Blasts From The Past

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Many of our followers will be aware of how The Hockey Museum (THM) has developed by collecting heritage material from many corners of the hockey family. In the 12 years of our existence in Woking we have received 1,369 collections of many different sizes and varieties.

Despite the amazing collections that we have amassed, we were very aware that arguably the most important and oldest known collection had escaped us. We were informed more than 15 years ago that this had been lost, indeed disposed of, when its owner died in 2006.

We refer to the collection of Ken Howells, former Welsh international player, a life-long supporter of Teddington Hockey Club and a senior official of the International Hockey Federation (FIH) for many years. He amassed his collection over a lifetime in hockey and was responsible for the first exhibition of hockey heritage at the London World Cup in 1986. We were both staggered and saddened to receive the news of its loss and, as we hadn’t heard another word of this wonderful collection in the intervening years, we believed that it had gone. Ken’s material used to be displayed in the Teddington HC pavilion in Bushy Park, the London Royal Park – some of our readers might remember seeing it in situ.

And then … two months ago we received correspondence from Ken’s grandson, via the Executive at Teddington HC, advising us that some of Ken’s hockey collection was safe and well in his mother’s garage! News of the best private hockey collection in the world can only come once!

Communications between Marcus Wardle (THM Archivist and Teddington Vice President) and the Howells family ensued. The “some” boxes became “many” became “enough to fit into a Transit Van”, and at this point we realised that this could be the core of the famous Ken Howells collection!

Naturally, Ken’s grandson Chris Howells had first contacted his grandfather’s hockey club, but both Teddington and Chris were quick to agree that there was only one location where Ken’s legacy could be dutifully preserved and made accessible to the whole hockey family …

All that was needed was to go and get it. The best and most elusive of privately held hockey collections … from Harrogate, Yorkshire!

Arrangements were swiftly made and on 17 August we took a van from Woking and collected the ‘Holy Grail of hockey’.

 

Ken Howells collection 01      Ken Howells collection 02
     
Ken Howells's personal collection of hockey heritage is collected by The Hockey Museum.

 

Ken's collection is no disappointment, although we have only had a cursory view of the 30 or so boxes and other framed display pieces. One of the frames contains five hockey sticks from the 1880s! Other gems include an archive of Teddington team photographs, a huge applique flag emblazoned with the logo of the International Federation of Women’s Hockey Associations (IFWHA) and a personalized United States IFWHA car registration plate (see pictures below).

Ken was also a great historian of the game, having written two excellent books that are very highly regarded. We look forward to researching his background papers in our quest to compile a definitive history of hockey.

 

Ken Howells collection 06
 
The collection safely in storage in Woking just waiting to be looked through and worked on.

 

Chris was visibly emotional upon handing over the collection to the Museum – it represents a symbolic and poignant connection to his grandfather, and he put a lot of effort into keeping it in good condition. He intends to visit Woking to help catalogue and conserve this amazing find – a collection that we thought had been lost to hockey forever.

 

Celebrate with us by making a financial donation to The Hockey Museum

Until we can more thoroughly examine the contents of this exciting new collection, we are unable to cost the work needed to scope and conserve it. However, considering the similarly large collection of Alan Walker that we are currently engaged with as a benchmark, the Ken Howells Collection will ultimately cost THM several thousands of pounds in conservation materials alone.

Please celebrate this incredible re-discovery with us by supporting our endeavours to preserve Ken’s collection for the benefit of hockey and for generations of hockey player to come. Click here to make a donation.

If you would like to make a considerable one-off donation, please contact our Treasurer to discuss a direct bank transfer (so as to avoid transaction fees). Click through to our online contact form.

 

Ken Howells collection 03      Ken Howells collection 04
     
Fascinating items were quickly identified with a cursory look through the incoming collection.

 

Ken Howells collection 07

 

Ken Howells collection 08      Ken Howells collection 04 detail

Hockey Wales

 

The Hockey Museum (THM) is pleased to share that it is working with Hockey Wales to support their National Lottery-funded heritage project to research, digitise and celebrate Welsh hockey heritage.

When the International Hockey Federation (FIH) became involved in supporting our fledgling museum financially back in 2015, we committed to broadening our collecting remit. This changed from exclusively focusing on English hockey (and on Great Britain at international level) to include international tournaments and the administration of hockey at world level. We changed our name from The National Hockey Museum to The Hockey Museum (THM) to reflect this and, at the same time, committed to guiding other FIH-member nations to recognise and preserve their own heritage.

Despite the FIH withdrawing their annual funding of THM several years ago, we have continued to honour the objectives of the partnership. We have contacts with personal collectors in Spain, the Netherlands, Italy, Australia and France, but our work supporting other nations with their heritage has often been closer to home; we have relationships with the Irish Hockey Archive based out of Dublin City Library and the developing Scottish Hockey Heritage Group. Now that list can categorically include Wales after Hockey Wales’s successful grant bid.

THM will support Hockey Wales’s project objectives by offering professional advice around the cataloguing and digitisation of heritage material currently stored in Cardiff, by hosting their visiting researchers, and by drawing on our extensive experience of collating definitive match and player statistics for Great Britain. This work has the added benefit of bringing in some much-needed funding to THM to help plug our annual operating deficit.

