History of Birmingham City F.C. (1875–1965)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

test match system; the following season promotion to the First Division was secured after a second-place finish and test match victory over Darwen. The club adopted the name Birmingham Football Club in 1905, and the following year moved into a new home, St Andrew's Ground. Matters on the field failed to live up to their surroundings. Birmingham were relegated in 1908, obliged to apply for re-election
two years later, and remained in the Second Division until after the First World War.

Under the

West Bromwich Albion. Though Birmingham remained in the top flight for 18 seasons, they struggled in the league, placing too much reliance on England goalkeeper Harry Hibbs
to make up for the lack of goals, Bradford excepted, at the other end. They were finally relegated in 1938–39, the last full season before the Football League was suspended for the duration of the Second World War.

The name Birmingham City F.C. was adopted in 1943. Under

".

Birmingham became the first English club side to take part in European competition when they played their first fixture in the inaugural

Aston Villa
, were pre-match favourites, but Birmingham raised their game and won 3–1 on aggregate to lift their first major trophy. By 1965, Merrick had been asked to resign, and after ten years in the top flight, Birmingham were back in the Second Division.

1875–92: The early years

In 1875, when members of the

Small Heath district, which became their home for the next 29 years.[1]

Ordnance Survey map showing football ground with housing to west and south and farmland to north and east
Muntz Street and surroundings in 1890

For the first thirteen years of their existence, there was no league football, so

Birmingham Football Association, were among the strongest in the country. Albion won easily, by four goals to nil, and the game was ended early after the losing supporters invaded the pitch and pelted the Albion goalkeeper with snowballs.[6]

As soon as payment of players over and above their actual out-of-pocket expenses was permitted by the Football Association for the first time, in 1885,[7] the Small Heath club turned professional.[1] The players did not receive a salary, but instead shared half the gate money.[8] Three years later, at the suggestion of Walter Hart, the president of the Birmingham FA who had once been the club's honorary secretary, it became the first football club to structure itself as a limited company with a board of directors,[9][10] under the name of The Small Heath Football Club Limited. The original company listed its objects as "to acquire a Football Club to play the game of Association Football and the doing all such other things as are incidental or conducive to the attainment of the above", set its nominal capital at £500, to be divided into ten-shilling shares, and its memorandum of association listed seven initial subscribers who between them took up 35 of the 1000 shares.[11] These included Hart, who became the first chairman of its board,[9] Alfred Jones, honorary secretary,[1] and William Starling.[11]

Sheffield Wednesday's offer of £200 to forfeit home advantage and play the match at Wednesday's Olive Grove ground; they lost.[17]

1892–1905: Small Heath in the Football League

The Football League decided to expand its membership for the

Birmingham Daily Post believed that "defeat would in all probability have meant the disbanding of the club", ambitions of promotion having sustained the committee's efforts throughout the season to raise enough funds to keep going.[26]

West Bromwich Albion.[22] The directors were criticised for failing to improve the team[30] and for their selection policy: making too many changes to the team from one game to the next, and playing men when they were unfit.[31][32] A draw from the final match of the season, at home to Sunderland, would have secured their First Division status for another year, but they lost, finished 15th of the 16 teams, and were relegated.[22] Following the relegation, Fred Wheldon, who had scored 116 goals from 175 matches in league and FA Cup,[33] left for League champions Aston Villa for a fee of £350, which was reported to be a national record.[34]

Small Heath were involved in two incidents during First Division matches that had lasting ramifications. After one of Everton's goals in a 4–4 draw in November 1894 was awarded despite having gone well wide, the referee believing it had passed through a hole in the net – William McGregor, former president of the League, suggested that it was the worst decision he had seen since goal-nets were introduced, and the scorer agreed that it was no goal[35] – the League issued an instruction to referees to examine the nets before each match in the future.[36] A year later, after their visit to Everton was abandoned after 37 minutes because of bad weather and the state of the pitch, a spectator took the host club to court claiming the return of his admission money. The case was decided in favour of the club, the judge ruling that the paying spectator is not entitled to a full 90 minutes' football, but only to that portion which can reasonably be completed within the rules of the game.[37]

