It is now 100 years since Charlton Athletic were admitted to the Third Division (South) of the Football League. There were two available places and Charlton faced competition from what was described as ‘a fleet of South Wales clubs’.
Charlton’s
simultaneous admission to the London Combination might seem to be a sideshow,
but in fact it was not for two reasons.
First, it enabled the club to have a competitive reserve side. Walsall, who were admitted at the same time
to the Third Division North, were obliged to compete with the minnows in the
Walsall and District League. Second,
the application revealed some of the complicated politics that surrounded
Charlton’s Football League application.
There was a
widespread suspicion in football circles that Charlton were a nursery club for
Tottenham Hotspur. The Athletics News
referred to ‘the suggestion that Charlton Athletic are but protégés of
Tottenham Hotspur, and that the London clubs can do without nurseries that are
so well known to many of the Midland League organisations.’ There was some substance in this report as
Charlton admitted that Spurs had advanced them £500 when they were
transitioning from a junior to a senior club.
This would be £25,000 at today’s prices and was hardly likely to be just
an altruistic gesture from north of the river. Indeed, the Charlton management admitted that
they received ‘kindly and encouraging advice’ from Spurs. Charlton had to pledge to repay the sum when
they were admitted to the Football League.
The proposed
admission of Charlton to the London Combination created a lot of bad feeling
and was initially opposed by three clubs: Arsenal, Clapton Orient and
Fulham. Arsenal were suspicious of
Charlton’s links with their North London rivals. More generally, there was a concern about
Charlton being the only professional club in London outside the ten members of
the combination. It was feared that if
Charlton were admitted other clubs might be encouraged to professionalise,
increasing competition for spectators in the capital.
This prospect
particularly worried Fulham. The
Athletics News explained: ‘Fulham draw a lot of their support from the south
side of the Thames, and bordered as they are on two sides by Chelsea and the
Rangers, they do not want a new professional club to come to oppose them on the
south. The club they fear is
Wimbledon. They are drawing large
gates.’
The club that
would be most affected by Charlton’s admission to the Combination and then to
the Football League were Millwall, but they were strongly in favour of
Charlton’s admission. They believed it
would be good for football in general, as well as from a financial aspect. Their chairman said: ‘I would not object if
a club was started in the next piece of ground to ours. It would help us both, for we should both be
educating the local public in the benefits of Association football. If they got part of our gate one week we
should have a share of theirs the next.
When Charlton Athletic played on our ground in a Southern League
fixture, the gate was over £500 and there were nearly 600 more spectators
present than there were on Easter Monday when our first team met Plymouth
Argyle.’
The club did what
it could to whip up enthusiasm and at a well-attended meeting in Greenwich, the
chairman (Mr A.E. Brandon) said Charlton had made wonderful progress in a few
years. They had practically carried everything before
them as juniors and attained a lot of success as seniors. The spirit of ambition was always with them,
and after one season as professionals they desired to join the Football
League. When completed they would have a
ground second to none in the kingdom, but money was needed to carry the scheme
to fruition. All their present players
had expressed a desire to stay with the club, and other first-class players
wanted to wear the Charlton colours. If
the local enthusiasts would only rally with financial support the future of the
club would be assured. Of course, they
did not to the extent needed and the club was beset by financial challenges
throughout the following decade in the absence of a wealthy backer.
Rick Everitt notes
in Battle for the Valley that the
proliferation of Welsh clubs competing for admission helped Charlton. In practice, the standard bearers for Wales
were Aberdare Athletic who were given the wholehearted support of Cardiff City
as the senior Welsh club who said they would do anything to help their cause. Aberdare had won the Welsh League in the
preceding season and were the runners up in the Southern League. Their average attendance was 16,000 and they
owned the freehold of their ground. The
Athletics News commented: ‘Everything is first-class and built of material to
last. The town of Aberdare is accessible
without the least difficulty. The
genuine character of Aberdare as a town’s club, the men at the head of it, and
their policy, should ensure their election’.
What did Charlton
have to offer in comparison? The
Athletics sent ‘Achates’ to find out and he was shown round by the
chairman. He reported: ‘Whenever I have travelled Woolwich way I have
been struck by the position of a football ground outside Charlton Station, and
had an eager desire to inspect it. This
Charlton ground would have delighted the ancients looking for an amphitheatre
in which to hold an Olympiad. I realised
that Stamford Bridge could be almost lost in it, for the enclosure already
fenced in covers over ten acres and extra land is available to make up the
round dozen.’