The Welsh project involves:

  1. Completing a definitive dataset of Wales international players and matches.
  2. Presenting ex-international athletes with an honours cap.
  3. Digitising memorabilia and records.
  4. Developing a cross-curricular resource for primary and secondary schools in and working with schools to educate students on how to digitise data and research historical records.
  5. Promoting the history of Welsh hockey clubs.
  6. Developing a hockey history page on the Hockey Wales website.

THM DMU PhD Award

 

The Hockey Museum (THM) has been awarded a Midlands 4 Cities (M4C) Collaborative Doctoral Award with De Montfort University (DMU).

This funded PhD project, Dressed for the Field: Gender, Bodies, and Society through the Material Culture of Field Hockey, 1880 to the Present, will delve into THM's extensive textile collection. The supervisor team includes Dr. Heather Dichter, a member of DMU's International Centre for Sports History and Culture and a THM Trustee, and Dr. Serena Dyer, historian of fashion and dress and an expert in material culture.

This project will examine how the material, embodied and gendered dynamics of clothing intersect with the complex social and cultural evolution of field hockey since its development as a modern sport in the late nineteenth century. Victorian women hockey players had to navigate contemporary sartorial norms: corsets, bustles and ankle-length skirts could not be discarded, necessitating nuanced strategies of modification and adaptation. Male and female players’ uniforms have since changed dramatically, yet hockey remains one of the few sports where women mostly still wear skirts.

Through THM’s extensive garment collection, images and advertisements in publications, and regulations regarding uniforms, the student will explore how social trends and technological advances in clothing manufacturing have interacted with changing notions of bodily comfort, motion, movement, and the performance of the sportsman/woman’s body. Shaped by gendered distinction, national identity, and the British class system, hockey playing uniforms offer an opportunity to deepen understanding of the intersecting relationship between class, bodies, gender, and sport in British culture.

Information about the project can be found on the M4C website, click here.

Applications will be able to be submitted as of 16 October 2023, with the deadline in early January 2024. The selected student will begin their doctoral studies at De Montfort University in October 2024.

GB Caps June 2022

 

The last few months have seen plenty of Great Britain (GB) honours caps presented in varied locations as we edge towards the target of 581 players who represented GB up to the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. Some 20 presentation events have taken place this year with over 50 caps presented. A further 10 or so events will take place in the second half of 2023. After this we will be mainly looking for the families of deceased players.

Recent activity has seen events in Scotland, Wales, Australia, Switzerland and, of course, here in England.

Please consider making a donation to The Hockey Museum in support of our stats and caps project: Make a donation to The Hockey Museum (supportedgiving.com)

 

Presentations Abroad

One of the most prestigious presentations took place at Olympic House, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) headquarters in Lausanne, Switzerland on 6 June. Jon Wyatt (GB men’s player no. 270) received his cap from IOC President Thomas Bach and International Hockey Federation (FIH) President Tayyab Ikram.

This certainly demonstrated to the Olympic Movement and the FIH just how important history and heritage is to us in Britain.

Read more here: FIH Academy on LinkedIn | FIH Sport Director Jon Wyatt OLY presented with his GB cap

 

 

Jon Wyatt GB cap presentation Olympic House 06062023 02     Jon Wyatt GB cap presentation Olympic House 06062023 01
     

Left: FIH Sport Director Jon Wyatt receives a personal certificate of recognition from IOC President Thomas Bach to accompany his GB honours cap.

Right: Jon Wyatt receives his GB cap from FIH President Tayyab Ikram.

 

On 14 May Caroline Jordan (GB women’s no. 56) had her cap presented in Melbourne by the former CEO of Scottish Hockey and past Scottish international player Andrew Scoular. Caroline represented GB in 1988 Seoul Olympic Games before settling in Australia.

 

Caroline Jordan GB cap presentation in Melbourne 14052023 02
 
Caroline Jordan receives her GB cap from former Scottish Hockey CEO Andrew Scoular.

 

Presentations in Woking

Several presentations have taken place at our home in Woking. On 26 May we were honoured by the visit of our local MP Jonathan Lord together with Saj Hussain, Chair of Surrey County Council, which gave us the opportunity to show off our amazing museum facility to those with local influence. We held geographically diverse cap presentations celebrating one Irish, two Scottish and two English GB players. Their careers spanned from 1951 into the 21st century, taking in six Olympic Games and with some very interesting stories arising.

The Irishman, Harry Cahill (109), was regarded as the best goalkeeper in the world in the early 1960s. He played 34 times for GB spanning his three Olympic Games. Local lad (to Woking) Danny Hall (264) also played in three Olympic Games but represented GB 107 times – a reflection of the greater intensity of games in the modern era. Danny scored 36 goals in his 107 outings for GB, which is nearly a goal every three games – an amazing conversion rate for a player who didn’t take penalty corners.

Peter Johnson (66) only played once for GB back in 1951 against Kenya in Nairobi. The GB team were returning from a very arduous tour of South Africa which had taken its toll. By the time they reached Kenya they only had ten fit players. Peter, a recent Cambridge triple blue, was living in Nairobi and was drafted in to play his one and only international match.

The other past athletes to be presented by our MP Jonathan were Louise Gordon (127) and Don Wilson (110).

