GAA had no
qualms. It even received an imprimatur from Archbishop Thomas Croke,
who enthusiastically endorsed Sunday sport as long as players and spectators
were ‘never unmindful’ of their duty to attend mass. The GAA was there-
fore able to fashion a new type of Sunday entertainment, in which whole
families and communities could gather for the day to eat, drink and cheer
their local representatives.
A GAA Sunday resembled a local carnival, with brass bands, community
singing and all manner of activity taking place alongside the football, hurl-
ing and athletic contests. Railway companies ran special trains for visiting
supporters to travel to see their side in towns and villages they would nor-
mally have no reason to visit. On arrival supporters and players would often
march behind a brass band as they made their way to their host’s ground.
For those who liked a drink, the GAA also offered a way to circumvent
Ireland’s ban on the sale of alcohol on Sundays. Anyone who travelled more
than three miles from home to a match acquired the legal status of a trav-
eller with the right to be served in a public house. For many, this in itself
Football and nationalism in Ireland 111
was probably more than enough reason to go to a match.3 One can gain a
flavour of the atmosphere at an early football match from the Celtic Times’
description of the build-up to a match in the small village of Kilmacthomas
in County Waterford in March 1887:
Eventually, the report notes, 7,000 people from the surrounding area
turned out that Sunday afternoon, approximately three times the village’s
population.
This was the key to the success of the GAA: its ability to stage events at
which people could watch sport collectively in a highly convivial environ-
ment while at the same time expressing their local and national pride. The
experience of Gaelic football is the most powerful counter-argument to the
‘football historian’s fallacy’, the belief that it is the rules of a football code
that determine its popularity. After the temporary decline of the GAA’s
fortunes in the early 1890s, when its reputation was damaged by its close
association with the paramilitary Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB) and
its support for Parnell during his highly public divorce case, the popularity
of Gaelic football followed an upward curve until the outbreak of World
War One, regardless of what was written in its rulebook.
redemption on the sporting field, thanks to games in which the Irish could
take pride in their own achievements without suffering the humiliation of
defeat by the occupying power.
Rugby was viewed, at least outside of Munster, as a sport of the middle
classes, while soccer’s relatively late arrival in Ireland – the first recorded
match under FA rules appears to have taken place as late as 1875 – meant it
could not challenge the GAA’s hold on the national imagination. In 1890
the GAA numbered 875 clubs while the Irish Football Association could
muster just 124. Rugby had even fewer.5 Nor did the national soccer side’s
dismal five wins and five draws in fifty-two matches before 1900 do much
to rouse the blood of patriotic sports fans.6
The emergence of Gaelic football appears to be the most overt example
of the rise of football in the service of nationalism in the second half of
the nineteenth century. Just as nationalist politicians in Europe constructed
their ‘invented traditions’ of language, ritual and customs, so too football
offered a narrative that complemented the framework of nationalism. The
spectacle, drama and binary nature of football provided a stage upon which
the shifting stories of nationalism could be acted out.
Yet the nationalism of Gaelic football only appears to be unusual because
the nationalism of those codes of football based on the British model of
Muscular Christianity was taken for granted and did not have to be explic-
itly stated. British nationalism was at the heart of all types of football. Even
American football drew on British cultural tropes to tell its story. But the
GAA expressed the nationalism of those who opposed Britain, or at least its
policy towards Ireland, and therefore its nationalism appeared to be aberrant
in comparison to that of other football codes.
This difference in perception can be seen by examining the links between
the GAA and militant Irish republicans. Paul Rouse has convincingly dem-
onstrated that the Irish Republican Brotherhood played a marginal role at
best in the formation of the GAA.7 By 1889, however, it appears that sup-
porters of the IRB had gained a majority on the GAA national executive.
Yet even if ‘physical force’ Irish Republicans were a major influence in the
organisation, this should not be surprising. As those familiar with Sir Henry
Newbolt’s Vitae Lampada will realise, the link between sport and the British
armed forces was perhaps even stronger. Attendees at the founding of the
FA in 1863 included five career soldiers, a future assistant under-secretary
of state for war, and representatives of the War Office and the Royal Naval
School clubs.8 Sporting organisations across the British Empire shared
similarly close ties to the military. The governing bodies of other football
codes were no less political than the GAA, but their support for the status
quo meant their politics were perceived as being within the spectrum of
Football and nationalism in Ireland 113
social snobbery was no different from that which dripped from the pens of
such upper-class Englishman as Arthur Budd and N.L. Jackson, and, it might
be added, was also regularly directed against the Irish themselves.
Although its leadership adopted many of the prejudices of English ama-
teurism, the GAA’s form of amateurism was less draconian than that of the
RFU or other similarly zealous sports organisations. Small amounts of prize
money were acceptable and those who had competed with or against pro-
fessionals in other sports were allowed to compete in GAA events. Unlike
many British sports, there was no machinery of compliance to hunt down
suspected transgressors of the amateur catechism.
Did this less rigid regime mean that the GAA’s amateurism was demo-
cratic and not based on class division, as the GAA itself and some historians
have claimed?15 In contrast to the rest of the English-speaking world, the
GAA’s amateurism was never tested by an internal revolt or external profes-
sional threat. Loyalty to parish and county, so crucial to the GAA’s popular-
ity, was therefore not threatened by the lure of greater rewards elsewhere.
The rising tide of nationalism in Ireland also gave the leadership of the
GAA an extraordinary level of moral authority. Disloyalty to its principles
could be, and often was, portrayed as a lack of patriotism. Free of internal
threats to its authority or external threats to its popularity, the GAA’s ama-
teurism could remain largely benign.
Michael Cusack, Maurice Davin and the GAA leaders who succeeded
them were well aware that they had created a new form of football. Like
those who made up the backbone of innumerable nationalist movements
across nineteenth-century Europe, their lives and their politics had become
one, the only difference being that the GAA had enabled them to do this
through the medium of sport. As nation-builders, they understood the
importance of sport for the nation in the modern world. Once they had
differentiated their code of football from those of the British in the 1880s,
they had little subsequent need to justify the rules of their game by refer-
ence to Irish traditions because they understood that Gaelic football, like
every other type of football, was about far more than simply what was writ-
ten in its rulebook or that which took place on the pitch.
Notes
1 Dick Fitzgerald, How to Play Gaelic Football (Cork: Guy & Co., 1914), p. 78.
2 Neal Garnham makes this point strongly in The Origins and Development of Foot-
ball in Ireland (Belfast: Ulster Historical Association, 1999), pp. 3–5.
3 This appeal is best captured and explained in Paul Rouse’s wonderfully evoca-
tive Sport and Ireland, pp. 179–81.
4 The Celtic Times, 12 March 1887.
Football and nationalism in Ireland 115
5 Tom Hunt, Sport and Society in Victorian Ireland: The Case of Westmeath (Cork:
Cork University Press, 2007), p. 1.
6 See Martin Moore, ‘The Origins of Association Football in Ireland, 1875–1880:
A Reappraisal’, Sport in History, vol. 37, no. 4 (2017), pp. 505–28. The definitive
history of the early years of Irish soccer is Neal Garnham, Association Football and
Society in Pre-Partition Ireland (Belfast: Ulster Historical Association, 2004).
7 Rouse, Sport and Ireland, pp. 164–5.
8 I am grateful to the superb research of Andy Mitchell for the biographies of
those who attended the FA’s founding meetings at www.scottishsporthistory.
com, accessed 4 December 2017.
9 For example, see Connor Curran’s excellent The Development of Sport in Donegal
1880–1935 (Cork: Cork University Press, 2015).
10 David Hassan, ‘The Gaelic Athletic Association, Rule 21, and Police Reform in
Northern Ireland’, Journal of Sport & Social Issues vol. 29, no. 1 (2005), pp. 60–78.
11 See also Mike Cronin, ‘Fighting for Ireland, Playing for England? The Nation-
alist History of the Gaelic Athletic Association and the English Influence on
Irish Sport’, The International Journal of the History of Sport, vol. 15, no. 3 (1998),
pp. 36–56.
12 ‘The Physical Training of the Young’, The Celtic Times, 9 April 1887.
13 The Celtic Times, 14 May 1887.
14 Quoted in Donal McAnallen ‘ “The Greatest Amateur Association in the
World”? The GAA and Amateurism’, in Mike Cronin, William Murphy and
Paul Rouse (eds) The Gaelic Athletic Association 1884–2009 (Dublin: Irish Aca-
demic Press, 2009), pp. 161–2. For a broader discussion on GAA amateurism see
John Connolly and Paddy Dolan, ‘The Amplification and De-Amplification of
Amateurism and Professionalism in the Gaelic Athletic Association’, The Inter-
national Journal of the History of Sport, vol. 30, no. 8 (2013), pp. 853–70.
15 See, for example, McAnallen, ‘ “The Greatest Amateur Association in the World”
pp. 158 and 273.
15
AMERICAN FOOTBALL
The old game in the new world
Football has earned for itself a unique place in the life of this coun-
try . . . it is the national autumn sport, without a rival, and as such will
retain its position as long as Anglo-Saxon blood flows in the veins of the
young American.
—Fielding Yost, 19051
In June 1857 the New York Times noted the average New Yorker was wealth-
ier than the average Londoner. However the position was reversed when it
came to health.
There can be no reasonable doubt that one very prominent and effi-
cient cause of this difference between ourselves and out transatlantic
kinsmen in respect of physical development is to be found in the
greater prevalence through England of a taste for all manner of manly
and athletic exercises
Where is the [American] lover of letters that does not claim an interest
in the town of Avon? Where is the lawyer that does not believe that
he possesses an inalienable right in the Inns of Court? Where is the
football man from the field, side line, or stand who does not feel that
he is an inheritor in the glories of Old Bigside at Rugby?13
Consequently, the United States adopted and adapted the British model
in which schools and colleges were central to the organisation of ama-
teur sport. American school and college sport followed the template of
sport in elite British institutions. In nineteenth-century Britain, Eton
versus Harrow cricket and rowing contests, and Oxford versus Cam-
bridge cricket, rugby and rowing contests occupied a central position
in national, middle-class sporting culture. Football contests between
American football 119
Harvard and Yale, which became known simply as ‘The Game’, mirrored
the annual Oxford versus Cambridge university rugby match. However,
unlike Britain, college-level education in America grew exponentially
in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, due in large part
to the impact of the Morrill Land Grant Acts of 1860 and 1892, which
provided universities with land on which to build. This was precisely
the period in which football became identified as an educational asset, a
marker of social distinction, and, not least, a significant revenue genera-
tor for U.S. universities.14
This intertwining of football and the universities provided the platform
for the subsequent exponential growth of the college sports’ system. In con-
trast, there were barely a dozen universities in the United Kingdom in 1900,
and the expansion of higher education was slow and piecemeal until the
1960s. British university sport therefore never had the geographic spread or
national significance that college sport acquired in early twentieth-century
America. So, although college and high school sport in America would
soon develop a very different culture to sport in Britain, football initially
emerged in America of the 1860s and 1870s profoundly shaped by British
culture and tradition. Without Tom Brown’s Schooldays, there would have no
been no Friday Night Lights.
and, after playing and defeating a team of former pupils of England’s Eton
College in December 1873, decided that football should be played using the
Etonian eleven-a-side formation.17 The following year, in May 1874, Har-
vard, whose ‘Boston Rules’ allowed carrying the ball, hosted two matches
with its Canadian equivalent, Montreal’s rugby-playing McGill University.
It would be these two Harvard-McGill games that set the tone for football’s
subsequent development in America.
The first game was played according to Harvard’s own rules, which the
home side won easily. The second was played under McGill’s rugby rules,
which Harvard surprisingly drew 0–0. More importantly, the experience
convinced the Harvard footballers that, in the words of the Harvard Advo-
cate, ‘the Rugby game is in much better favour than the somewhat sleepy
game played by our men’ and they switched to the rugby code.18 Feeling
compelled to compete against its traditional foe,Yale dropped its own rules
and played Harvard under amended rugby rules, known as the ‘concession-
ary rules’, in November 1875. Princeton adopted the new rules and invited
Harvard, Yale and Columbia to create an Intercollegiate Football Associa-
tion (IFA). As had been the case in Britain, pride in one’s own football rules
had been trumped by the desire to compete against one’s fiercest rivals.
The formation of the IFA in November 1876 and the standardisation of
football rules – ‘essentially those of the Rugby Union’ reported the NewYork
Times – created an arena in which America’s elite universities could play out
their intense rivalries.19 Football matches, especially those on Thanksgiv-
ing Day, became major social occasions. In 1878, 5,000 spectators watched
Princeton’s 1–0 victory over Yale at Hoboken.Three years later football had
become so fashionable that the Princeton-Yale match was moved to the
more expansive Polo Grounds in Manhattan where it was watched by over
10,000 people. The Thanksgiving Day game, which became the traditional
meeting ground for the season’s two top teams, was attracting 25,000 peo-
ple by 1890 and 40,000 by 1893.20 Elite universities now provided enter-
tainment for the masses.
Like soccer and rugby in Britain, college football’s rapid success was facil-
itated by the growth of the popular press and transport systems. Matches
between Ivy League universities commanded the back and the front pages
of the major newspapers. The huge profile of the game meant that Ameri-
can universities saw football as a route to publicity, status and reputation.
