The 1896 FA Cup final and two-goal hero Fred Spiksley
1896
HERO
Wednesday
win the FA Cup for the first time
Kick off time at the 1896 FA Cup final - the first goal was scored within half a minute by Spiksley
THERE WAS A SURPRISE when Wolves overcame Derby County 2-1 in their 1896 FA Cup semi-final with goals from Joe Tonks and Billy Malpass. Tonks had replaced David Wykes in the first team after the latter died from typhoid fever.
It was the
third time in eight seasons that the Black Country side had reached the final,
losing 3-0 to Preston in 1889 and beating Everton 1-0 in 1893. Unlike Wolves,
Wednesday were hoping to capture the FA Cup for the first time. The trophy was
a new one as the original had been stolen.
The Wanderers
amateur team first won the original trophy in 1872. When they also became the
first to win the competition three years in succession between 1876–78 they
relinquished their right to keep the trophy on the understanding that any side
equalling their feat would also return it to the FA. When Blackburn Rovers were
successful three years running between 1884–86 they were awarded a
commemorative shield.
After Aston
Villa beat West Bromwich Albion 1-0 in the 1895 final they displayed the cup in
the window of William Shillcock, a football outfitters. It was stolen on 11
September 1895 and never recovered. This was despite a £10 reward for its
return.
Villa were
fined, a new trophy was made and it took a hundred years for the truth to
become known when evidence surfaced which author Mike Collett said was “as
reliably substantiated as possible came to light.”
Mrs Violet
Stait, aged 80 in 1995, had married Jack Stait in 1935, the son of John ‘Stosher’
Stait. She claimed her husband had told her that his dad “pinched that cup out
of Shillcock’s window” and following further extensive investigation by the
Aston Villa club magazine Claret and Blue, and later the BBC, it was
agreed that Stait had been one of four unemployed men who had broken into the
shop through the roof before walking out the front door with the trophy. Little
good it did them financially as the four were double-crossed by their receiver who
only gave them ten shillings (50 pence) to share. Melted down, the cup
disappeared forever.
Sheffield
Wednesday played three League games before the Cup Final. They won two and lost
one. Fred Spiksley scored in the 3-0 defeat of Small Heath, his tenth League
goal. Wednesday finished seventh.
Wolves,
meanwhile, needed a 5-0 last-day defeat of Bolton Wanderers to avoid playing in
the test match series.
In a surprise
move the Wednesday directors departed from tradition by preparing the team for
the big game at home. Headquarters were established at the Earl of Arundel and
Surrey Hotel and training took place each morning at Olive Grove with the
ground open to anyone interested in seeing their heroes close up.
The Wednesday
party departed for London at 2.30pm on Friday 17 April 1896 with the train
stopping momentarily at Nottingham’s Midland Station to collect Fred Spiksley
and Jack Earp and complete the playing contingent of thirteen. Who, though,
were going to be the unlucky two not to make the final eleven?
After arriving
at St Pancras Station at 6.10pm the party journeyed across the capital to reach
the Queen’s Hotel, the name of which had been a close secret with everyone
under strict instructions not to divulge it.
After the
evening meal, Arthur Dickinson reported that the side would be announced in the
morning. The papers had been full of reports that if the Crystal Palace pitch
was firm and dry then Langley would play at left back. If the pitch conditions
were heavy, however, Dr Jim Jamieson would play at half back with Harry Brandon
moving to full back and Langley dropping out of the side.
Fred Spiksley
and Ambrose Langley, whom everyone knew better as Mick, shared a twin-bedded
room on the night before the big game. Fred had been left bemused by the press
reports.
Writing for
the Thompson Weekly News in 1920, Fred Spiksley said: “For a game of
this importance and stature, the team chosen should have been announced well in
advance to allow the eleven players selected sufficient time to prepare
mentally for the game ... I shared with Mick Langley, and neither of us had
more than two hours’ sleep. I was anxious for him. I kept getting out of bed,
going over to the bay window and looking out to see what was happening with the
weather ... this state of affairs continued throughout the night. Other players
were restless, not least Jim Jamieson, who had played in every Cup-tie that
season and yet faced the possibility of missing the final if it didn’t rain
heavily!’”
After
breakfast on the Saturday morning the players gathered in the hotel library to
discover their fates. Coach Bill Johnson had visited Crystal Palace and had
returned with his pitch report.