 

GB cap presentations at THM with Jonathan Lord MP 26052023
 
From left to right: THM President Mike Smith; Chair of Surrey County Council Saj Hussain; GB player Louise Gordon; Ina, widow of GB player Harry Cahill; GB player Danny Hall; Shona, relative of GB player Don Wilson; Natasha, relative of GB player Peter Johnson; Jonathan Lord, MP for Woking.

 

South-of-the-border Scot Colin Hector (259) also received his cap in Woking; as did past Trustee of The Hockey Museum Lucy Newcombe (109) when she met up with former Museum colleagues in June. Vice President and past Chair Katie Dodd presented Lucy with her GB cap alongside current Trustee Imogen Gibbon who was down from Edinburgh. The photographs are a great reflection of the warmth and camaraderie of the team involved with the Museum.

 

Colin Hector GB cap presentation 02 03032023     Lucy Newcombe GB cap presentation 08062023 02     Lucy Newcombe GB cap presentation 08062023 04
         

Left: Colin Hector receives his GB cap from THM President Mike Smith.

Centre and right: Lucy Newcombe receives her cap from her trustee contemporaries at The Hockey Museum Katie Dodd (left) and Imogen Gibbon (right).

 

Pro League Presentations

More recently we have seen a lot of activity at the Pro League mini tournaments that have taken place at Lee Valley over the past month or so.

On the 27 May, Iqbal Singh Kullar (198) received his cap in the VIP suite. This was followed by further presentations of the 17, 18 & 21 June. Most were made on the pitch in front of the crowds, which has given great acknowledgement to our stats and caps project.

All were presented by GB President Sheila Morrow who has shown great support to our initiative.

 

Iqbal Kullar GB cap presentation 27052023 07
 
 Iqbal Singh Kullar receives his cap from GB President Sheila Morrow.

 

Two serendipitous presentations took place on 18 & 21 June. Firstly, former Olympic medallist Sally Walton (141) unexpectedly accompanied students from Royal Grammar School Worcester to Lee Valley. Her students (Sally is their hockey coach) were delighted to see her presented with her GB cap.

Then, on 21 June, the US Field Hockey High Performance Director Craig Parnham (273) received his GB cap having accompanied the US women’s team on their Pro League trip to London. With him now living in USA we had been wondering how we might get his cap to him!

The full list of recipients during the Pro League:

Women: Lisa Scarborough (nee Copeland; 105), Lucilla Parkes Wright (108), Sally Walton (141), Jo Ellis (154), Joie Leigh (180), Zoe Shipperley (187).

Men: Ian McGinn (178), Iqbal Singh Kullar (198), Simon Mantell (209), Soma Singh (248), Simon Nicklin (250), Howard Hoskin (260), Craig Parnham (273), Richard Springham (322), Richard Smith (324), James Bailey (330), Ben Arnold (338), Paddy Smith (342).

 

 

Jo Ellis Soma Singh Simon Nicklin Howard Hoskin Richard Springham GB cap presentation Lee Valley 17062023
 

GB cap recipients on the Lee Valley pitch.

From left to right: Howard Hoskin, Soma Singh, Jo Ellis, Sheila Morrow (GB President), Richard Springham, Simon Nicklin.

 

Craig Parnham Simon Mantell Ben Arnold Time Whiteman Lee Valley GB cap presentations 21062023
 
Craig Parnham, Simon Mantell, Ben Arnold and Tim Whiteman after receiving their GB honours caps during the Pro League presentations.

 

Links with Lord's

Most of the recent recipients have been from the modern era, although 17 June saw the only Lee Valley recipient to have played for GB on grass in Ian McGinn (178; pictured). Two of Ian’s 19 GB caps were matches at Lord’s Cricket Ground (against Netherlands and Ireland) in March 1976.

 

Ian McGinn GB cap presentation Lee Valley 17062023
 
Ian McGinn receives his cap from GB President Sheila Morrow.

 

Lord’s has a further role to play in our June presentations. The cricket test match on 2 June (England men against Ireland) saw a good gathering of hockey players including Jimmy Kirkwood (226) and Billy McConnell (201) from Northern Ireland, and Englishman Guy Swayne (223). They all received their GB caps with the iconic Lord’s Cricket Ground as their backdrop and in the presence of their hockey teammates.

 

Guy Swayne Billy McConnell and Jimmy Kirkwood GB cap presentation Lords Cricket Ground 04062023 04
 
Guy Swayne, Billy McConnell and Jimmy Kirkwood receive their GB caps from former GB Captain Richard Dodds at Lord's Cricket Ground.

 

A Powerful Legacy for our Sport

All the players mentioned in this report are suffixed by their GB player number. These numbers perhaps best encapsulate what this project is about. Every GB player now has a legacy number that is unique and personal to them. It will always be theirs. Many, many players have expressed to us the pride that they have taken from being awarded this memento of their GB career, but it best summed up by current GB international Ellie Rayer.

 

"I currently wear number 13, but I am merely looking after the number for the moment. 193 is my number and it always will be, which is incredibly special.

"A huge, huge thank you for the work you have done."

-- Ellie Rayer, GB women's player no. 193.

Ellie Rayer GB cap crop

 

Please click the link to make a donation to The Hockey Museum in support of our stats and caps project: Make a donation to The Hockey Museum (supportedgiving.com)

 

Can You Help?