This was especially true for those which benefited from the Morrill Land
Grant Acts. Many of the names that would dominate college football in the
twentieth century were established this way: California, Clemson, Michigan
State, Penn State, Purdue, Ohio State, Texas A&M, Virginia Tech and many
others began as land grant universities. Through the universities, the game
American football 121
PLATE 10
Quarterback passing from the scrimmage during the 1889 Yale versus
Princeton match (Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, 7 December 1889)
the man of the future [who] must be able to elbow his way among
rough men in the foul air of primary elections; he may need cour-
age enough to take his part in vigilant and safety committees and the
like; he may need to ‘tackle’ an anarchist now and then and perhaps
oftener.22
122 American football
the lower classes prefer watching a Rugby Union game, but that the
Association rules find more favour in the eyes of the middle and upper
classes is made amply evident by the crowds of respectable people that
assemble [for major soccer matches] even in apathetic London.26
More importantly, until the 1900s soccer had neither the significant inter-
national profile nor the ideological framework desired by the middle classes
American football 123
Unexceptional exceptionalism
The rapid series of rule changes that college football underwent in the
1870s and 1880s led many of its followers to believe that it had travelled a
singular path that reflected what became known as American exceptional-
ism. First discussed in Alexis de Tocqueville’s 1840 Democracy in America,
American exceptionalism viewed American society as unique because of
its lack of a feudal past, the vastness of its geography and a supposed greater
degree of social mobility, encapsulated as the ‘American Dream’.27 The most
prominent advocate of the idea that American football was an expression of
American exceptionalism also happened to be the game’s leading coach and
journalist,Yale’s Walter Camp.28
Born in 1859 in Connecticut, Camp was an enthusiastic reader of Tom
Brown’s Schooldays as a youth. He attended Yale from 1876 to 1882, where he
was half-back and captain of its football team, eventually becoming coach in
1888.29 He was the outstanding coach of his era, the most prominent mem-
ber of the Intercollegiate Football Association (the first governing body
for college football) and a prolific football journalist, being a contributing
editor at both Outing and Collier’s magazines. More than anyone else, Camp
was responsible for the narrative of the birth of American football, and his
1886 article ‘The Game and Laws of American Football’ acquired the status
of a Rosetta Stone for understanding the game’s emergence from rugby.30
After initially adopting the English rugby rules, Camp argued, Americans
noticed ‘ambiguities’ in the rules of the game which led them to reform it
to suit American attitudes.The rules had to be amended, he argued in a later
article, because of ‘the absolute lack of any existing foot-ball lore or tradition
on American soil.The English game was one of traditions’.31 Very much the
author of his own legend, Camp himself invented the creation myth of the
American game to fit the narrative of American Exceptionalism.
124 American football
Notes
1 Fielding Yost, Football for Player and Spectator (Ann Arbor: University Publishing:
1905), p. 14.
2 New York Times, 5 June 1857. This chapter is based on my article ‘Unexcep-
tional Exceptionalism: the Transnational Origins of American Football’, Journal
of Global History, vol. 8, no. 2, July 2013, pp. 209–30.
3 New York Times, 30 August 1860.
4 Julie Des Jardins, Walter Camp: Football and the Modern Man (New York: Oxford
University Press, 2015), p. 11.
5 New York World, 17 November 1872.
6 Scott Meacham, Old Division Football, the Indigenous Mob Soccer of Dartmouth Col-
lege, Dartmo (2006), at www.dartmo.com/football.pdf (viewed12 August 2017).
Ron Smith, Sports and Freedom:The Rise of Big-Time College Athletics (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1991), p. 13. For Harvard, see the New York Times, 15
October 1852.
7 Winthrop S. Scudder, An Historical Sketch of the Oneida Football Club of Boston,
1862–1865 (1926) at https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89098742257
;view=1up;seq=3 (viewed 9 April 2012). The Oneida club has recently been
the subject of much attention for claims that it was the first U.S. soccer club, but
there is no evidence that it played any form of modern code.
8 William Matthews, Getting On in the World (Toronto: S.C. Griggs, 1876), p. 61.
9 Quoted in Elliott Gorn, The Manly Art (Cornell: Cornell University Press,
1986), p. 188.
10 The other was Thomas Bailey Aldrich’s 1869 Story of a Bad Boy. See Gordon
Hutner (ed.), Selected Speeches and Writings of Theodore Roosevelt (New York:Vin-
tage 2014), p. 7.
11 Gary B. Magee and Andrew S.Thompson, Empire and Globalisation (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2010), p. 69.
12 See also Roberta J. Park, ‘Sport, Gender and Society in a Transatlantic Victo-
rian Perspective’, The International Journal of the History of Sport, vol. 24, no. 12
(2007), pp. 1570–603.
13 Parke H. Davis, Football. The American Intercollegiate Game (New York: Charles
Scribner, 1911), p. 24.
14 For a discussion of the relationship between football and the growth of Ameri-
can higher education, see Brian Ingrassia, The Rise of the Gridiron University:
Higher Education’s Uneasy Alliance with Big-time Football (Lawrence, KS: Univer-
sity Press of Kansas, 2012) and Ron Smith, Sports and Freedom: The Rise of Big-
Time College Athletics (New York: Oxford University Press, 1991).
15 Davis, pp. 51–2. For the soccer view see Ronald Smith, ‘American Football
Becomes the Dominant Intercollegiate National Pastime’, International Journal of
the History of Sport, vol. 31, nos. 1–2 (2014), pp. 109–19. For the similarity with
Australian rules, see W.J. Henderson, ‘College Football Twenty-Five Years Ago’,
Outing, vol. 37, no. 1 (October 1899), p. 16. It is also worth noting Yale alumni
Rudolf Wurts, who worked in Melbourne in the 1890s, thought Australian
football was ‘as near as can be the game played at Yale’ in 1879, quoted in Walter
Camp, Football Facts and Figures (New York: Harper & Bros, 1894), p. 163.
16 See Davis, pp. 60–1.
126 American football
Organised football had been played in Canada from at least 1861, when stu-
dents from the University of Toronto in Ontario arranged a match among
themselves. Further north, in Quebec, the first recorded match appears to
have taken place in 1862 with a twelve-a-side match between teams of the
Grenadier Guards and the Scots Fusiliers stationed in Montreal, which the
Grenadiers won by two goals and three rouges to nil.2 Over the next few
years the British model was followed and football clubs were established in
Hamilton (1869), Montreal (1872), Toronto (1873) and Ottawa (1876), all
playing the rugby version of football and each comprising young men from
Canada’s English-speaking elite. As with the game in the rest of the Anglo-
phone world at this time, football in Canada was a sport for gentleman.
Canada was a nation that defined itself by its position in the British
Empire and its proximity to the United States. It had been created in 1867
when confederation brought together the previously autonomous Brit-
ish colonies north of the United States, which themselves had occupied
the lands of native Canadians. With the exception of the French-speaking
Quebec nation that was ceded by the French to the British in 1763, the
PLATE 11
An 1892 guide to Canadian football (The Dominion Illustrated Monthly,
February 1892)
Canadian football 129
of the border. But, as with many in the English RFU, some in Canadian
football did not want to see it become a mass spectator sport. The game’s
leadership was resolutely amateur. Writing in 1891, the educationalist and
physician Robert Tait McKenzie argued that
it will be the class of people who will attend the matches that will
have the greatest influence in moulding the game. If the game caters
to the rougher element it will soon become rough and brutal, but if
the class of spectators is of the best, players will be ashamed to disgrace
themselves by ungentlemanly or foul play, and the whole tone of the
game will be elevated.12
thus forming a round compact mass with the ball in the middle.
Directly the holder of the ball has succeeded in forcing it down to the
ground, he shouts ‘Down’ and business may be commenced at once.21
Just as in America, many British rugby followers sought to move the game
away from what Bell’s Life described as the ‘monotonous shoving matches’
of endless scrums.22 This pressure to reform the sport meant that by 1877
games were played fifteen-a-side. Ten fewer forwards on the field meant
that scrums no longer lasted for minutes, because it was easier for the ball to
come out of the scrum. Forwards began to break away from the scrum and
dribble the ball downfield with their feet. The ball also began to be passed
from the scrum-half to the other backs to start attacks. This led to teams
deliberately heeling the ball backwards out of the scrum, to the horror
of traditionalists. In 1878 the rules were further amended so that a tack-
led player, who would previously hold the ball until the forwards gathered
around to form a scrum, was forced to release the ball immediately the
tackle was completed.23 The game became faster and more open.
But the change to eleven-a-side in America had even more far-reaching
consequences. The removal of so many forwards from the game meant
the traditional scrum was impossible. In rugby, propelling the ball forward
through a thicket of fifteen or more pairs of legs and boots took considera-
ble skill and strength. However, with only six or seven forwards on each side,
the ball could not be contained in the scrum for any length of time. Kicking
the ball forward resulted in it quickly emerging out on the opponents’ side,
giving them the ball. Conventional scrummaging became wholly counter-
productive. Yale and the other sides playing eleven-a-side rugby therefore
began to position their forwards in a single line, the ‘open formation’, with
the intention of transferring the ball to their backs as quickly as possible.
Yale quickly grasped the implications of the move to eleven-a-side. At
the IFA meeting that approved eleven-a-side teams in 1880, a resolution was
also passed that redefined – and renamed as the ‘scrimmage’ – the scrum:24
A scrimmage takes place when the holder of the ball, being in the field
of play, puts it down on the ground in front of him and puts it in play
while on side, first, by kicking the ball; second, by snapping it back
with his foot. The man who first receives the ball from the snap-back
shall be called the quarter-back, and shall not then rush forward with
the ball under penalty of foul.25
The debates about the RFU’s rules were therefore part of wider trans-
national debate across the rugby-playing world. Many of the American
134 Canadian football
solutions also had their roots in early British rugby. Interference, defined by
Camp as ‘the assistance given to a runner by a companion or companions
who go before him and break a path for him or shoulder-off would-be
tacklers’, was similar to a tactic used in rugby until the 1870s.26 Blackheath,
arguably the leading club of nineteenth-century rugby, developed a tactic
in the 1860s which featured, according to RFU president Arthur Guille-
mard, ‘forwards charging down the ground as an advance guard to ward off
opponents from the back who was in full run with the ball behind them’.27
It was not until 1888 that the RFU ruled that it was ‘not lawful for a player
to charge against or obstruct any opponent unless such opponent is hold-
ing the ball’.28 And in Australian Rules, obstructing opposing players has
historically been a legal tactic, known as ‘shepherding’. American football
was therefore not so much innovating as extending a feature present in the
earliest forms of rugby codes.
There were many other contemporary similarities between the Ameri-
can and rugby forms of football. For example, passing the ball (known as
lateral passing in modern American football) initially was as common, if
not more so, in the American as in the rugby game. Harvard in particular
became known for their eagerness to pass the ball among players, in con-
trast to rugby players’ then traditional reluctance to do so. Commenting
on Harvard’s ‘almost monotonous success’ against Canadian teams in 1880,
one writer pointed to the fact that ‘the two styles vary as to passing. The
English game discountenances passing, except in rare cases, whilst the Har-
vards always shy the ball back when about to be tackled, that is, if it be at all
possible’.29 In fact, unlike American football today, the game in the 1880s
placed a much greater premium on passing combinations between players.30
Even the name ‘quarterback’ was taken directly from early Scottish
and Irish rugby. Originally in Scotland backs were arranged originally as
‘quarterback’, ‘half-back’ and ‘full-back’, the same terminology as in North
America, rather than the English system of ‘half-back, three-quarter back’
and ‘full-back’.31 American football’s formalisation of the role of the quar-
terback, whose duty initially was to pass or kick the ball but initially not
to run with it, anticipated the development of the ‘passing game’ in British
rugby.
Similarities in the football debates on both sides of the Atlantic can also
be seen in English rugby’s 1895 split.Walter Camp’s support for the primacy
of the touchdown over the goal – ‘the advocates of team play were espe-
cially strong against such a premium as existed on what seemed to be but
an act of individual skill [i.e. the goal]’ – mirrored precisely that of rugby
reformers in northern England. ‘A try in the vast majority of instances is the
most deserving point in the game, and calls for the greatest exertion on the
Canadian football 135
part of the team as a whole’, wrote one northern journalist in 1891 who
also described goal-kicking as ‘an individual responsibility . . . attended by
none of the combined action which forms one of the chief attractions of
the game’.32
The scrum was also a major focus of the English rugby reformers. In
1892 James Miller argued for the reduction of players from fifteen to thir-
teen in terms not unlike that of Camp and his co-thinkers:
The Canadian football reformers held a similar attitude to the scrum, view-
ing the game as:
slow and heavy. The ball was buried in a scrimmage and the heavier
team kept it there or tried to, until it had plowed a passage to the
enemy’s goal line. There was a constant succession of muffled shouts
which, to the spectators, sounded like ‘Hell! Hell!’ and yell seemed to
fit the occasion. The cry was really ‘Held! Held!’ but the uninformed
patron could not be expected to get the full sound when vocalist had
a mouthful of dirt. This yell was the player’s salvation for if he did not
cry it around and often when he had the ball dead under him, his
adversary was liable to tear his head from his shoulders, such was the
gentle nature of the conventionalities of the game in those days.34
Like the American game, both rugby league and Canadian football sought to
reform the scrum by introducing a more-or-less orderly resumption of play
when a player was tackled with the ball. In both Canada’s scrim and league’s
play-the-ball, the tackled player would regain their feet, place the ball on the
ground and attempt to play it backward with a foot to a teammate.
But this also brought its own problems. The automatic retention of the
ball by the tackled player’s team meant that by not kicking or passing the
ball a side could completely starve their opponents of the ball.35 The most
notorious example of what became known in America as the ‘block game’
was the 1881 Princeton versus Yale encounter, when each side kept pos-
session of the ball for a complete half of the match. The IFA’s solution was
136 Canadian football
Notes
1 George W. Orton, ‘Canadian and United States Rugby’, The Canadian Maga-
zine, vol. 10, no. 1 (November 1897), p. 60.
2 Bell’s Life in London and Sporting Chronicle, 16 November, 1862. For a detailed
and comprehensive history of rugby in Canada, see Doug Sturrock, It’s a Try:
The History of Rugby in Canada (Langley, British Columbia: Sturrock Consult-
ing, 2016).
3 For an overview, see Kenneth McNaught, The Pelican History of Canada (Har-
mondsworth: Penguin, 1969).
4 Toronto Daily Globe, 23 October 1875.
5 Toronto Daily Globe, 12 November 1875.
6 Town & Country [Toronto], 16 June 1880.
7 Toronto Daily Globe, 16 November 1880.
8 For discussions on the development of the rules of Canadian football, see Rob-
ert Sproule, ‘Snap-Back versus Scrimmage’, From Scrimmage to SnapBack. Journal
of the Canadian Football Historical Association, vol. 1, no. 1 (Fall 2003), pp. 6–8, and
Canadian football 137
Ian Speers, ‘The Development of the American Scrimmage System’, The Coffin
Corner, vol. 24, no. 2 (2002).
9 See Alan Matcalfe, Canada Learns to Play:The Emergence of Organised Sport 1807–
1914 (Toronto: McLelland & Stewart, 1987), pp. 56–7.
10 Daniel S. Mason, ‘The International Hockey League and the Professionaliza-
tion of Ice Hockey, 1904–1907’, Journal of Sport History, vol. 25, no. 1 (Spring
1998), pp. 1–17.
11 See Charles Anthony Joyce, From Left Field: Sport and Class in Toronto 1845–
1886 (Unpublished PhD thesis, Queen’s University, Kingston, ON, 1997). For
baseball’s popularity among the working class, see Bryan Palmer, ‘In Street and
Field and Hall:The Culture of Hamilton Workingmen, 1860–1914’ in his Marx-
ism and Historical Practice, vol. 2 (Leiden: Brill, 2015), pp. 133–7.
