At a recent event at Great Comp House & Gardens in Kent, we presented Sue Chandler (former Great Britain (GB) Captain with 25 appearances) with her GB honours cap alongside a group of ladies from Sevenoaks and Teddington hockey clubs who were re-enacting hockey as it was played in the early 1900s.
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Left: Sue Chandler receives her Great Britain honours cap from The Hockey Museum Vice President Katie Dodd. |
We’ll reveal more on this re-enactment in due course, but it got us thinking: English hockey does not have a long-standing tradition of wearing caps or having any sort of headwear as part of its uniform (kit), for either men or women – as is the case in other sports. Neither has English hockey awarded honours caps to international players, though some caps exist in recognition of county or territorial representation.
The Evolution of Honours Caps | The Hockey Museum
Yet photographs and artwork exist from the late 1800s and early 1900s which indicate that it was not uncommon for women’s hockey teams to wear boaters, berets or other headwear as part of early hockey uniform.
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The France international women's team wearing berets at a tournament in Copenhagen in 1922. |
An engraving, published in 1894, after a painting by the artist Lucien Davis, would also suggest that it might have been common for ladies to actually play in their hats.
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A Ladies' Hockey Club at Play, c.1894; engraving after an artwork by Lucien Davis. |
Marjorie Pollard, in her book Fifty Years of Women's Hockey, wrote that in 1896 "the distinguishing dress to be worn by the All England XI was agreed upon as follows: white canvas shirts and caps; the badge, the Rose of England, on the pocket of shirt and on the peak of cap; cardinal serge [woollen] shirt and band; white silk (long); sailor hat (for travelling?)".
This lends itself to the interpretation that in 1896 a peaked cap was for playing in and a sailor hat was worn for travel between matches. This is supported by a photograph of the England women’s team of 1896 and a report of the match in The Queen':
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The England international women's team which played Ireland in 1896. |
During the Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the All England Women’s Hockey Association (AEWHA) in 1895 it was proposed that "No player shall wear hat pins, or sailor or other hard-brimmed hat [during matches]", but this was defeated and only passed several years later, possibly in 1898. Even back then player safety was obviously an issue and it appears that playing in hats of any description quickly disappeared.
Fast forward 120 years and The Hockey Museum and GB Hockey are now presenting honours caps to all GB hockey players, past and present. These caps have a very traditional look and the heritage appeal of this design has struck a chord with the recipients.
While English hockey (and Great Britain international hockey) may not have had an illustrious hat-wearing tradition, there are hockey-playing nations and cultures where headwear is more common and deeply rooted: the Sikh turban and the Muslim hijab for example.
Recognising this, England Hockey this week announced revised regulations on playing kit for the 2022-2023 season. When published these will provide clarity on what kit can be worn during hockey matches including, for the first time, making explicit reference to head coverings for players such as turbans and hijabs. These regulations will ban the use of metal fastenings and pins to secure any headwear – a link back to those original 1890s AEWHA regulation banning hat pins!
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Harvey Wood, England men's 1908 Olympic gold medal-winning goalkeeper. |
The Hockey Museum volunteer James Ormandy spent a large part of 2019 researching hockey in Yorkshire to produce an article “When Hull Got Hooked on Hockey” for the Playing Pasts website.
When Hull Got Hooked on Hockey | Playingpasts.co.uk
During his research James came across an article on the East Riding Museum website on Harvey Jesse Wood from Beverley, the British goalkeeper from the 1908 Olympic Games. It was part of a panel from the museum’s exhibition Sporting Beverley.
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The Harvey Jesse Wood text panel from the Sporting Beverley exhibition at East Riding Museum. Click the image to link to the full exhibition PDF. |
Just a few weeks later James purchased a copy of a photograph from the February 1908 edition of The Bystander magazine of “H. J. Wood, the Midlands goalkeeper” in action against the South territorial team.
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Photograph captioned "H. J. Wood" from The Bystander magazine, February 1908. |
With his article on Harvey Wood published on Playing Pasts, all seemed fine – that is until James recently visited The Hockey Museum. Exploring deeper amongst the Museum’s library and archive, James came across a feature article on Harvey Wood (no middle initial given) in the 1 May 1908 edition of Hockey magazine. It claimed that England goalkeeper was born in Staffordshire not Yorkshire as previously believed. This made sense as he played for West Bromwich HC, Staffordshire county and the Midlands.
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The article in Hockey magazine (May 1908) which records Harvey Wood's birthplace: "Born in Staffordshire, Mr Wood is only 23 years of age ..." |
Using the British Newspaper Archive, James set about trying to resolve the issue. Many early reports had Harvey listed on England team sheets as H. J. Wood, but later ones were either H. Wood or by the time of the Olympic Games in 1908, H. I. Wood.
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Extracts from the British Newspaper Archive. |
During the Olympic Games the England goalkeeper was listed always as H.I. Wood. The H.I. Woods outnumbered the H.J. Wood references by a factor of 4-1 in the 1908 hockey reports.
James set about trying to find H.I. Wood using online genealogy service Findmypast. Only one result fitted the timeline: Harvey Icke Wood who was baptised in late 1884 in West Bromwich, but there were no other references. In the 1901 census James found a Harvey Wood, son of Peter Wood owner of P&S Wood Ltd, the second-generation brickmakers whose father George (Harvey’s grandfather) had left £35,000 to his sons when he died in 1884. His sons followed George into the business. Searching on “Peter Wood” rather than “Harvey Icke” bizarrely brought up Harvey Icke Wood in the 1911 census working as an Insurance Agent. This rather put to question the efficiency of the search engines!
He played three seasons for West Bromwich HC two in the 2nd XI before replacing England international Lancelot Augustus Gurney in the 1st XI goal. West Bromwich would go unbeaten in the 1907-08 season. Wood played for Staffordshire and the Midlands having reportedly outstanding performances leading to his debut for England against Ireland in March 1908. He played in all the home internationals and the Olympic Games earning seven caps but seemingly never played again.
Across the internet, Wiki sites and Olympic history sites list Harvey Jesse Wood as the 1908 Olympic goalkeeper, but the vast majority reference the text from the 2016 East Riding Museum website and offer no other evidence.
Harvey Jesse Wood was born in Beverley, son of the local butcher who was a notable local sportsman playing cricket and rugby and appears in both the 1901 and 1911 censuses as a railway clerk living in Beverley. Even though both Beverley and West Bromwich railway stations were part of the London & Northern Railway Company, it seems highly unlikely he ever moved to West Bromwich.
Harvey Icke Wood was born in West Bromwich into a brickmaking dynasty that his grandfather George (1808-1880) had created. Seven of his nine sons became brickmakers including Harvey’s father Peter. The family could be classed as rich industrialists, part of the upper-middle class as were the members of the England team of 1908. His father’s company P&S Wood Ltd owned the Pump House Brickworks whose trademark was the star of David. They exported Staffordshire blue bricks across Europe with, ironically, Germany being one of their biggest export markets in the 1900s. Harvey visited Canada in 1912 and married in 1916 worked as a bookkeeper living in Bath until his death 1963.