Yet we still have approximately 150 players (or their descendants) to find. We need all the help we can obtain to find them so that they too can join in the pride of receiving their GB honours cap and unique legacy number.

Please get in touch if you'd like to help: Contact Us (hockeymuseum.net)

Earlier this year The Hockey Museum (THM) acquired the collection of the late Royal Navy hockey historian Lt Commander Alan Walker. It is a vast collection of memorabilia items and paper archives, which includes unique Royal Navy Hockey material dating back to the 1890s as well as spanning Alan’s life in hockey, from Navy to Combined Services Hockey, from coaching (and coaching coaches) to his time as England Under 21s and senior manager. THM President and Hon. Curator Mike Smith describes it with admiration as, "One of the last great hockey collections we are likely to acquire".

We have drawn on the help of our contacts locally to house Alan’s collection so that we can begin to work through it to catalogue and preserve its fascinating content. We have acquired temporary premises in town with the support of the Surrey Museums Partnership and the Surrey History Centre and now we need to pull together a team of volunteers to undertake the work.

 

Alan Walker Collection
 

Above: A small part of Alan's archive, now in the care of The Hockey Museum but in need of much work.

Below: The late Lt Commander Alan Walker at the Hockey Writers' Club lunch.

 
Alan Walker presentation

 

 

Volunteering on the project

We’d like to start work on Alan’s archive in July. You would need to be able to travel to Woking in Surrey to work on the material. Our aim is to have a minimum of two people working together on the project each week, Monday to Friday. You would be trained and supported by THM’s curatorial team making this is an exciting opportunity whether you’re retired and looking to get stuck into a project or keen to gain museum experience and learn new heritage skills.

Click below for the full role description – you can apply to volunteer with us directly or through the Volunteer Woking website.

Volunteers for the Alan Walker Hockey Archive Project for Hockey Museum (The) | Volunteer Woking

Contact Us (hockeymuseum.net)

 

Funding the materialsArchiving materials

This project is going to need a lot of conservation materials and they don’t come cheap. If you cannot make it to Woking to help with work in person, perhaps you would consider making a donation to support the project costs?

We’re confident of acquiring a grant for £1,000, but our initial costings suggest we need to spend in the region of £3,500 to complete the work!

Please make a donation to support the cost of conservation materials. Click the link below.

Make a donation to The Hockey Museum (supportedgiving.com)

This year (2023), there will be over 30 Great Britain honours cap presentation events, not just around the country but around the world. Amazingly, the project has now passed 350 caps produced and presented (out of 581 GB men and women) and we will be beyond 400 by the year end! We anticipate that there will be over 100 GB players or their families that we may never find, mainly because the men’s teams go back over a century to 1920.

 

Cambridge City Hockey Club presentation, 15 May 2023

CCHC group
 

From left to right: Mark Brookes (CCHC Chairman); Diane Wilman, Nick Thompson, Christopher Robinson,
Tim Ireland (CCHC President), 
and Mike Smith (The Hockey Museum President and Hon. Curator).

Photographs courtesy of Simon Webb Photography.

 

The latest presentation took place at the magnificent Cambridge City Hockey Club (CCHC) with its three artificial pitches and clubhouse. The event was triggered by the presentation of David Wilman’s cap to his widow Diane. David was a long-time and much respected member of the Club. He played in three Olympic Games – in Rome 1960, Tokyo 1964 and Mexico City 1968 – earning a total of 31 GB caps over nine years, which was exceptional in those days!

Being in Cambridge, our most easterly presentation venue, we were joined by Christopher Robinson, the nephew of Anthony (Tony) Robinson who played in the Helsinki Olympic Games in 1952 winning a bronze medal, and in Melbourne 1956. International matches were much less frequent in those days: Tony totalled 17 GB appearances across the two Olympiads.

It has proved challenging to trace the families of the earlier players and in Tony’s case we have only located six out of 34 of his GB contemporaries. Consequently, the Cambridge presentations were a great joy for The Hockey Museum (THM) as well as for the recipients.

Also at this very special event, former CCHC First XI player Nick Thompson was presented with his cap – 67 caps accrued between 1989 and 1996 including the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games – but sadly his wife Jo (nee Ellis), also a GB hockey player, was unable to join us.

We are grateful to CCHC for their hospitality and thank them for embracing the historical achievements of its past players. The Club now boats six GB internationals and is going to mount a display to celebrate this feat.

Cambridge City HC's write up of the event | cambridgecityhc.org

 

 

CCHC Diane Willman Nick Thompson     CCHC Chistopher Robinson
     

Left: Diane Wilman (widow of David Wilman) and Nick Thompson with their GB honours caps.
Right: Christopher Robinson receives his uncle Tony’s GB honours cap from Mike Smith.

Photographs courtesy of Simon Webb Photography.

 

 

 

Looking ahead to England

The families of Tony Robinson and David Wilman will in due course receive their England honours caps, but with over 2,000 England players reaching back to the late 19th century, compiling this definitive dataset and then finding the players or descendants is and will be a much bigger job.

If you are interested in getting involved with THM’s England statistics research project, please get in touch.

