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Author Archives: MD

Women’s football after the Great War

Posted on May 4, 2015 by MD Posted in Uncategorized .

WW1: Why was women’s football banned in 1921

Dick. Kerr Ladies
The Dick, Kerr Ladies became international stars

Women’s football was huge during World War One, drawing crowds of 53,000 even after the war had ended. So why did it disappear so dramatically, asks Gemma Fay, captain of the Scottish national female football team.

She had a shot so hard she once broke the arm of a professional male goalkeeper. She also earned the distinction of being the first woman to be sent off in an official football match for fighting.

At 6ft tall (1.83m), Lily Parr was remarkable in many ways. She scored more than 1,000 goals during her 31-year-playing career, according to the National Football Museum. Of those, 34 were in her first season when she was aged just 14.

Her team were exceptional too. The Dick, Kerr Ladies were made up of 11 factory workers from Preston. They went on to become international celebrities and the biggest draw in world football. They remain the most successful women’s team of all time, says the the museum.

But these were also exceptional times. WW1 was being fought and any man fit enough to play football had been sent to fight on the front line. Back home women not only took on their jobs, they also took their places on the football field.

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A Christmas kickabout?

German soldiers
  • iWonder: What really happened in the Christmas truce of 1914?
  • iWonder: What was the Footballers’ Battalion?
  • Footballers United: Watch the BBC’s online WW1 drama
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Women’s football was already established but up until WW1 it hadn’t been well received. This all changed when the Football League suspended all of its matches at the end of the 1914-15 season.

As a generation of young men signed up to serve king and country, so too did the women who were left behind. They answered the call, with hundreds of thousands taking on traditional male roles previously considered too dangerous for women – the most familiar image of these was the munitions factory girl.

Lily Parr
Lily Parr started playing football with her brothers

The female workers converged upon the various factories that sprang up across the country, forming strong friendships on the factory floor that spilled over on to the playing fields on their breaks.

Informal kickabouts became a popular pastime for the women and this was not missed by factory management. An activity that was previously considered unsuitable for the delicate female frame was heartily encouraged as good for health, well-being and moral.

As the war progressed, the women’s game became more formalised, with football teams emerging from the munitions factories. Initially, the novelty of women playing football was used to raise money for war charities, with crowds flocking to see the so-called munitionettes take on teams of injured soldiers and women from other factories.

As more teams cropped up, people started to enjoy the matches for the skill and ability of the women, rather than the initial humorous spectacle. Games were still used to raise money for charities.

The Munitionettes’ Cup was established in August 1917, with the first winners Blyth Spartans beating Bolckow Vaughan of Middlesbrough 5-0. Star striker Bella Reay scored a hat-trick to add to her 130 other goals that season.

Their love of the game was such that on one occasion Blyth winger Jennie Morgan is said to have gone straight from her wedding to play in a match – she scored twice.

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Football at home during WW1

Government Rolling Mills Ladies
  • Blyth Spartans Ladies, the football team that were never beaten
  • The women’s Christmas Day match that thousands came to see
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The most famous of these teams was Dick, Kerr Ladies FC from Preston. Founded in 1917, their first match drew a crowd of 10,000 people. By 1920, a Boxing Day match against St Helen’s Ladies was watched by 53,000 spectators at Goodison Park, with another 14,000 locked outside the ground trying to get in.

With the war now over, a nation devastated by the loss of so many attempted to put itself back together. One by one, the factories closed and women who had been galvanised and liberated during wartime, found themselves being quietly shunted back into domestic life, returned to their “right and proper place” in society.

Football was no longer a health benefit – it was now seen by top physicians, such as Dr Mary Scharlieb of Harley Street, as the “most unsuitable game, too much for a woman’s physical frame”.

Bella Reay
Bella Reay was an international star

Despite these warnings, the Dick, Kerr Ladies were still the leading team in Britain. Their popularity reached its height in 1921, with big crowds wanting to see them play. However, this “golden era” of women’s football was to be short-lived.

On 5 December 1921 the FA cited strong opinions about football’s unsuitability for females. It called on clubs belonging to the associations “to refuse the use of their grounds for such matches”. The ban changed the course of the women’s game forever.

