The Scottish Referee Gallery: The Runners

Having given a series of the first twelve portraits which were mainly football (although some were very good athletes (Crerar) we will now concentrate on the athletes who were profiled starting with AG Colquhoun of Clydesdale Harriers, who was always called AG – even in club handbooks!   14 drawings here – two Rangers players, two from Celtic, several from Clydesdale Harriers and others but all were athletes, and all were runners.

April 89

 

12th August 1889

July, 1889

19th August, 1889

Although mainlky a football player, he was also a half-miler of note 

30th December, 1889

(Clydesdale Harriers and West of Scotland Harriers)

24th February, 1890

Although he is here as QPFC, Brown was also a prominent member of West of Scotland Harriers and of the SAAA

9th June 1890

16th June 1890

Another who was an excellent athlete – his speciality was the sprint hurdles

7th July 1890

14th July 90

A top class hurdler (SAAA Champion) and sprinter

28th July, 189

Mitchell was a top class 440/880 runner who was one of those battling to be first Scot under 2 minutes along with Walter Malcolm of Morton.

11th August 1890

25th August 1890

1st September 1890

Another very good athlete – and another sprinter from the Rangers FC

The Scottish Referee

An important part of the sport of athletics (including cross-country running) is the coverage given by the Press.   We already have profiles of athletics journalists and reporters such as Doug Gillon, Sandy Sutherland, Bill Melville and George Sutherland on the website.   But long before that the coverage was of a totally different order.   Where editors were at one point in the 1980’s only concentrating on three or four sports, a century before that there were several weekly papers dealing only with sporting matters.   One of the best known of these was ‘The Scottish Referee’.   The title and associated information is above.   It covered all of the outdoor sports: football, rugby, cricket and, most important to us, track and field athletics, road running and cross-country running.  In contradiction of the headline, it also covered such as snooker, billiards, draughts,  chess and whist.  There were only four pages but it did an excellent job.    It ran from 1888 to the start of the War in 1914.

The story started on Thursday, 1st November, 1888, when the following notice appeared in the Glasgow Evening Post:

NEW ATHLETIC PAPER FOR SCOTLAND

THE SCOTTISH REFEREE

A WEEKLY RECORD AND REVIEW OF 

OUTDOOR RECREATION

PRICE ONE HALFPENNY

The proprietors of the Glasgow Evening News beg to announce that they have arranged to publish on

MONDAY AFTERNNOON, NOVEMBER 5,

the First Issue of a New Athletic Paper under 

the title of

THE SCOTTISH REFEREE

The object of the promotion is to supply the Public with a Thoroughly Reliable and Unbiased Record and Review of all the  Recreation and Sports for which Scotland is famed; and for this purpose they have retained, in the different departments the services of many of the ablest Athletic Writers, and have been promised the support of a large contingent of the best exponents of the various Recreations.

The Scottish Referee will comprise New, Novel and Alternative Features; and all the facilities of the Establishment which has been the centre of Athletics for the past fifteen years will be enabled to make the Paper varied, interesting and authoritative.  

The paper will be brightly and simply written; and while Persons and Events will be firmly criticised and commented upon, no malice or  animus  will be allowed to sully its pages.   Sensibility and personal abuse will be rigidly excluded; and fairness,  a free field, and no favour will be the dominant policy of the paper.

The utmost freedom will be given for the discussion, in a gentlemanly manner, of al questions of current, and permanent interest to the Athletic World.

Every effort, in fact, will be made to prevent the healthy recreation of the rising generation from becoming  associated with the  debasing recrimination and professional spleen which of late years been imported into many forms of athletics.

In form, style and tone the Scottish Referee will be different from any paper published in Scotland, and will contain more reading than the ordinary penny journals.