Contact Us | hockeymuseum.net

 

On Friday 21 May 2023, The Times newspaper featured an article on the centenary of Wembley Stadium in London. Frustratingly, they made no mention of the annual women’s hockey international matches which ran from 1951-1991. Under a photograph of the England women’s football team (the ‘Lionesses’) celebrating their European Championship success last year (2022), the article states: “No one imagined a women’s team packing out this stadium when they were building it.” Whilst they may not have foreseen women’s sports teams attracting large crowds, women’s hockey did this in the 1970s!

 

Wembley crowd
 
The record crowds of schoolgirls at Wembley during its hockey heyday; an electric atmosphere perhaps not dissimilar to the rock concerts that Wembley also hosted.

 

Prior to its article, The Times asked its readership to contribute their memories of Wembley, though the resulting article is surprisingly light on reminiscence. Former England captain Anita White wrote in with her memories of leading out the England team as World Champions in front of a 68,000-strong crowd at Wembley in 1976. Her correspondence was completely ignored by The Times.

The Wembley crowd of mostly schoolgirls in 1976 was a record attendance for women’s sporting event. Indeed, throughout the 1970s and through to the early 1980s the annual Wembley fixture regularly exceeded 60,000 spectators – the second largest crowds after men’s football. Women’s football matches in the UK did not exceed the hockey crowd size at Wembley until the 2012 Olympic final at Wembley (80,000) and again for the 2022 European Championship final at Wembley (87,000).

Anita says: “I'm personally thrilled to see women's sport as a whole beginning to get the recognition it deserves but frustrated at the omission of hockey's spectator appeal in the 1970s. The women’s Wembley internationals are quite unique in the history of the development of women's sport.”

 

Teams England Scotland walk out Wembley 1972 Pat Ward
 

England women vs Scotland at Wembley Stadium in 1972. The match took place in front of a crowd of 65,000.

From the collection of Hockey Field magazine's Editor Pat Ward, held by The Hockey Museum.

 

The Magic of Wembley: enjoy the book

MoW A1 poster PRESS single 1The Times may not have been interested in hockey’s fascinating Wembley legacy, but you can read about the 41 years of England international matches in The Hockey Museum’s (THM) book, The Magic of Wembley. It is available for purchase for only £10 plus postage.

Purchase The Magic of Wembley Book (hockeymuseum.net) or click the poster image.

When we were researching for book, THM team tried to trace the whereabouts of the Wembley Stadium business archives. We presumed that there must be an organisation responsible for keeping records of the multi-event history of the venue – we failed, though ultimately not to the detriment of our book! Having exhausted our contacts at the National Football Museum, we were pointed in the direction of the Football Association (FA) – they were only interested in football rather than the development of and wider use of the stadium itself – and then the London Metropolitan Archives who did have some of the financial records but not a lot else. So where have all the Wembley records gone!? It all rather reinforces Anita White’s view that hockey at Wembley is persistently and sadly overlooked, but at least THM exists to continue to bang the drum!

 

The 70th anniversary of hockey at Wembley

Back in March 2021, THM partnered with Talk Hockey Radio to record a special panel discussion celebrating the 70th anniversary of the first women’s hockey match at Wembley Stadium in 1951. It featured former England captains Maggie Souyave, Anita White and Kate Richardson-Walsh. You can watch it on our website below.

Click her for more information about the special panel discussion film and other Wembley hockey-related material: Reliving The Wembley Magic: 70th Anniversary Special (hockeymuseum.net)

Reliving the Wembley Magic is a panel discussion produced in March 2021 in partnership with Talk Hockey Radio to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the first women's hockey match at Wembley Stadium in 1951. 

The Hockey Museum (THM) continues its rewarding programme of Great Britain (GB) honour cap presentations, tracking down past GB players in all four corners of the world. The most recent presentation took place in the British Overseas Territory of the Cayman Islands on Friday 21 April 2023: Andrew West (GB men’s player number 292) received his cap from Nigel Bates, President of Cayman Hockey at the Cayman Compass.

 

Andrew West GB cap presentation 02 2142023     Andrew West GB cap presentation 01 2142023
     
The GB honours cap presentation to Andrew West.

Left to right: Ivan Burges (Cayman Hockey Secretary), Andrew West, Nigel Bates (President of Cayman Hockey), and Dwayne Atherley (Cayman captain and Barbadian international)

Photography copyright: Compass Media - Seaford - Russell Jr.

 

Andrew earned 6 GB caps in addition to his representative honours for England, which included the 2005 European Nations Championships in Leipzig, Germany. His GB caps all came during a Tri-Nations tournament against Canada and Belgium in in Vancouver in 2003.

 

Date

Teams

Score

Venue

09 July 2003

Canada : Great Britain

3 : 1

Vancouver, Wright Field, University of British Columbia

07 July 2003

Great Britain : Belgium

6 : 2

Vancouver, Wright Field, University of British Columbia

05 July 2003

Canada : Great Britain

1 : 2

Vancouver, Wright Field, University of British Columbia

04 July 2003

Great Britain : Belgium

2 : 1

Vancouver, Wright Field, University of British Columbia

02 July 2003

Canada : Great Britain

4 : 1

Vancouver, Wright Field, University of British Columbia

01 July 2003

Great Britain : Belgium

4 : 3

Vancouver, Wright Field, University of British Columbia

 

Andrew started playing hockey in Hong Kong, aged five. His parents worked there for several years before returning to their homeland of England when Andrew was nine. He played representative hockey for Northamptonshire, the Midlands and England Under 15s through to Under 21s, captaining all age groups for county and country matches. As an England Under 18, Andrew and his team won the Junior European Nations Championships – he was player of the tournament and top goal scorer. At Under 21 level, Andrew won a bronze medal at the Junior World Cup in Hobart, Australia, in 2001.