12 Robert Tait MacKenzie, ‘Rugby Football in Canada’, The Dominion Illustrated
Monthly (Feb 1892), vol. 1, no. 1, p. 19. See Orton, ‘Canadian and United States
Rugby’, pp. 56–60.
13 Tait MacKenzie, ‘Rugby Football’, p. 12.
14 See Phillip Buckner, ‘The Creation of the Dominion of Canada, 1860–1901’, in
Phillip Buckner (ed.) Canada and the British Empire (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 2010), pp. 79–82.
15 A.C. Kingstone and C.A.S. Boddy, ‘The Characteristics of Canadian Football’,
Outing, vol. 27, no. 3 (December 1895), p. 251.
16 The Varsity [University of Toronto], vol. 19, no. 11, 17 January 1900, p. 140.
17 Davis, Football, pp. 24 and 62.Yale’s original football rules of 1872 are on p. 54,
Harvard’s on p. 53 and the two matches reported on pp. 251–4.
18 Boston Daily Globe, 25 November 1877, reprinted in Greg Gubi (ed.) The Lost
Century of American Football, 2011, p. 60.
19 Proceedings of the Convention of the Intercollegiate Football Association, 12
October 1880, reprinted in Davis, Football, p. 468.
20 For example, see John Sayle Watterson, College Football: History: Spectacle: Contro-
versy (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003), pp. 19, or Baker, Sports
in the Western World, p. 129.
21 A.G. Guillemard, ‘The Rugby Union Game With Hints to Players’, in Thomas
P. Power (ed.) The Footballer (Melbourne: Henriques & Co., 1877), p. 11.
22 Bell’s Life, 16 October 1875.
23 Rev. Frank Marshall (ed.), Football. The Rugby Union Game (London: Cassell,
1892), p. 120.
24 See for example the use of ‘scrimmage’ in the Manchester Guardian, 20 Septem-
ber 1906. Camp’s claim is in Outing, October 1886, p. 73.
25 Proceedings of the Convention of the Intercollegiate Football Association, 12
October 1880, reprinted in Davis, Football, p. 468.
26 Camp, American Football (New York, 1891), p 15.
27 A.G. Guillemard, ‘Foundation and progress of the Rugby Football Union’ in
Marshall, Football.The Rugby Union Game, p. 71.
28 Percy Royds, The History of the Laws of Rugby Football (Twickenham: Rugby
Football Union, 1949), p. 149.
29 Montreal Gazette, 2 November 1880.
30 See, for example, reports in the Ottawa Citizen, 10 November 1884. “The
American Game of Foot-ball”, The Century Magazine, October 1887, p. 890.
138 Canadian football
31 R.J. Philips, The Story of Scottish Rugby (Edinburgh: Foulis, 1925), p. 13. See also
Marshall, Football:The Rugby Union Game, p. 172.
32 Walter Camp, ‘Football in America’ in Frank Leslie’s Popular Monthly, vol. 57, no.
1 (November 1898), 61. The Yorkshireman, 4 April 1893.
33 Yorkshire Post, 9 October 1892.
34 The Daily Colonist [Victoria, British Columbia], 6 October 1920.
35 The ‘Block Game’ is described in Camp, American Football, p. 19.
36 Proceedings of the Convention of the IFA, 14 October 1882, reprinted in
Davis, Football, p. 468.
37 See Tony Collins, Rugby League in Twentieth Century Britain (Abingdon: Rout-
ledge, 2006), pp. 112–13. It was later increased to six tackles.
38 Camp had favoured ten yards since at least 1891; see The Canadian Magazine, vol. 10,
no. 1 (November 1897), p. 59.
17
RUGBY LEAGUE FOOTBALL
From people’s game to proletarian sport
I say with Mark Twain’s bold bad boy that we glory in the sentence of
outlawry pronounced on us, as freeing us from the tyrannical bondage of
the English [Rugby] Union, and we breath pure air in being freed from
the stifling atmosphere of deceit in which we previously existed.
—‘A member of a Northern Union club’, 18951
The twenty-two clubs that broke away from the Rugby Football Union in
August 1895 to create the Northern Union set themselves the task of mak-
ing rugby a sport for the modern age of the masses. The underlying cause
of the split was summed up by the first Northern Union (NU) president
Harry Waller: ‘where there was a preponderance of working class players
[rugby] could not be honestly carried out under the existing by-laws of
the English Union’.2 The new organisation immediately legalised ‘broken-
time’ payments to players and began to reform the rules of the game. Over
the next decade the NU accepted full professionalism, changed the rules of
rugby dramatically by reducing teams to thirteen-a-side to make the game
more attractive, and expanded to the working-class rugby strongholds of
Australia and New Zealand. Rugby league, as it became known, embodied
the three elements that had come to dominate the handling codes of foot-
ball: class, commercialism and how to play the game. The 1895 schism was
a harbinger of the turmoil that would consume much of the football’s oval
world in the first decade of the twentieth century.
The split had been a long time coming. English rugby had been engulfed
by civil war ever since the RFU had declared it an amateur sport in
140 Rugby league football
but it also highlighted the relationship between class and the development
of commercial sport.3
Unlike the northern soccer clubs that forced the FA to accept pro-
fessionalism by threatening to form a rival British Football Association
(BFA) in 1884, the northern rugby clubs did not consider a split until
1895, by which time they had effectively been left with no choice by
the RFU’s new draconian amateur regulations. This reluctance was partly
due to the northern rugby clubs’ greater integration into the RFU’s
structures – they provided four of the thirteen presidents of the RFU
before 1895 – but also because the rebels believed, on the basis of soccer’s
experience, that professionalism in one form or another was inevitable.
The simple arithmetic of the growing number of rugby clubs in the north,
they surmised, would eventually win a majority in the RFU and rugby
would then join soccer on the road to becoming a modern, professional
mass spectator sport.
They had not reckoned with the intransigency of the leaders of the RFU.
The impact of professionalism in soccer had led RFU officials to fear for
their future in the game if working-class players were able to compete on
equal terms. This over-rode all other considerations. ‘If blind enthusiasts of
working men’s clubs insist on introducing professionalism, there can be but
one result – disunion’, explained Arthur Budd in 1892.4 The northern clubs’
campaign to be allowed to legalise broken-time payments was decisively
defeated at the RFU’s 1893 annual general meeting. It was a gathering that,
noted the weekly Yorkshireman
laid bare the position assumed by those who oppose the payment of
out-of-pocket expenses to the working men. We have at last been
boldly told the truth . . . if a man cannot afford to play he has no right
to; that Rugby football is a game for the classes and, in effect, that the
masses are neither more nor less than intruders.5
Rugby league football 141
By the time the split finally took place in 1895, the debate about pro-
fessionalism was being conducted entirely on the terrain of class and the
rights of the ‘working-man player’. One side sought to defend the rights of
those who had learnt the game at public school to control the game, while
their opponents believed ‘it was their duty to place the working man on
the same level with the other classes’.6 The overt hostility to working-class
players and spectators expressed in the debate meant class became embed-
ded into the identity of both rugby codes and would define the culture of
both. Union viewed itself predominately as the game for those educated in
the British public school tradition, while league saw itself as a sport of the
working class.
Sociologically, rugby league’s players and spectators were overwhelmingly
drawn from the industrial working classes. The RFU had responded to the
‘northern declension’, as those of its supporters who remembered their Latin
grammar sometimes called it, by banning from rugby union all those who
played rugby league, whether amateur or professional, officiated in the sport
or signed any forms relating to the new organisation. This had the effect of
sealing-off rugby league not only from members of rugby union clubs but
also from a significant portion of ‘respectable’ middle-class society, for whom
the threat of social ostracism could not be ignored. Although members of the
northern industrial bourgeois classes played the central role in founding the
first rugby clubs across the north in the 1860s, the number involved in league
a decade after the split could be counted in single figures. Unlike professional
soccer clubs, which retained upper- and middle-class support because they
were seen as a route to national recognition and status, rugby league clubs
quickly became mono-class institutions, overwhelmingly working class with
a small fringe of lower middle-class officials, such as publicans, shopkeepers
and local government officials, who administered them. Rugby in the north
of England had gone from being a game of the people before 1895 to a sport
almost exclusively of the industrial proletariat in the years after.
As a result of the intensely ideological nature of the split, rugby league
developed its own egalitarian culture. This reflected the perceived virtues
of the industrial north of England and was originally articulated as the
‘masses versus the classes’, a famous phrase of Liberal prime minister Wil-
liam Gladstone. A number of the leaders of the northern clubs, such as the
NU’s founding president Harry Waller, were prominent Liberals but in the
early 1900s this worldview merged with a social-democratic outlook, in
much the same way as Labourism was derived from the earlier Liberal-
ism. The NU claimed its place in the nation’s life by claiming to represent
the democratic ‘true’ England of ordinary working people. This was best
expressed by the common northern saying, ‘t’ best in t’ Northern Union’,
142 Rugby league football
which implied that the best in the game was the best that existed anywhere,
regardless of what the establishment thought. This democratic sensibility
was overtly referred to by rugby league spokesmen. As early as 1914 John
Houghton, the manager of that year’s British team in Australia and New
Zealand, declared rugby league was ‘the people’s game’. In 1926 RFL chair-
man Ted Osborne argued league and union should remain separate because
‘I believe rugby league is the more democratic body’, and from the 1940s
journalist and TV broadcaster Eddie Waring would regularly promote the
belief that the game was ‘the most democratic in the world’.7
British rugby league shared many of its social and economic character-
istics as soccer. Both were mass spectator sports relying predominantly on
working-class players and supporters. But the NU was constrained by factors
that professional soccer did not have to deal with. The first was professional
soccer itself. By 1895, the seemingly irresistible rise of the soccer juggernaut
meant rugby was essentially boxed into its traditional heartlands. Areas with-
out significant traditions in any code, such as much of the south of England
in the 1890s, invariably chose soccer when it came to putting themselves on
the map with their own football club.There was no virgin soil into which the
new rugby code could expand.Worse still, the Football League actively sought
to establish professional soccer in rugby’s strongholds. Manningham, the first
Northern Union champions in 1896, abandoned rugby in 1903 and were
admitted into the Football League’s second division as Bradford City. Over the
next decade Football League sides were established in the former rugby cita-
dels of Leeds (1905), Hull (1905), Oldham (1907) and Huddersfield (1910).
Moreover, the NU was hemmed into the northern industrial power-
house of the Victorian era – coal and textiles in Lancashire and West York-
shire, shipbuilding in Barrow, docks in Hull, chemicals in Widnes, and
glass manufacture in St Helens and the Wakefield area – at precisely the
moment when many of those industries were starting their long structural
decline. Rugby league’s strong regional identity with the north made it dif-
ficult to promote in soccer regions of Britain, which were already part of a
national competition, and in areas where rugby still retained working-class
roots, such as South Wales, the hostility of the rugby union authorities was
matched by their flexibility of principle when ignoring evidence of their
own clubs breaching their laws against payments to players.
In 1896 Welsh rugby union captain Arthur Gould had his house paid
for by a testimonial fund organised by the Welsh rugby union in violation
of its amateur rules. The controversy almost split British rugby union
in two and gave rise to fears that Wales would join the NU. But the RFU
backed down from expelling the Welsh because, in the words of RFU sec-
retary Rowland Hill, it was ‘a matter of expediency’ that Wales should not
be forced out.8 The great opportunity for the NU to challenge the RFU
Rugby league football 143
for the leadership of British rugby was snuffed out. For the next century a
subterranean culture of ‘boot money’ ensured that Welsh players who did
not want to ‘Go North’ and play rugby league would always find some
remuneration available.Thus the social and geographical template of British
sport was set by the mid-1900s, and there was little that either league or
union could do to alter it.
the very fact that try-getters are plentiful while goal-droppers are
scarce shows that the latter art is very much more difficult of acquire-
ment. . . . [Why] ought the more skilful piece of play to be depreciated,
while a premium is placed on mere speed of foot?
Budd even argued that heeling the ball out of the scrum should be penalised
because it undermined the importance of forward play.10
The northerners were not alone in their conception of how rugby should
be played. Much the same ideas prevailed in South Wales, where rugby had
become the mass spectator sport of the region and encompassed all social
classes. In 1884 Cardiff began to play with four three-quarters, in contrast to
the standard three or more traditional two, reduced the number of forwards
to eight and emphasised passing the ball quickly from the scrum to the
backs. From the early 1880s Australia and New Zealand also placed greater
value on running and passing the ball to score tries, which reached its acme
with the gloriously open rugby of the 1905 All Blacks touring team.
The logic of those favouring the open game had been summed up in
1892 by James Miller, the secretary of the Yorkshire Rugby Union. Pointing
to the rapid evolution of rugby since teams had been cut from twenty- to
fifteen-a-side in 1875, Miller argued the forward-dominated era was over
and rugby should cut teams to thirteen to encourage try-scoring rather
than goal-kicking.11 Miller was also a leading campaigner for broken-time
144 Rugby league football
completed, the ball-carrier had to put the ball down in front of him and
play it with his foot. But instead of a full-scale scrum, a sort of mini-scrum –
known as the play-the-ball – took place. A member of the tacked player’s
own side would stand behind him as a makeshift scrum-half and an oppo-
nent was allowed to stand in front of the player with the ball. This player
could also attempt to play the ball with his foot. He too would have a player
behind him who could either retrieve the ball or tackle an opponent who
retrieved the ball.
Although there is no evidence the NU ever discussed the North Ameri-
can evolution of rugby rules, the introduction of the play-the-ball rule took
the sport down the same path of American and Canadian football. The
importance of the scrum was undermined and the contest for the ball at
the play-the-ball gradually disappeared as players and coaches developed
techniques, legal and illegal, to ensure the tackled player’s team retained pos-
session. This again created the problem of teams dominating possession for
long periods. It was only in 1966 that a solution was found, when the sport’s
International Board took a leaf from the American game and restricted each
side to four tackles. This was extended to six tackles in 1972, and eventually
the struggle for possession at the play-the-ball was formally abandoned and,
like the snap in the North American codes, it became simply a device for
restarting play after a tackle.
The break with rugby union in 1895 had freed the northern clubs to
reform the sport, and the 1906 rules changes were the culmination of the
debate on the rules of rugby that had begun in the 1880s. But, although
the leaders of the Northern Union did not know it at the time, they had
transformed their game at precisely the point at which the rugby-based
football codes of the world were undergoing deep structural turmoil – a
transnational crisis that would transform rugby across the world.