The team
selection up front was a surprise but the Wednesday selectors knew that Wolves
had some big strong players. Brash and Ferrier had performed brilliantly
throughout the season but both were small and so it was thought best to beef up
the right flank by using Brady in support of Brash. Davis was switched to inside
left to partner Spiksley on the left wing, with Bell at centre forward. In
defence Langley was selected with Jamieson missing out.
Spiksley opened the scoring
Wednesday:-
Massey, Earp
(captain), Langley, Brandon. Crawshaw, Petrie, Brash, Brady, Bell, Davis,
Spiksley
It was six years
since Wednesday had last played in the Cup Final and no-one from the 1890 match
represented the club in 1896. The 1890 side had included nine local lads. It
was a sign of how quickly football had changed following the development of
professionalism that in 1896 only Crawshaw was from the Sheffield area.
Wednesday were
the bookies favourites to win the 1896 Cup Final. But Wolves were not without
their backers.
As one of the
original twelve members of the Football League, Wolves had appointed tobacconist
John Addenbrooke as secretary/manager in August 1885 and he did the job until
June 1922. He was an exceptionally fine administrator and office worker as well
as possessing the ability to spot good footballers and recruit fine scouts.
Wolves:- Billy
Tennant, Dickie Baugh, Tommy Dunne, Hillary Griffiths, Billy Malpass, William
Owen, Jack Tonks, Charlie Henderson, Billy Beats, Harry Wood (captain), David
Black.
The eleven
included many local lads: Tennant, the only amateur in the side, Baugh, who had
played in Wolves’ first League match in 1888, Griffiths, Owen, Tonks, Wood and
Malpass. Baugh, Wood and Malpass had played in the 1893 final while Baugh and
Wood had also played in the 1889 final.
The
thirty-year-old amateur goalkeeper, Tennant, had quickly established himself as
a fans’ favourite after England international Billy Crispin Rose was injured.
Baugh was a
Wolves man through and through and played from 1886 to 1896. He was a fine
player with a tremendous appetite for hard work topped off with the ability to
head the ball powerfully to safety. Son, Richard junior, played for Wolves
after World War One. Tommy Dunne was a Scot who made 102 Wolves first team
appearances. He was a no-nonsense defender, a strong tackler and a good header
of the ball.
Right half
Hillary Griffiths was one of three brothers who played for Wolves. He made 201
first team appearances, scoring once. He and Fred Spiksley had frequently
tangled in earlier games. Centre half Billy Malpass had played superbly in the
1893 FA Cup final and during his Molineux career from 1891 to 1899 he made 155
League and FA Cup appearances, scoring nine times including goals against Notts
County, Stoke and Derby County in the 1896 FA Cup run. Billy Owen completed the
half back line. He was the tallest wolf in the pack at 6ft. In the 1895–96
season he played in every single League and FA Cup match. He did the same in
1896–97 and 1897–98.
Jack Tonks was
a dashing outside right and fine crosser of the ball. His goals had helped his
side overcome Stoke and Derby in the quarter and semi-final stages. Scotsman
Charlie Henderson was Tonks’s right flank partner in the 1895–96 season, his
only one with Wolves, during which he scored eleven goals in 36 League and Cup
appearances before signing for Sheffield United.
Billy Beats
was signed a year after he scored three for Port Vale when they beat Wolves in
the 1894 Staffordshire Cup final. He made 218 League and FA Cup appearances for
Wolves, his ability to run at defenders being supplemented by fine ball skills,
a delicate touch and a powerful shot. He spent seven seasons at Wolves during
which he scored 73 goals; he represented England twice.
Harry Wood
signed for Wolves in 1885 and made 289 Football League and FA Cup appearances,
scoring 126 goals. He was the scorer of Wolves’ first League hat-trick, against
Derby County, in 1888 when, with thirteen goals, he topped the season’s scoring
charts for his club. He repeated that feat in 1890–91, when he was equal with
Sam Thomson, 1892–93, 1894–95, 1895–96 and 1897–98, when he was equal with
Beats and Bill Smith. Wood played football with great skill and enthusiasm and
he won three England caps. He later signed for Southampton where he became a
big favourite at the Dell, scoring 65 goals in 180 games. He played in the 1900
and 1902 FA Cup finals where he completed a hat-trick of defeats and also won
four Southern League championship medals between 1899 and 1904. Like many
footballers, on retirement he took over the running of a pub, the Milton Arms
near Fratton Park, Portsmouth.
