Monday, 28 August 2023
Tom Mann Close, Coventry
Mann is quite possibly Britain's most famous trade unionist and was key to the victory by the London Dockers in 1889 that paved the way for unskilled workers to join trade unions. It was great to come across his street in Foleshill, Coventry close to the canal and around half a mile from the Ricoh Arena.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Mann#Early_years
Coventry City 0 Sunderland 0
For the first time in a long while the Sunderland side were not backed by a sold out away end with 300 unsold tickets from a 3,000 allocation. Ticket prices of £37 with kids tickets costing £25 plus a train strike kept down the numbers who made the 400 mile round trip to watch a game that failed to thrill.
Sunday, 13 August 2023
Coming very soon - Haaland: Manchester City's striking Viking
Erling Braut Haaland's first season in English football saw
him tear up the record books.
Manchester City's striking Viking eclipsed modern
goalscoring legends like Alan Shearer, Andy Cole and Mohamed Salah as Pep
Guardiola's Sky Blues ensured their place amongst the game's greatest-ever
teams by winning a Premier League, Champions League and FA Cup Treble.
Haaland found the back of the net an astonishing 52 times,
becoming the first top-flight player to rack up a half-century of goals in over
90 years.
His incredible contribution also secured him the
Premier League's prized Golden Boot as well as the Football Writers'
Association Footballer of the Year Award - at the age of just 22.
The Leeds-born No 9 had his pick of Europe's top clubs when
he was deciding on his future during an injury-hit final season with Borussia
Dortmund in 2021-22.
He rejected offers from Real Madrid and Bayern Munich to
come 'home.' Haaland's father, Alfie, joined Manchester City in the same summer
his youngest son was born.
Haaland's decision to sign for a team that had won four of
the previous five Premier League titles under Guardiola was not based on
sentiment.
This book details why the 6ft 5ins Norwegian felt moving to
Manchester to help City become European champions for the first time in their
history made perfect sense for a player who has mapped out his career with the
same precision he demonstrates in front of goal.
It also documents a debut season which saw Haaland set new
standards in Premier League excellence as City were confirmed as football's
most dominant force, both at home and abroad.
Mark Metcalf and Simon Mullock
Wednesday, 9 August 2023
Halifax Heritage is just one long list of murderous atrocities
Halifax and its infamous Piece Hall, built by murderous bastards, is just one of many pieces of heritage so revered by the middle classes that pack out all the major parties across the West Yorkshire town. Meanwhile, here is a lovely little grave in Wainstalls that contains the remains of orphans brought from Liverpool to work for nothing in the 19th century and who died very early deaths. There'll be no special occasions for those poor sods.
It is my intention to produce a short film on this soon.
Sunderland 1 Crewe 1 With Crewe winning 5-3 on penaltties
Historic
Crewe seal victory with their fifth successful penalty |
The crowd was just 10,000+
Friday, 4 August 2023
Celebration of the life of Kevin Stannard, Monday 14 August
Celebration of the life of Kevin Stannard, Monday 14 August
The Celebration of the life of former Trades Council secretary Kevin Stannard will take place on
Monday 14 August
Noon
at Natural Endings
Rise Lane
Todmorden
OL14 7AA
Natural Endings are based in the former Todmorden Sorting Office building.
No flowers please, but donations in Kevin's memory are invited to the Foodbank at the Old Library Community Hub for Cornholme and Portsmouth - account number: 20338192, Sort code: 608301.
Please would people wear bright colours to the celebration and bring a story about Kevin - he had fingers in so many pies and it would be lovely for everyone to hear them.
There will be a buffet at the Golden Lion after the celebration.
Kevin's partner Jane has asked people to let us know at info@calderdaletuc.org.uk if you will be attending on Monday 14 August.
Kevin Stannard, RIP
We are sorry to announce that Calderdale Trades Council secretary, Kevin Stannard died last weekend.
Kevin became Secretary in 2021, having previousy been chair. He was an ardent socialist, dedicated trade unionist and he will be sorely missed.
Calderdale Trades Council officers paid tribute to their friend and colleague...
"Kevin gave a lot of himself to others and to ‘the movement’, and this is something to be honoured. I’ll remember his cheerful, sometimes cheeky, demeanour, as well as his critical political eye, and of course his picket line solidarity." Daniel Whittall, chair.
"A man full of principle and political intelligence" Nigel Smith, vice-chair.
We send our sympathy and solidarity to his partner, Jane, his family and friends.
Thursday, 3 August 2023
HOW THE LADS KICKED OFF The origins of Sunderland AFC
HOW THE
LADS KICKED OFF
The origins
of Sunderland AFC
Mark Metcalf
Many of
today’s famous football clubs were set up by churches, cricket clubs and works’
teams. Sunderland AFC, however, is unique as it was set up in 1880 by a trade
union.
Within a
decade, it was playing in the Football League and won the league title three
times in the first five seasons in which it competed. Only six clubs have won
more top flight titles than Sunderland, whose record of six is equal to Chelsea’s.
Football as
an organised club sport in Sunderland began in 1873. This, however, was rugby
(union) football which was widely reported on by local papers over the
subsequent years. Although the Football Association had been formed in 1863,
the battle for supremacy among those who preferred to play the game with their
feet over those who preferred the handling game was to rage on till after WWI.
In 1879, The Times reported that the North was ‘rugby.’
That might
have remained the case except for the genius that was Sunderland-born Charles Alcock
who, seven years earlier had created the FA Cup competition. That was national
and it gave teams of working-class footballers the opportunity to take on and
beat teams packed with the elite of society. Local communities were inspired to
turn out in large numbers at important games and football fervour began. Regional
FA knock out competitions were inaugurated. One was the Northumberland and
Durham FA, formed in 1879, Challenge Cup in 1888-81.
It was this
that inspired the formation of a football club in Sunderland. On Saturday 25
September 1880, a special meeting was, as reported two days later in the
Sunderland Echo, held by “the Sunderland and District Teachers’ Association for
the purpose of hearing Mr TE Heller, secretary of the National Union of
Elementary Teachers, and a member of the London School Board on union and educational
matters.”
It can be
clearly seen that they Sunderland and District Teachers’ Association was part
of the growing trade union movement and its descendant union be today’s
National Education Union (NEU).
At the end
of the meeting, it was agreed to form a football club and this was announced in
the Sunderland Echo on the following Monday. Other regional papers later
reported that a football club had been formed.
The club
held its first training sessions for teachers only at Hendon two weekends later
on Saturday 9 October but the attendance was poor and it was agreed to seek
players from Sunderland in general and the name of the club was changed to
Sunderland Association Football Club on 16 October 1880. Less than two months
after the club began, they played their first game on 13 November 1880 and lost
1-0 to Ferryhill at Hendon.
SAFC were
to go on and reach the semi-final of the 1880-1 Northumberland and Durham FA Challenge
Cup and were beaten 5-0 by Newcastle Rangers at St James’ Park on Saturday 12
February 1881.
Mark
Metcalf, from a Durham mining family, is a member of the Football Writers’
Association and his many works include the authorised biography of Charlie
Hurley, Stan Anderson’s autobiography and Sunderland: Almost the Double;
Sunderland AFC 1912-13 and Total Football: Sunderland 1935-37.