Further research by The Hockey Museum’s Curator Shane Smith and Archivist Marcus Wardle revealed that the Hockey Association’s (HA) England selection book had Wood listed as H. I. Wood and not H. J. Wood. In the book, the I and J appear similar enough to cause a possible confusion, but distinct enough to be identifiably different. Note the J in “J. Y. Robinson” (John Yate Robinson) which loops below the line of the other letters, and the I in “A. I. Draper” (Arnold Inman Draper) which sits neatly on the line with no lower loop.
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The Hockey Association selection book of England international players. From The Hockey Museum collection. |
So, our evidence:
Given all this, it would seem that sports historians to date have credited the wrong Harvey Wood. Once again, the redress of history began in The Hockey Museum’s archive by one of our research volunteers.
The Hockey Museum (THM) regularly receives interesting enquires from the public and sometimes even an exchange of information. Back in April 2022 there was one such enquiry from Colin Gallacher. His father Don was Head Groundsman at Wembley Stadium between 1975 and 1985. Colin is planning to publish his father’s memoires in a book called Get Off My Pitch and he was seeking permission to use some of the photographs from THM’s own publication The Magic of Wembley. In particular, Colin sought those of Her Majesty the Queen’s visit to Wembley in 1981 – clearly a proud and stirring memory for Don.
Her Majesty Attends the Women's Hockey at Wembley Stadium in 1981 | hockeymuseum.net
We were happy to share these photographs in exchange for a donation. They were taken by Pat Ward, past Editor of Hockey Field magazine, who kindly donated her collection (and their copyright) to the Museum.
There was a bit of sadness that we had not found Colin sooner. His father’s insights would certainly have been included in The Magic of Wembley. When writing the book, THM had tried (even advertising in the papers) but ultimately failed to trace one of the grounds team. It is always good to receive new information even if it is past the time it was really needed. It all helps to better tell hockey’s heritage stories and expand our knowledge of items in THM collection.
Katie Dodd explains:
“What a shame we didn't find Colin earlier. Nan Williams [co-author of The Magic of Wembley with Christabel Russell Vick] and I did try to get details of any former staff at the old Wembley Stadium to hear their stories, but we were not successful. Neither Wembley Stadium nor the Football Association seemed to have any interest in the history of the old Stadium ... apart from football! The most help we had was from the local Wembley newspaper who published an article about us trying to find anyone who had worked at Wembley. Sadly, we got no responses.”
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The Hockey Museum's article in the Harrow Observer, 8 May 2014. |
However, better late than never. There is now overlap between THM’s past work and Don Gallacher’s memories of the England women’s hockey team playing at Wembley. Sometimes you just need to wait a few years for things to fall into place.
Long-time THM volunteer Christabel (Chris) Russell Vick met virtually with Colin and they had a wonderful time remembering what Wembley Stadium meant to them as part of their family histories, albeit from completely different angles. Chris in the posh seats – her mother Mary was President of the All England Women’s Hockey Association (AEWHA) – and Colin pitch side assisting a cameraman during the FA Cup final.
Colin has promised us a copy of his forthcoming book Get Off My Pitch (pictured) for the Museum’s library, which we will be very happy to receive as it provides a unique perspective on an illustrious era in hockey’s past.
The Magic of Wembley book – minus Head Groundsman Don – remains available to purchase for the bargain price of £10.00 (plus postage costs). Please enquire using the contact form on THM website: Contact Us | hockeymuseum.net
International touring has a long and distinguished sporting history. Within British hockey, Australasia has been an attractive location to tour to as far back as the early twentieth century. An England women’s side travelled to Australia and New Zealand in 1914, in an era before UK women had the vote (but Australia and New Zealand had enjoyed women's emancipation for some years). England toured to Australia again in 1927 prior to an Anglo-Scottish women’s tour to Australia in 1937. There were International Federation of Women’s Hockey Association (IFWHA) World Conferences & Tournaments in Sydney, Australia in 1956 and Auckland, New Zealand in 1971, which were approached with something akin to a touring mentality rather than formal tournaments. Great Britain men enjoyed an Australia tour in 1966.
Yet touring internationally is not exclusively the domain of international teams. Following in the footsteps of these early pioneers, more recent decades have seen school hockey teams embracing transcontinental touring.
August 2022 marks the 25th anniversary of Burford School in Oxfordshire's first mixed hockey tour to Australia in 1997.
Between 5-22 August 1997, twenty 16-year-olds and three members of staff made the 12,000-mile journey. It included visits to Perth in Western Australia, the Central Coast in New South Wales, and the iconic city of Sydney.
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Burford School mixed hockey team in Australia, 1997. Left: taking in the Perth Skyline. Right: Sydney Harbour Bridge. Below: Touring the Central Coast, New South Wales. |
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The tour party experienced many great sight-seeing opportunities, but the highlight of the trip on the hockey field was undoubtedly the 3-1 victory over Sydney Co Ed Grammar School at Holmbush, the hockey venue for the Olympic Games in 2000.
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Burford School and Sydney Co Ed Grammar School share a group photograph after their match at Holmbush, 15 August 1997. |
Theirs was an ambitious and trail-blazing tour. According to Monica Pickersgill, President of the All England Women's Hockey Association (AEWHA), it was “the first school mixed hockey tour we [the AEWHA] have had the pleasure of supporting”.
Toby Douglas of Edwin Doran Sports Tours, the company who organised the trip and is the market leader in school sports tours, states that as far back as 1974 (when the company was founded) he could find no reference to school mixed hockey tours to anywhere outside the UK.
This was the first British school mixed hockey tour outside of the UK ever recorded – unless you know differently.
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Letter from Monica Pickersgill, President of the AEWHA. |
Hockey has been played at Burford School since the 1930s, a near century-long tradition of girls, boys and mixed teams.
Mixed hockey was the vehicle for three major overseas tours to Australia in 1997, Canada in 2000 and Australia and New Zealand in 2003. It played on three visits to Burford's twin town, Potenza Pocena in Italy, as part of cultural visits in the late 2000s. These also included a full orchestra and choir!
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Ernest Hartley, the most famous Old Burfordian. |
Many former Burford School pupils played county hockey, but the most famous Old Burfordian is Ernest Hartley, who played hockey for The Isis Club in Oxford and for England. Ernest earned the first of 17 caps for England (three as Captain) in 1922. In an amusing coincidence, one of the matches he captained was, of all places, in Perth – though this was Perth in Scotland (for Scotland vs England), not Australia! The hope is that Ernest's family will receive a posthumous cap at some time in the not too far distant future.
As of August 2022, the groundwork is being completed for an all-weather pitch at the school, specifically for hockey!
By Bill Williams
Bill was Head of Physical Education and Sport at Burford School between 1987-2019. He organised the 1997 Australia tour alongside his wife Mandy, who led girls Physical Education at the school.