David Black
was a coalminer’s son who, after playing internationally for Scotland in 1889,
moved south to play professional football at Grimsby and Middlesbrough before
signing for Wolves for the start of the 1893–94 season. His tricky skills on
the Wolves left helped him score seventeen goals in 84 appearances.
In 1896 any
visitor to the Crystal Palace would quickly realise it was “The Home of the
English Cup Final” and the “Finest in the Kingdom”. For starters there was an unequalled
opportunity for sightseeing. The Crystal Palace was a gigantic glass building
constructed in Hyde Park to house the 1851 Great Exhibition that was a showcase
for Britain’s industrial and economic might.
In the summer
of 1851, six million visitors attended what was the first ever international
industrial fair. The building was then dismantled and re-erected in an enlarged
form at Sydenham in South London, its location a 200-acre park, being renamed
the Crystal Palace. Ornamental gardens, terraces and fountains were added, as
were two massive fountains. These were switched on for the first time on 18
June 1856 by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, the prince having co-organised
the Great Exhibition with Henry Cole.
A massive
blaze in 1936 burnt down the palace. The ruins still remain in the park along
with a couple of statues, some stairs and dinosaur sculptures from the 1840s.
In 1895 the FA
were desperate to return the English Cup final to London after the two previous
Lancashire finals. Kennington Oval was clearly too small for the big game and
so the FA approached the Crystal Palace company to see if they could assist. J
A H Catton was one of the FA council members who was placed on the
sub-committee to confer with the Crystal Palace. He claimed “There was nowhere
else to go, or so suitable, the arena was neutral as it was not used by any
club and was so situated that a massed multitude on the lawn and the rising
ground behind could obtain a view of the game”.
It was agreed
to create a new football field within the grounds and a vast area of the
parkland that previously formed the south basin of the water fountain was
turned into a massive arena extending to 25 acres of ground. The playing field
was laid out in an elipse shape with a cycle track installed.
The goal posts
were sited at the north and south ends of the ground and around the playing
field was a railed area called simply “The Ring”. Landscaped banking was
introduced to form a natural amphitheatre that could accommodate tens of
thousands of football fans in relative comfort with most having a reasonable
view of the pitch.
At the north
end there was an entrance and a standing area with the banking behind that
extending round the goal to the east side. The banking then rose rapidly upwards
to the tree line directly in front of a strong retaining fence. On the other
side of this fence was a switchback railway fairground attraction.
There is a
magnificent photograph, taken as the game kicked off in 1896. It shows the west
side, where John Aird and Sons built a pavilion and where ‘honoured guests’ sat
comfortably under cover and were guaranteed a great view when the captain of
the winning side received the FA Cup directly in front of them.
There were
6,000 additional seats in blocks of 3,000 in two multi-span stands on either
side of the pavilion, which contained provision for 100 members of the press.
On 20 April
1895, Aston Villa beat WBA to become the first winners of the FA Cup at the
Crystal Palace, when 42,560 fans watched the action. With football becoming
more popular a larger crowd of 48,836 witnessed the 1896 final.
The occasion
was nothing like as big as today’s major football matches in terms of its
coverage but there had been plenty in the newspapers in the days leading up to
it, including photographs and cartoon drawings of the players. The Sports newspaper
gave away photographs of both teams.
On the day
itself photographs of action on the pitch were taken. Some of these are
reproduced in this book.
Spiksley at the 1896 FA Cup final - this is one of the earliest action photos taken at an FA Cup final
Excursion
trains from Sheffield to Kings Cross and St Pancras railway stations started
leaving at 6.00am on 18 April 1896. Thousands of blue and white-dressed
Wednesday fans streamed south where they poured out of the stations and hopped
on to open-topped horse-drawn omnibuses travelling into central London.
Sheffield blue
merged with Wolves black and gold as all along the River Thames the big game
was the main topic of conversation. A feature of the journey across London was
the music of partisan Wednesday fans, singing songs in honour of their side. At
Sydenham Hill and Crystal Palace railway stations the fans disembarked and
after a short walk the multitude of Wednesday fans arrived at the gates.