Head and shoulders of a young clean-shaven white man with neatly trimmed hair. He is looking straight ahead, and is wearing a shirt wth a drawstring at the neck.
Walter Abbott, record-holder for goals in a season

Five seasons in the Second Division followed. Small Heath started 1896–97 badly but finished frustratingly well, in fourth position.[38] After coming sixth in 1898, they were only two points off the promotion positions with four matches of the 1898–99 season to play; they lost three, drew one, and finished eighth.[22] Walter Abbott set club records that still stand, of 34 league goals in a season and 42 in all competitions.[39] In 1899–1900, Small Heath were never out of the top four in the division but rarely in the top two, and finished third.[22] Both income and expenditure had doubled over the two First Division seasons.[25][28] The local press criticised the "penny wise and pound foolish" approach to the signing of players after relegation,[40] and the 1898–99 accounts illustrated an over-reliance on gate receipts: Woolwich Arsenal took £360 less on the gate, but their profit exceeded Small Heath's by nearly £3,000.[41] After an £875 loss the following season, the directors made it clear they could not continue funding a loss-making enterprise, and suggested that a reduction in players' wages was the only course of action.[42]

Two defeats at the end of the 1900–01 season deprived Small Heath of a second divisional title, but not of promotion as runners-up. They also reached the quarter-final of the FA Cup, losing to Aston Villa after a replay.[22] The board's decision to reject Villa's offer of "a big transfer fee and a benefit match in addition" for the services of centre-forward Bob McRoberts was vindicated when he top-scored with 17 goals.[43][44] Average attendances rose from 5,500 to 13,000 for 1901–02,[45] but finishing the season with a six-match unbeaten run was not enough to escape relegation. A fifth change of division in eleven seasons – they reached the top two places by mid-November 1902 and remained there for the rest of the campaign[22] – gained Small Heath the reputation of a yo-yo club.[46] This time, a late run proved enough to keep them in the division, in contrast to 1904–05 when they reached second place in mid-February, one point behind Everton, but lost six of the last ten games to finish seventh.[22]

1905–15: New name and new home

With William Adams as president and former player Harry Morris on the board, the club adopted a more enterprising approach.[46] An extraordinary general meeting in March 1905 heard a proposal that, Small Heath being the only major football club in the city[a] since Birmingham St George's had folded in 1892, the club should be renamed Birmingham City F.C. The shareholders were not in favour, though they were prepared to go as far as plain Birmingham Football Club.[46] That name was approved by the Football Association, after consulting the Birmingham F.A., and by the League,[48] and was formally adopted ahead of the 1905–06 season. It was still a step too far for some; one reporter referred to "the Small Heath club now masquerading as Birmingham",[46] and the Manchester Courier reported their assuming "the more pretentious name of Birmingham".[49]

The inadequacies of the Coventry Road ground, which was by then surrounded by tightly packed housing, were highlighted by events surrounding the February 1905 match with Aston Villa. The official attendance was given as 28,000,

St Andrew's Ground and a goalless draw with Middlesbrough.[51]

The Football Association used the ground for a semi-final of that season's FA Cup,[53] but Birmingham's play failed to live up to the new surroundings. They were relegated in 1907–08, prompting the resignation of Alf Jones, who had been secretary-manager since 1892. The second of Alex Watson's three seasons in charge ended with Birmingham bottom of the Second Division and having to apply for re-election to the league.[b] After Hart's address, in which he stressed the club's age and longstanding league membership and assured his audience that inexperienced directors to whom the team's present position could be attributed had retired in favour of men of experience, the meeting voted Birmingham back into the league as top of the poll.[55] Responsibility for team affairs passed to former player Bob McRoberts, who in 1911 became the club's first dedicated team manager.[56] Birmingham remained in the second tier for the five seasons before League football was suspended because of the First World War.[57]