Mike Smith, Hon. Curator and President of The Hockey Museum (THM), describes the process of uncovering hockey’s history as being like a jigsaw puzzle:
“Putting together the history of hockey is like doing a jigsaw puzzle where many pieces are missing. Ultimately, we hope to find enough pieces to make the picture recognisable.”
Visitors to the museum may be under the impression that THM already has all the answers – that couldn’t be further from the truth. Staff and volunteers are undertaking a constant process of investigation and discovery that requires creativity, attention to detail, and often, consultation with the wider hockey community. THM’s recent delve into umpiring history is a perfect example.
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Three engraved silver whistles and a referee's brooch from the 1908 Olympic Games. These items previously belonged to international umpire F S Brabham. |
We recently acquired three silver whistles engraved with dates from the 1920s. These belonged to F S Brabham, a relatively unknown umpire. The engraved information on the whistles opened up new avenues to explore, revealing Brabham’s involvement in an Ireland vs Scotland match in 1923, an Ireland vs Wales match in 1924 and a France vs England match in 1925. A further whistle was awarded for umpiring the Easter Hockey Tournaments in Norwich in 1925 and 1926.
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Reports on the France vs England international hockey match in 1925 from The Times newspaper. Neither report mentions the umpires! |
Having searched through THM’s partially verified statistical records of England matches as well as the British Newspaper Archive (see above), we were unable to find details of the umpires for that England vs France match in 1925. Undaunted, we reached out to our friends at the Irish Hockey Archives to see if they knew of Brabham. Drawing on their records and with help from the Irish Times newspaper, they confirmed Brabham’s presence as an umpire at the Irish matches. This helped prove the provenance of the whistles.
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The Irish hockey team from the Ireland vs Scotland international match played on 3 March 1923. Image courtesy of the Irish Hockey Archive. |
Following the rollout of Great Britain (GB) honours caps by THM (in partnership with the Hockey Internationals’ Club and GB Hockey), we have increasingly been asked why there has been no recognition of international umpires. The implication being: why should the players get all the fun/credit?
The GB caps were the culmination of a meticulous six-year, volunteer-led research project by THM to create the statistics to determine definitive match and player records for GB hockey players back to 1920. Without definitive records, it would have been impossible to provide an athlete’s unique player number. To do this it was vital to know every GB hockey match ever played in history and every player who featured in them. Miss one player or one match and the numbering goes awry! The same is true for appointed umpires. THM must research and assemble complete and indisputable records for every British umpire and the matches they officiated, or we cannot be sure that the awarding of umpire numbers and appointment/appearance totals will be correct.
Our search to discover F S Brabham – we still don’t know his given names – and prove his officiation at international matches, demonstrates some of the inconsistencies within historical sources. You might think that paper records would be the most helpful kind of source, but this is not necessarily the case. Different sources prioritise different pieces of information. The edition of Hockey World magazine from the 27 March 1925, tells us that the Easter event engraved onto one of the whistles was Norwich’s inaugural hockey tournament. Yet Norwich is not even mentioned in the following year’s issue and there is no mention of umpires in either.
Similarly, with the England player records (which our volunteers are currently collating), whilst the England players are recorded, the umpires are not, making it necessary to find additional confirmatory sources. Records can often result in more questions than answers and sometimes physical objects, such as these whistles, can prove invaluable for research. The whistles are a highly unusual source for discovering appointed international umpires, but they are symbolic of the variety of sources THM needs to engage with before it can create definitive umpiring records and even consider umpires’ caps.
THM’s project to research and collate umpiring and technical official statistics is being led by volunteer Steve Catton, himself an active international official. This research will become an asset to THM and prove fruitful for future projects. The challenge makes these discoveries all the more rewarding, resulting in the occasional whistle while we work!
Steve is keen to hear from active or retired GB and England international umpires and officials who can provide accurate records of their appointments, which will assist with building up this side of THM’s valuable data resource. Steve can be contacted at: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .
Following the Platinum Jubilee last weekend to celebrate Her Majesty the Queen’s record breaking 70-year reign, we look back on what is arguably her most iconic hockey moment: the visit to Wembley Stadium in 1981.
The Queen made an appearance at the England vs Wales women’s international match at Wembley, much to the delight of the crowd of 62,000 schoolgirls eager to catch a glimpse of Her Majesty. There was a lunch before the match that was attended by many former players and officials. Before meeting the players, the Queen toured the stadium in an open-top Range Rover alongside All England Women’s Hockey Association (AEWHA) President Mary Russell Vick and Welsh Women's Hockey Association President Ceri O’Donnell. An exciting moment for them both and a wonderful way to acknowledge the sport of hockey, its players and fans.
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Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II attends during the England vs Wales women's international hockey match at Wembley Stadium in 1981. |
Pat Ward, former Editor of Hockey Field magazine, recalled how her interest in photography led to an exciting opportunity to photograph the Queen at Wembley Stadium – a memory that has had a lasting impact on her life and career.
Our interview with Pat Ward, which can be found among our oral histories on THM’s website, reveals her fond memories of this day and the nerves she felt from the pressure of the job and of being in the presence of the Queen. The atmosphere was magical. The crowd sang the National Anthem at the end of the match, much to the delight and surprise of Her Majesty, who later mentioned how she felt extremely touched by the love shown to her.
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All England Women's Hockey Association (AEWHA) President, Mary Russell Vick with the Queen at Wembley. |
Oral History Interview: Patricia (Pat) Ward | The Hockey Museum
Maggie Souyave, England captain on the day the Queen attended: Oral History Interview: Margaret (Maggie) Souyave | The Hockey Museum
In The Hockey Museum’s self-published book, The Magic of Wembley, Christabel Russell Vick (daughter of AEWHA President Mary) recalls how “the thrill of singing God Save the Queen when you can see the Queen was very special. A once-in-a-lifetime memory.” She also remembers her mother coming back from a meeting in late 1980 where she declared, “I have not yet had a refusal from Her Majesty, and I am getting worried that she is going to accept!” As Patron the Queen was invited to Wembley every year.
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A letter from Buckingham Palace confirming the Queen's patrongage of the AEWHA (dated 19 November 1979). |
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A letter from Sandringham approving the programme for the day the Queen was to visit Wembley (dated 28 January 1981). |
Despite the upheaval that the visit caused (such as Wembley Stadium having to re-paint the banqueting hall as the Queen was coming to lunch) the Royal visit provided a very memorable day for every attendee. Katie Dodd who played in the match remembers the excitement of meeting the Queen and recalled that the team probably spent more time practising curtsies than short corners!
Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II’s reign has touched many people, but for hockey players past and present, this moment was a defining point in the history of hockey which, considering the size of the Wembley crowd and the age of our Monarch, is unlikely to be matched on such a scale ever again.
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The thank you letter to Mary Russell Vick sent from Buckingham Palace on behalf of the Queen (dated 23 March 1981). |
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Joyce Hatton, Vera Cox (wearing her AEWHA blazer) and Frances Heron-Maxwell. |
Last Wednesday 4 May, Frances Thompson travelled from Australia to The Hockey Museum (THM) for a rather personal research visit, and we asked her to give a talk.