THE SCOTTISH REFEREE

A WEEKLY RECORD AND REVIEW OF 

OUTDOOR RECREATION

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5

PRICE ONE HALFPENNY

———————————-

 It did appear as promised and in the first ever edition, they stated their aims and objectives in a slightly longer form as follows:-

The Scottish Referee

Glasgow, Monday, November 5

The motive and object of The Scottish Referee may be stated in a few sentences.   Within recent years, athletics, football, and other outdoor recreations have assumed an importance in the general affairs of life which a decade ago was undreamt of.   Unfortunately, with this growth have also developed some features of a less desirable character – unbridled partisanship, unfriendliness, quasi-professionalism, roughness, in many instances ferocity and mere brute force – until now there is a very grave danger of the manly exercises on which the future physical superiority of the nation depends being banned because of the evils with which they are being associated.   Full and impartial publicity is the only remedy for these and other evils.   Hitherto – in Scotland, at least – journals devoted to athletics (as invariably is the case in the earlier years of all movements) have been too malignly influenced by the passions and interests of contending parties and interests – they have been identified too closely with the rivalries and controversies of reckless combatants, and have in consequence tended to incite rather than diminish the bad social and personal feelings, the existence of which all true lovers of healthy recreation deplore.   Recreation for recreation’s sake will be the policy of the Referee.   Our purpose is not only to provide a free and unbiassed channel for recording the chief events in the world of recreation; we shall also endeavour, by unprejudiced comment, honest criticism and direct discountenance of all unfair tactics and foul play, to purge the more popular pastimes of the passions which so easily beset them.   To attain our object we cordially invite the assistance of secretaries of clubs and associations, and of all others interested in the welfare and physical health of the rising generation.-

———-

That was the statement of editorial policy and some of it bears comment.   Look at this section:

“Journals devoted to athletics (as invariably is the case in the earlier years of all movements) have been too malignly influenced by the passions and interests of contending parties and interests – they have been identified too closely with the rivalries and controversies of reckless combatants,”      The year was 1888, the amateur athletic movement had burgeoned and pretty well taken the imagination by storm after the establishment of Clydesdale Harriers in May 1885.   At least one of the sporting periodicals – The Scottish Umpire – had welcomed the arrival of the new club and had reported and commented on just about every aspect of the club’s activities since then.   Could this have been the direction in which the section quoted was aimed?

There were lots of regular features in the Referee but it should be remembered that the use of photographs was severely limited simply because the technology did not exist at that time.   The result was that there were many illustrations which were hand drawn to start with.   eg the first feature mentioned below.   They certainly did score over their rivals, certainly in the beginning, by the quality and number of illustrations.

  • Our Portrait Gallery (every edition had a drawing with a pen portrait of the sportsman) and the intention here is to reproduce some of the more interesting ones.   Many of the subjects were members of many clubs at the same time – eg Robert Mitchell was a St Mirren Player but one of the three men striving to be first Scot under 2 minutes, JR Gow of Rangers was SAAA hurdles champion and sprint medallist.   
  • The front page was always made up of small gobbets of information about whatever sport was in season.   These might be about a game played at the weekend, some information about upcoming or recent player transfers, committee business at club or national level, or just plain gossip.   The paper assumed a knowledge of the sport in question and just gave the bare information.
  • Sporting columns were written under an appropriate pseudonym.   eg   Far and Sure  by  Niblick; Tries and Touches  by  Rugby, By   Field and Fen   by   Pace;  Cycling  by  Spokes; Splashes & Spurts  by  Ben Bow  (rowing); and Volley and Smash  by  Back Hand.   Each had its own graphic header.

1892 was an important year in the development of the paper – it produced its first regular Friday edition in April.   The previous week there had been a Special Edition on the Thursday dealing with the Scotland v England international to be played at Ibrox Park (for the teams see the Groups page) and then on 8th April came the new edition of the paper.   Note the subtle change in its masthead.

The changes hadn’t stopped there – although the portraits kept coming the title of The Portrait Gallery disappeared, and the blocks identifying the various sports commentaries by Ben Bow and the rest ceased to appear too.   Then colour came upon the scene – from the start of January, 1893, the paper was printed on pink paper.   It maybe made it stand out from the others on the news stands but there was a new look.