‘It I situated in
a pit, exceptionally well drained I understand, with tremendous cliffs on two
sides, and banking possibilities out of the ordinary. It is at present in a more or less rough
state, but 50,000 spectators could see a game now, and one scheme has been
prepared whereby accommodation, if it were necessary, could be made for nearly
20,000. Visions of a national ground for
the Cup Final, I wonder.’
‘Charlton
Athletic is an ambitious club. This
season they became a professional organisation on modest lines. With “Wally” Rayner as manager, with whom I
renewed acquaintance, remembering him as a player with Croydon Common, Norwich
City etc., attention is being paid to the development of local talent, with a
wise leavening of experienced men.’
‘For the freehold
of the large ground they occupy the price is £3,000 (£150,000 today), and at a
recent meeting purchase was decided upon.
At the same time it was agreed to float a company with a suggested
capital of £10,000 (£500,000 today). To
me there appeared every reason why a Third Division club should be
successful. Next season a long stand
will be erected as a first instalment of the improvement scheme, and it is in
the centre of a very populous district, exceptionally well served by train,
tram and bus, and only a short journey from the City. Woolwich Arsenal used to flourish in the
district, and Charlton have paid them the compliment of wearing the same
coloured livery. Charlton should one day
be one of the big clubs of London.’
Presenting
Charlton’s case to the Football League, Mr E Radford pointed out that the town
adjoined Woolwich, which was the cradle of professional football in the
south. The club was established 16 years
ago, and had done splendid service in fostering the game. They were the rightful successors to the
Arsenal, and they hoped to continue that succession by again taking league
football to that part of the metropolis.
There was a population of a million immediately surrounding the ground
and the revenue last year, without a stand and with a 9d gate, was £8,000
(£400,000 today). The accommodation on
the ground could be expanded to 100,000, and by the opening of the season they
were expecting that they would be able to accommodate 50,000 with great comfort.
They had over 20 professionals and he held in his hand from certain directors
and other local gentlemen a financial backing to a very considerable sum – far
more than would be necessary to carry out any obligations for next year.
Apart from Aberdare
Athletic, which received 38 votes to 30 for Charlton, the fleet of Welsh clubs
did not do well. Despite Pontypridd
claiming that it was the most accessible spot in South Wales with a population
of quarter of a million within six miles of the ground and similar gate
receipts to Charlton, it got just five votes, followed by Abertillery with four
and Barry with just one. The main
rivals to Charlton were Bath, but they got just 12 votes. Their case was weakly presented, it being
argued ‘that there were huge possibilities for the Association game in
Bath.’ In fact it has remained an area
where rugby is the most popular spectator game and Bath have never achieved
league status. Aberdare Athletic failed
to secure re-election to the Football League in 1927.
In August 1921 the
Daily Herald published a number of stories boosting what they described as
‘London’s baby professional’, although it is questionable whether a story about
a reporter turning up at the ground and finding players engaged in a makeshift
game of cricket did much for the cub’s image.
On August 9th a detailed report stated that ‘Those who saw
the wild, uncultured surroundings of last year at Charlton will be surprised to
find a ground this season terraced on three sides, affording a view to 35,000
spectators.’ The grandstand had been
held up by a delay in consent being granted by the London County Council, but
was now being built on the lines of that at Spurs.
It was noted that
‘The playing pitch, which came in for some criticism last season, has been
greatly improved.’ Those parts of the
ground not used for football would provide facilities for cricket, bowls and
tennis. The ground was only two minutes’
walk from the almost continuous LCC tram services, and not a half minute elapsed
before a bus or tram could be boarded going in either direction. ‘The club should meet the desire for good
football felt in the Woolwich, Greenwich and Blackheath districts. With the right sort of support from the
enthusiasts among the million and half inhabitants of the neighbourhood,
Charlton Athletic should prove an undoubted success.’
Unfortunately,
although respectable, the crowds did not appear to the extent hoped for. The club was under capitalised and the flawed
move to Catford lay ahead. In many ways
getting membership of the Football League was the easiest hurdle the club had
to overcome. Without it, the club would
never have flourished.
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