Frances presented on the work she has been doing to piece together the fascinating life of her great grand aunt, Vera Cox. Vera played for Atalanta HC, Kent, the East and then England between 1908 and 1912, captaining the team in 1912. Her international hockey career was brought to an early conclusion following a knee injury sustained in the 1912 fixture against Ireland but she continued to play club hockey and went on to coach, select players for representative honours and umpire. Vera umpired at international level until the early 1930s. She was also involved in hockey administration and then in support of her friend, Frances Heron Maxwell the early feminist and suffragette, went on to be one of the driving forces behind the setting up of the England Women’s Cricket Association and the development of international women’s cricket.
To find out more about Mrs Frances Heron Maxwell, click on the following link: Feminist Icon Frances Heron-Maxwell | GreatBritishLife.co.uk
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England women's hockey team c.1910. Vera Cox is seated middle row far right. |
Frances’ talk gave a fascinating insight not only into Vera’s many early achievements but also Vera the person – one of ten siblings who wrote constantly to each other. These letters still exist and are held in the Bodleian Library, Oxford. Frances has been researching them and the talk covered the period up until the beginning of World War 1.
Hockey Shorts will cover details from the talk including a video of the presentation itself in a later edition. Meanwhile, you can listen to Frances's podcast 100 Years of Cox; series 3, episode 17 uncovers Vera's hockey life through her letters.
Subscribe to the Mailing List | hockeymuseum.net
100 Years of Cox S3E17: Vera - The Joys of Hockey | Apple Podcasts
Prior to her talk, Frances Thompson spent the day at THM in Woking pouring over copies of Hockey Field magazine and other items that our Archivist Marcus Wardle had unearthed in our collections management database. Among these were four large scrapbooks containing photographs, programmes and other memorabilia relating to Kent and England women’s hockey from the early 1900s. While we knew we had these books, our records revealed nothing about how they came to be created or by whom. Amazingly, as soon as Frances looked at them, she recognised the handwriting as Vera’s – having read so many of her letters, the style was so distinctive! These four scrapbooks have now been identified as Vera’s record of her hockey career from 1906 through to 1912 – such an amazing find for all of us. Frances was thrilled. As Mike Smith, THM’s Hon. Curator reflected later, discovering the link between the scrapbooks and Vera is what makes all the work at THM worthwhile – positioning more pieces in the jigsaw puzzle of hockey’s heritage to create a better image of our sport’s fascinating past.
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One of the four scrapbooks from the Pat Ward collection held at The Hockey Museum in Woking, now identified as having been created by Vera Cox. |
A total of 581 players (men and women) have represented Great Britain (GB) over the years. Many of these players have enjoyed illustrious international careers with seven men and 13 women having exceeded 100 appearances – yet this piece is about those players who only made one single appearance.
To achieve international player status takes a huge amount of physical and mental hard work and dedication. To become a GB international normally means progression through their ‘Home Country’ national team, so it is fair to assume that the players would be quite well known to the selectors by the time they reached consideration for GB. Selection by a panel of appointed ‘selectors’ was the traditional method of choosing players for county, regional and international duty during much of the twentieth century. This familiarity might imply that players could expect at least a few games to show their mettle.
Each case will be slightly different, but through our statistical research The Hockey Museum (THM) has discovered that 35 men and 18 women have played representative hockey for GB just once. It would be fair to assume that most of these 53 individuals would be a little disappointed at only being selected once. However, there is one concrete exception!
In 1951 a GB & Ireland team visited South Africa for a Five Test Series. They flew home via Nairobi in Kenya having accepted an invitation to play one match against Kenya (& East Africa). The very enjoyable South Africa tour was also very gruelling. By the time the party reach Nairobi they were somewhat depleted. This was aggravated by a couple of players returning home separately meaning that when they reached Nairobi, GB were struggling to find 11 fit players – in 1951 there was no such thing as substitutes, so, if they could scrape them together, 11 would be sufficient. Significantly, GB only had four forwards and no centre forward. These were the days of ‘positional hockey’ rather than the fluid systems employed today.
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A cartoon commenting on the GB & Ireland team tour to South Africa in 1951. It proved to be a gruelling trip with many players having picked up injuries by the time |
It transpired that a young Brit had recently moved to Nairobi; a very competent hockey player called Peter Johnson. He was a recent Cambridge University ‘Blue’ in an era when many Oxford University and Cambridge University ‘Blues’ progressed rapidly into international hockey. Peter had played in the Varsity matches of 1946, 1947 and 1951 – a rare and lengthy span which must confirm his competence as a hockey player. On 20 September 1951, Peter was called upon to play for GB in a narrow 3-2 loss for the visitors at Nairobi’s City Park Stadium. In doing so he earned his one and only international cap, albeit in very unusual circumstances.
We can be certain that Peter Johnson would have been delighted to have played in just one international match, unlike many other one-cap internationals who might have hoped for more appearances.
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Great Britain & Ireland team cloth blazer badge from the 1951 South Africa tour, Peter Johnson would not have owned one of these badges as he wasn't part of the original |
We have no further information on Peter Johnson. If he is still alive he would be nearly 100 years old, but he or his family are entitled to received his GB honours cap. We would very much like to make this presentation, so unique is Peter’s story.
Please help with any contact details for Peter or his family. Contact The Hockey Museum using the website contact form: Contact Us (hockeymuseum.net)
The Hockey Museum recently received a 42-year-old document that has a particular resonance with contemporary events that are consuming the world’s media today.
The document in question is a copy of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s letter of 19 February 1980 to Sir Denis Follows, CBE, Chairman of the British Olympic Association. The letter on 10 Downing Street headed notepaper was a response to the British Olympic Association’s wish that the Moscow Olympic Games be moved away from Russia because of the Soviet Union’s invasion of Afghanistan in December 1978. Prime Minister Thatcher’s response was to advise British athletes to boycott the Moscow Olympic Games. She requested that the British Olympic Association should “accept the advice of the Government in this matter and reflect it in [their] response to the invitation of the Moscow Organising Committee to take part in the Games in Moscow”.1
The Prime Minister (PM), in tones that are eerily familiar today, observed that the “Soviet invasion of Afghanistan on a flimsy pretext and its continued military occupation of a sovereign country violates all the principles governing relations between states and peoples”. This commentary could apply equally to the situation in Ukraine today. The PM later stated that “for British athletes to take part in games this summer would be for them to seem to condone an international crime”.2
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Extract of the letter from Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher on 10 Downing Street headed paper. Correspondence from The Hockey Museum's archives. |
The Thatcher Government embarked on a press campaign to support the boycott of the 22nd Olympiad. Bernard Levin in The Times commented that “our athletes might win medals in Moscow, but they would be tarnished badges of shame”. Subsequently the Government prohibited civil servants and serving members of the military to take leave to attend the Olympic Games.3 There are parallels in the Western nations’ boycott of the Moscow Games in 1980 and today’s economic sanctions being levied on Russian businesses and individuals linked to Vladimir Putin’s regime. Similar pressures have been applied by governments to Western businesses to boycott Russia now, as were applied to the British Hockey Boards 42 years ago.