Photographs had to come and they did, beginning at the end of 1908 and there were regular series of them: Ben Bow had a series of portraits and profiles, the Portrait Gallery returned  but with photographs, football and other sports were now illustrated with photos rather than with drawings and there were new pages covering the theatre with photographic studies of the leading men and women.  The occasional news featured too – eg a large picture and account of the death of the King was there.

The Referee continued to develop until the War started in 1914.  It had become a six page paper most of the time but for this final issue it was back to four.   It was a rather sad Cap and Bells commentary in Tout le Monde for issue number 2,590 and the big cartoon below was the centrepiece, maybe ‘drawing’ would be better because as Dudley Moore said in another context, he couldn’t see the joke.  

It was published on Monday 16th November, 1914.   

A sports paper it had lasted for over 25 years and it had taken a War to stop it.   Latterly it had included some content on entertainment (the theatres in Glasgow were numerous) and other news which was not part of the initial intention but it was still a popular and detailed publication.  

We will cover all the various aspects of the paper as the weeks go by meanwhile, we can have a look at the last issue by following the link below, the others are all pictorial extracts.

The Final Issue: November, 1914

The Runners     More Runners    Some more general portraits     The ‘byelines’    .The Advertisements     The Columnists   Some Groups   Photographs

You can read much more about the publication at this link:

 https://aspectaculartableau.wordpress.com/2017/02/13/scottish-referee-1888-1914/

The other two sports publications are discussed   here   (The Scottish Umpire)   and    here  ( The Scottish Athletics Journal )

Perth to Kirkcaldy Relay Race

A scene from the 1935 race (see attached report) and it shows John Suttie Smith passing over to W Johnston 

The Perth to Kirkcaldy was a popular 36 miles road relay race held in the 1930’s which attracted athletes from the west of Scotland as well as from the east.   The Edinburgh to Glasgow sponsored by the ‘News of the World’ had started in 1930 and was run over 8 stages; the district cross-country relays were run over 4 stages and other club organised events were also run over 4 stages.  This one, with the first running being on the first Saturday in April in 1934, was over 6 stages.   It’s not too much of a strectch of the imagination to think that some clubs used it as a run-in to the Edinburgh to Glasgow, given that the dates of the eight stager in the 30’s were 4th April 1936, 3rd April 1937, 9th April 1938 and 22nd April 1939.   It was first run on the first Saturday in April, 1934, in dreadful weather conditions.   The report from the ‘Scotsman’ on the following Monday read:

PERTH-KIRKCALDY RACE RUN IN SNOWSTORM

DUNDEE MAN’S ORDEAL

Eight clubs contested the first Perth to Kirkcaldy road relay race of 36 miles on Saturday, under most inclement weather conditions.   Lord Provost Hunter started the first relay of runners from Perth in gusts of whirling sleet and snow, with treacherous underfoot conditions.   Within the first two miles the falling snow had increased in intensity and when the sector from Freuchie to Coaltown of Balgonie was entered upon the road was fully four inches deep in snow and slush.   

A mishap occurred to the leader at this stage, D Gowans of Dundee Thistle.   With a lead of over a furlong, Gowans, unaccompanied by any stewards, had his own way to find to the next stage, and being strange to the district he took a wrong turning.   The second runner, W McGregor, Kirkcaldy YMCA, also took a wrong route but managed to correct his mistake and get on to the right road again.   

The non-arrival of Gowans at Coaltown of Balgonie occasioned much concern and a conveyance was dispatched in search of him.   He was ultimately found in an exhausted condition, having run almost nine instead of six miles.   After attention in a nearby cottage, the Dundee runner was taken to Kirkcaldy hospital where he was detained overnight  to recover from the results of exhaustion and exposure.   Over the last stage, McIntosh had an easy task to win for Edinburgh Northern.   The unfortunate mishap to Dundee Thistle detracted somewhat from the merit of Northern’s win, but their runners deserved commendation for the earnest and unrelenting manner in which they raced over each relay, to reduce a deficit of 2 mins 5 secs at six miles to a gain of 2 mins 23 secs at thirty six miles.   