It was barely
noon as fans poured into the ground. There were four hours to kick-off, plenty
of time to picnic and sightseeing opportunities to enjoy. Best not miss the
kick-off, though, as the previous season had seen the quickest goal ever scored
in an FA Cup final. It was timed at 30 seconds and is credited to Aston Villa’s
Bob Chatt although many Villa fans, and a certain Steve Bloomer, standing
behind the goal where it was scored, were adamant that their captain John Devey
had got the final touch.
By two o’clock
many fans were inside the ground and by 3 o’clock the people holding reserved
seat tickets were busy taking their places while right up to kick-off the crowd
continued to swell.
Wednesday and
Wolves walked out fifteen minutes before kick-off and while familiarising
themselves with the conditions the players also warmed up with exercises and
stretches to get themselves loose. The Wednesday XI were all fit, their
splendid conditioning undertaken by coach Bill Johnson and his faithful ally
John McReynolds to whom the players were indebted.
The weather
was fine and warm without even the slightest breeze. The referee, Lieutenant
Simpson, summoned the two captains to the centre spot. The toss was won by
Wolves captain Harry Wood who elected to defend the southern ‘Railway End’. In
truth the conditions meant there was no real advantage in winning the toss.
With the
referee allowing the teams time to settle into their formations, Fred Spiksley
glanced across at his ‘old friend’ Hillary Griffiths and saw he was taking up a
position a couple of feet across the whitewash. The Wednesday outside left
immediately knew his opponent would have a dodge or two up his sleeve and if he
was to make an impression then he needed to be at his best from the start. Fred
knew what to expect from Griffiths. Little trips and kicks at ankles and knees
were routine for Division One and especially at Molineux, which even then had a
reputation for being a difficult place to play as the crowd was so partisan.
However, Fred was feeling fit and more than ready to perform on what was the
biggest stage in football in 1896. He also had a point to prove as he had been
inexplicably left out of the England side that faced Scotland exactly two weeks
before.
Fred scores
what seems likely to be the quickest goal ever in an FA Cup final. (The
information which follows is taken from extensive research that can be found
at:- www. spiksley.com)
“Sheffield
scored in the first few seconds.”
The
Times – 20 April 1896
“Less than 20
seconds had passed”
Manchester
Guardian – 20 April 1896
At 4pm Lawrie
Bell started the game by passing to Brady who pushed the ball forward to
Spiksley out left with the winger moving the ball back infield to Crawshaw who
under pressure by the advancing Wolverhampton half backs sent the ball out of
play on the Wednesday right around 35 yards out from the Wolves goal. In what
proved to be Wolves’ only touch of the ball before it entered the net a hasty
throw saw Crawshaw regain possession before sending the ball forward on the
Wednesday right to Brash who beat his marker before reaching the goal line and
crossing to Davis who laid the ball off for Spiksley to beat Tennant from
around 25-30 yards out to make it 1-0.
Sadly, the
exact time of Fred Spiksley’s goal cannot be officially confirmed. No-one
thought to ask the referee afterwards if he had recorded it in his notebook and
there was no reason for him to do so as it was not common practice in 1896.
According to the former FA historian David Barber the FA do not have the
referee’s notebook and don’t know if it still exists. All this has allowed
Louis Saha to become known as the quickest FA Cup final goalscorer when his
effort for Everton against Chelsea in 2009 was recorded at 25 seconds.
However there
is more than ample evidence that the honour of the quickest FA Cup final goal
is Fred Spiksley’s. The Monday Sportsman reported the goal as follows:- “Few
will forget the dash with which the Wednesday went off, and the lightning goal
credited to Spiksley inside the first minute of the game had a great deal to do
with their ultimate victory.”
The same day’s
Manchester Guardian is more specific:-
“Less than 20
seconds had passed, when Wednesday scored the first point of the game. Archie
Brash on the outside right passed the ball into the path of Fred Spiksley who
scored with a powerful shot that Tennant in the Wolves goal was unable to
reach.”
“In about a
quarter of a minute Spiksley registered the first goal.”
Morning
Post (London)
of 20 April
“Sheffield
scored in the first few seconds.”
The
Times –
20 April
The following
newspapers reported that the goal had come within 30 seconds: Sheffield
Daily Telegraph, Nottinghamshire Guardian.
