The Bantamspast ‘History Revisited’ series – How to obtain our books

history revisitedYou can buy copies of the four books in the series direct from BANTAMSPAST, PO Box 307 SHIPLEY BD18 9BT – cheques payable to BANTAMSPAST. Paypal on request – plse email glorious1911 at paraders dot co dot uk

Stockists in Bradford: Waterstones, Wool Exchange, Salts Mill bookshop and the Bradford PA club shop at Horsfall (BCAFC books apart!). You can purchase online through Amazon (distributed by Bradford based Precious Books) and ebay.

Tweet updates (and ebay searches): #bcafcobjects #reinventingbcafc #roomatthetop #lifeatthetop

Vol. 1  A History of Bradford City AFC in Objects by John Dewhirst, pub Oct-14 (limited copies only, now £20)

Vol2 Reinventing Bradford City by Jason McKeown, pub Mar-16 £20 – including p&p (a small number of hardback copies available, £30)

Vol3 Room at the Top by John Dewhirst, pub Jul-16 £20 (softback) / £30 (hardback) – including p&p

Vol4 Life at the Top by John Dewhirst, pub Jul-16 £20 (softback) / £30 (hardback) – including p&p

There is only a small number of hard back books available and these are expected to be collectors’ items.

If you have any problems getting hold of copies contact us direct. Likewise, to join our mailing list to get news of the final two books in the series – vols 5 & 6 for release in the next 24 months – please email. Subscribers get books at a discount and the opportunity for their name to be printed in the book.

 

Room at the Top & Life at the Top

Thanks for your interest in the two latest volumes in the BANTAMSPAST HISTORY REVISITED series, both of which have been written by John Dewhirst who authored A HISTORY OF BRADFORD CITY AFC IN OBJECTS which had great reviews when published in 2014:

Hunter Davies: ‘Lucky old Bradford City – this is the best illustrated history of any club I have ever read. I am so envious of all John’s football treasures and memorabilia, which will  appeal to and interest and amuse and fascinate all real football fans, not just those of Bradford City’

The two new books look back at the genesis of sport and professional football in Bradford:

ROOM AT THE TOP: The origins of professional football in Bradford and the rivalry of Bradford FC and Manningham FC.

LIFE AT THE TOP: The rivalry of Manningham FC and Bradford FC and their conversion from rugby to soccer

Much has been written about the industrial transformation of Bradford of the nineteenth century but the history of organised sport in the town has been virtually overlooked and in particular, the commercialisation of football. From today’s vantage it seems difficult to believe that in the second half of the nineteenth century Bradford became known as a centre of sporting excellence. Indeed, Bradford was at the leading edge of how sport came to be transformed by money.

The origins of Bradford FC can be traced back to 1863 but 2016 marks the 150th anniversary of the club being established on a formal basis and games started to be organised with other sides in the 1866/67 season. Bradford FC can thus be credited as one of the first (rugby) football clubs in the country.

Bradford Cricket Club had been established in 1836, launched as a political instrument to encourage support for the Conservatives. However it was not until the 1860s that participation in other sports activities became more widespread. During that decade various new pursuits were taken up by people in the town, from gymnastics and athletics to cycling and rowing. Indeed, Bradford Rowing Club at Saltaire marks its own 150th anniversary in 2017. Many of the people involved in football participated more widely in other activities as a new cult of athleticism became embedded in Bradford. By the 1880s, following the reduction in working hours, that culture was entrenched.

The military heritage of Bradford has been all but forgotten yet it was an important factor in sporting activities becoming established in the town. Gymnastics and assault at arms had been encouraged to remedy perceived military weaknesses in the Crimean War and became popular as both a form of exercise as well as entertainment. Bradford men were also enthusiastic recruits to the volunteer movement, renewing a tradition from the Napoleonic era of a citizen militia and the claret & amber and red, gold & black colours of the town’s principal football clubs bear witness to those military connections.

ROOM AT THE TOP explores the early influences on Bradford sport and examines the role played by urban development and railway expansion on where football came to be played. Even the aborted cross town rail schemes had an impact, indirectly leading to Valley Parade becoming adopted as a venue for football in 1886. Detail is provided of all the leading clubs in Bradford – from Wibsey to Bingley, Shipley to Wyke, the different Manningham sides as well as Heaton – and there is detail of where they played.