From a club perspective, Andrew started his men's club career at Beeston in 1996, competing in the Men's National Hockey League. At the time, he was the youngest ever starting finalist in the Hockey Association Cup, aged 16, when Beeston lost to Cannock in 1998. For the 2000-2001 season Andrew was named captain of Beeston Hockey Club, aged 19, becoming the youngest ever captain of a National League side – do these records still stand?

In 2001, Andrew moved to Cannock Hockey Club and won four National League titles in 2002-‘03, 2003-‘04, 2004-‘05, and 2005-‘06. That is still the longest winning streak of any club, and 3 English Hockey Association Cups in 2001-‘02, 2004-‘05, and 2006-‘07. Andrew left Cannock in 2009 and joined Holcombe Hockey Club for a season before retiring in 2010.

Andrew retired from international hockey in 2005 to start at career in investment banking with JP Morgan.

 


 The Hockey Museum is indebted to Ivan Burges for his support in tracing Andrew West and organising Andrew’s GB cap presentation in collaboration with THM President Mike Smith.

One of the longest-established touring teams still playing are the Horseshoes Hockey Club, founded in 1970 as a team for current and former pupils of Oakham School that went to the Blackpool Festival each Easter.

The Hockey Museum (THM) volunteer Steve LeMottee took over as the organiser in 1974, and during his 27-year ‘term of office’ the membership was opened up and the fixture list was expanded to include other festivals in England and some overseas tours, the most ambitious being to Vancouver and San Francisco in 1981.

With the exception of the two ‘Covid years’, the recent Bank Holiday was Steve’s 50th consecutive Easter with the Horseshoes, and although his playing involvement is limited to walking hockey these days he had planned to make an occasional guest appearance on the grass pitches at the Skegness Festival – sadly one of only two such gatherings of the hockey family that is still running.

However, even Steve’s modest ambitions were frustrated when he was diagnosed with Myeloma (cancer of the bone marrow) in early March. But not to be deterred, he still went to Skegness and, over the course of the two-day festival, walked 50 times around a pitch to raise money for the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) and Myeloma UK.

Accompanied by teammates, friends and family – and by the entire Horseshoes HC men’s and mixed squads for the final two laps – Steve raised £800 to be shared between the two good causes. Thanks to Festival organisers Ben Read and Stuart Cunnington, a further £200 – the proceeds of the Saturday evening social – was raised for Myeloma UK.

Steve is currently undergoing a course of chemotherapy before a spell in hospital and a recuperation period, but he fully intends to return to Skegness next year for his 51st Easter with the Horseshoes.

 

Skegvegas 2023 01
 
Skegvegas 2023 02
 

THM volunteer Steve LeMottee (right in the bottom photograph) undertook a sponsored walk during the Skegness Easter Hockey Festival this year.

Images courtesy of Anne Tate Photography.

Wimbledon away day 03
 
Volunteers and staff from The Hockey Museum pose for a photograph in the Media Centre of the All England Lawn Tennis Club.

 

On Thursday 13 April a group of volunteers from The Hockey Museum (THM) enjoyed the privilege of visiting the All England Lawn Tennis Club at Wimbledon including a visit to its Museum. The day was made more challenging by a signalling meltdown at Waterloo train station. This caused detours and some emergency travel plans – the last time we organise a trip on the 13th of anything! – but the majority of the group made it more or less on time and were rewarded by a glorious spring day.

The visit, arranged by our curatorial team, was a combination of a fact-finding, professional outreach visit with the added pleasure of a grounds tour and a look behind the scenes of the workings of their museum. The tour included visits to both Centre Court, Number One Court, Murray Mound – or is it Henman Hill? – and a rare opportunity to visit the Wimbledon Championships’ Media Centre.

 

Wimbledon away day 04
 
Wimbledon away day 05
 
Outside and inside Wimbledon's Centre Court during our tour of the All England Lawn Tennis Club grounds.

 

THM Curator Shane Smith commented:

“This was a rewarding day. A great professional recognition for The Hockey Museum from a fellow leader in the sports heritage community, but also an exciting and thought-provoking day out for our hard-working volunteers. The day was highly enjoyable and a great team building opportunity, but we also gained key insights into Wimbledon’s collection and archive management work.”

The Wimbledon archive includes the earliest wooden rackets, tennis clothing, tennis balls and all sorts of lawn tennis-related material from the game’s earliest, formative years. Access to their archive gave our group an opportunity to see close at hand how rare tennis artefacts were stored, catalogued and preserved as part of the game’s heritage. This reinforced the diligent, painstaking work that THM’s volunteers undertake with our own collection material, ably overseen by Collections Officer, Carli-Lyn Vermani.

A most enjoyable and professionally rewarding day out that will live long in the memory. Our thanks to the Lawn Tennis Museum team for hosting us so well.