Notes
1 Letter published in the Yorkshire Post, 21 September 1895.
2 Yorkshire Post, 29 April 1896.
3 Salford Reporter, 27 October 1894.
4 Arthur Budd, ‘The Past and Future of the Game’, in Revd Frank Marshall (ed.)
Football – The Rugby Union Game (London: Cassell, 1892), p. 137.
5 OPQ, ‘Payment for Broken Time’, The Yorkshireman, 27 September 1893.
6 A Londoner, ‘Metropolitan Football’, in Marshall, Football, p. 329 and Leeds Mer-
cury, 23 September 1893.
7 Eddie Waring, England to Australia and New Zealand (Leeds: County Press 1947),
p. 5.
8 Yorkshire Post, 17 September 1897.
146 Rugby league football
Rugby league was not the only football code for which 1906 was a pivotal
year. In the United States and Canada, football was also consumed by a crisis
over commercialism and the way the game was played. By the early 1900s
American football dominated winter sport in the United States, attracting
five-figure crowds that often exceeded those for baseball, and command-
ing vast amounts of coverage in the press. College footballers had become
celebrities, their exploits watched by tens of thousands and read about by
millions more.The game was now the concern not only of university presi-
dents, for whom the game provided considerable revenue, but of the U.S.
president himself, Teddy Roosevelt.2
Football’s importance to college life and the vast public that followed
the game meant players were often covertly rewarded for their deeds and
recruited purely for their football achievements rather than their schol-
arly abilities. Suspicions of professionalism, both in deed and in spirit, were
legion.The desire to win at all cost had turned the game into a war of attri-
tion. Football was dominated by mass plays, allowing the offensive team to
keep possession with wave after wave of charges through their opponents’
line. Tactics such as the ‘flying wedge’, where offensive players would link
together as an arrowhead to force the ball-carrier through the defensive line,
148 The 1905-07 football crisis in North America
also increased the risk of serious injury and death. In 1904 alone, twenty-
one players were killed on the gridiron.3
By 1905 these concerns reached crisis point. At the start of the year
Harvard president Charles Eliot used his annual report to declare that ‘the
American game of football as now played is wholly unfit for colleges and
schools’. It was, he believed, promoting ‘great moral mischief ’ and should be
prohibited, not least because football’s rule-makers could not be trusted to
reform it.4 ‘The main objection lies against the moral quality’, argued Eliot,
that gave it a dangerous and ‘brutalizing’ nature.5
Four months later, an article titled ‘The College Athlete: How com-
mercialism is making him a professional’ by Henry Beach Needham in
McClure’s Magazine, provided the hard evidence for Eliot’s concerns. The
top college players, he argued, were effectively professionals and the com-
mercial benefits of football to universities were now so great that the game
could no longer claim to be an educative or moral force.6 Football’s vio-
lence was a result of its embrace of competition and commercialism. The
solution, he believed, lay ‘in the awakening of the spirit of true sport – fair
play, and sport for sport’s sake’.7
The depth of Needham’s research made his case unimpeachable. College
sport was ‘honeycombed with commercialism’ a former classmate of Walter
Camp told him. Even more shocking for his readers was that he conclu-
sively demonstrated that some of the most serious abusers of the rules were
the elite Ivy League colleges. The universities of Pennsylvania, Columbia,
Princeton and Yale were all indicted by Needham using first-hand evidence
from athletes and alumni. Pennsylvania was accused of recruiting Penn State
full-back Andrew Smith in violation of the eligibility rules. Demonstrating
the social snobbery underlying amateurism, Needham denounced Smith as
a ‘tramp athlete’ for playing for more than one team. Harvard, in an embar-
rassing confirmation of Charles Eliot’s concerns, was singled out under the
heading ‘Harvard’s Self-Righteous Contentment’. Needham pinned the
blame for this corruption firmly on the college authorities and warned that
‘a growth of commercialism in college sport is a trend from amateurism to
professionalism’.8
In the same month Needham’s exposé appeared, the critics of football
gained a powerful ally when President Teddy Roosevelt used his com-
mencement speech at Harvard to denounce ‘sensationalism and profession-
alism’ in college sports. Roosevelt felt the issue personally. Not only had
he publicly lauded Tom Brown’s Schooldays but his two sons, one of whom
was at Harvard, were keen footballers. Indeed, it was the headmaster of
his younger son’s school, Endicott Peabody of Groton, itself modelled on
Rugby School, who asked Roosevelt to call a ‘football summit’ to tackle the
The 1905-07 football crisis in North America 149
Crisis in Canada
Wheeler’s suggestion that football ‘with Canadian modifications’ should be
considered by college football programs suggested that he was not especially
well-informed about football. By 1906 Canadian football was also being
riven apart over the issue of professionalism. The catalyst was the Montreal
Amateur Athletic Association’s employment of professional players in their
ice hockey and lacrosse teams. Hockey had become a mass spectator sport
and was generating significant amounts of revenue, while lacrosse could still
command large crowds for major matches. The Canadian Amateur Athletic
Union (CAAU), the de facto governing body of sport in Canada, refused to
countenance professionalism, so in February 1907 those clubs supporting the
Montreal stance on professionalism broke away to form the Amateur Ath-
letic Federation of Canada. Payments to players had long been a simmering
issue in football. In 1900 Chaucer Elliott, the captain of Kingston’s Queen’s
University team, had been suspended due to doubts about his status. In 1902
Toronto Argonauts’ William Grant had been charged with professionalism
after being accused of being paid to coach Toronto University in the late
1890s. The situation had become such a concern for the football authorities
that in 1901 the Ontario Rugby Football Union, based in Toronto, insisted
that all its players had to sign declarations that they were amateurs.17
Although lacking the popular appeal of hockey, football was quickly
engulfed by the crisis. The Quebec Rugby Football Union, with close
links to the Montreal AAA, quickly joined the new organisation, and mat-
ters came to a head in October 1907 when Montreal played the CAAU-
affiliated Toronto Argonauts. The Montreal team included the Montreal
Wanderers hockey club’s star professional player Ernie Russell. According to
the CAAU rules anyone who played against professionals like Russell would
be banned from all sports controlled by the CAAU. Despite this threat, the
Toronto players voted to play and the CAAU promptly banned everyone
who played in the game.18 The CAAU’s 1908 annual report listed seventy-
nine footballers who had been investigated for alleged professionalism.19
But the CAAU’s rigidly British conception of amateurism was difficult to
enforce without accusations of unfairness and hypocrisy. Canada’s own ‘Big
Four’ football clubs – Montreal, Toronto, Hamilton Tigers and the Ottawa
Rough Riders – formed their own organisation, the Interprovincial Union,
and, although football remained a nominally amateur sport, the amateur
influence waned over the next two decades, not least due to the gradual
integration of American coaches and players into Canadian football.20
But the growing popularity of Canadian football also increased the pres-
sure to reform its rules. From the mid-1900s, five-figure crowds regularly
152 The 1905-07 football crisis in North America
Notes
1 Benjamin Ide Wheeler to James B. Angell, 28 November 1905 in James B.
Angell Papers, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan: Correspond-
ence 1851–1916: Folder: November 1905.
2 For Roosevelt’s involvement in football, see John J. Miller, The Big Scrum: How
Teddy Roosevelt Saved Football (New York: Harper Collins, 2011).
3 Wiley Lee Umphett, Creating the Big Game: John W. Heisman and the Invention of
American Football (Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1992), p. 86.
4 Harvard University, Reports of the President and the Treasurer of Harvard College
1904–1905 (Cambridge: Harvard University, 1906), pp. 52–3.
5 The Outlook, 11 February 1905, p. 363.
6 McClure’s Magazine, June 1905, pp. 115–28. The second part is in the July 1905
issue, pp. 260–73.
7 McClure’s Magazine, July 1905, pp. 272.
8 McClure’s Magazine, June 1905, p. 117.
9 John Sayle Watterson, College Football: History: Spectacle: Controversy (Baltimore:
Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000), pp. 68–9. See also Michael Oriard,
‘Rough, Manly Sport and the American Way: Theodore Roosevelt and College
Football, 1905’, in Stephen Wagg (ed.) Myths and Milestones in the History of Sport
(London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011), pp. 80–105, and Brian Ingrassia, The Rise
The 1905-07 football crisis in North America 153
of the Gridiron University: Higher Education’s Uneasy Alliance with Big-time Football
(Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 2012).
10 Quoted in Ronald A. Smith, Sports and Freedom: The Rise of Big-Time College
Athletics (New York: Oxford University Press, 1988), p. 199.
11 Quoted in David A. Nelson, The Anatomy of a Game (Newark: University of
Delaware Press, 1994), p. 97.
12 Smith, Sports and Freedom, p. 202.
13 Nelson, Anatomy of a Game, pp. 123–26.
14 John Sayle Watterson, ‘The Gridiron Crisis of 1905: Was It Really a Crisis?’,
Journal of Sports History, vol. 27, no. 2 (Summer 2000), 294. Nelson in Anatomy
of a Game, quotes a figure of thirty-three from Alonzo Stagg (p. 141).
15 ‘Shall Football Be Ended or Mended?’, American Monthly Review of Reviews
(January l906), pp. 72–3.
16 See Ingrassia, Rise of the Gridiron University, pp. 62–7 and Roberta J. Park, ‘From
Football to Rugby – and Back, 1906–1919: The University of California-
Stanford University Response to the “Football Crisis of 1905” ’, Journal of Sport
History, vol. 11, no. 3 (1984), pp. 5–40. The quote is from p. 19.
17 Kevin G. Jones, ‘Developments in Amateurism and Professionalism in Early 20th
Century Canadian Sport’, Journal of Sport History, vol. 2, no. 1 (1975), pp. 29–40.
18 Alan Matcalfe, Canada Learns to Play: The Emergence of Organised Sport 1807–
1914 (Toronto: McLelland & Stewart, 1987), pp. 58–9.
19 Jones, ‘Developments in Amateurism and Professionalism . . . ’, pp. 38–9.
20 Consentino, Canadian Football:The Grey Cup Years, chapter 4.
21 Frank Consentino, Canadian Football:The Grey Cup Years (Don Mills, ON: Mus-
son Book Publishing, 1969).
19
THE 1905–07 FOOTBALL CRISIS IN
WORLD RUGBY
The depth of the football crisis in the United States meant that many
Americans looked abroad for solutions. Michigan University president
James B. Angell was, according to David Starr Jordan, in favour of a return
to rugby rules, Walter Camp’s advocacy of the ten yards in three downs rule
was borrowed from Canada, and Cal’s Benjamin Ide Wheeler corresponded
with Victorian Football League secretary Col Hickey. Although Wheeler may
have been overly optimistic about the state of football in Canada, it was no
accident that the California and Stanford joint committee bracketed England
and New Zealand together when suggesting rugby as an alternative to foot-
ball. England was viewed as the source of sporting wisdom but the 1905
All Blacks had a revolutionary impact on the international football world.2
Shortly after Stanford’s decision to switch to rugby in January 1906,
a student in its engineering faculty, Taranaki-born Norman Halcombe,
wrote to the New Zealand RFU requesting copies of the rugby rulebook.
Although neither Stanford nor Cal’s athletic department had any experi-
ence of rugby, there did exist an expatriate community on the West Coast
that was familiar with the game, including the captain of the inaugural 1899
British rugby tour to Australia, Matthew Mullineaux. It was one of these
exiles, New Zealander Alf Cameron, who suggested that the All Blacks,
The 1905-07 football crisis in world rugby 155
football to return to its prelapsarian origins. Camp was also well aware of
the rules of rugby, telling Baskerville he was familiar with all forms of foot-
ball. Undeterred, the New Zealander turned his entrepreneurial enthusiasm
to another project: a professional rugby league tour to Britain.
grew exponentially over the next decade, bringing with it new players and
spectators from Australia’s rapidly expanding industrial proletariat. Just as in
Britain, this was also an era of trade union militancy and growing working-
class self-confidence.
Rumours of payments and other incentives to players soon became com-
monplace. As early as 1898 the rugby union authorities investigated claims
of money paid to NSW representative players. But RFU-style amateurism
did not sit easily with those Australians who believed in a ‘fair go’ (at least
for white citizens) and calls for players to be properly compensated grew
louder. By the early 1900s crowds of 20,000 were not uncommon for major
matches, and the game was awash with money. The simmering discontent
came to a head in 1907, when the rugby authorities closed the game’s med-
ical insurance scheme, forcing players to pay their own premiums. At the
same time, Sydney’s Metropolitan Rugby Union raised its secretary’s salary
to an annual £250, approximately double the average wage.14 The tension
had reached breaking point.
The catalyst for change came from New Zealand. Organised rugby was
first played there in 1870, when an eighteen-a-side match under rugby rules
was played between the town of Nelson and the prestigious Nelson College.
It slowly spread across New Zealand’s two islands as part of their economic
and cultural unification in the 1870s. Rugby flowed through the new trans-
port and communication networks, linking the islands’ disparate parts and
bringing a sense of unity to an isolated nation. It was also a live cultural link
with Britain, for some its most important quality. By 1892, when the New
Zealand RFU was formed, it was estimated there were around 700 sides
playing the game.15 When the New Zealanders once again toured Australia
in 1897, the three ‘test’ matches were watched by 72,000 people. Rugby was
now not merely vastly popular, it was also hugely profitable.
This much had been demonstrated in 1888 when a predominantly
Maori ‘Native New Zealand’ side toured Britain. Consisting of seventy-
eight matches, the tour was watched by large crowds and had proved more
than a match for their British opponents.The appetite for trans-hemispheric
tours had been whetted, and following a British tour to Australia and New
Zealand in 1904, plans were laid for an official New Zealand national tour
of Britain in 1905. No-one, neither in Britain nor New Zealand, expected
what happened next.
The All Blacks, as they were dubbed by the press on their arrival in
England, swept through British rugby union like a whirlwind. They scored
830 points against a mere 39. Only the Welsh national side remained uncon-
quered, holding out for a controversial 3–0 win at Cardiff Arms Park. The
All Blacks’ impact on the sport was as much about the style of their victories
PLATE 12 A 1909 Australian amateur view of the threat of professionalism in rugby,
with anti-Semitic overtones (Rugby Football League Archive, Huddersfield)
The 1905-07 football crisis in world rugby 159
as it was their scale. In an era when rugby union sides focused on scoring
goals and the penalty goal was increasingly influential in deciding matches,
the All Blacks scored 205 tries but kicked only four penalty goals and a
mere two dropped goals.16 British rugby union was thrown into a turmoil
of self-doubt and confusion. Another rugby revolution was in the making.