The following
newspapers all reported that the goal was scored in under a minute: Leicester
Chronicle, Pall Mall Gazette, Northern Echo, Derby Telegraph, London Standard,
Reynolds’ News, Glasgow Herald, Wrexham Advertiser, Liverpool Mercury,
Sportsman, Lincolnshire Chronicle, Buckinghamshire Advertiser, Lloyd’s Weekly,
Dundee Courier.
As the
Wednesday fans celebrated, a shell-shocked Wanderers side restarted the match.
Harry Davis, though, dispossessed Charlie Henderson and drove forward to hit a
shot that was deflected for a corner. This was taken by Fred Spiksley and only
just scrambled away by a panic-stricken Wolves defence.
When Wolves
made their first advance on four minutes Langley cleared to great South
Yorkshire cheers. On eight minutes the Molineux side had their first real
chance from a free kick awarded against Langley. Jack Tonks floated the ball
into the Wednesday six-yard box and when it bounced up kindly, David Black,
with his back to the goal hooked it over his head and towards the Wednesday
net. The hush in the crowd was ended when at the very last moment the ball
seemed to dip into the goal, Wolves had equalised thanks to a touch of skill and
good fortune. Massey, playing against his home town club, could only look on in
anguish as the black and gold ranks roared their approval at the
equaliser.
Four minutes
later a determined Petrie hit a fine shot that fizzed just over before Spiksley
beat Griffiths and bore down on Tennant’s goal; his shot was only just wide.
Wednesday, though, were determined to restore their lead. They did so on
eighteen minutes with what Fred Spiksley believed was the best goal he ever
scored.
Spiksley's second and the winning goal at the 1896 FA Cup final
The initial
movements were almost identical to those of the opening goal with the ball
being crossed into the centre from the right wing. Lawrie Bell then helped it
on into Spiksley’s path 35 yards out from Billy Tennant’s goal. This was five
yards further out than from where the Wednesday outside left had shot in the
first minute but those five yards were to prove crucial as he drove the ball
with great power. This time though he put spin on the ball and the crowd’s
initial groan meant most believed he had badly miscued his shot. Then when the
spin took hold the ball swung violently and at just three feet off the ground
smacked against the far right hand goalpost before entering the Wolves net.
So powerful
was the strike that when the ball hit the net it rebounded back on to the
field. Tennant was so confused that after he kicked it away he missed Billy
Beats restarting the game as the shocked crowd tried to work out exactly what
they had just witnessed.
Tennant then
kept his side in the match on 25 minutes by denying Brady with a fine stop but
with neither side able to wrestle control Wolves were happy to concede a number
of free kicks in their desire to prevent the quicker Wednesday forwards
grabbing a third. The side a goal up then adopted a neat passing style that
forced Wanderers on to the defensive. The interval arrived with Sheffield
Wednesday still leading 2-1.
The Black
Country side were again pushed back at the start of the second half as twice
Brady and Brash combined with Dunne and Baugh being forced to make last-ditch
tackles to prevent a Wednesday third. Spiksley, who had confused his opponents
by performing his back heel trick, was then upended from behind by Griffiths.
On 57 minutes
there were great cheers among the Wolves fans when Tommy Dunne drove a free
kick beyond Massey but these were soon stilled when it was realised that no one
had touched the ball. Griffiths then flattened Spiksley again before Langley
denied Tonks a shooting chance.
Pushing
forward, Wednesday should have doubled their lead but Bell failed to direct his
header from a Crawshaw free kick beyond Tennant from just yards out. The Wolves
’keeper then performed heroics when Spiksley put Davis through and the
Wednesday player was denied by Tennant’s outstretched fingers. As the game
entered the final quarter Wolves stepped up their efforts and for the first
time became the better side.
Massey needed
to rush out to deny a dashing Beats. The Wednesday ’keeper then made a fine
save from a Black hot shot that brought cheers from the increasingly anxious
Wednesday fans. From a corner Massey punched clear amid half a dozen Wolves
players all trying to clatter him. Wednesday were dropping ever deeper and from
a second corner there was the remarkable sight of Fred Spiksley making one of
the only half a dozen clearances he made during his entire career.
In
desperation, Earp, the Wednesday captain, then asked Crawshaw to drop back and,
as a foretaste of the general system of defence that was later perfected by
Herbert Chapman at Arsenal in the 1920s and 1930s, perform the role of a
stopper centre half.