 

Wimbledon away day 01
 
Wimbledon away day 02
 
The Hockey Museum group were excellently hosted by staff from the Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Museum's curatorial and learning teams.

THM Woking Library poster low res

Click for the full size poster.

 

This Easter holiday, The Hockey Museum (THM) has partnered with Woking Library on an animal trail and craft activity as part of the nationwide initiative The Wild Escape. Between 1 & 15 April children aged 7-11 can find four animals that have 'escaped' from THM’s collection hidden around Woking Library. As children search for these animals they will learn about their symbolism and relevance to hockey as well as how we can protect these animals in the wild. Children can make their own origami version of each animal to ‘release’ back into the wild (no littering please).

THM is taking part in The Wild Escape within our local habitat of Surrey. Participating museums will conclude their Get Wild About Surrey event on Earth Day, 22 April, with a display of their projects at Haslemere Museum.

THM's excellent contribution to The Wild Escape has been fashioned by volunteer Elysia Morgan with support from THM's curatorial staff.

 

getwild landscape cmyk 

 

Not in Surrey?

pdfYou too can get wild at home with The Hockey Museum's origami activity pack inspired by the animals in our cloth badge collection. Download the pack by clicking the PDF icon.

The Wild Escape invites museums and schools across the nation to take part in a celebration of UK wildlife. If you do not live in Surrey, then be sure to look out for activities at museums near you this Easter.

The Wild Escape is made possible by lead support from Arts Council England’s National Lottery Project Grants, with additional support from Art Fund and a group of generous individuals and trusts.

 

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Blasts From The Past: An Introduction

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....

AWRE Hockey Club: Explosive Hockey Played in 1950s Berkshire

AWRE Hockey Club: Explosive Hockey Played in 1950s Berkshire

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...

An ‘Anglo-Welsh’ hockey honours cap

An ‘Anglo-Welsh’ hockey honours cap

  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...

A postcard home … to France in 1906

A postcard home … to France in 1906

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...

Sikhs, Lord’s and Hockey

Sikhs, Lord’s and Hockey

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 hockey story of Shalford church’s ecclesiastical cloth is not fabricated

The hockey story of Shalford church’s ecclesiastical cloth is not fabricated

    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....

Core of 'The Apple' reflected in Hampshire church window

Core of 'The Apple' reflected in Hampshire church window

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...

Len Smith’s Sportswear and designs on further clothing research

Len Smith’s Sportswear and designs on further clothing research

            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...

Maurice Turnbull: Britain’s most complete all-round sportsman?

Maurice Turnbull: Britain’s most complete all-round sportsman?

  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: Hockey Field’s Educator Editor

Eustace E White: Hockey Field’s Educator Editor

   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...

How the introduction of VAT impacted club hockey in the UK

How the introduction of VAT impacted club hockey in the UK

          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...

Women’s History Month 2023: Biddy Burgum’s fascinating life in hockey

Women’s History Month 2023: Biddy Burgum’s fascinating life in hockey

    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....

The British and the Origins of Hockey in Italy

The British and the Origins of Hockey in Italy

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...

50th anniversary of the introduction of substitutes

50th anniversary of the introduction of substitutes

  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...

The creation of umpiring structures for women in 1923

The creation of umpiring structures for women in 1923

“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 Grammar School 7-5 Staines Hockey Club

Kingston Grammar School 7-5 Staines Hockey Club

“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...

A Fashion Faux Paus? England vs France, 1923

A Fashion Faux Paus? England vs France, 1923

  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...

'Combination' in Hockey: the Difference between English and Irish Styles?

'Combination' in Hockey: the Difference between English and Irish Styles?

  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....

Overcoming the Elements: Hockey during the Big Freeze of 1962-‘63

Overcoming the Elements: Hockey during the Big Freeze of 1962-‘63

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...

The Astonishing Role of Hockey Boots During WW2

The Astonishing Role of Hockey Boots During WW2

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 History of I M Marsh College of Physical Education, Liverpool

The History of I M Marsh College of Physical Education, Liverpool

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...

“Get Off My Pitch”: A Memoir of Don Gallacher

“Get Off My Pitch”: A Memoir of Don Gallacher

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...

Centenary of Australia and New Zealand's First International Matches

Centenary of Australia and New Zealand's First International Matches

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...

A Brief History of Women’s Headwear in Hockey

A Brief History of Women’s Headwear in Hockey

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...

Correcting Hockey History: The Hunt for Harvey Wood

Correcting Hockey History: The Hunt for Harvey Wood

  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...

Unearthing a Groundsman’s Special Memories of Wembley Stadium

Unearthing a Groundsman’s Special Memories of Wembley Stadium

  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...

The First Mixed Hockey International Tour by a British School: Australia 1997

The First Mixed Hockey International Tour by a British School: Australia 1997

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...

Whistle While You Work: Researching Umpiring Whistles From The 1920s

Whistle While You Work: Researching Umpiring Whistles From The 1920s

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...

Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II Attends The Women's Hockey At Wembley Stadium in 1981

Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II Attends The Women's Hockey At Wembley Stadium in 1981

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,...

Discovering Vera Cox's Missing Scrapbook

Discovering Vera Cox's Missing Scrapbook

  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...

Peter Johnson: The Great Britain Hockey Player With Only One Cap

Peter Johnson: The Great Britain Hockey Player With Only One Cap

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...