Despite this a few female teams continued for a while. In 1937 the Dick, Kerr Ladies played Edinburgh City Girls in the Championship of Great Britain and the World, winning 5-1. Lily Parr became one of the greatest scorers in English history, netting more than 1,000 goals during a 31-year career. However, the women’s game soon became overshadowed by the return and growth of the male game.

In 1971 the FA finally lifted the ban on women’s football. In the same year UEFA recommended the women’s game should be taken under the control of the national associations in each country. This move signalled the start of a female football revival, not only in Britain but across Europe and the rest of the world.

The first official European Championship was held in Sweden in 1984 with the inaugural World Cup taking place in 1991. Fast forward to now and women’s football is a global phenomenon. At the 2012 Olympic Final at Wembley Stadium between the USA and Japan, a record-breaking crowd of over 83,000 was in attendance.

The astounding fact is that only now, nearly 100 years later, are women attracting the crowds and attention experienced by their predecessors. These pioneering women not only managed to achieve phenomenal success and recognition, but they did it at a time when it would have seemed nigh on impossible. They defied society, changed the mindset of a nation and took women’s football to unprecedented new heights, all within a couple of years.

Llanelli Women's team
During WW1 female matches raised money for charities

I have huge adoration and respect for the footballing women of WW1, but also a pang of jealousy and frustration. Having been involved in women’s football in this country for nearly 18 years, I have never experienced the level of public interest and support they did. The stories of their struggles in the post-war era, however, bears a resemblance to my early years in the sport. There were frustrations which can unfortunately still be felt in some quarters today.

With the England women’s team securing its biggest crowd at Wembley of 40,181 in a recent friendly against Germany, it has taken the current generation nearly 43 years to achieve something remotely close to their success.

And what of Lily Parr? Her achievements were finally recognised in 2002, when she became the first woman to inducted into the Football Hall of Fame at the National Football Museum in Preston, 24 years after her death.

Discover more about the World War One Centenary.

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Thamesview School

Posted on April 17, 2015 by MD Posted in Uncategorized .

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Left, Mr Brennan, Peace Fields Project Director presenting the Peace Field Poppy Ball to Mr Ingham, Thamesview School, Head Teacher.

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Oasis Academy Isle of Sheppey

Posted on April 17, 2015 by MD Posted in Uncategorized .

PFP Wing Fields design choice_W300_H124IOSA_logo_150

IOSA_JohnCavadino_PaulMurray_NathanSpocchia_poppyball-w300_h124

L to R, Mr Cavadino, Principal, and Mr Murray, Community Officer, holding the Peace Field Poppy Ball, Mr Spocchia, Oasis Academy PFP Project Manager.

Oasis Academy kicked off their Peace Field Project last week with a work shop facilitated by NCFA and Kent Libraries.  A video of the school commemorating the First World War was uploaded to help inspire other schools Peace Fields Projects in their cross curricular work.

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Herne Bay High School

Posted on April 16, 2015 by MD Posted in Uncategorized .

PFP Wing Fields design choice_W300_H124

 

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Chris Gregory & Ernie Brennan with PFP Poppy football_w300_h185

Left, Mr Gregory, Herne Bay High School’s PFP Project Manager and right, Mr Brennan PFP Director with the Peace Field Poppy Ball.

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Abbey School

Posted on April 13, 2015 by MD Posted in Uncategorized .

PFP Wing Fields design choice_W300_H124

 

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L to R; Mr Finlan (Deputy Head), Mrs Woodend (Head Teacher) and Mr Long Abbey School PFP Project Manager

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Pent Valley Tech College

Posted on December 18, 2014 by MD Posted in Uncategorized .

PFP Wing Fields design choice_W300_H124

Pent Valley Technology College Logo

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L-R. Mr Layland, Senior Leadership Team, Mr Reygate, Head of PE, Pent Valley, PFP Project Manager with the Peace Fields Poppy Ball.

Kent and Flemish Schools remember WW1 Christmas Truces through football.

FR Folkestone Girls Match_w400_h200Students from Pent Valley Technology College in Folkestone and Thamesview School in Gravesend were joined by Middle School and Provincial Technical Institute from Ypres in Belgium, they played football matches to mark the centenary of the games that took place during the World War 1 Christmas Truces – in a project backed by Prince William.