1915–39: Birmingham in the First Division

West Ham United; he went on to set goalscoring records for the club of 267 goals, 249 in the league, was their leading scorer for twelve consecutive seasons from 1922 to 1933, and scored seven times in twelve appearances for England.[59] Off the field, the club bought the freehold of St Andrew's in 1921 for around £7,000.[60]

Birmingham finished 18th out of 22 in the first season back at the top level, but did not take part in the 1921–22 FA Cup. The club failed to submit the entry form in time to be granted exemption from qualifying, and the Football Association refused to bend the rules in their favour. Although that decision did not preclude their entering the competition in the qualifying rounds, the directors chose not to do so.[61] In 1922–23, the team set an unwanted record sequence of eight league defeats, since equalled but as of 2015 not beaten.[23] Off the field, the club made a £13,000 saving on wages and general expenses to end the season with a profit of £3,000.[62]

This had been Richards' last season as secretary-manager. He was succeeded by Billy Beer, who had played 250 matches for the club in the 1900s. He led the team to three mid-table finishes before, in early 1927, a boardroom dispute over transfer policy came to a head. Writing in the Sports Argus, the pseudonymous "Argus Junior" described one faction as "anxious to secure talent at almost any price" and the other "desirous with 'going slow' as its motto", and believed that "the former are now in the ascendancy and that they mean business".[63] Three directors resigned,[63] followed a few days later by Beer,[64] who had reportedly found it impossible to work with some members of the board.[65] Over the next few months, further departures included secretary Sam Richards, former player Billy Harvey, who had acted as team manager, and the long-serving Womack,[66] who made his Birmingham debut in 1908 and set club appearance records of 491 league games, a record which as of 2015 still stands, and 515 games in senior competition, since overtaken by Gil Merrick.[67] The Argus suggested a better course of action and "the clear duty of the present board [would be] to resign and test the feelings of the shareholders".[66]

Instead, it appointed former Arsenal manager

West Bromwich Albion were heading for promotion from the Second Division, youthful and full of confidence.[69] Bradford had played only once since the semi-final and declared himself fit on the morning of the match.[70] Birmingham had a goal disallowed early on, then fell behind; the clearly unfit Bradford was able to equalise, but W. G. Richardson went upfield straight from the kickoff and scored his side's winner.[69] Knighton's team finished in the top half of the division in 1932, and he signed a contract extension, but when Chelsea made him an offer he could not refuse, he left, to be replaced by George Liddell, recently retired from playing.[71]

Birmingham remained in the top flight for 18 seasons in all, but most of them were spent in the bottom half of the table.[22] Consistency of selection played a part in the 1920s; six – Womack, Bradford, Crosbie, Dan Tremelling, Percy Barton and Liddell – of the as of 2010 fifteen men with more than 300 league appearances for the club played most of their matches in that decade.[67] Much reliance was placed on Tremelling and then on England goalkeeper Harry Hibbs to make up for the lack of goals, Bradford excepted, at the other end.[72] Under Liddell's management, the makeup of the side never settled. He used 70 players over his six seasons in charge (in contrast to the 55 used in the first six First Division seasons in the 1920s[73]), and after narrowly avoiding relegation three times in 1934, 1935 and 1938, Birmingham were finally relegated in 1938–39, the last full season before the Second World War.[71] The club's record attendance of 67,341 was set that season, in the fifth round of the FA Cup against Everton.[45]

1939–65: Birmingham City and post-war success

When war was declared in September 1939, the government banned public gatherings until safety implications could be assessed.

goal average – the 1945–46 Football League North and South included teams from the pre-war First and Second Divisions, and were an interim step between the highly regionalised and mixed-ability wartime leagues and the Football League itself, which restarted in 1946–47 – and reached the semi-final of the first post-war FA Cup.[80] Two years later they won their third Second Division title, conceding only 24 goals in the 42-game season.[81]

Birmingham's sixth position in their first season back in the First Division remains their highest league finish. They also reached their second

outside left Alex Govan blamed the absence of the "utterly ruthless"[85] Roy Warhurst through injury and a poor choice of replacement.[86] It was during this FA Cup campaign, in which all Birmingham's games had been away from home, that Harry Lauder's "Keep right on to the end of the road" was adopted as the fans' anthem.[87] The following season the club lost in the FA Cup semi-final for the third time since the war, beaten 2–0 by Manchester United's "Busby Babes
".