This governmental pressure led to the Great Britain Hockey Board (men) and the Women’s Hockey Board of Great Britain and Ireland voting to withdraw from the Moscow Games on 22 March 1980. Both groups had met independently prior. Roger Self, Manager of Great Britain (GB) men, spoke to the Hockey Association (England) meeting the previous day and confirmed that the “entire [men’s] squad under present political circumstances prevailing wanted to go to Moscow”. The players saw the decision to be a “political one and not in the interests of the game”.4 This stance pitted the men’s players against their governing body which voted 25-6 to boycott the games despite the players’ strong desire to participate.
Despite trenchant opposition, the boycott went ahead and hockey, along with yachting and the equestrian team, were the only British sports wholly absent from Moscow – other sports sent depleted teams.
The British men had missed out on qualification for the Montreal Games in 1976, so the Moscow boycott meant a whole generation missed the opportunity to play Olympic hockey. The Soviet Union’s aggression also deprived the GB women of the prestige of taking part in the inaugural women’s Olympic hockey tournament. Despite men’s hockey having been an Olympic sport almost without exception since 1908, women’s Olympic hockey had been forced to wait 72 years for admittance and, like the men, many elite players lost the chance to compete at an Olympic Games.
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Official poster from the Moscow Olympic Games of 1980, featuring Games mascot Misha. Poster from The Hockey Museum's collection. |
The inaugural women’s Olympic hockey tournament was subsequently a depleted affair with most of the Western nations boycotting alongside Great Britain. It was played on a round-robin basis and in a spectacular result was won by Zimbabwe. Czechoslovakia and Soviet Union took the silver and bronze medals respectively. The sole group for the women’s tournament also included India, Austria and Poland.
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Zimbabwe women's hockey team celebrate their unexpected gold medal at the Moscow Olympic Games, 1980. © Wikipedia RIA Novosti. Zimbabwe's first Olympic gold and the forgotten hockey fairytale of 1980 | insidethegames.biz |
The original format of the women’s tournament (as would have been before teams boycotted) is not known, but initially GB men were selected in Group A along with Argentina, India, Kenya, Netherlands and Pakistan. After multiple countries pulled out, the men’s tournament comprised of six nations – Spain, India, Soviet Union, Poland, Cuba and Tanzania. Spain topped the round-robin tournament only to lose 4-3 to India in the Gold Medal match. Spain’s Juan Amat, competing in his fourth Olympic Games and the tournament’s top scorer with 16 goals (8 goals in an 11-0 demolition of Cuba), scored a hattrick in a losing effort.
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Ticket to the Olympic hockey tournament at the Dynamo Minor Arena, Moscow, 1980. |
Despite the heroics of the competing nations, in Britain the Olympic hockey tournaments in Moscow will for ever be remembered for who was not there, and why.
Whilst the public support for a sporting boycott of Russia because of the Ukraine crisis remains strong and more importantly, both appropriate and proportionate, the hockey boycott of the Moscow Olympic Games by the GB women and men’s teams remains a painful and, for many, a contentious issue 42 years on.
Ian G Jenkins, March 2022
NB. The research undertaken by Ian for this article unearthed considerable further material. Subsequently, Ian recognises the need for a more detailed study, including a thorough exploration of The Hockey Museum archives but also interviews with those involved or impacted by the Moscow 1980 Olympic boycott. If you have information or consider yourself a potential person of interest to Ian’s ongoing research, please contact The Hockey Museum: Contact Us (hockeymuseum.net)
Footnotes
The following oral history interviews available on The Hockey Museum website offer insight into the personal experiences of players, coaches and umpires in relation to the 1980 Olympic hockey boycott. You can search "Moscow" within each oral history and jump to the relevant point in each interview. Alternatively, listen to them in their entirety.
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The first England women's hockey team (1896). |
When England’s Mary D’Oyley (nee Piper) lined up against Ireland at Alexandra College, Dublin, on 2 March 1896, she made history in more ways than one.
Not only was the East Molesey centre-forward participating in the first ever women’s hockey international, but she was also the first married woman – and the first mother – to represent her country at the sport.
The Norwich-born player had married civil service clerk Arthur Frederick D’Oyley in August 1891, and the couple welcomed their first child – Charles Tristan – in July 1892.
Master D’Oyley would, therefore, have been a few months short of his fourth birthday when his mum – aged 33 – made the trip across the Irish Sea to take part in the historic match. She was unable to get on the scoresheet, however, as Ireland won 2-0.
It would be Mary D’Oyley’s only international appearance, and her second son, Paul Arthur Austin, was born in January 1900.
She wasn’t the only member of her family involved with English hockey, however.
Mary’s younger brothers Charles and Arthur played for East Molesey, and Charles represented the club at the 1886 meeting that led to the formation of the men’s Hockey Association (HA). In 1895, he was on the HA committee that turned down a request for affiliation from the All England Women’s Hockey Association! But that’s another story…
Jo Halpin
Follow Dr Jo Halpin on Twitter (click: Jo Halpin (@JoHalpin) / Twitter) or reach her through THM's website contact form: Contact Us (hockeymuseum.net)
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Punjab Lok Congress Party symbol |
The image shown above is being used by a political party as its logo (see here). This may seem a rather strange adoption, yet it has occurred in the Punjab in Northern India. Not only is hockey the national sport of India but the Punjab is undoubtedly the spiritual home of Indian hockey. It could be argued that it is very appropriate for a hockey symbol to be adopted in a sports-mad place like the Punjab.
Apart from the sport of hockey, the city of Jalandhar in the Punjab is the home of the Indian sports industry which has been responsible for producing much of the world’s hockey equipment for the past seventy years. The actual introduction of hockey to the Indian Sub-Continent and the birth of the manufacturing industry is the subject of another and much longer story that goes back to the days of the Raj.
However, your writer, The Hockey Museum’s (THM) Curator Mike Smith, has a story to tell about the predominance of hockey in the Punjab. He was a frequent visitor to India over four decades and when his younger son wanted a ‘gap year experience’ where better than a visit to the welcoming, friendly Punjab and Jalandhar in particular. A few miles outside Jalandhar lies the rural village of Sansarpur – this really is the spiritual home of Indian hockey. It is a fact, which we are confident cannot be contradicted, that more Olympic and World Cup hockey medalists have come from this village than any other town on the planet. The basic but strong playing facilities nurtured India’s greatest players through the twentieth century. They have a very cosy clubhouse within which are proudly shown all the great hockey players who are the sons of Sansarpur. It is one of those rare places that makes the hairs on the back of one’s neck stand up!
Through time-honoured friendships, our Curator’s son and his travelling companion were invited to daily practice and training at Sansarpur – what an amazing privilege. The ‘travelling companion’ was the Curator’s godson, the son of THM co-founder David Wareham. It is not surprising that the fathers decided to visit India to coincide with the end of their sons’ gap year visit. The highlight was undoubtedly for the fathers to umpire a game on the pitch at Sansarpur, contested by teams which included both boys and watched by the bemedaled sons of Sansarpur. Money cannot buy unique occasions like that.