But it was not only British rugby that was in crisis. Although the All
Blacks returned home to New Zealand in March 1906 to be greeted as
national heroes, the reverberations of the tour sent shockwaves throughout
the game. Many of the tourists found themselves out of pocket, despite
the fact that the tour had made a mammoth £8,908 profit. Other than
three shillings per day to cover the expenses of the tour, the players did not
receive a penny thanks to rugby union’s amateur regulations. As one former
player explained ‘the All Blacks could scarcely raise £10 in the whole team
on their return passage home. . . . [I]t was generally admitted that the team
were not well treated. Several were men of means, and could well afford the
loss of time, but the majority were working men’.17 The fact that ‘working
men’ players were paid to play rugby in the Northern Union had not gone
unnoticed by the tourists.
It was Albert Baskerville who became the public face of the New
Zealand players’ discontent. It seems probable that at least one All Black,
winger and champion sprinter George Smith, met with the Northern
Union while on the 1905 tour to discuss the potential for professional
rugby in New Zealand.18 He also met like-minded Australian rugby play-
ers in Sydney on his way home from the tour. A plan was soon developed
and in January 1907 Baskerville wrote to the Northern Union informing
them a touring team was being assembled and proposing financial terms
for a tour in the 1907–08 season. The NU quickly agreed his terms and in
March 1907 it was announced that a professional All Blacks team was to
tour Britain.
Worse was to follow for rugby union. In August 1907, shortly before the
rebel All Blacks docked at Sydney en route to Britain, fifty people met in
Sydney to form the New South Wales Rugby Football League (NSWRFL)
and organise a team to play the New Zealanders. Within days, 138 players
had signed with the NSWRFL, including Australian rugby’s biggest star,
three-quarter Dally Messenger. A few days later 20,000 people flocked to
see the first openly professional rugby match in the southern hemisphere.
Brimming with confidence, Baskerville invited Messenger to join the
tour, and the Australian rebels announced that a rugby league competition
would kick off at the start of the new season. Both the 1907 tour and the
NSWRFL were successes, and rugby league quickly embedded itself in the
sporting cultures of the two countries. The rugby world had split in two.
160 The 1905-07 football crisis in world rugby
The Australasian rugby crisis of 1907–08 was very different from Ameri-
ca’s football crisis. It was as much a social revolt as it was a sporting rebellion.
Rugby league in Australia was, as in England, predominantly based in the
industrial working classes and intimately connected to the labour move-
ment. Harry Hoyle, the first president of the NSWRFL, was a leader in the
railway workers’ union and an Australian Labor Party (ALP) election candi-
date.Ted Larkin, the league’s first full-time secretary, was an ALP member of
the New South Wales Legislative Assembly. John Storey, a future Labor Party
prime minister of NSW in 1920, was a founder of the Balmain club. In
New Zealand, the game had similar connections to the labour movement.19
Wherever it was played, rugby league saw itself, and was seen by others,
as a sport of the working class. This was not necessarily a socialist belief but
a more general feeling, animated by the dispute with rugby union, that the
world was divided into ‘us and them’. Rugby league wanted to be treated
equally with the other classes in society. Horrie Miller, the secretary of the
NSWRL, summed this up in 1920 when he said that ‘it is essential that
every class in a community should understand and appreciate the worth
of every other class’.20 In the 1920s the sport was regularly referred to in
Australia as the ‘people’s code’.21 Sydney’s Rugby League News proclaimed
in 1946 that ‘rugby league, with justifiable pride, always emphasises the fact
that it is the most democratic of sports’, just as it saw itself in Britain.22
While rugby league sank deep roots into the industrial working classes
of Australia and New Zealand, it failed to establish a significant presence in
South Wales, the only other region where rugby had mass working-class
support. Yet Wales was not immune from the global rugby crisis. Shortly
after the announcement of the 1907 New Zealand rugby league tour, moves
to establish league clubs in Wales began. By 1909 there were six professional
sides playing in Wales, but a combination of institutional hostility in Wales
and the indifference of the rugby league authorities led to the Welsh clubs
all folding by 1912. Nevertheless, many working-class Welsh rugby players
simply voted with their feet to split from rugby union and went to play
rugby league in such great numbers that they created a parallel Welsh nation
in northern exile.
Rugby union was even less successful in fulfilling the needs of America’s
middle-class supporters of amateurism. Initially, the Californian universi-
ties’ move to rugby seemed to be paying off. The annual Stanford versus
Cal game showed no diminution in importance and tours by the 1908–09
Wallabies, who played three matches on their way home from Europe, and
the New South Wales Waratahs in 1912, were well-attended and sufficiently
competitive that the Waratahs incurred two defeats. Yet tensions emerged
over the playing of the game.The Waratahs believed American rugby players
The 1905-07 football crisis in world rugby 161
were too violent and did not play in the right spirit. The Americans were
unhappy with the game’s constant scrummaging and proposed switching
to fourteen-a-side teams in 1913.23 Walter Camp rubbed salt in the wound
in Outing, dismissing West Coast rugby as ‘mediocre play’ and that in com-
parison ‘the Northern Union game, especially in Lancashire and Yorkshire,
would be a revelation to many’.24 When the long-awaited All Blacks tour
of North America took place in 1913, it offered nothing but humiliating
defeats for the American sides, whose only scores were two penalty goals
in thirteen matches. Rugby union could not offer meaningful international
competition, it had isolated Stanford and Cal from the prestige of domestic
football, and it had not been adopted by any other significant college. In
1915 Cal called time on the experiment and in 1919 Stanford followed suit.
The crisis of 1905–06 in America had been partially solved by radi-
cal reform of football’s rules, which removed its deadlier aspects, but more
importantly by the tacit acceptance that its commercialism could not be
stopped.The supporters of amateur purity had been defeated by the exigen-
cies of mass spectator sport. Methods of recruiting and retaining players that
violated the sport’s amateur code were not stopped but, rather like the Vic-
torian attitude to prostitution, accepted as an unspoken necessary evil that
every so often would be subject to a fit of moral outrage and then left alone
to carry on as before. Although the sport rejected the playing rules of rugby
union, college football accepted the underlying hypocrisy of rugby union’s
amateur ethos. Lacking a rival professional competition nor challenged by
significant working-class involvement, college football was not threatened
by schism or a viable alternative leadership. And as the next century would
prove, organised hypocrisy was no barrier to becoming even more popular
or ever richer.
Notes
1 Jim Gleason, ‘1907 New Zealand Rugby League Tourist’, Yorkshire Post, 2 Octo-
ber 1907. George Smith, Duncan MacGregor,‘Massa’ Johnson and Bill Mackrell
were all 1905 Rugby Union All Blacks who were also 1907 New Zealand
rugby league tourists.
2 For Camp, see The Canadian Magazine, vol. 10, no. 1 (November 1897), 59. For
Angell and Hickey, see Roberta J. Park, ‘From Football to Rugby – and Back,
1906–1919: The University of California-Stanford University Response to the
“Football Crisis of 1905” ’, Journal of Sport History, vol. 11, no. 3, p. 17.
3 Park, ‘From Football to Rugby – and Back, 1906–1919’, p. 18.
4 Sturrock, It’s A Try, pp. 121–3.
5 Letter from G. Rowland Hill (RFU president) dated July 1906. Box 21, Folder
599. Walter Chauncey Camp Papers. Manuscripts and Archives,Yale University
Library.
162 The 1905-07 football crisis in world rugby
On 24 July 1898 São Paulo Athletic Club played a match against São Paulo
Railway Club. Founded ten years earlier by British expatriates, the Athletic
Club won a fiercely contested game, with one of their three tries created
by their left centre-threequarter Charles Miller, who was also praised for his
sterling efforts in defence.2 It was the first organised rugby match to take
place in Brazil, but despite his contribution to the birth of the oval ball game,
Miller would subsequently be remembered as the father of Brazilian soccer.
Just as with the founding of the football codes in the English-speaking
world, the expansion of soccer beyond its British roots also had its own
creation myths and invented traditions. Like Alexander Watson Hutton in
Argentina and William Leslie Poole in Uruguay, Miller was one of a number
of British soccer players who became known as ‘the father of football’ in
their respective countries. These three men personified the common origin
story of the emergence of soccer in Europe and Latin America, in which
the game was brought to each country by the British, whereupon it was
taken up with enthusiasm by the local population. The success of these
164 Soccer
countries in their adopted sport led to the observation, often heard during
World Cup tournaments, that ‘Britain gave football to the world and has
been trying to get it back ever since’.
Indeed, it is true that very often the first football games and clubs in
numerous countries were initiated by British young men, either as teach-
ers at English-speaking schools or as visiting businessmen or technicians.
Thus it was British mining engineers who took the sport to Bilbao and the
Basque country, railway engineers who started football in Latin America,
and seamen and merchants who first played the sport in port cities such
as Le Havre, Marseilles and Naples.3 Famous Italian clubs like Genoa and
Milan adopted anglicised names because they were formed by British expa-
triates in the 1890s.
However, this emphasis on soccer’s ‘firsts’ and ‘fathers’ (the deep-going
male chauvinism of sport means that there are never ‘mothers of football’)
does not explain how or why the game spread far beyond its expatriate
founders and became, in the words of the pioneering football historian
Tony Mason, the ‘passion of the people’ in dozens of nations far beyond
the cultural reach of the British Empire. Nor does it explain why in many
countries soccer was abandoned for rugby union by the expatriate British
communities that had founded it.
Nowhere can this be seen more clearly than in Argentina. Argentinian
soccer history is portrayed as a seamless story of upward progression after its
introduction to the country by the British. But soccer became a mass spec-
tator sport in Argentina only when it slipped out of the control of the local
British community, which then embraced rugby as its premier sport. In
1882 Alexander Watson Hutton introduced football into South America’s
oldest English school, St Andrew’s Scots School in Buenos Aires. By the
1890s, rugby and soccer were of equal status and popularity in Argentina.
Its first soccer league began in 1891, and its championship was won seven
times in the first decade by clubs that also played rugby. In 1899 two of
those clubs, Lomas and Belgrano Athletic Club, were founding members
of the River Plate Rugby Union (which became the Argentinian Rugby
Union in 1951), along with Buenos Aires FC, Flores Athletic Club and
Rosaria AC. Most of these clubs were multi-sport institutions in which
soccer and rugby, along with sports such as cricket and tennis, were played.4
But the catalyst for the rapid expansion of soccer across all sections of
Argentine society did not come from the English-speaking community but
was a result of the 1898 Argentinian Ministry of Justice and Public Instruc-
tion decree that all schools, public or private, had to teach physical educa-
tion and establish sports clubs for past and present pupils. Argentina at this
time was also experiencing massive waves of immigration from Europe,
Soccer 165
especially from Italy but also Jews from Eastern Europe. Spurred by govern-
ment support for sports clubs, many new teams were formed in the first
decade of the new century. Boca Juniors was founded by working-class
Italian immigrants in 1905 and Atlanta, established a year previously, found
much of its support in the Jewish community. Almost all of these new clubs
came from outside of the English-speaking enclaves.
Moreover, as the rail network extended its reach across the nation, rail-
way companies set up recreation clubs for their employees, not least because
there was little else for workers to do after they had finished long shifts
building or operating the railway. The vast majority of these workers were
Argentinians or recent immigrants. Rosario Central FC was founded in
1889 as the Central Argentine Railway Athletic Club, one of dozens of
clubs created this way.5 The influx of new, non-English speaking players
into the game from schools, local clubs and workplaces revolutionised the
face of Argentinian soccer. When it played its first official international
match, against Uruguay in 1902, ten of the Argentina eleven had British
surnames. A decade later against the same opponents, the position was the
exact opposite.6
However, despite its status and high profile in Argentina, rugby did not
become a mass spectator sport. As working-class Argentinians and other non-
British immigrants took up soccer, English-speaking sports clubs that played
both games abandoned soccer for rugby’s amateur exclusivity. Alexander
Watson Hutton’s son, Arnaldo, became an international rugby player as well
as playing his father’s sport. When Buenos Aires’ first non-British rugby club
was formed in 1904 it was established by upper-class Argentinian engineer-
ing students. Rugby became a haven for those who wished to stay aloof from
popular sport. This difference between rugby and soccer was illustrated by
the governance of the two codes. After 1914, Argentinian soccer never had a
British-born president. In contrast, Argentinian rugby had twenty presidents
in its first fifty years of existence, of whom only six were not British.
The same process of rugby consciously choosing exclusivity over popu-
larity can also be seen in Brazil. Soccer had been introduced into schools in
1896 and football clubs had been established in textile factories in the São
Paulo area in 1902, providing the base for the game’s popularity.7 But rugby
confined itself to the social elite even more than in Argentina. Its major
stronghold was the São Paulo Athletic Club, the multi-sport club that had
Charles Miller among its members. As in Argentina, the popularity of soccer
among the masses proved to be unpalatable for the British-educated elite
that ran the club and, despite winning São Paulo’s soccer championship in
the first three years of its existence, the club severed its soccer link in 1912
to focus on rugby.8
166 Soccer
establishing the sport beyond their own countries. Hans Gamper, a Swiss
evangelical Protestant, arrived in Barcelona to work as an accountant and
founded FC Barcelona in late 1899, and thus helped soccer become a cen-
tral part of the new culture of the rising Catalan urban middle classes.18
Swiss educators established the first clubs in Bulgaria and, 10,000 kilometres
away, Medellin’s Sporting FC was founded by Swiss merchants working in
Colombia.19 In Brazil, the Anglo-Swiss Oscar Cox returned from college
in Lausanne to his home in Rio de Janeiro and founded Fluminense FC
in 1902. In São Paulo, Hamburg-born Hans Nobiling founded two soccer
clubs in 1899, one of which was SC Germania that went on to win the local
championship twice.20
The extensive involvement of Germans and German speakers in the
expansion of the game underlines the extent to which soccer was now
seen as a universal, cosmopolitan sport. Up until the 1900s, physical recrea-
tion in German-speaking nations was dominated by the Turnverein move-
ment. The Turners combined nationalist politics and gymnastic exercises,
and rejected team sport as a British invention that was unsuitable for the
German character. Football in particular was opposed because it was seen
as unpatriotic. As the German empire spread around the world, so too did
Turner gymnastics follow in its wake.21 In propagating soccer, German
pioneers of the game were consciously rejecting their own national physi-
cal culture. But they had not abandoned conservative German traditions
to become British, but to promote a sport that reflected their own cosmo-
politan modernity.