The history of Park Avenue – opened in 1880 – is also told. The ground should be seen in the context of the municipal parks that were developed in Bradford. Park Avenue fulfilled an earlier call for a ‘Peoples Park’ to provide for the recreation and entertainment of Bradfordians. It offered a permanent home for cricket and football in the town, protected from property speculation and housing construction.

ROOM AT THE TOP tells of how Bradford FC became the richest sports club in England by 1890 and of the rivalry that arose with Manningham FC. The relationship between the two clubs became akin to a blood feud that continued into the twentieth century. LIFE AT THE TOP continues the story from the formation of the Northern Union through to abandoning rugby at Valley Parade and Park Avenue. Between them they debunk the myths that have been claimed about that relationship, in particular the simplistic and erroneous suggestion that it was dictated by social class.

LIFE AT THE TOP provides a fresh interpretation of the formation of the Northern Union, at odds with the official version of Rugby League history. The two Bradford clubs were founder members in 1895 and other clubs in the Bradford district were also at the forefront of events in that year.

Bradford FC at Park Avenue and Manningham FC at Valley Parade became business, as well as sporting, rivals. Both clubs were founder members of the Northern Union in 1895 and joined the Football League in the first decade of the twentieth century. The intense competition between the two proved mutually damaging and it became apparent that there was not room for both in Bradford. However in 1907 emotion overruled economic logic and the opportunity of merger was rejected by the Bradford City membership who inherited the prejudices of their Manningham forebears.

By any standard, the nineteenth century history of the Bradford rivals was eventful and sport had a unique role in helping to define a Bradford identity. Indeed, Bradford people became known for applying the same ‘pluck’ to sport as they did to industry. Through their coverage ROOM AT THE TOP and LIFE AT THE TOP provides an alternative narrative of Victorian Bradford, its urban geography and its recreation. Whilst this is first and foremost a sports history, they tell the story of how a football entertainment industry was pioneered in the town and how sport both unified and divided its people. The fate of the local Bradford clubs is also told, of the emergence of sides in the mid 1880s through to their demise by the end of the nineteenth century.

The two books are both 320 pages in size of which 32 each full colour illustrations. Originally it had been intended to produce a single publication but the sheer size of the project has not made this possible and hence the production of two complementary volumes. They will both be produced in a similar format as the acclaimed A HISTORY OF BRADFORD CITY AFC IN OBJECTS by the same author, John Dewhirst (a book described by Hunter Davies as ‘the best illustrated history of any football club he had ever read’). ROOM AT THE TOP and LIFE AT THE TOP will appeal to rugby and soccer fans but hopefully also to those with an interest in the social history of Victorian Bradford.

Further information can be requested from the author at johnpdewhirst at gmail dot com

This is what the books look like…

These are the final covers of ROOM AT THE TOP and LIFE AT THE TOP. The plain covers are for subscriber copies; the others are non-subscriber copies. The foil inscription of the hard cover of ROOM AT THE TOP is based on the design of a book by Bradford historian William Scruton that was published in 1889.

Soft cover subscriber copies of ROOM AT THE TOP have already been despatched and those of LIFE AT THE TOP are being posted on Monday 25th July. Hard cover subscriber copies of ROOM AT THE TOP will be posted next week also. The hard cover copies of LIFE AT THE TOP will not be ready for another three weeks.

If non-subscribers wish to purchase copies of the books email glorious1911 at paraders dot co dot uk – £20 soft cover and £30 hard cover. The books will not be available in shops or online until after the summer but LIFE AT THE TOP will be delayed.

Room at the Top & Life at the Top

ROOM AT THE TOP has now gone into production and updates on progress will be posted on this site. Once a delivery date is confirmed details will be circulated to subscribers and through tweets. Please note that the hard cover books will take slightly longer.

The original plan had been to produce a single book covering the history of Bradford football through to 1908 when City won promotion to Division One and Bradford Park Avenue were admitted to the Football League. Instead there will now be two books which ensures that everything can be included and the number of illustrations do not have to be cut – the alternative was a single book of 600+ pages and the risk of the spine splitting.

The two books will each be of the same size. The first will be published as ROOM AT THE TOP and cover the period to 1892. The second will be published as LIFE AT THE TOP to cover the period 1892 to 1908.