Results:

 

It was a pity that the first running of the race should coincide with a freak snow storm in April but even a quick look at the results will note the names of such quality athletes as Alex Dow, Suttie Smith , W Slidders and Peter Addison.   If we look at the field here and the result of the Edinburgh to Glasgow 8 man relay that year, the Dundee Thistle team had won that from Edinburgh Northern and Maryhill Harriers  with Gowans on the second stage for the Dundee team.   Both Dow and Suttie Smith ran for Scotland in the international meeting that year while Slidders ran the year before too.    

In 1935,  the race had been brought back by a month and was run on 30th March.    The race had attracted a lot of attention locally and a silver trophy had been gifted by Sir Michael Nairn for the winning team.   He was of the Kirkcaldy linoleum manufacturing family and the cup would be known as the Nairn Cup.   The Courier had a fairly detailed preview of the race in their edition of March 30th.   Teams entered were 

Edinburgh Northern Harriers – Colours : White with maroon and blue bands.   JS Smith, WA Ferguson, C Lothian, W Hinde, JP Laidlaw, H McIntosh.   Their achievements are too numerous to mention here, suffice to say they have gained every honour possible both for team and individuals.   There are four internationalists in this team, and it is considerably stronger than when had a lucky win in this race last year.   As they won the Scottish National cross-country championship, Edinburgh to Glasgow road relay race and the unofficial Scottish 10 miles relay championship this season, they will be all out to win this race too.

Garscube Harriers (Glasgow):   Colours: White with blue band.   From T Urquhart, D Brooke, J Bennett,  T Dailly, J Thomson, W Gowans, T Armstrong, AD McDonald, C Thomson.   They have been prominent in cross-country circles for a good number of years back, and were runners-up in Scottish championships and Edinburgh to Glasgow race.   

Dundee Thistle Harriers: Colours: Red trimmed with white.   A club that has been amongst the honours greatly in the last twenty years and have been just short of championship form being runners-up on two or three occasions.   Have won the Edinburgh to Glasgow Relay and were most unfortunate last year in this race when after establishing a winning lead, a runner went off the road.   A Team: T Coburn, P Addison, WS Slidders, D Whitecross, D Gowans, A Donnett;   B Team: C McDonald, D Thomson, F Suttie, J McKechnie, EH Wright, WW Howie.

Dundee Hawkhill Harriers: Colours  Blue and white quarters.   Thistle’s greatest rivals in the Jute City and quite a go-ahead club in the East of Scotland.   Finished fourth last year.   Team: G Rudd, A Robertson, D Taylor, F Kane, A Jamieson, W Cook.

Edinburgh Southern Harriers:   Colours  Blue and white stripes.   The Northern’s greatest rivals in the East of Scotland and especially in the Edinburgh League races, have also been among the honours.   Team   W  Shaw, J Wilson, L Kapelle, G Jamieson, J Lindsay, T Ross.

Kirkcaldy YMCA: Colours  White with Gold Band.   The most prominent local club but still short of higher honours as regards team work.   Winners of Teviotdale trophy last year in this race and runners-up in the open race.   Team  J Adie, T Dewar, A Dow, W Duncan, W McGregor. D Pryde.   

Eastbank AC: Colours  Black with white band.   A club that has risen rapidly in East of Scotland cross-country circles and may be Kirkcaldy YMCA’s greatest threat in local events.  Team: J Rennie, D McArthur, D Dewar, W Riddell, G Ross, G Adamson.

Kirkcaldy (BB) Old Boys Club:  Colours White with black and yellow bands.   Composed of ex-members of the Boys Brigade but have never fulfilled expectations as yet.   Team:  JG Cameron, DM Bannerman, LAH Pake, DF Page, DE Williamson, LM Smart.