For the inaugural edition of the

Roma 4–2 on aggregate.[89]

In February 1958, three days after Birmingham lost 8–0 at

Preston North End, former Bristol City manager Pat Beasley joined the club. He was expected to be Turner's assistant, but chairman Harry Morris Jr. announced his appointment as joint manager, that Turner had recommended him, and that secretary Walter Adams was also to have input into team matters. At the time, Turner was quoted as being happy with the arrangement,[90] but was later reported to have only found out about it from the press and to have needed persuading not to resign.[91] The experiment did not work. Turner and the board found themselves at odds over aspects of managerial policy,[92] the players unsure as to who was in charge.[93] With the team lying 21st after a 6–0 defeat against West Bromwich Albion, Turner quit in September 1958. Beasley was named acting manager, and would have to submit his team selections to the board for discussion, though not for alteration: Morris insisted that "The manager and not the directors will pick the team as long as I am chairman."[94] He led the team to a 9th-place finish.[22]

Towards the end of the season, two weeks after playing in a match at Portsmouth, Birmingham full-back Jeff Hall died of polio. The realisation that a young, fit, England footballer could die of a preventable disease sparked a massive rise in demand for vaccination,[95] and a memorial fund launched in his name by the club and local newspapers endowed a research fellowship in the University of Birmingham's Department of Medicine.[96]

two legs on the grounds of the competing clubs. Opponents Aston Villa were pre-match favourites, having beaten Birmingham 4–0 in their most recent league meeting. But in the home leg Birmingham "served up a treat of attacking football ... controlling the game with such assurance that their supporters must have wondered why the team had performed so badly in the First Division",[99] and came out comfortable 3–1 winners, with two goals from Ken Leek and one from Jimmy Bloomfield. Under the captaincy of Trevor Smith, a solid defensive performance in a goalless draw saw Birmingham lift the trophy at the home of their local rivals.[99][100] After the fourth consecutive bottom-six finish – they won the last two matches of 1963–64 to escape relegation – the board felt a "complete reorganisation" of the club was necessary, and asked Merrick to resign.[101] He complied, but thought he had been ill-treated, and had nothing more to do with the club for more than thirty years.[97][102] In 1964–65, Birmingham finished seven points away from safety and returned to the Second Division.[22]

Notes

  1. ^ Aston Villa F.C. was based in the municipal borough of Aston Manor, which was not absorbed into the county borough of Birmingham until 1911.[47]
  2. the Football League were obliged to apply for re-election to the league, in competition with applicants from non-League football. Full member clubs of the Football League (the top two divisions) were eligible to vote, together with delegates representing the associate member clubs (lower divisions).[54]
  3. ^ The London XI, including players from several London clubs, were the first English team to play in European competition when they played their first match in the inaugural Fairs Cup in 1955, and the first English team to reach a final, in the same campaign.[89]

Bibliography

  • Inglis, Simon (1988). League Football and the men who made it. London: CollinsWillow. .
  • Lewis, Peter, ed. (2000). Keeping right on since 1875. The Official History of Birmingham City Football Club. Lytham: Arrow. .
  • Matthews, Tony (1995). Birmingham City: A Complete Record. Derby: Breedon Books. .
  • Matthews, Tony (2010). Birmingham City: The Complete Record. Derby: Derby Books. .
  • Matthews, Tony (2000). The Encyclopedia of Birmingham City Football Club 1875–2000. Cradley Heath: Britespot. .