The match was part of the Football Remembers project from the British Council, The FA, the Football League and the Premier League – which will see every level of football mark the anniversary in a week of commemoration.

Over 70 Students from across the four schools participated in a number of learning activities together related to the Christmas Truce before playing a football tournament which commenced after the Last Post which was played by one of the students before kick off.  The schools are currently working together in a European Funded Comenius Regio project EASIER – Facing the Great War where the students from the two countries are researching their shared history of the Great War.

Belguim pupils with BFHB_w300_h200

Belgium pupils with their mementos from a special event

At the end of the matches all participants received medals and the students exchanged gifts, in the spirit of the Christmas Truce.  Jim Cadman, author of The Black Football Heritage Book, in partnership with The National Children’s Football Alliance, donated a copy of the Heritage Lottery Funded book to each participant.  The book features one of Folkestone’s First World War heroes Walter Daniel John Tull who was the first ever black outfield player to play professional league football.  During the First World War, he served in the Middlesex Regiment and fought at the Battle of the Somme in 1916.  He was commissioned a Second Lieutenant on 30th May, 1917.  Tull was commended for his gallantry and coolness whilst fighting in Italy leading 26 men on a raiding party in enemy territory.  He was killed in action on 25th March 1918.  Each school also received a One World Peace Field Poppy Ball as a memento of the centenary event.

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The One World Flanders Peace Field Poppy Ball that kicked off the first of many events to commemorate WW1 and celebrate peace.

The schools marked the occasion by tweeting a photo of the two teams standing together with the hashtag #FootballRemembers and the name and location of the school. Their image will be featured on a special website – www.footballremembers.com – where it will sit alongside photos from teams across the country, including some of football’s biggest names. The website will be a permanent tribute to the soldiers who laid down their arms on Christmas Day 1914.

Handshake_w300_h220The students have been learning about the Christmas Truce with the help of a Football Remembers education pack, which more than 30,000 schools across the UK received in May. It includes resources to help children learn about the Truce – including eye-witness accounts, photos, drawings and letters from soldiers some of which have never been published before.

HRH The Duke of Cambridge – President of The FA – said: “We all grew up with the story of soldiers from both sides putting down their arms on Christmas Day, and it remains wholly relevant today as a message of hope over adversity, even in the bleakest of times.”

Vicky Gough, Schools Adviser at the British Council, said: “The impromptu games of football that happened along the Western Front 100 years ago are an incredible example of how people-to-people connections can triumph in the midst of a global conflict. It’s a powerful lesson for all our children.”

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Global Peace Games Camp Fire

Posted on December 7, 2014 by MD Posted in Uncategorized .

Post by Flanders Peace Field.
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Global Peace Games Press Release

Posted on September 15, 2014 by MD Posted in Uncategorized .

Global Peace Games NCFA (G) PRESS RELEASE

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Prime Minister supports Football & Peace Projects

Posted on August 9, 2014 by MD Posted in News .
Ernie Brennan with Prime Minister David Cameron 01 07 14_280_200

Ernie Brennan (left) meets Prime Minister David Cameron at number 10 Downing Street’s Centenary Reception

The NCFA’s Director, Ernie Brennan talks about meeting the Prime Minister and visiting 10 Downing Street to discuss the Peace Fields Project.  Funded by the National Heritage Lottery Fund, the Football & Peace Pilot Project was considered a success with partners, participants and the government.  The Peace Fields Project continues the good work and invites schools and sports clubs to twin there areas of play with Flanders Peace Field.

Interview by Paul Cooper (PC) with Ernie Brennan (EB)

PC.  So how did the invite come about?

EB.  The Football & Peace Project profile hit the roof in terms of enquiries when Andrew Murrison, MP, featured on the NCFA website.  The Government have been helpful for organisations like the NCFA seeking to commemorate WW1 at grass roots community level.  NCFA’s work chimed with Helen Grant, Sports Minister, who very kindly found the time to attend the Football & Peace Day Celebration at Maidstone United Football Club’s Gallagher Stadium, last May.  Over the last couple of years NCFA have been in the position to lobby the custodians for support commemorating WW1.  The predictable lip service from the business world of football that followed was recognised by numerous organisations, MPs, councillors and education.  A body of support who value the Football & Peace Projects and the Peace Fields Projects, wanted the community programmes to work in a way that wasn’t selling football as a product.  The Christmas Truces thankfully lacked Fifa rules and Skye television.  Also a number of national newspapers referenced our work – in answer to your question; the Government clearly get it, the Press clearly get it, the public clearly get it- I think that is why NCFA’s work led to the WW1 Centenary Reception invite to number 10.