This features page includes articles from hockey's rich history. With the ever increasing activity of The Hockey Museum, our research is constantly coming across fascinating stories from throughout the sport's history and across the hockey world. These are not current news stories although some may have been when they occurred....
Last weekend saw the release of the much-anticipated biographical film Oppenheimer, which tells the story of the American nuclear physicist J Robert Oppenheimer, often recognised as the ‘father of the atomic bomb’. Situated in a remote part of New Mexico, USA, the secret Los Alamos Laboratory was established by the...
A recent addition to our ever-increasing collection at THM, a beautiful Welsh honours cap, has come to us from the family of William Richard Edwards who played for Wales between 1929 and 1931. William was born, lived and died in England but with Welsh ancestry he played hockey for...
Whilst looking at this picture, consider that the first ladies’ hockey in England – indeed the world – began less than twenty years before this photograph was taken. This really was at the dawn of women's hockey! The postcard is from a French girl writing home to her...
The following article was written and researched by former trustee of The Hockey Museum Dil Bahra for fieldhockey.com. It is reproduced here for posterity. Dil is author of the website sikhsinhockey.com which highlights the contribution and achievements of Sikh hockey athletes. The names of Sikh players are emphasised in bold...
The altar at St Mary’s Chruch, Shalford in Surrey.Photographs courtesy of St Mary’s Church Shalford’s vicar, Rev’d Sarah Lloyd, and parish administrator, Kate Waldock. Steve Woodward, a hockey player and international umpire, who died in 1992, has an unusual memorial: an altar cloth in his local church....
If you ever have cause to visit St John the Baptist Church in Burley, Hampshire, in the UK, be sure to look out for the hockey sticks! For among its many memorials is a stained-glass window dedicated to Constance Applebee, the British woman credited with popularising hockey among women in...
Royal Ascot Hockey Club's Royal Stewart tartan skirt, produced and sold by Len Smith's. From The Hockey Museum's collection. Following on from mention of Len Smith’s Sportswear Ltd. in a recent article about the introduction of VAT in 1971, several volunteers at The...
August 2024 will mark the 80th anniversary of the sad death of a long-forgotten Welsh sportsman, the unique Maurice Turnbull, who was killed in action in France at the climax of World War 2. Why unique? Maurice has the distinction of having been a ‘quadruple international’ gaining honours for...
Eustace E White. The life of Eustace E White Mr Eustace E White was the Editor of Hockey Field and Lacrosse magazine (aka Hockey Field). The magazine was shocked to learn his sudden death on 8 December 1922, due to a second heart attack whilst in Nottingham during...
Len Smith’s was a renowned shop in Twickenham, Greater London, which sold women’s sporting attire to hockey clubs. It is perhaps most famous for its skirts (pictured), even fitting out the England national team. The introduction of Value-added tax (VAT) into the UK on...
Biddy Burgum's scrapbook which chronicles England women vs Belgium at Empire Stadium, Wembley in 1953. March 2023 is the 70th anniversary of England women’s thumping 11-0 victory over Belgium at Wembley Stadium – a match played in front of an impressive 50,000-strong crowd of mainly schoolgirls....
This article is inspired by the research of the writer and journalist Pier Angelo Rossi, whose work was shared with The Hockey Museum by our Italian friends at HockeyLove.it, Riccardo Giorgini and Luciano Pinna. Towards the end of the nineteenth century, the region of Liguria in north-western Italy witnessed an influx...
The International Hockey Rules Board minute book. The book is held in the collection of The Hockey Museum on loan from the International Hockey Federation (FIH). In March 1973 at its third meeting held in London, the International Hockey Rules Board approved a new rule introducing up to...
“Men have helped us in the past … until we are able to stand on our own legs, and we now look to them to encourage women to umpire. There is no doubt … that women will not trouble to learn to umpire as long as there is a man...
“Kingston School maintained their unbroken record on their own ground by defeating Staines. During the first half, Staines pressed continually and scored three goals. The School forwards, on the other hand, did not seem able to play together, and only succeeded in getting one goal (Shoveller). At half time the...
An action shot of England women vs France on 3 February 1923. Image from the Marjorie Pollard collection, The Hockey Museum. 100 years ago on 3 February 1923, England women played their first international match against France. The game was played at Merton Abbey, Battersea and Chelsea Polytechnic...
England vs Ireland during the Olympic final of 1908. In January 1948, Hockey World magazine published an extract from the book Hockey in Ireland by TSC Dagg. In it, Dagg compares the ‘traditional’ playing styles of the English and Irish men’s national teams by drawing on previous literature....
In these days of global warming and only occasional flurries of snow in winter, it perhaps seems unbelievable that it could start snowing on Boxing Day and for the frost and snow to remain for nearly three months! That is what happened in the (real) winter of 1962-‘63. Today, water-retaining...
There are few things in everyday life that could be described as ubiquitous hockey items. However, one exception are the canvas and rubber hockey shoes that were widely worn in the ladies and school game from the 1930s onwards. Men’s hockey of the era preferred the more substantial football or...
The I M Marsh campus of Liverpool John Moores University has a long history. The college was founded in 1900 by Irené Mabel Marsh under the name of Liverpool Physical Training College. From small beginnings the college grew over the years and by the 1960s I M Marsh College of...
In August 2022, The Hockey Museum (THM) featured a piece about Wembley Head Groundsman Don Gallacher and his son Colin’s efforts to document his father’s memories in a new book. Don oversaw the Wembley pitch between 1974 and 1985 when hockey crowds were at their highest. The vibrancy and the...
27 September 2022 is the centenary of Australia and New Zealand men’s first international matches. It is unusual for two nations to have their first international matches occur simultaneously, but the geographical distance of Australia and New Zealand from other hockey-playing nations of that era led to this exceptional first...
At a recent event at Great Comp House & Gardens in Kent, we presented Sue Chandler (former Great Britain (GB) Captain with 25 appearances) with her GB honours cap alongside a group of ladies from Sevenoaks and Teddington hockey clubs who were re-enacting hockey as it was played in the...
Harvey Wood, England men's 1908 Olympic gold medal-winning goalkeeper. The Hockey Museum volunteer James Ormandy spent a large part of 2019 researching hockey in Yorkshire to produce an article “When Hull Got Hooked on Hockey” for the Playing Pasts website. When Hull Got Hooked on Hockey | Playingpasts.co.uk...
The Hockey Museum (THM) regularly receives interesting enquires from the public and sometimes even an exchange of information. Back in April 2022 there was one such enquiry from Colin Gallacher. His father Don was Head Groundsman at Wembley Stadium between 1975 and 1985. Colin is planning to publish his...
International touring has a long and distinguished sporting history. Within British hockey, Australasia has been an attractive location to tour to as far back as the early twentieth century. An England women’s side travelled to Australia and New Zealand in 1914, in an era before UK women had the vote...