Those people who have subscribed will receive both publications this summer with LIFE AT THE TOP planned for release in July. The timing of the retail release and prices will be confirmed later.

NB The title of both publications were originally adopted by Bingley author John Braine. His novel, Life at the Top (published in 1962) followed Room at the Top (1957) and continued the story of his central character, Joe Lampton. Other than the fact that the titles capture the themes of my own books, the link with John Braine is fitting for his coverage of the personalities he knew of in Bradford. The story of football in the district involved similar characters to those he wrote about – variously stubborn, proud, ambitious and ruthless.

Launch event 24-Mar-16 for another BANTAMSPAST book…

The second book in the BANTAMSPAST series ‘HISTORY REVISITED’, REINVENTING BRADFORD CITY by Jason McKeown is released on Thursday 24 March and you are welcome to attend the formal launch event at the Record Cafe on North Parade at 7pm.
If you are a subscriber to ROOM AT THE TOP you can purchase one of the Victorian retro scarves which will be available at the launch of REINVENTING BRADFORD CITY.
Orders are still being taken for ROOM AT THE TOP.

What’s new about Germans at Valley Parade?

In the last few days the talking point among soccer fans in Bradford has been in respect of BCAFC being refinanced with the money of German investors. A hundred years ago there was similarly talk of German money sustaining the club but coming as it did in the middle of war, the suggestion was that it was unpatriotic and an act of treachery for the club to be dependent upon funding derived from German natives.

The club’s connection with Germans went back much further given that the Manningham district was the home to wool merchants of German origin. In the early history of rugby in Bradford during the 1860s and 1870s, second and third generation German immigrants were regular members of local teams, Bradford FC included. However men of German extraction were also influential in the launch of soccer at Valley Parade in 1903 and the financial management of BCAFC before World War One.

German immigrants played a crucial role in the economic development of Bradford. They were good immigrants: cultured, economically active and assimilated into the wider community and they added considerably to the civic life of Bradford. So too, they played a part at Valley Parade – a number of key individuals were influential in safeguarding the future of BCAFC during the first decade of existence.

The role of William Pollack in particular was pivotal in the financial management at Valley Parade where he served as treasurer prior to the outbreak of war and later as club chairman. During the war when finances were difficult there is the suggestion that he provided the necessary bank guarantees to keep the club solvent (although it needs to be highlighted that there is no evidence of Pollack having bankrolled the club at any stage as a major lender or investor).

The outbreak of war in 1914 led to members of the German community leaving their homes in Bradford to go back to Germany. Many of those who remained were ostracised and chose to be anonymous. In that context, the club’s chairman William Pollack was singled out for abuse. Not only did he cope with the stress of keeping the club solvent during the war, but he also had to deal with being the victim of personal attack because of his ancestry. When he died in November, 1916 it was suggested that all told the pressures had caused his early death.

The rivalry with Bradford FC at Park Avenue was akin to a blood feud and the relationship of the two clubs was bitter to say the least. It is a fair bet that many of the jibes about BCAFC being kept afloat by the money of an enemy came from Bradford FC supporters whose grudge about Manningham FC / BCAFC had always been that the Manningham club was unpatriotic.

It seems fitting that as we approach the centenary of Pollack’s death there should be talk of German money invested in BCAFC.

The full story of the first Germans at Valley Parade and the bitter rivalry is told in LIFE AT THE TOP, the sequel to ROOM AT THE TOP

***24-jul-16 *** I have been informed of research that suggests Wm Pollack may have committed suicide in 1916 – Bradford cemetery records disclose that he was buried in an unmarked grave at Scholemoor. 

‘Victorian’ scarves

To promote ROOM AT THE TOP, a limited number of a pair of Victorian styled scarves are being made in the colours of Bradford FC and Manningham FC. The photos are pre-production and there will be minor tweaks to the design; the MFC scarf has the text ‘Manningham FC’ on the face and ‘The Paraders’ on the reverse with the Bradford arms. The Bradford boar features on both sides of the BFC scarf.

These are being made available to people who subscribe to ROOM AT THE TOP on a first come basis. At this stage the order is being limited to the minimum quantity but if you are interest I’d welcome a confirmation of interest as I have little idea how many people will actually want one. They will be sold at cost price so you’ll probably find them to be cheaper and more unique than the modern equivalent!. More details to follow.