PC.  Looking back to the early days of the NCFA it would have seemed incomprehensible that one day you would be knocking on the most famous door in the world. Do you think that reflects how far the NCFA have come over the years?

EB. I never doubted the need for a Children’s Football Alliance, neither did the stakeholders, Brunel University, Leicester University and University of Gloucester.  NCFA core members are the salt of the Earth when it comes to the aims of the organisation.  I was indeed pleased that the Government invited the NCFA to talk about our work and support the WW1 commemorations at a community level, which I feel recognises the importance of every community that had no choice 100 years ago.  I think it is a testament to how far the NCFA have travelled over the years – if the Government are listening, then one hopes the sport you wish to make better is listening too!

PC.  Did you get to speak to the pm and if so what about?

EB.  I did manage to speak to the PM about the Peace Fields Project and how NCFA are seeking to twin designated areas of school playing fields with Flanders Peace Field through the Peace Village, Messines, Belgium.  We briefly discussed the importance of sports at community level engaging in the WW1 centenary commemorations.  I stressed that memorials to peace inspired by the Christmas Truces were just as important to memorials of war.  As you can imagine the PM’s time is a little like the BBC’s, every second is monitored, recorded and stop watched.

PC. It appears that the NCFA are filling a void and that politicians recognise this. What is you take on this?

EB.  In my opinion it is almost ironic that politicians recognise the NCFA on level that chimes with their ‘Big Society’ and yet, sport, particularly football, can be considered by the general public a law onto themselves.  Football is now a constant battle of the brands – it is tiresome – many people see through the marketing agendas; I think the Piece Fields Project will remind people that there is a lot more to football than brands and win at all costs, the Project lends itself to the essence of play.  Children that took part in the Football & Peace Projects re-evaluated how they felt about the modern day football machine. They considered a space, time and place, where the Christmas Truces in 1914 were humanitarian acts provided moments of hope in a world of chaos.  Allies and Germans played games just like they did in their childhood to escape reality.  With that thought in mind maybe some politicians are human after all?

 PC. What other organisations were at the function?

EB.  The great and the good from community projects.  There was a wide variety of organisations many from the education sector.  The most impressive person I met was Neil Beddow artistic director from Acta Community Theatre who have recently been performing ‘Gas Girls’ which has been receiving critical acclaim in the West Country for their performances.  The reception was peppered with celebs which I guess is a necessary tick in a box.

PC. How will attending such a function help the NCFA?

EB.  It will raise the NCFA profile which will lead to bolstering a growing network in the third sector (charities) for children’s football.  Hits on the NCFA website continue to rise with more child focused organisations recognising the value of partnership work.  Attending functions hosted by high profile people is an expected part of the course for further legitimisation.   I don’t mean to sound cynical here but I find the whole process a learning curve and frustratingly slow.

PC. To finish off can you describe what it was like to put on a suit and tie. Also please tell me they had cocktail sausages and cheese footballs in the buffet at Number 10!

EB.  On a lighter note; my old man once said to me that, ‘you have to earn the right not to wear a suit’.  So, I expect I will be wearing a suit like a straight jacket for the rest of my life. Regards the cocktail sausages and cheese footballs, unfortunately, they missed a trick because there were lots of school children on the premises.  If fact, number 10 Downing Street has got the perfect garden for jumpers for goal posts.  It did cross my mind to challenge the government to a quick game of footy but I feared the neighbours might have kicked up a fuss!

For more information click on the Peace Fields Projects

 

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Germany

Posted on August 9, 2014 by MD Posted in International .

The NCFA’s Football & Peace Projects are gathering interest from around the world.  We hear from one of the many Football & Peace supporters taking part in the Peace Day Celebrations in Kent.  