With just ten
minutes remaining, the Wolves captain Harry Wood knew Wednesday were wilting
and he urged his defenders to hit the ball high into their opponents’ box. The
aerial bombardment did create the anticipated panic but Wolves might have done better to keep playing
the way they had been as the Wednesday defenders were exhausted. Hitting in
long balls allowed them to stay where they were and when the ball was cleared
the Wednesday forwards could hold it up and run down the clock, which is
exactly what Spiksley did when he used all his trickery to prevent Wolves
gaining possession.
However, on 89
minutes the goal Wolves craved was only denied by another great Massey save
before the Wednesday defenders began to literally throw themselves in front of
further attempts on their goal. The game finally ended when the ball was
cleared into midfield with the referee’s whistle bringing jubilation among the
Wednesday players, officials and fans.
Wednesday had
won the FA Cup.
Bell then
grabbed the match ball and later declared that it was destined to his home town
of Dumbarton, where it would remain for eternity. The current whereabouts of
the ball is unknown.
While Fred
Spiksley was having his hand ‘shook-off’, as reported in the Athletic News,
a bizarre story was unfolding in the centre of the Crystal Palace football
pitch. One player couldn’t understand what all the fuss was about. As the
players were walking off the pitch, Billy Tennant innocently enquired of Mick
Langley when the date for the replay was.
“Replay, old
chap, there won’t be any replay, we have won the English Cup by the odd goal in
three”.
Tennant was
adamant. “Get away, there were only two goals scored today.”
“Why, man
alive, where on earth were you when we scored our second goal?” enquired
Langley.
Years later,
Fred Spiksley wrote about this in his autobiography stating:
“I was lucky
to score the third and winning goal, hitting the ball with such force and spin
that when it hit the back of the net the ball catapulted back into the field of
play with Billy Tennant still wondering where the ball had vanished. Eventually
he turned round to see the ball lying on the ground in front of him. Believing
the ball was still in play Tennant leathered it down the ground, blissfully
unaware that Lieutenant Simpson had already awarded the goal. In his moments of
searching to see where the ball had gone Billy contrived to turn his back away
from the action and in consequence he missed seeing both the ball being
returned to the centre spot and Billy Beats taking the kick-off.”
At least
Tennant was given a medal. Wednesday’s unlucky reserve, Bob Ferrier, came
running over from the bench, where he had been watching the game, and
congratulated all the players and after shaking their hands he finished up by
tearfully saying; “You know I should have so liked to have had a medal.” Fred
later acknowledged that nobody who played in the final could possibly have
understood the true feelings of a fellow player such as Ferrier and Jim
Jamieson who had been left out in the cold. The sheer thrill of winning the FA
Cup and collecting a winner’s medal in this era is perhaps best illustrated by
Roy Massey, grandson of the Wednesday ’keeper. Interviewed for this book, he
recalled “My grandfather always wore his medal on his waistcoat.”
Roy played as
a forward for Rotherham United, Leyton Orient and Colchester United before undertaking
coaching roles at Colchester, Arsenal and Norwich and in mid 2019 was working
as a scout for the losing side in 1896, Wolverhampton Wanderers. Roy has had 50
years in football and is very proud of his grandfather, who lived to the ripe
old age of 91.
“I visited him
every Sunday to sit in front of the living room fire listening to his tales. He
told me in his first Wednesday game he had gone to catch the ball and was
knocked over the line with it in his hands by the centre forward. A goal was awarded
but the next time a similar situation arose he tipped the ball over the bar
before crouching down and flipping the forward over him and into the post where
he suffered a broken arm.”
“’Keepers are
a breed apart and to be a good one you have to be mentally tough but from
reading about him he was also very brave, handled the ball well, had good
reflexes and was physically strong. In terms of training I understand he did a
lot of shot-stopping with the players shooting at him. He was clearly a good player
but he made apparent to me that Crawshaw and Spiksley were the best players in
the team that won the FA Cup. He really admired both those players.
“He told me
there was, like in most dressing rooms, great comradeship between the players
and of how they were treated by Sheffielders like kings when they returned with
the FA Cup in 1896. He said it was a close game and he was proud he had made a
couple of good saves late on to keep Wednesday in the lead. At home games he
said that Wednesday often attracted big crowds who were rarely abusive like can
be the case today and who would be very happy if Wednesday won. When he finally
finished playing football until he retired he largely worked in the coal mines
around Mexborough.”
