PODCAST · sports
The Red Devils Through The Ages - A Brief History of Manchester Utd
by Trevor Daivid Delves
There is a statue outside Old Trafford of three men: George Best, Denis Law, and Bobby Charlton. The Holy Trinity, as Manchester supporters call them. It is a good statue. But it does not tell you about the railway workers who founded the club in 1878 and played in green and gold on a patch of ground near the depot. It does not tell you about Major, the St Bernard dog who wandered from a fundraising bazaar into the home of a Manchester brewer — and whose journey saved the club from bankruptcy and set in motion the chain of events that produced the name Manchester United. It does not tell you about the 23 people who died at Munich-Riem Airport on 6 February 1958, or about Matt Busby receiving the Last Rites twice and coming back to build a team that won the European Cup ten years later. It does not tell you about the 26 years of Alex Ferguson — the most sustained period of dominance in the history of English football — or about the twelve years since his retirement, with their parade
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Episode 1: The Heathens - Railway Men, Green and Gold, and the Dog That Saved the Club (1878–1902)
There's a story that almost no one knows, and it goes like this: in 1901, a Saint Bernard dog named Major escaped from a fundraising bazaar at St James's Hall in Manchester. He wandered across the city, ended up at the home of a wealthy brewer named John Henry Davies, and his daughter refused to give him back. When Davies traced the dog to its owner — Harry Stafford, captain of a nearly bankrupt football club — he made a decision that changed the history of sport. He would save the club.That club was Newton Heath LYR Football Club, founded in 1878 by workers from the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway depot. They played in green and gold. They changed in a pub half a mile from the pitch. They had been relegated, nearly dissolved, and left to fend for themselves by the railway company that created them. And yet they survived — until April 24, 1902, when they stopped being Newton Heath and became Manchester United Football Club, in red and white, with a new chairman, new money, and something that had not existed in the Heathens years: the beginnings of ambition.This episode tells the full story of Manchester United's origins. Our Player of the Era is Billy Meredith — the Welsh wizard who arrived from a coalmine, played with a toothpick in his mouth, and continued playing at the highest level until he was forty-six years old. Duration: 30 minutes.Research SourcesSpartacus Educational — detailed early Newton Heath history including the Three Crowns pub changing room and North Road groundManchester United Investor Relations History Page — founding date, league entry in 1892-93, Old Trafford move in 1910American Red Devils / Manchester United History: Heathens Era (1878–1902) — the John Henry Davies / Major the dog story in detailFootball and the First World War — detailed account of Newton Heath's progression through the Combination and Football AllianceBritannica: Manchester United — confirmed founding year, first league title, Old TraffordKey Dates for This Episode1878 — Newton Heath LYR Football Club founded by Carriage and Wagon department of Lancashire and Yorkshire RailwayNovember 20, 1880 — First recorded match: Newton Heath 0, Bolton Wanderers reserves 61883–84 — First entry to Lancashire Cup; lost 7-2 to Blackburn Olympic reserves1885 — Lancashire Cup won: beat Manchester FC 2-1 in front of 8,0001886 — First FA Cup entry; knocked out in first round by Fleetwood Rangers1888 — Football League application rejected; joined The Combination as founding member1892 — Elected to Football League First Division when Alliance merged with Football League1893 — Relegated from First Division after Test Match defeat1894 — Drop "LYR" suffix; also sign Billy Meredith from ...
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
There is a statue outside Old Trafford of three men: George Best, Denis Law, and Bobby Charlton. The Holy Trinity, as Manchester supporters call them. It is a good statue. But it does not tell you about the railway workers who founded the club in 1878 and played in green and gold on a patch of ground near the depot. It does not tell you about Major, the St Bernard dog who wandered from a fundraising bazaar into the home of a Manchester brewer — and whose journey saved the club from bankruptcy and set in motion the chain of events that produced the name Manchester United. It does not tell you about the 23 people who died at Munich-Riem Airport on 6 February 1958, or about Matt Busby receiving the Last Rites twice and coming back to build a team that won the European Cup ten years later. It does not tell you about the 26 years of Alex Ferguson — the most sustained period of dominance in the history of English football — or about the twelve years since his retirement, with their parade
HOSTED BY
Trevor Daivid Delves
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