Mike Smith, Hon. Curator and President of The Hockey Museum (THM), describes the process of uncovering hockey’s history as being like a jigsaw puzzle: “Putting together the history of hockey is like doing a jigsaw puzzle where many pieces are missing. Ultimately, we hope to find enough pieces to make...
Following the Platinum Jubilee last weekend to celebrate Her Majesty the Queen’s record breaking 70-year reign, we look back on what is arguably her most iconic hockey moment: the visit to Wembley Stadium in 1981. The Queen made an appearance at the England vs Wales women’s international match at Wembley,...
Joyce Hatton, Vera Cox (wearing her AEWHA blazer) and Frances Heron-Maxwell.This photograph was colourised for Frances Thompson's talk at The Hockey Museum. Last Wednesday 4 May, Frances Thompson travelled from Australia to The Hockey Museum (THM) for a rather personal research visit, and we asked her to give...
A total of 581 players (men and women) have represented Great Britain (GB) over the years. Many of these players have enjoyed illustrious international careers with seven men and 13 women having exceeded 100 appearances – yet this piece is about those players who only made one single appearance. To...
The Hockey Museum recently received a 42-year-old document that has a particular resonance with contemporary events that are consuming the world’s media today. The document in question is a copy of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s letter of 19 February 1980 to Sir Denis Follows, CBE, Chairman of the British Olympic...
The first England women's hockey team (1896).Mary D’Oyley is seated middle row, right of centre next to the lady holding the ball. Mary has her cap on her stick. When England’s Mary D’Oyley (nee Piper) lined up against Ireland at Alexandra College, Dublin, on 2 March 1896, she...
Punjab Lok Congress Party symbol The image shown above is being used by a political party as its logo (see here). This may seem a rather strange adoption, yet it has occurred in the Punjab in Northern India. Not only is hockey the national sport of India...
The ongoing series of Great Britain (GB) honours cap presentations to current and former GB players is a direct outcome of THM’s Playing Statistics Project. These presentations are really a 'bolt on' to the stats project, perhaps triggered by THM's small collection of various historical hockey...
"Hockey" magazine, 15 December 1893 – the first magazine for hockey? The Hockey Museum (THM) has over 80,000 items in its growing collection. We receive another two collections most weeks. These are sorted and catalogued by our brilliant volunteers and occasionally we come up...
Hockey, Olympic Suite No.2 by Jordi Alumà The Hockey Museum (THM) holds in its art collection a limited-edition print of a female hockey player by Spanish artist Jordi Alumà (pictured). After a long and distinguished life, Alumà passed away earlier this year on 8 June 2021. The...
© The Trustees of the British Museum How are Orthodox Christianity and sport linked within Ethiopian culture? Created in the late 1940s by an Ethiopian priest, this watercolour painting from the British Museum’s collection depicts two teams of men playing the native stick-and-ball game Genna. Traditionally played at Christmas,...
As we approach the quarterfinals (QF) of the Tokyo 2020 hockey tournament, we reflect on a momentous QF back in 1960: Kenya vs Great Britain (GB) at the Rome Olympic Games. On 5 September 1960, the QF match in Rome became the longest match in the Olympic history (until this...
An archival document recording an All England Women’s Hockey Association (AEWHA) tour to Australia and New Zealand in 1914, leads The Hockey Museum (THM) Archivist on a journey of discovery to trace a very special match ball with an intriguing social history. The match ball from Canterbury...
The England hockey team from the 1908 Olympic Final. Louis Baillon is seated furthest left. Louis Charles Baillon is the only Falkland islander to have won an Olympic gold medal. He achieved this feat as a member of the England hockey team that won gold at the 1908...
After the 2014 feature film The Imitation Game and other publicity most people are now aware of the amazing contribution made by Alan Turing and the remarkable team at Bletchley Park during World War 2. It is often said that their efforts helped the Allies to win the war and...
These photographs tell the story of a convivial charity match involving Christ's Hospital school (CH) during World War One (WW1). They were unearthed by staff at Christ’s Hospital Museum and shared with The Hockey Museum. Photographs of the hockey match fundraiser, 1917....
I was delighted and honoured to be invited as one of the Guests of Honour at a virtual conference for Kenyan hockey Olympians on Sunday 30 May 2021. The invitation was extended by Hilary Fernandes, Kenya’s triple Olympian, and Raphael Fernandes, a Kenyan Los Angeles 1984 Olympian. Raphael co-ordinated the...
Cartoon from the Punch Almanack, 1903. The caption reads:"We had a scratch game with the 'Black and Blue' Club yesterday, but had an awful job to get any men. Enid's brother and a friend of his turned up at the last moment; but they didn't do much except call 'offside'...
When Janet Smallwood (later Mrs Macklin) was awarded her first international cap for Scotland in 1951 she was not the first member of her family to have an international sporting honour – her father, Alistair Smallwood, was selected to play for England Rugby in the 1920s. Alistair was born in...
Cover of the programme for the Grand International Hockey Tournament during the Festival of Britain, 1951.Click the image to download the full programme as a PDF.Credit: the AEWHA Collection at the University of Bath Library. Seventy years ago in May 1951, a very unusual sporting event was staged...
[ Editor's note: A follow up article to this piece has since been published which corrects some aspects of the below. Please click here for the follow up article: Correcting Hockey History: The Hunt for Harvey Wood | hockeymuseum.net ] A piece of research on the 1908 Olympic Games together with...
Portrait of William Shakespeare, 1610. Possibly painted by John Taylor. There are several references to the word ‘bandy’ in the works of English playwright William Shakespeare, including one in Romeo and Juliet when Romeo, trying to stop a fight between Tybalt and Mercutio, declares: “The Prince expressly hath forbidden...
Frank Benson, actor and hockey players, inWilliam Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew. The Edwardian era would witness the peak of theatre going and its watershed moment as cinema arrived. It also witnessed a sporting boom – especially in hockey – and one club, Benson’s Hockey Club, had done...
By Katie Dodd The first Scotland women's team, 1901. The 13 April 2001 is the 120th anniversary of Scotland women’s very first international match, played against Ireland in Dublin. I was first made aware of this special date during a conversation with Evlyn Raistrick, former Scottish and International...
Not that many years ago Easter festivals were the much-anticipated climax to the hockey season. Many hundreds of teams, certainly well into four figures, would travel to play in one of over fifty festivals that took place around Britain. The most popular venues were seaside ones, from Bournemouth to Bridlington...
It’s not often that small, independent museums like The Hockey Museum (THM) have an opportunity to change the narrative of national history, but today we share some very exciting news concerning a highly significant archaeological collection – the Anglo-Saxon burial ship at Sutton Hoo. Sutton Hoo gained a lot of...
By Elton Riches I was researching in The Hockey Museum (THM) library reviewing the early hockey periodicals for photographs or illustrations of player-issued caps. I located a black-and-white photograph in an 1898 publication showing the Welsh men’s hockey team wearing honours caps. Clear evidence that the Welsh national teams were...