Indeed, almost all of those who founded soccer clubs outside of the
English-speaking world had Anglophile sympathies, were often educated
in English-speaking schools, or had business links with Britain. But in con-
trast to the socially conservative Anglophilia of the Muscular Christian-
ity, as expressed by Pierre de Coubertin, their Anglophilia was part of a
wider cosmopolitanism, as Pierre Lanfranchi has noted.22 They admired
what they believed was the liberal, modern capitalist values of the British
legal and political system. Thus English names were commonly used as
the names of clubs even where there was no or little British involvement,
such as Grasshoppers of Zurich or Young Boys of Bern. English techni-
cal terms and rules were used, for example the founding constitution of
Rio de Janeiro’s Liga Metropolitana de Football of 1905 stated that only
English terms should be used for the game, a practice also insisted upon by
the footballers of Chilean port Valparaiso.23 Although the English language
indicated high social status, its use as a lingua franca among non-British
soccer enthusiasts also underlined the cosmopolitan modernity that soccer
was seen as representing. This was a modern game for the modern middle
classes of the world.
168 Soccer
Association, at first sight a tame game compared with the other, is pos-
sibly more perilous than Rugby Union . . . its modern developments,
though in many ways so similar, are more certainly towards danger
than are the developments in the tactics of the older branch.
It revisited the issue in 1907 and drew exactly the same conclusion: ‘every-
thing seems to show that the degree of danger incurred by players is greater
in the dribbling than in the carrying game’.28
The explanation for soccer’s rise to globalism is not to be found in how
the game was played but in how it was administered. Its transformation
into a world game was made possible because of its acceptance of profes-
sionalism in 1885. The decision opened the way for league competitions
Soccer 169
to be created and, together, professionalism and the league system gave the
game the appearance of a meritocracy. It could now claim to be – and
more importantly, was perceived as being – a ‘career open to talent’, regard-
less of a player’s social or educational background. Leagues also meant that
teams could be assessed objectively by their playing record rather than their
social status. Soccer had become a system of continuous competition, legal
regulation and the supplanting of personal relationships by the exigencies
of the commercial market. Rugby in the 1880s had no league structures,
was governed largely by unelected elites, and amateurism allowed the RFU
arbitrary control over the sport at home and abroad.
The increasing use of the term ‘science’ in soccer symbolically under-
lined the difference between its gentlemanly origins and its global future. It
not only described the playing style of professional sides but also indicated
the social stratum of the men who promoted professionalism and league
football. William Sudell, the manager of Preston North End, was a fac-
tory manager and accountant. John Lewis, the founder of Blackburn Rov-
ers, built coaches for railway engines. William MacGregor, the chairman
of Aston Villa and the prime mover behind the creation of the Football
League, was a shopkeeper. John Bentley, the secretary of Bolton Wanderers
and president of the Football League, was a journalist.
These men saw themselves as bringing modern principles of science
and technology to the way that football was organised, as much as they had
done in their businesses. Their enthusiasm for cup and league competition
reflected their belief that sport should be free from arbitrary social restric-
tions imposed from above.29 This conception of sport as an expression of
the modern industrial meritocratic world where advancement was based
on talent and skill would be critical in making soccer so appealing beyond
Britain and its empire.
This was very different from the beliefs of the privately educated men
who still controlled rugby. Largely from the upper middle classes, they were
members of professions such as medicine, the law, the church and the higher
civil service. In the mid-nineteenth century this social layer consolidated
their status and established legally recognised associations, such as the British
Medical Association, which allowed them to regulate entry into their pro-
fessions and exclude those they saw as undesirable. They believed in com-
petition but only to the extent that it did not threaten their own position
in the social hierarchy.Their imposition of amateurism in sport in the 1880s
was an attempt to stem working-class encroachment on ‘their’ pastimes, and
keep tight control of rugby.
The leaders of the RFU also had little interest in seeing rugby develop
beyond the middle classes of the British Empire. Indeed, it was not until
1978 that France was admitted as a full member of the International Rugby
170 Soccer
Board (IRB), the sport’s world governing body. Even Australia, New Zea-
land and South Africa were not made full members of the IRB until 1948.
Rugby was a symbol of Britishness almost everywhere it was played. And in
the few places where it wasn’t, it was played because of its relationship to the
British. So, in France, it was the desire to emulate the success of the British
Empire that led to rugby’s adoption, and in Afrikaans-speaking white South
Africa, it offered the opportunity to avenge the iniquities of the Boer War.
The men who led professional soccer were no less patriotic or parochial
than the men who ran rugby or any other British sport. Football League
president Charles Sutcliffe’s declaration that ‘I don’t know the name of a
club or a single individual on the continent’, was typical of the game’s lack
of interest in anything beyond the immediate success of their highly suc-
cessful domestic league.30 The English national side did not play against
a non-British nation until 1908 and played just six more similar matches
before World War One.31 Moreover, the booming success of English and
Scottish soccer meant that soccer’s leaders were largely indifferent to the
international expansion of their game and therefore uninterested in the
formation of FIFA.
But there was one major difference between soccer and rugby. The lead-
ers of British soccer no longer had arbitrary or unconditional control of the
game. Its transformation by professionalism laid the basis for it to become
independent from its British administrators. Professionalism necessitated an
external, objective set of rules for the governance of the game. British soc-
cer was still led by the same people, but professionalism eroded their direct
control over the game. Soccer was no longer based on social status and net-
works, but ultimately controlled by rules that were independent of whoever
led the sport. Unlike rugby, there was now no inherent reason why soccer
could not be led by those who owed no allegiance to Britain or the British
Empire. Soccer’s relationship to Britain had become a conditional one.
own hands: ‘Tiring of the struggle [with the FA], and recognising that the
Englishmen, true to tradition, wanted to watch and wait, I undertook to
unite delegates from various nations myself ’.32
Men like Guérin had fallen in love with soccer not simply for what it
is, but also for what it represented. In Europe, the decade before World
War One saw soccer become identified with a new sense of cosmopolitan
modernity, that feeling that the world was entering a new era of speed,
technology and urban life that was unlike anything experienced before.This
link between football and modernity was expressed by modernist works of
art such as Kasimir Malevich’s Painterly Realism of A Football Player. Colour
Masses in the Fourth Dimension (1915), Robert Delaunay’s Football (1917),
Picasso’s Footballers on the Beach (1928), Willi Baumeister’s Fussballspieler
(1929) and Christopher Nevinson’s Any Wintry Afternoon in England (1930).
In the hands of these and other artists, soccer became a symbol of a rapidly
changing world, in which new and exciting opportunities were opening
up, not least for the liberal middle classes. The cosmopolitan, liberal ideals
of the early pioneers of international soccer can be seen in FIFA’s self-
consciously universalist philosophy. As Jules Rimet, FIFA president from
1921 to 1954, would later write, they believed that football ‘draws men
together and makes them equal’.33
The meritocratic culture of soccer also undermined the appeal of ama-
teurism. Although most of soccer’s early national federations paid lip-service
to the principle of amateurism, their practice differed qualitatively from its
British adherents. Unlike in Britain, where amateurs refused to allow leagues
because they saw them as a step towards professionalism, league tournaments
were quickly set up in every country where soccer was established. Moreo-
ver, British professional clubs regularly toured Europe and Latin America in
the decade or so before World War One, attracting huge crowds and helping
to popularise soccer beyond its original elite and middle-class constituency.
For the growing number of clubs that competed at the highest levels of
these new leagues, professional British managers became essential in their
quest for success. Scottish international Jake Madden coached Slavia Praha
from 1905, Bolton’s Jimmy Hogan was appointed manager of the Nether-
lands in 1910 and Arsenal’s Willie Garbutt was appointed coach of Genoa in
1912. Such was the importance of these British coaches to the development
of the sport that the English word ‘Mister’ became the informal term for the
team coach in Italy, Portugal and Spain.34
Even then European soccer’s definition of amateurism differed mark-
edly from the British. Most federations allowed ‘broken-time’ compensa-
tion to be paid to players who lost wages to play the game, precisely the
issue over which English rugby had split bitterly in 1895. This version of
172 Soccer
Practices which are forbidden to English amateur clubs and players are
permitted by some continental nations, and the effect is that English
amateur teams meet opponents which, while regarded as amateurs in
their respective countries, would be classed as professionals if under
English jurisdiction.35
There was widespread suspicion in Britain that the Olympic Games were
not a truly amateur venture, and this distrust helped stimulate the creation of
the British Empire Games in 1930.36 Indeed, the British football associations’
opposition to broken-time payments being classed as amateurism was the
ostensible reason for their resignation from FIFA for a second time in 1928.
Amateurism still retained its attraction for some members of the Euro-
pean middle classes who saw football as a social recreation for well-to-do
young men. In 1913 the Dutch football federation, the NVB, turned down
a motion from clubs that believed that the social status of teams should not
play role in the organisation of tournaments, and the NVB ensured that
Dutch soccer remained a formally amateur sport until 1954.37 The desire
to preserve soccer’s respectability, especially in countries where its rivals
were strong – such as rugby in France and Argentina, or the Turnverein and
similar gymnastics movements in Germany and central Europe – was also
a factor in the attachment to amateurism of some football federations. In
Germany, the official acceptance of professionalism did not take place until
1963, although it was an open secret that players had received monetary and
other benefits since the 1920s. Indeed, professionalism might have emerged
in Germany in the 1930s but for Hitler’s coming to power in 1933 that saw
the Nazi regime impose a strict amateur code on all sports.38
But in general, as soccer became a commercial mass spectator sport
in Europe and Latin America, amateurism dissolved. Professionalism was
allowed in Italian football in 1926 and in Argentina in 1931, although cov-
ert payments and the provision of easy jobs was commonplace long before
this.39 Uruguay followed suit in 1933. And even those national federa-
tions that remained nominally amateur did not carry out systematic cam-
paigns against professionals in the same way as Anglo-Saxon amateur sports’
administrators.40 The elaborate systems of discipline and punishment that
some British sports erected to defend amateur principles were not repeated
outside of the British world. Conversely, where British amateur ideology
remained strong, soccer struggled. In Canada, the grassroots popularity of
Soccer 173
soccer (and its ability to compete with football and hockey) was under-
mined by a split over whether to support the Amateur Athletic Union of
Canada’s draconian anti-professional regulations.41
The incompatibility of amateurism with soccer’s growing popularity
around the world eventually led to FIFA’s decision to organise its own world
cup in 1930. The amateurism of the Olympic Games, which in the 1920s
was briefly the stage for soccer’s most important international tournament,
excluded a growing number of soccer-playing nations that had embraced
professionalism, leading FIFA secretary Henri Delauney to declare in 1926
that ‘today international football can no longer be held within the confines
of the Olympics’.42 This final break with amateurism meant that soccer
could now become the modern game for the modern world.
Notes
1 Jules Rimet, Le football et le rapprochement des peuples (Genève: Éditions René
Kister, 1954), p. 47.
2 Match report in The Rio News, 2 August 1898, p. 7, available at https://archive.
org/stream/1898therionews31/189808-Vol.24N.312agoTheRioNews#page/
n5/mode/2up.
3 For an excellent summary of the expansion of soccer, see Matthew Taylor, ‘The
Global Spread of Football’, in Robert Edelman and Wayne Wilson (eds) The
Oxford Handbook of Sports History (New York: Oxford University Press, 2017),
pp. 183–95.
4 For English language histories of football in Argentina, see Tony Mason, Passion
of the People (London:Verso, 1995), Jonathan Wilson, Angels With Dirty Faces:The
Footballing History of Argentina (London: Orion, 2016) and Raanan Rein, Fútbol,
Jews and the Making of Argentina (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2015).
5 The first football established in Bolivia was set up for its workers by the Antofa-
gasta & Bolivia Railway Company, while Uruguay’s Penarol began life as the
football section of the Central Uruguay Railway Cricket Club.
6 For line-ups, see www.11v11.com.
7 Paulo Fontes and Bernardo Borges Buarque de Hollando (eds), The Country
of Football: Politics, Popular Culture and the Beautiful Game in Brazil (London: C
Hurst & Co., 2014), pp. 18 and 23–5.
8 For the origins of Brazilian rugby, see Victor Sá Ramalho Antonio, Passe para
trás! Os primeiros anos do rúgbi em São Paulo (1891–1933) (Masters thesis, Uni-
versity of São Paulo, 2017).
9 For a similar thesis, see Matthew Brown, ‘The British Informal Empire and the
Origins of Association Football in South America’, Soccer & Society, vol. 16, nos.
2–3 (2015), 169–82, and his From Frontiers to Football, An Alternative History of
Latin America Since 1800 (London: Reaction, 2014). For a complementary view-
point, see Brenda Elsey, Citizens and Sportsmen: Futbol and Politics in Twentieth-
century Chile (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2011).
10 Mason, Passion of the People, pp. 10–13.
174 Soccer
11 The greatest modern example of this is Eduardo Galeano’s Soccer in Sun and
Shadow (London:Verso, 1998).
12 For an outline of the expansion of soccer beyond Britain, see, Christiane Eisen-
berg, Pierre Lanfranchi,Tony Mason and Alfred Wahl, One Hundred Years of Foot-
ball (London: Weidenfield & Nicholson, 2004), ch. 2 and 3.
13 Bill Murray, Football: A History of the World Game (Aldershot: Scolar Press, 1994),
pp. 68–9.
14 P. Lanfranchi, T. Mason, C. Eisenberg and A. Wahl, 100 Years of Football (London:
Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2004), p. 49.
15 Ulrich Hesse-Lichtenberger, Tor! The Story of German Football (London: WSC,
2003), p. 23.
16 Kay Schiller and Chris Young, ‘The History and Historiography of Sport in
Germany: Social, Cultural and Political Perspectives’, German History, vol. 27,
no. 3 (2009), p. 321.
17 ‘For a broader discussion of this, see Eisenberg’s ‘ “Not Cricket!”: Sport in Ger-
many, or How the British Model Fell into Oblivion’, in Arnd Bauerkamper and
Christiane Eisenberg (eds) Britain as a Model of Modern Society? German Views
(Augsburg: Wissner-Verlag, 2006), pp. 242–56.
18 Andrew McFarland, ‘Founders, Foundations and Early Identities: Football’s
Early Growth in Barcelona’, Soccer & Society, vol. 14, no.1 (2013), pp. 93–107.