Echoes Of The Moscow Olympic Hockey Boycott 42 Years Later

Echoes Of The Moscow Olympic Hockey Boycott 42 Years Later

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...

A Mother's Pride

A Mother's Pride

  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...

Hockey: A Political Symbol In The Punjab

Hockey: A Political Symbol In The Punjab

    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 Evolution of Hockey Honours Caps

The Evolution of Hockey Honours Caps

        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...

The First Ever "Hockey" Magazine

The First Ever "Hockey" Magazine

           "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...

Jordi Alumà: Hockey

Jordi Alumà: Hockey

    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...

How Great Thou Art: Religious Hockey-like Games in Ethiopia

How Great Thou Art: Religious Hockey-like Games in Ethiopia

  © 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,...

The Longest Olympic Matches

The Longest Olympic Matches

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...

Tracing The Match Ball From The Australia And New Zealand Tour of 1914

Tracing The Match Ball From The Australia And New Zealand Tour of 1914

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...

Louis Charles Baillon: The Only Falkland Islander Olympic Champion

Louis Charles Baillon: The Only Falkland Islander Olympic Champion

  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...

Alan Turing: WW2 hockey-playing hero features on £50 note

Alan Turing: WW2 hockey-playing hero features on £50 note

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...

Christ’s Hospital's Jovial WW1 Charity Match

Christ’s Hospital's Jovial WW1 Charity Match

    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....

Kenya Hockey Olympians Conference

Kenya Hockey Olympians Conference

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...

The ‘Hockey Girl’ And The Pursuit of Love

The ‘Hockey Girl’ And The Pursuit of Love

  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'...

A Biography of Janet Macklin (née Smallwood)

A Biography of Janet Macklin (née Smallwood)

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...

The Festival of Britain’s Grand International Hockey Tournament 1951

The Festival of Britain’s Grand International Hockey Tournament 1951

    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...

Harvey Wood: England’s Mysterious Giant Goalkeeper

Harvey Wood: England’s Mysterious Giant Goalkeeper

[ 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...

Bandy In Shakespeare

Bandy In Shakespeare

   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...

Hockey-Playing Thespians Of The Edwardian Era

Hockey-Playing Thespians Of The Edwardian Era

  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...

It's A Date: Celebrating the First Scotland Women's International Match

It's A Date: Celebrating the First Scotland Women's International Match

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...

Easter Festivals in Years Gone By

Easter Festivals in Years Gone By

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...

An Amazing Find As The Hockey Museum Links Up With The British Museum

An Amazing Find As The Hockey Museum Links Up With The British Museum

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...

Welsh Honours Caps: A Tale of Interrelated Research

Welsh Honours Caps: A Tale of Interrelated Research

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...

Remembering Wembley

Remembering Wembley

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...

Wembley Was A Family Affair

Wembley Was A Family Affair

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...

The First Ever Women's International Hockey Match in 1896

The First Ever Women's International Hockey Match in 1896

   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...

Unearthing Further Hockey Connections At Sutton Hoo

Unearthing Further Hockey Connections At Sutton Hoo

  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...

Digging Hockey: An Excavation of Edith Pretty's Links to Hockey

Digging Hockey: An Excavation of Edith Pretty's Links to Hockey

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 Search of The Hull & District Hockey Register

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...

Never Defeated By Wine Or In A Game: A Secret Edwardian Gentlemen's Hockey Club

Never Defeated By Wine Or In A Game: A Secret Edwardian Gentlemen's Hockey Club

   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: The Lord Mayor's Cup

The Jean Arnold Collection: The Lord Mayor's Cup

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...

Baffling Brass Buttons

Baffling Brass Buttons

  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...

A Tale Of Principled Pilley

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...

A Rare Item In The Modern Hockey World

A Rare Item In The Modern Hockey World

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...

Old Creightonians Archive Arrives With A Suprise

Old Creightonians Archive Arrives With A Suprise

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...

Terrific Trophies

Terrific Trophies

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 Work Of Preserving Hockey Heritage: Saving The AEWHA Scrapbook

The Work Of Preserving Hockey Heritage: Saving The AEWHA Scrapbook

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...

A Vintage Christmas Present? From India To The London Stage

A Vintage Christmas Present? From India To The London Stage

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...

An Early Easter Hockey Tour

An Early Easter Hockey Tour

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...

Bullets Stopped Play

Bullets Stopped Play

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.

Hockey Played In Antarctica

Hockey Played In Antarctica

"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...

Bringing History To Life With Juan Calzado

Bringing History To Life With Juan Calzado

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...

An Update On The English Cup

An Update On The English Cup

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...

Three Antique Silver Cups From The Royal Navy HA

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...

The Grand International Match

The Grand International Match

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.

The Liberty Bodice

The Liberty Bodice

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...

Hockey And Football: A Comparison

Hockey And Football: A Comparison

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...

An Illegal Hockey Stick

An Illegal Hockey Stick

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...

The Jet-propelled Hockey Stick That Didn't Take Off!

The Jet-propelled Hockey Stick That Didn't Take Off!

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 On The Sand At Minehead

Hockey On The Sand At Minehead

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...

Have You Heard Of The English Cup?

Have You Heard Of The English Cup?

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...

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