On 3 March 2021 The Hockey Museum (THM) celebrated the 70th anniversary of the first England women’s hockey match at Wembley Stadium in 1951. In partnership with Talk Hockey Radio, we produced a podcast (The Special One - Epsiode 6) and video of the personal memories of Maggie Souyave, Anita White...
By Christabel Russell Vick I grew up knowing that the Wembley hockey international was the biggest fixture in the women’s hockey calendar. When I talked to my mother (Mary Russell Vick) about her hockey career, I was amazed to discover that these matches at the iconic Wembley Stadium were entirely...
Action photo of Ireland vs England women, the first ever women's international hockey match in 1896. 2 March 2021 is the 125th anniversary of the first ever women’s international hockey match in 1896, between Ireland and England. Ireland beat England 2-0. The game took place on the Alexandra...
Sutton Hoo excavation, 1939. Still from film made by Harold John Phillips.Public domain. In a recent article (click here) we covered the links that exist between the Netflix blockbuster film The Dig and our sport of hockey. Following that piece, we received news of a further hockey connection. If...
by Dr Jo Halpin. Portrait of Edith Pretty by Dutch artist Cor Visser.© National Trust / Robin Pattinson Edith Pretty is famous for unearthing an Anglo-Saxon burial ship on her land at Sutton Hoo, near Woodbridge, Suffolk, in 1939 – an event that has now been made...
In 1900 there were just twenty clubs from the North affiliated to the Hockey Association (HA) causing some historians have been misled as to the game’s popularity outside of the home counties. In most northern towns and cities at this time hockey playing was increasingly popular. For example: in Hull...
Cover of the Sticks Club Handbook, 1910 A fascinating item recently came into The Hockey Museum’s possession which threw an amusing light on a social activity in London hockey circles in the early years of the last century. It was the history of an exclusive gentlemen’s hockey club...
The Jean Arnold collection was donated to The Hockey Museum (THM) during lockdown and is now helping to uncover more of the once-hidden history of women’s league hockey. Jean Arnold Jean Arnold, a well-known figure in Liverpool hockey circles, has donated a large number of items relating to the...
The Hockey Museum (THM) has recently acquired a set of blazer buttons that once adorned the England blazer of George Hardy. These buttons, emblazoned (ahem) with the HA logo of the Hockey Association, presumably made their way to Hardy’s fellow England player, Captain John Yate Robinson who passed them...
On 14 April 1935 (not 1938 as stated on this British Pathé YouTube clip), Germany women played England women in Berlin. The result was 6-4 victory for England. An unexpected tour given the precarious political situation in Europe. The England team line up: Eileen Arnold (GK), Mary Knott (Cptn), Marjorie...
The Hockey Museum recently received a Winchester HC fixture card for the 2017-2018 season. This came as a bit of a surprise as we knew that many (most?) clubs no longer produce such a publication. With the availability of information on the internet and social media they have become virtually...
Mike Smith, Curator of THM (left) discusses theOld Creightonians HC archive with Simon Lawton-Smith (right). At The Hockey Museum (THM) we receive at least one collection each week, but not many have a twist in the story like this one. A recent visit by Simon Lawton-Smith brought us the club records...
Over the past couple of years, a considerable amount of material, including a large collection of trophies, has come to THM from Cannock HC. It was rescued from the former National Hockey Stadium in Milton Keynes by Laurie Alcock, affectionately known as 'Mr Cannock'. Had Laurie not saved it, the cabinets and artefacts...
The All England Women’s Hockey Association (AEWHA) Collection is looked after at the University of Bath by their Archivist, Lizzie Richmond. The collection contains many unique and irreplaceable items documenting the evolution of women’s hockey in the UK. Two items, the Hockey Jottings scrapbook and the very first minute book...
Photo from Daisy Pulls It Off, showing at the Park Theatre, Finsbury Park, London.Photo courtesy of Tomas Turpie. One of our eagle-eyed supporters spotted this wonderful image taken by Tomas Turpie in The Times newspaper last week. It was from a review of Daisy Pulls It Off, a play that...
Programme (cover) of The Newport Centrals Hockey Club Fourth Annual Tour, Season 1913-14 Easter hockey tours and festivals have been very popular for many years, probably more so before the league systems were set up in the 1960s and ‘70s. A recent find, hidden amongst our postcard collection, gives...
Yesterday one of our volunteers was going through a collection and found this newspaper cutting from Thanet International Hockey Festival, 1964. Anyone who has been to Thanet will know that three coats is a mininum and not just because of the flying bullets.
"First game of Hockey played on ice near Ship", from The Atlantic magazine, 2013. The Hockey Museum recently heard of hockey being played in a most unlikely location: on the sea ice in Antarctica. We were contacted by an Antarctic history enthusiast who pointed out that the British Film...
The Hockey Museum (THM) was very proud to receive a visit recently (28 March 2017) from Juan Calzado, former President of the International Hockey Federation (FIH), European Hockey Federation (EHF) and Real Club de Polo, Barcelona. We were honoured that on a holiday visit to London with family he took...
In 2015 The Hockey Museum received an enquiry from Alan Lancaster. He sent two photographs, one a team photograph, which Alan thought was Newhey Ladies’ Hockey team. One of the photographs featured his mother Doreen Howles and her two sisters, Vera and June holding a cup which was believed to...
Does the existence of three antique silver cups with the Royal Navy HA have a ‘black lining’? The Royal Navy Hockey Association is the proud owner of three silver cups that date back to the 1900 period. They were used for different competitions between ships and units that made up...
During the First World War, the War Office often used sporting references to try to persuade sportsmen to enlist and an amusing notice in the book Ireland’s Call (by Stephen Walker) recently caught our eye.
We recently came across an interesting advertisement in The Hockey Field magazine from 6 January 1916: "Physical Instructors and Games Mistresses are recommended to try the Liberty Bodice. It obviates the necessity for corsets and gives absolute freedom of movement to growing girls. It is ideal wear for all kinds...
We recently acquired copies of a rare early sports magazine dating from 1906 – The Cricketer, The Hockey and Football Player. It was only published for just over a year taking in two cricket and one winter season. The magazines contain a number of interesting articles that make comment on...
New collections are, thankfully, arriving weekly and many of them create great interest when received. The hockey stick illustrated in the below images was a real example of this. It came complete with a copy of an advertisement from Hockey Magazine of 4 September 1908 extolling the virtues of the...
In response to the many enquiries that we receive at The Hockey Museum our volunteers are constantly trawling through hockey publications in search of information. These searches often take twice as long as expected because we find unrelated pieces that are very interesting. One such piece was discovered recently in...
Hockey players on the beach at Minehead with North Hill behind. Photograph by Alfred Vowles. Unlike most of today's youngsters who learn to play on artificial pitches, Nan Williams, a former England international and volunteer at The Hockey Museum (THM), started her playing career on the sands of Minehead on the...
I have recently joined the many volunteers working with the The Hockey Museum. As I live in the Manchester area I am quite away from all the action, however I have recently been forwarded a couple of enquires from the Museum in relation to matters from the North! My first...