19 Taylor, ‘The Global Spread of Football’, p. 187. Matthew Brown, ‘British Infor-
mal Empire and the Origins of Association Football in South America’, Soccer
and Society, vol. 16, nos. 2–3 (2015), p. 177.
20 David Goldblatt, Futebol Nation: A Footballing History of Brazil (Harmondsworth:
Penguin, 2014), pp. 8–10.
21 Heikki Lempa, Beyond the Gymnasium: Educating the Middle-class Bodies in Clas-
sical Germany (Lexington, 2007), pp. 67–111. Gertrud Pfister, ‘Colonialism and
the Enactment of German National Identity’, Journal of Sport History, vol. 33, no.
1 (2006), pp. 59–83.
22 See his ‘Exporting Football: Notes on the Development of Football in Europe’,
in Richard Giulianotti and John Williams (eds) Game Without Frontiers: Football,
Identity and Modernity (Aldershot: Arena, 1994), pp. 23–45.
23 Gregg Bocketti, Invention of the Beautiful Game: Football and the Making of Modern
Brazil (Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2016), pp. 75–6. Brenda Elsey,
Citizens and Sportsmen: Futbol and Politics in Twentieth-century Chile, p. 27.
24 David Goldblatt, The Ball is Round (London, Viking, 2006), p. 178. See also
Graham Curry and Eric Dunning, Association Football: A Study in Figurational
Sociology (Abingdon: Routledge, 2015), p. 188.
25 See ‘The Aesthetics of Sport: Responses to Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht’s “In Praise
of Beauty” ’, a special issue of Sport in History, vol. 28, no. 1 (2008).
26 Montague Shearman, Athletics and Football (London: Longmans, Green, 1887),
p. 260.
27 Quoted in Goldblatt, p. 188.
28 Lancet, 24 March 1894, p. 765 & 16 November 1907, p. 1402.
29 For a comprehensive examination of the backgrounds of soccer’s early admin-
istrators, see Simon Inglis, League Football and the Men Who Made It (London:
Harper Collins Willow, 1988).
Soccer 175
By it [soccer] the mark of England may well remain in the world when
the rest of her influence has vanished.
—A.J.P. Taylor, 19651
Arnhem, a member of the first wave of British soccer coaches that would
transform the continental game.2
Sutcliffe died at the age of 79 in 1947, having lived a life that reflected
football’s journey since the 1860s. He was born into a world where there
were fewer than a hundred football clubs in Britain, started his playing
career when rugby was the dominant football code, fell victim to the RFU’s
amateur purge that destroyed rugby’s leadership of the football codes, and
switched to soccer at precisely the point that it was becoming the most
popular sport the world had ever seen. He then moved to the Netherlands
just as the game was on the cusp of seizing hold of the imaginations of mil-
lions of Europeans.
Football, like the railway, the mass media and the modern city, was one of
the most successful products of the great expansion of industrial capitalism
in the second half of the nineteenth century. Sutcliffe began life in a village
that specialised in woollen production and, like millions of others, would
find his way to a major city in search of work as the factory era superseded
small-scale manufacture. His skills as a footballer would make him a celeb-
rity thanks to the popular press’s obsession with the game, and then soccer’s
increasing international popularity would enable him to work in Europe.
In the course of his life, the tiny football world of 1868 had fragmented
into seven different codes, soccer had gone from having no national cup
competitions to staging a regular world cup, and there were now more
nation-states playing the game then there had been local clubs in existence
when Sutcliffe was born. In the course of one man’s lifetime, football had
expanded from a recreational interest of a handful of young middle-class
British men to become the passion of millions of men and women across
the entire planet. Yet, of all the sets of rules created to provide a satisfying
way to propel a ball towards a goal, only one would become a truly global
game.
This would have come as a surprise to the young Sutcliffe and his
contemporaries. When he made his debut for the England rugby side in
1889, the dominant international code was rugby. It was played across the
colonial-settler states of the British Empire, and its variants were established
winter sports in Australia, Canada and the United States. Governing bodies
existed wherever rugby was played, each of which was either affiliated to
the English RFU or accepted its authority. Tours by representative national
rugby sides had begun to take place in the 1880s, making it a vehicle for
expressing national pride. In 1882 a team representing New South Wales
toured New Zealand, thus initiating one of sport’s oldest international rival-
ries. In 1888 an unofficial British side undertook an epic tour of Australia
and New Zealand, and later that year the predominantly Maori Native
178 The global game
New Zealand team – against whom Sutcliffe would make his international
debut – embarked on an even more extensive tour of the British Isles. At
the same time, discussions began about a British rugby tour to South Africa,
which eventually took place in 1891. The following year regular visits by
British sides to the fledgling rugby clubs of France started. Rugby union’s
international footprint had been largely established by 1895.
In contrast, international soccer beyond England and Scotland was still
in its embryonic stages. In Ireland and Wales, soccer played second fiddle
to rugby, and would only begin to challenge its popularity until the 1900s.
Outside of the British Isles, only Denmark and the Netherlands had created
national governing bodies for soccer before 1890, and its regional organisa-
tions remained weak and lacked authority. FIFA was founded by just seven
nations in 1904. But by the eve of World War One, the game had advanced
so rapidly in Europe that men like Sutcliffe could be handsomely rewarded
for coaching local teams. And within the next decade the unprecedented
popularity that the game had experienced in England and Scotland would
be replicated across Europe and Latin America.
Much of soccer’s growth in the decade after 1914 was due to the tumul-
tuous social impact of World War One. The war introduced the game to
millions of young men in the military across Europe. The new, mass war of
the trenches meant that in between intense periods of unimaginable carnage
soldiers had considerable time on their hands, and the military authorities
quickly realised that soccer helped to fill up time while also maintaining
fitness. Moreover, by organising teams as part of the existing military struc-
tures, regimental, national and other loyalties could be strengthened.3 Initial
fears that soccer would be a distraction to the troops or, on the home front,
would undermine recruitment soon passed, and by the end of the war most
of the major belligerents had organised soccer tournaments behind their
front lines.4 Those who had played or watched the sport while on military
service more often than not returned home with a passion for the game.
That enthusiasm was often complemented by a new post-war sense of
national identity. The old world had been destroyed by war and revolu-
tions that swept across Europe from 1917. From the ashes of Tsarism and
the Austro-Hungarian Empire, new nation-states emerged across Central and
Eastern Europe. For mass-circulation daily newspapers and new media tech-
nology like radio, football offered a simple and understandable way of creat-
ing a patriotism that they hoped could unite classes, an important asset for
the rulers of countries confronted by the threat of class struggle inspired by
the Bolshevik revolution in Russia. It was therefore no accident that Aus-
tria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia, all former components of the
Hapsburg Empire, were among the nations at the heart of European soccer
The global game 179
from the suffocating grip of British Muscular Christianity and abandon the
Anglo-Saxon attitudes upon which soccer had been founded. Indeed, soc-
cer’s increasing popularity across the globe grew in an inverse ratio to the
declining influence of the British Empire, especially in the second half of
the twentieth century, leading to A.J.P Taylor, among others, suggesting that
soccer might well come to be viewed as Britain’s most enduring cultural
legacy.
To explain soccer’s expansion around the world as a manifestation of
its cosmopolitan, meritocratic ideology is also to understand why other
football codes could not match its global reach. Rugby union, as we have
seen, was too closely associated with British, Muscular Christian national-
ism to appeal to the non-Anglophone world, with the partial exception of
a France seeking a model after its defeat in the 1870 Franco-Prussian war
and the spectre of the 1871 Paris Commune.Wherever rugby threatened to
become a commercial mass spectator sport, the RFU used its amateur ide-
ology to block its development into a modern game. Rugby league had lit-
tle international presence beyond the industrial working-class rugby players
of England, Australia and New Zealand. And of the nationally named rugby
derivatives in America, Australia, Canada and Ireland, only the Irish game
developed anything of an international profile due to its cultural impor-
tance for the Irish diaspora. The much later attempts by America’s NFL to
establish its own European league between 1991 and 2007 failed because
it was ultimately unable to offer meaningful cultural resonance beyond its
own aficionados, while the Canadian Football League’s expansion into the
United States in the 1990s foundered on the very fact that it was Canadian
and could not provide an outlet for the American nationalism that college and
NFL football prided themselves on. No football code other than soccer has
qualitatively expanded beyond its 1914 national boundaries. And soccer still
continues to increase in popularity. Today FIFA claims, with little reason to
doubt it, that one in every twenty-five people on the planet plays soccer in
some form.
There is no record that John Sutcliffe was ever asked what he thought
about the dramatic changes to football that had taken place during the
course of his life, or whether he could have imagined what soccer would
become. If he had, one likes to think that as a plain-speaking son of the
Victorian industrial working class, he would have perhaps anticipated the
words of another son of the industrial proletariat who would be born into
the football cauldron of twentieth-century Glasgow a few years before Sut-
cliffe died:
Notes
1 A.J.P. Taylor, English History 1914–1945 (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1975),
p. 274.
2 Yorkshire Post, 20 and 28 September 1889.
3 See, for example,Tony Mason and Eliza Reidi, Sport and the Military (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2010).
4 See, for example, Arnaud Waquet and Thierry Terret, ‘Ballons ronds, Tommies
et tranchées: l’impact de la présence britannique dans la diffusion du football-
association au sein des villes de garnison de la Somme et du Pas-de-Calais (1915–
1918)’, Modern & Contemporary France, vol. 14, no. 4 (2006), pp. 449–64, and
Arnaud Waquet and Joris Vincent, ‘Wartime Rugby and Football: Sports Elites,
French Military Teams and International Meets During the First World War’,
International Journal of the History of Sport, vol. 28, nos. 3–4 (2011), pp. 372–92.
5 Matthias Marschik, ‘Between Manipulation and Resistance:Viennese Football in
the Nazi Era’, Journal of Contemporary History, vol. 34, no. 2 (1999), pp. 215–29.
6 V.I. Lenin, ‘The Slogan of Civil War Illustrated’, Collected Works, vol. 21 (Moscow:
Progress Publishers, 1974), pp. 181–2.
7 Quoted in Paul Dietschy, ‘Did a “Europe of Football” Exist in the 1930s?’ Sport
in History, vol. 35, no. 4 (2015), p. 517.
8 Football Association, Minutes of the International Selection Committee, 22
April 1921, National Football Museum, Manchester. Paul Dietschy, ‘Making
Football Global? FIFA, Europe, and the Non-European Football World, 1912–
74’, Journal of Global History, vol. 8, no. 2 (2013), pp. 279–98.
9 The famous words of Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson after his side
won the 1999 European Champions League final with two goals in the final two
minutes against Bayern Munich.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Folk football
Association football
Taylor, Matthew, The Leaguers: The Making of Professional Football in England, 1900–
1939 (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2005).
Taylor, Matthew, The Association Game: A History of British Football (London: Pear-
son, 2008).
Tischler, Stephen, Footballers and Businessmen: The Origins of Professional Soccer in
England (New York: Holmes & Meier, 1981).
Walvin, James, The People’s Game:The History of Football Revisited (Edinburgh: Main-
stream, 2000).
Williams, Jean, A Game for Rough Girls? (London: Routledge, 2003).
Wilson, Jonathan, Angels With Dirty Faces: The Footballing History of Argentina (Lon-
don: Orion, 2016).
Harvey, Adrian and Swain, Peter, ‘On Bosworth Field or the Playing Fields of Eton
and Rugby? Who Really Invented Modern Football?’ International Journal of the
History of Sport, vol. 29, no. 10 (2012).
Hay, Roy, Harvey, Adrian and Smith, Mel, ‘Football Before Codification:The Prob-
lems of Myopia’, Soccer & Society, vol. 16, no. 2–3 (2015).
Holt, Richard, ‘Football and the Urban Way of Life in Nineteenth-century Britain’,
in J.A. Mangan (ed.) Pleasure, Profit and Proselytism: British Culture and Sport at
Home and Abroad 1700–1914 (London: Frank Cass, 1988).
Horowitz, Joel, ‘Soccer Clubs and Civic Associations in the Political World of Bue-
nos Aires Prior to 1943’, Soccer & Society, vol. 18, no. 2–3 (2017).
Kitching, Gavin, ‘The Origins of Football: History, Ideology and the Making of
“The People’s Game” ’, History Workshop Journal, vol. 79, no. 1 (2015).
Lanfranchi, Pierre, ‘Exporting Football: Notes on the Development of Football in
Europe’, in Richard Giulianotti and John Williams (eds) Game Without Frontiers:
Football, Identity and Modernity (Aldershot: Arena, 1994).
Lanfranchi, Pierre, ‘Mister Garbutt: The First European Manager’, The Sports Histo-
rian, vol. 22, no. 1 (2002).
Lewis, Robert, ‘ “Our Lady Specialists at Pikes Lane”: Female Spectators in Early
English Professional Football, 1880–1914’, International Journal of the History of
Sport, vol. 26, no. 15 (2009).
Marschik, Matthias, ‘Between Manipulation and Resistance: Viennese Football in
the Nazi Era’, Journal of Contemporary History, vol. 34, no. 2 (1999).
McFarland, Andrew, ‘Founders, Foundations and Early Identities: Football’s Early
Growth in Barcelona’, Soccer & Society, vol. 14, no. 1 (2013).
Michallat, Wendy, ‘Terrain de lutte: Women’s Football and Feminism in “Les anneés
folles” ’, French Cultural Studies, vol. 18, no. 3 (2007).
Pfister, Gertrud, ‘Colonialism and the Enactment of German National Identity’,
Journal of Sport History, vol. 33, no. 1 (2006).
Porter, Dilwyn, ‘Revenge of the Crouch End Vampires: The AFA, the FA and Eng-
lish Football’s “Great Split”, 1907–1914’, Sport in History, vol. 26, no. 3 (2006).
Russell, Dave, ‘From Evil to Expedient:The Legalization of Professionalism in Eng-
lish Football, 1884–85’, in Stephen Wagg (ed.) Myths and Milestones in the History
of Sport (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2011).
Schiller, Kay and Young, Chris, ‘The History and Historiography of Sport in Ger-
many: Social, Cultural and Political Perspectives’, German History, vol. 27, no. 3
(2009).
Swain, Peter, ‘The Origins of Football Debate: Football and Cultural Continuity,
1857–1859’, International Journal of the History of Sport, vol. 35, no. 5 (2015).