References

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  2. ^ Matthews. Encyclopedia. p. 8.
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  7. ^ "1883 – Northerners: Part 16 of the History of Football". 11v11.com. AFS Enterprises. Archived from the original on 15 June 2006.
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  15. ^ Cover-point (14 May 1889). "Cricket & Football Notes". Sheffield & Rotherham Independent. p. 8 – via British Newspaper Archive. The rejected applicants for admission to the Football League did not lose much time in making other arrangements, which have resulted in the formation of another league under the title of the Football Alliance. This entirely destroys the badly managed Football Combination of last season, and also seriously interferes with the proposed organisation of the Northern and Midland Counties Leagues.
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  30. ^ Centre-Forward (14 October 1895). "Football Notes". Sheffield & Rotherham Independent. p. 7 – via British Newspaper Archive. People in Birmingham are blaming the Small Heath directors for not strengthening their team. ... Despite this the executive will not have a Scotchman though possibly their weak spot – at half-back – might therefore be remedied. Their patriotism is more to be commended than their judgment.
  31. ^ Centre-Forward (10 February 1896). "Facts and Fancies". Sheffield & Rotherham Independent. p. 9 – via British Newspaper Archive. While the majority of the players have fallen far short of expectation, it is not clear that the team has been managed to the best advantage. No fewer than four centre forwards have been played in a month, which is hardly likely to give any one of them a fair chance, while at least one man took part in Saturday's game who was quite out of condition, and not fit to take part in any match of importance.
  32. ^ "Serious outlook for Midland clubs". The Sportsman, quoted in "The position of Midland League clubs". Derby Mercury. 5 February 1896. p. 7 – via British Newspaper Archive. When this club obtained its position in the First League last season the committee had a splendid chance of obtaining big "gates" and doing well. But the chances were thrown away. They were afraid to speculate ... and went on with the old team last season, and they delayed enterprise this year until too late.
  33. ^ Matthews (2010). Complete Record. pp. 224–37.
  34. ^ Centre-Forward (29 June 1896). "Facts and Fancies". Sheffield & Rotherham Independent. p. 11 – via British Newspaper Archive. Speculation has been rife in football circles as to the price paid by Aston Villa for the transfer of Wheldon, the Small Heath inside left. It turns out that the terms are higher than have ever been concluded, it being officially stated at the annual meeting of the Small Heath club in Birmingham on Friday evening that the sum guaranteed was £350, with a prospect of a still further amount conditional on the proceeds of a match to be played in the autumn. Aston Villa are also paying Wheldon a big salary for his services.
  35. ^ "Notes on Sport". Birmingham Daily Post. 5 November 1894. p. 7 – via British Newspaper Archive.
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  54. .
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  59. ^ Matthews. Encyclopedia. p. 74.
  60. ^ Matthews. Encyclopedia. p. 87.
  61. ^ Matthews (1995). Complete Record. p. 164.
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  69. ^ a b "The Cup victory of West Bromwich, a triumph of youth". The Times. 27 April 1931. p. 5. The victory of West Bromwich Albion was the victory of youthful enthusiasm and confidence. ... Birmingham took the chance of playing Bradford, their centre-forward, after many weeks' absence from football through an injury to his knee. It is probable that, if they had another centre-forward available, they would not have taken the chance. It was evident almost in the first minute of the game that he was not himself. He had a slight limp at times. He could not trust himself too far and he did not go in for the ball as he would have done if he had been wholly fit.
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  75. ^ .
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  79. ^ Matthews. Encyclopedia. p. 55. "City was added to Birmingham (to make Birmingham City Football Club) in the summer of 1943 (and not 1945 as previously thought). The official Blues home programmes for the 1943–44 season clearly show Birmingham City Football Club on the front cover."
  80. .
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  82. ^ Matthews, Complete Record, p. 61.