Thorven Lucht_640My name is Thorven Lucht and I am 40 years old, married with two children (twins). I am a teacher of English, History and Ethics at Humboldt-Gymnasium Bad Pyrmont. At the school I also run the football program – with the help of a group of “junior coaches” (pupils from years 10 to 12 who help with training and organization). This is the perfect way to combine many of my main interests: the English language, historical education, football and working with young people.

German School building_533Our school is a “Gymnasium”, which is basically an “academic high school”, preparing the students for college. We have around 950 pupils from grade 5 to 12, so between appr. 10 and 18 years of age. Bad Pyrmont is a rather small town of about 22,000 people, located between Hanover and Bielefeld. Our school puts a lot of emphasis on extracurricular activities – often in cooperation with local organizations and clubs. We are also an “inclusive” school, accommodating the needs of students with physical handicaps. Around 15% of our pupils are from immigrant families, mostly from Poland, Russia, Turkey and Pakistan, which makes Bad Pyrmont somewhat less multicultural than bigger German cities.

Is your school looking forward to visiting England and taking part in the Football & Peace Day Celebration?

I can assure you that everyone is tremendously looking forward to this event – the school community as a whole and of course especially the pupils who will have a chance to participate. International contacts are very important for our school. We run regular exchanges with schools in Poland, Italy, Sweden, France and Ireland and are always grateful for more chances to establish new contacts and friendships. The Football & Peace Day is a great idea and a great opportunity for our pupils.

What are the plans to commemorate the First World War in Germany, in particularly your school?

There are a lot of exhibitions and commemorative events at the local and regional level. There is also a noticeable focus on the First World War in the media. The federal government is planning joint events with the French government on August 3rd. At our school, we will put a focus on the First World War in the history curriculum, and various tenth-grade classes will be doing research projects on the history of Bad Pyrmont at that time.

Do children at your school learn about the 1914 Christmas Truce? If so, what do you teach them?

German Football and Peace_2291 - GroupThe Christmas Truce is not a mandatory part of the curriculum, but individual teachers often deal with the topic in 9th/10th grade history, 7th-grade bilingual history or in various Religion and Ethics classes. Sometimes it is taught in English classes, often using popular songs about the event. Often the movie “Merry Christmas” (2005) is used in classes. The emphasis is on the symbolic implications of the “Christmas Truce”, as well as on the situation of the young men at the front.

How important is sport for young German children?

In general, still very important, with football and handball being the most popular sports. Former “trend sports” such as tennis and basketball have become somewhat less fashionable. In a town like Bad Pyrmont probably more than half the pupils are members of a sports club. The football program at our school is very popular with girls and boys of all ages.

To what extent does football and sport play a part in German education?

There are regular P.E. classes (2 lessons a week, 3 in the lower grades), as well as school teams which can participate in competitions in more than 20 different sports. The latter are very much dependent on individual teachers who invest their free time into practice times and tournaments, often on weekends. So the extent to which schools participate varies widely.

As for football, there are many different tournaments offered by the State, local Bundesliga clubs (our school is an official partner school for Werder Bremen, for example), or Universities. The German football association offers a lot of help and resources to the schools, for example they train “junior coaches” and young referees and offer seminars and training materials and guidelines to school football coaches.

As stated above, with the help of many “junior coaches”, we manage to offer school football for all age groups – at a competitive level but also often for non-competitive events and projects, sometimes with an international dimension.

Humboldt Gymnasium School_769

Can you tell the National Children’s Football Alliance why you think it is important that children learn about the Christmas Truce and Why this visit to the Football & Peace Day Celebration will benefit your children?

 As stated above, the Christmas truce teaches important lessons about the human spirit. It shows that there is a universal longing for peace, and as an act of disobedience and resistance it is unique and uniquely moving. It contrasts impressively with the patriotic madness that swept over Europe at the outbreak of the First World War. The Football and Peace Day Celebration will commemorate this event and will be held in a similar spirit of peace and friendship. That alone will probably be a very impressive experience for our children – hopefully enriched by many valuable encounters with young people from other countries. We are truly grateful that we can be a part of this. 

For more information please click on http://www.humboldt-gymnasium.de/joomla/ 

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