At the same
time that the Wednesday first team had been playing in the Cup Final the second
team had been at home against Barnsley St Peter’s. Four thousand Wednesday fans
shouted with joy when a telegram arrived on fifteen minutes with news their
side led 1-0 and there was further pleasure when the half-time score arrived.
When the game ended spectators assembled in one vast crowd in the main stand
and when the tinkle of a telephone bell was heard they could hardly hold their
breath.
At first there
was silent hush, ears straining for news and then there was a cry – “WE’VE WON
THE CUP!”
Two hundred
miles south, Lord Kinnaird, the FA president, surrounded by excited spectators,
presented the cup to Wednesday captain Jack Earp and he proudly lifted the
trophy high above his head. Tremendous cheers meant few could hear Kinnaird say
how delighted he was with the match and spirit in which it was played.
Lord Kinnaird
then presented the gold medals to all twenty-two players who played in the
final. These were memorable moments for the players before Jack Earp again
lifted up the FA Cup, bringing deafening cheers from the Wednesday supporters.
Arriving back
at the hotel, the FA Cup was placed proudly in the centre of the tea table.
Gleaming in the sunlight it looked magical and quite took the breath away.
John Holmes,
the Wednesday chairman, stood up to say a few words.
“Gentlemen I
have been hunting this Cup for the past twenty years, and whilst Mr. Dickinson
has been the huntsman, and his clever hard-working team, the hounds, there has
also been a tremendous number of members in the hunt who joined the chase with
a will, and yet experienced continual disappointment year after year, but they
still kept their courage, and in doing so were in at the kill at the Crystal
Palace at Sydenham this afternoon. In closing this part of my notes I must
refer to a great man connected with our great game. I refer of course to Mr
Arthur Dickinson, our financial club secretary, and I congratulate him upon the
success that has at last crowned his work”.
Arthur
Dickinson rose to his feet and replied; “Yes, I’m glad we’ve won it at last, as
I can now bow out in a blaze of glory.” This was clearly said tongue in cheek
as Dickinson continued serving Wednesday for many years.
When the
Wednesday players and officials caught the train home from St Pancras on Monday
afternoon they could not have anticipated the massive welcome they would
receive in Sheffield when they arrived at 5.28pm at Midland station. Other
football fans also wanted to catch a glimpse of the trophy and from Derby
onwards the numbers grew gradually with the Wednesday players holding it up to
carriage windows for people to see.
When the
doubled-headed locomotives finally steamed into Sheffield they were met by Fred
Spiksley, who had journeyed home independently. Travelling separately to games
and living and training in Gainsborough all helped to make Fred a bit of an
outsider. There was absolute chaos as the arrival platform was swamped with
thousands of fans all desperate to see the winning players and the FA Cup.
Inspector Bestwick’s Brass Band started belting out See the Conquering Heroes
but they had hardly got started when the crush of the crowd separated the
bandsmen from the conductor.
The Sheffield Wednesday side that won the 1896 FA Cup
The conquering
heroes were forced to retreat to the safety of their saloon carriage and it was
a further twenty minutes before the band could form up again and the players
could board a coach and horses waiting to take them on a parade around
Sheffield.
The large
crowds had spilled out on to the road as they sought to catch a glimpse of the
FA Cup, which for most of the time was held aloft by the player who had scored
the Wednesday goals at the Crystal Palace.
The sheer
numbers of people made it impossible to travel up Commercial Street and, to the
disappointment of everyone involved, the coach was forced to go straight to the
Royal Hotel where Councillor George Senior and Mr Arthur Nixon had arranged a
dinner for the honoured guests. The band by this time had long since
disintegrated.
Later that
evening the players visited the Empire Theatre where another enthusiastic
reception awaited them, especially when the FA Cup was displayed. The reformed
band managed to play a few tunes.
Four nights
later an official dinner was held at the Masonic Hotel. By this time, the
scorer of Wednesday’s two goals in the final had received a cheque from Will
Chatterton for £11. This concluded Fred’s football betting career, but, sadly,
not his addiction to gambling.
Fred and the
rest of the Wednesday players and directors also received a special jug from
Wednesday board member, the Earl of Wharncliffe, who was so delighted at
winning the FA Cup that he commissioned a number of jugs from Staffordshire
Pottery.
Comments
Post a Comment