  83. ^ Matthews, Complete Record, pp. 25–27.
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    Lewis (ed.) Keeping Right On. p. 63. "... if Badham had been in we would have won that game. He would never have given Don Revie the room to run the match."
  87. ^ "Club anthem". Birmingham City F.C. Archived from the original on 14 February 2020. Retrieved 26 June 2017.
  88. . At this time there seemed a general lack of ambition at Villa Park. The club were slow to install floodlights, they turned down the chance of combining with Blues to field a 'Birmingham' team for the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup...
  89. ^ a b Ross, James M. (13 July 2006). "European Cups Archive". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF). Retrieved 27 July 2007.
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  91. ^ Matthews (1995). Complete Record. p. 62.
  92. ^ Williams, Alan (6 September 1958). "Arthur Turner quits Birmingham City". Daily Express. London. p. 10. They bitterly resented his failure to rebuild when the 1955 promotion and 1956 Wembley side started to fade. They were exasperated by his decision regarding the signing of a class inside forward the club has needed so badly for two years. They ridiculed his overenthusiastic assessment of young players he thought would be ready for the First Division last season. They complained that he had not enough faith in modern coaching methods.
  93. ^ Williams, Alan (25 February 1958). "Crisis club snubs Eddy Brown". Daily Express. London. p. 12. I came out of the office more perplexed than I went in. One manager shifted the blame on to the board. The other just looked embarrassed and said nothing, absolutely nothing. Now surely it is up to the board to explain. All I want to know is why I am left out.
  94. ^ Hall, Ross (6 September 1958). "Turner resigns as Birmingham boss". Daily Mirror. London. p. 13. Mr. Morris then added, 'He will have to submit his teams to the Board for discussion. But they will not alter them. The manager and not the directors will pick the team as long as I am chairman.'
  95. ^ Varma, Anuji (24 June 2009). "Tragic Birmingham City star Jeff Hall inspired polio fight". Birmingham Mail. Retrieved 20 December 2015.
    "The moment that could save her life". Daily Express. London. 21 April 1959. p. 5. If you happened to pass a health clinic yesterday, or on any day since April 4, you would have seen a queue—a big one—of mothers and children, teenagers and young people at work, waiting for polio inoculations. Why since April 4? Because that was the day that Jeff Hall, the Birmingham and England full-back, died of the disease. Before that there were few queues. Polio injections had been made available to more than 6,000,000 youngsters between 15 and 26, and many appeals were made to them to take advantage of it. But by the end of February only one in 12 of them had paid attention to the warning. Jeff Hall's death changed all that.
  96. ^ "Poliomyelitis research fellowship". The Times. London. 14 November 1959. p. 8.
  97. ^ a b "Gil Merrick: England goalkeeper unfairly blamed for the heavy defeats against Hungary in 1953 and 1954". The Independent. London. 6 February 2010. Retrieved 20 December 2015. Merrick's reward, however, was the sack, delivered abruptly in the spring of 1964, a decision which left him heartbroken as he believed he had laid the foundations for a successful future.
  98. ^ Matthews, Complete Record, pp. 29–31.
  99. ^ a b Jawad, Hyder (2006). Strange Magic. Birmingham City v Aston Villa. Birmingham Post. pp. 27–28.
  100. ^ Ponting, Ivan (15 September 2003). "Obituary: Trevor Smith". The Independent. London. Retrieved 12 December 2015. Smith was an inspirational figure in both legs of their League Cup victory over local rivals Aston Villa in 1963, especially in the goalless second game at Villa Park, when his tight marking of the combative Bobby Thomson was a crucial factor in the Blues maintaining their 3–1 advantage from the opening encounter.
  101. ^ "Birmingham City ask Merrick to resign". The Guardian. 29 April 1964. p. 16. Yesterday Mr W. Adams, the secretary of Birmingham City, issued the following statement: 'Mr Gil Merrick met the board this morning who notified him that changes and complete reorganisation of the club were to take place, and asked him to resign. To this Mr Merrick agreed.'
  102. ^ "Gil Merrick". The Daily Telegraph. London. 5 February 2010. Retrieved 20 December 2015. For 36 years he did not set foot in St Andrew's, but in later years he returned to the fold; and in 2009 the club renamed the ground's Railway End Stand after Gil Merrick.

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