Taylor, Matthew, ‘Football’s Engineers? British Football Coaches, Migration and
Intercultural Transfer, c.1910–c.1950s’, Sport in History, vol. 30, no. 1 (2010).
Taylor, Matthew, ‘The Global Spread of Football’, in Robert Edelman and Wayne
Wilson (eds) The Oxford Handbook of Sports History (New York: Oxford Univer-
sity Press, 2017).
Bibliography 187
Waquet, Arnaud and Terret, Thierry, ‘Ballons ronds, Tommies et tranchées: l’impact
de la présence britannique dans la diffusion du football-association au sein des
villes de garnison de la Somme et du Pas-de-Calais (1915–1918)’, Modern &
Contemporary France, vol. 14, no. 4 (2006).
Waquet, Arnaud and Vincent, Joris, ‘Wartime Rugby and Football: Sports Elites,
French Military Teams and International Meets during the First World War’,
International Journal of the History of Sport, vol. 28, no. 3–4 (2011).
Websites
www.scottishsporthistory.com.
www.donmouth.co.uk/womens_football/womens_football.html.
Archival sources
Football Association minute books, National Football Museum.
Moses Heap, My Life & Times, typescript in Rawtenstall Library, RC942 ROS.
Sheffield FC, Minutes and list of members, letterbooks, results and misc papers,
Sheffield City Archives.
188 Bibliography
Rugby Union
Turley, Alan, Rugby – The Pioneer Years (Auckland: Harper Collins, 2009).
Williams, Gareth, 1905 and All That (Llandysul: Gomer, 1991).
Wood, Desmond, New Zealand Rugby Country (Auckland: Bateman, 2017).
Archival sources
Australian Rugby Union archives, Sydney.
RFU committee minutes, World Rugby Museum, Twickenham.
Australian Rules
Burke, Peter, ‘Patriot Games: Women’s Football During the First World War in Aus-
tralia’, Football Studies, vol. 8, no. 2 (2005).
Collins, Tony, ‘National Myths, Imperial Pasts and the Origins of Australian Rules
Football’, in Stephen Wagg (ed.) Myths and Milestones in Sports History (Basing-
stoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011).
Collins, Tony, ‘The Invention of Sporting Tradition: National Myths, Imperial Pasts
and the Origins of Australian Rules Football’, in Stephen Wagg (ed.) Myths and
Milestones in the History of Sport (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011).
Flanagan, Martin, ‘Football Ebbs and Flow with Tide of Society’, The Age (Mel-
bourne), 9 August 2008.
Grow, Robin, ‘From Gum Trees to Goal Posts, 1858–76’, in Rob Hess and Bob
Stewart (eds) More Than A Game (Carlton: Melbourne University Press, 1998).
Hess, Rob, ‘Playing with “Patriotic Fire”: Women and Football in the Antipodes
During the Great War’, International Journal of the History of Sport, vol. 28, no. 10
(2011).
Hess, Rob, ‘Missing in Action? New Perspectives on the Origins and Diffusion of
Women’s Football in Australia during the Great War’, International Journal of the
History of Sport, vol. 31, no. 18 (2014).
Hess, Rob, Hogan, Tim, Nicholson, Matthew, Wedgewood, Nikki and Ian, Warren,
‘Women and Australian Rules Football: An Annotated Bibliography’, Football Stud-
ies, vol. 8, no. 2 (2005).
Hibbins, Gillian, ‘The Cambridge Connection: The English Origins of Australian
Rules Football’, in J.A. Mangan (ed.) The Cultural Bond (London: Frank Cass
1993).
Mandle, W.F., ‘Games People Played: Cricket and Football in England and Victoria
in the Late-nineteenth Century’, Historical Studies, vol. 15, no. 60 (1973).
McConville, Chris and Hess, Rob, ‘Forging Imperial and Australasian Identities:
Australian Rules Football in New Zealand During the Nineteenth Century’,
International Journal of the History of Sport, vol. 29, no. 17 (2012).
O’Dwyer, Barry, ‘The Shaping of Victorian Rules Football’, Victorian Historical Jour-
nal, vol. 60, no. 1 (1992).
Pill, Shane and Frost, Lionel, ‘R.E.N. Twopeny and the Establishment of Austral-
ian Football in Adelaide’, International Journal of the History of Sport, vol. 33, no.
8 (2016).
Syson, Ian, ‘The “Chimera” of Origins: Association Football in Australia before
1880’, International Journal of the History of Sport, vol. 30, no. 5 (2013).
Gaelic football
American football
Ingrassia, Brian, The Rise of the Gridiron University: Higher Education’s Uneasy Alliance
with Big-Time Football (Kansas: University Press of Kansas, 2012).
Lipset, Seymour Martin, American Exceptionalism: A Double-Edged Sword (New York:
W.W. Norton, 1998).
Lockhart, Charles, The Roots of American Exceptionalism (London: Palgrave, 2003).
Madsen, Deborah L., American Exceptionalism (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University
Press, 1998).
Markovits, Andrei S. and Hellerman, Steven L., Offside: Soccer and American. Excep-
tionalism (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001).
Matthews, William, Getting on in the World (Toronto: S.C. Griggs, 1876).
Miller, John J., The Big Scrum: How Teddy Roosevelt Saved Football (New York: Harper
Collins, 2011).
Nelson, David M., The Anatomy of the Game: Football, the Rules and the Men Who
Made the Game (New Jersey: University of Delaware Press, 1994).
Oriard, Michael, Reading Football: How the Popular Press Created an American Spectacle
(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1993).
Pease, Donald E., The New American Exceptionalism (Minnesota: University of Min-
nesota, 2009).
Peterson, Robert W., Pigskin:The Early Years of Pro Football (New York: Oxford Uni-
versity Press, 1997).
Shafer, Byron E. (ed.), Is America Different?: A New Look at American Exceptionalism
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991).
Smith, Ronald, Sports and Freedom:The Rise of Big-Time College Athletics (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1991).
Umphett, Wiley Lee, Creating the Big Game: John W. Heisman and the Invention of
American Football (Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1992).
Watterson, John Sayle, College Football: History: Spectacle: Controversy (Baltimore:
Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003).
Yost, Fielding, Football for Player and Spectator (Ann Arbor: University Publishing, 1905).
Park, Roberta J., ‘From Football to Rugby – and Back, 1906–1919: The University
of California-Stanford University Response to the “Football Crisis of 1905” ’,
Journal of Sport History, vol. 11, no. 3 (1984).
Park, Roberta J., ‘Sport, Gender and Society in a Transatlantic Victorian Perspec-
tive’, The International Journal of the History of Sport, vol. 24, no. 12 (2007).
Riesman, David and Denney, Reuel, ‘Football in America: A Study in Cultural Dif-
fusion’, American Quarterly, vol. 3, no. 3 (1951).
Smith, Ronald,‘American Football Becomes the Dominant Intercollegiate National
Pastime’, International Journal of the History of Sport, vol. 31, no. 1–2 (2014).
Walter Camp, ‘Football in America’, Frank Leslie’s Popular Monthly, vol. 57, no. 1
(1898).
Walter Camp,‘Rugby Football in America’, Outing Magazine, vol. 57 (March 1911).
Watterson, John Sayle, ‘The Gridiron Crisis of 1905:Was It Really a Crisis?’, Journal
of Sports History, vol. 27, no. 2 (2000).
Websites
Meacham, Scott, Old Division Football, the Indigenous Mob Soccer of Dartmouth Col-
lege, Dartmo (2006), at www.dartmo.com/football.pdf (viewed12 August 2017).
Scudder, Winthrop S., An Historical Sketch of the Oneida Football Club of Boston,
1862–1865 (1926) at https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89098742
257;view=1up;seq=3.
Archival sources
David Starr Jordan Collection, Reel 52, Frames 482–5, Stanford University Archives.
Harvard University, Reports of the President and the Treasurer of Harvard College
1904–1905.
James B. Angell Papers, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan.
Walter Chauncey Camp Papers, Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University
Library.
196 Bibliography
Canadian football
Rugby league
Haines, Katherine, ‘The 1921 Peak and Turning Point in Women’s Football History:
An Australasian, Cross-Code Perspective’, International Journal of the History of
Sport, vol. 33, no. 8 (2016).
Little, Charles, ‘ “What a Freak-Show They Made!”: Women’s Rugby League in
1920s Sydney’, Football Studies, vol. 4, no. 2 (2000).
Moore, Andrew, ‘Opera of the Proletariat: Rugby League, the Labour Movement
and Working-Class Culture in New South Wales and Queensland’, Labour His-
tory, vol. 79 (2000).
Archival sources
JC Davis Collection, Mitchell Library, Sydney.
Rugby Football League Archives, Heritage Quay, University of Huddersfield.
General
Magee, Gary B. and Thompson, Andrew S., Empire and Globalisation (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2010).
Martin-Jenkins, Christopher, The Wisden Book of County Cricket (London: Queen
Anne Press, 1981).
Russell, Dave, Popular Music in England, 1890–1914: A Social History (Manchester:
Manchester University Press, 1987).
Seymour, Harold, Baseball: The Early Years (New York: Oxford University Press,
1960).
Smith, Dennis, Conflict and Compromise: Class Formation in English Society 1830–
1914: A Comparative Study of Birmingham and Sheffield (London: RKP, 1982).
Taylor, A.J.P., English History 1914–1945 (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1975).
Thompson, E.P., ‘Time, Work-Discipline and Industrial Capitalism’, in Customs in
Common (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1993).
Tranter, Neil, Sport, Economy and Society in Britain 1750–1914 (Cambridge: Cam-
bridge University Press, 1998).
Vamplew, Wray, Pay Up and Play The Game (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1988).
Vlasich, James A., A Legend for the Legendary: The Origin of the Baseball Hall of Fame
(Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1990).
Weber, A. F., The Growth of Cities in the Nineteenth Century: A Study in Statistics (Lon-
don: Macmillan, 1899).
Williams, Graham, The Code War (Harefield:Yore Publications, 1994).
Northern Rugby Football Union 39, 80, 139 Raeburn Place, Edinburgh 35
North Staffordshire F.A. 41 Ranger, Terence 93
Norwich 12 Rangers F.C. 51
Nottingham 25, 29, 41 Referee 156
Nottingham Forest F.C. 61 Reform Act (1867) 44
Nottingham Review 14 Richard II 10
Nottinghamshire Guardian 22, 33 Richmond F.C. 7, 21, 31
Notts County F.C. 23, 29, 40, 61 Richmond F.C. (Melbourne) 95
Rimet, Jules 163, 171, 179
offside 19, 87, 104 River Plate Rugby Union 164
Old Etonians F.C. 42, 59, 60 Rochdale 13, 31
Oldham Athletic 142 Roosevelt, Theodore 117, 148 – 51
Olesha,Yuri 168 Rosario A.C. 164
Olympic Games 173 Rossin House Hotel, Toronto 129
Oneida F.C. 117 Rosslare 102
Ontario Rugby Football Union 132, 152 rouge 19, 27 – 8
open formation 129 – 30 Rouse, Paul 112
Original Lady Footballers’ F.C. 67 Rowing Almanack 55
Orkney Islands 12 Royal Commission on Children in Mines
Orton, George W. 127 (1842) 13
Osborne, Ted 142 Royal Engineers F. C. 7, 21, 36, 50
Ottawa Rough Riders F.C. 127, 152 Rudd, Kevin 91
Outing 121, 123, 131, 161 Rugby (town) 17
Oxford University 118 – 19 Rugby Football Union 7, 75 – 80, 87, 124,
133, 139 – 42, 142, 155; formation of 35
Parkhead Stadium 48 Rugby League International Board 145
Parnell, Charles Stewart 99, 111 Rugby League News 160
Parr, George 29 Rugby School 5, 6, 8, 19, 20, 22, 26 – 7, 33,
Partick F.C. 51 38, 83, 86, 87, 92, 118 – 19
Peabody, Endicott 149 Russell, Ernie 152
Pember, Arthur 7 Rutgers University 119
Pennsylvania State University 122, 149
Perceval House 6 Sabbatarianism 13
Peron, Juan 179 Saint Andrew’s Scots School 164
Perth (Western Australia) 70 Saint Monday 28, 43
Picasso, Pablo 171 Sale F.C. 23, 31
Poole, Leslie 163 Salford F.C. 79
Poulter, Jim 95 San Francisco 68
Prest, William 25 São Paulo Athletic Club 163 – 4
Preston 31, 69 São Paulo Railway Club 163
Preston Guardian 57 Saturday Night (Birmingham) 43, 49
Preston North End F.C. 41, 53, 57, 61, 169 Scotch College (Melbourne) 85
Princeton University 88, 117, Scotland (first international matches)
119 – 21, 149 35, 47
professionalism: American football 122; Scots Fusiliers 127
Canadian football 152; English soccer Scott, Sir Walter 10
53 – 9; FIFA 168 – 73; rugby league 139; Scottish Athletic Journal 49
Scottish soccer 49 Sedgefield 12
Shakespeare, William 10
quarterback 134 Shaw, Jack 44
Quebec Rugby Football Union 152 Sheffield 13, 25 – 9, 31, 41, 43, 70, 77
Queen’s Park F.C. 36, 47, 60 Sheffield F.C. 21, 22, 25, 27, 33, 34, 40, 51,
Queen’s University, Kingston 152 87, 94
206 Index
Wheeler, Benjamin Ide 148, 151, 154 Yale University 117, 119, 120, 123,
Whitehaven 12, 69 132 – 3, 149
White Roding, Essex 13 York F.C. 44
Whitney, Caspar 121 Yorkshire County F.C. 41
Widnes F.C. 41, 142 Yorkshire Cup 42
Wigan F.C. 69, 79 Yorkshire Evening Post 79
Wigston 13 Yorkshireman 54, 66, 140
Wilde, Oscar 67, 68 Yorkshire Owl 75
Wills, Tom 83, 84, 86 – 7, 88, 92 – 3 Yorkshire Post 83
Winchester College 5, 19 Yorkshire Rugby Union 56, 68
Wolverhampton Wanderers 38 Yorkshire Senior Competition 77
Women 65 – 73; American football 68; Yost, Fielding 116
Australian Rules 70; folk football 11, 12; Youdan Cup (Sheffield) 28
male sphere 21; rugby league 70; rugby Young Australia League 90
union 68, 70 Young Boys (Bern) 167
Woolhouse, William 29 Young Men’s Christian Association 117 – 18
Workington 12
World Cup (FIFA) 173, 179 Zola, Emile 68
World War One 69, 179 Zurich Grasshoppers 167