Kirkcaldy Boys Club: Colours  Royal blue with white trimmings.   On a par with the Old Boys Club and keen rivalry exists between them.   Team:  S McGregor, J Bell, W Dryburgh, S Robertson, H Lascelles, D Muir. 

Penicuik Harriers:  Colours  Black with white gate.   A moderate club who have been more prominent individually rather than collectively.   Team: A McMillan, J Johnston, W Palmer, W McKenna, A Little, W Galt.

Bellahouston Harriers (Glasgow):   Colours  Blue with pale blue St Andrew’s Cross.   This club is pretty well to the fore in the West of Scotland and should give a fairly good account of themselves.   This is a late entry but the team will definitely include Jacky Campbell, Scottish internationalist.   

In the list of names can be found nine Scottish internationalists, namely JS Smith, W Hinde, J Laidlaw and R McIntosh (ENH), D Urquhart (GH), WD Slidders (DTH), J Wilson (ESH), A Dow (Ky YMCA), and J Campbell (BH).   

It is an interesting list of teams from the North East, the East, the Borders and the West of the country and all of the teams were putting forth their finest runners.   Would the race live up to the expectations of the promoters?   The picture at the top of the page shows the intensity of the effort the runners were putting in.   The enthusiasm of the spectators is evident too and the host of bicycles at the back presumably are for club supporters to follow the race.   So how was the race?

The report in the  ‘Scotsman’ was brief and to the point:   

“Edinburgh Northern Harriers on Saturday won the second annual Perth to Kirkcaldy 36 miles road relay race for the Sir Michael Nairn Cup.  Twelve teams, each of six runners took part.    Northern’s victory completed a remarkable sequence of successes, the club having won every open event they have competed in this season.   The details:

  1.   Edinburgh Northern Harriers (JS Smith 30:29, W Johnston 27:09, C Lothian 30:47, W Hinde 25:42, JP Laidlaw 31:32, H McIntosh 35:35)  3 hrs 01 min 14 secs
  2. Dundee Thistle Harriers (D Coburn 31:14, P Quinn 26:36, WD Slidders 30:34, A Whitecross 25:57, D Gowans 32:43, A Donnet 36:01)  3 hrs 3 min  5 secs
  3. Bellahouston Harriers (G Hunter 31:23, A Hamilton 27:36, R Lumsden 32:21, T Lamb 26:57, R Austin 32:36, J Campbell 34:18) 3 hrs 5 min  11 secs
  4. Garscube Harriers  3 hrs 9 min 33 secs;  5  Dundee Thistle B 3 hrs 9 min 46 secs; 6. Dundee Hawkhill 3 hrs 10 min 50 sec,  7  Kirkcaldy YMCA  3 hrs 11 min 31 secs; 8.  Eastbank AC  3 hrs 13 mins 20 secs; 9.  Kirkcaldy Boys Club 3 hrs 17 min 48 sec; 10  Edinburgh Southern Harriers  3 hrs 18 min 28 sec; Kirkcaldy Old Boys Club 3 hrs 20 min  32 secs; Penicuik Harriers 3 hrs 26 min 50 sec.

Fastest relay times were accomplished by the following runners: last year’s best times are given in parentheses.

First Relay: J Suttie Smith, Edinburgh Northern (31 min 20 sec) 30 min 20 sec;   Second Relay: P Quinn, Dundee Thistle, (28 min 20 secs) 26 min 36 sec; Third Relay: A Dow, Kirkcaldy YMCA, (31 min 02 sec) 30 min 13 secs; Fourth Relay: W Hinde, Edinburgh Northern, (27 min 42 secs) 25 min 42 secs;  Fifth Relay: JP Laidlaw, Edinburgh Northern, (33 min 48 secs) 31 mins 32 secs;  Sixth Relay: J Campbell, Bellahouston Harriers (34 min 53 secs) 34 min 18 secs.

The third running of the race on 23rd March, 1936, was also well supported and the picture below is of the start. 

The race was a close one with two Glasgow clubs – Bellahouston and Plebeian Harriers – fighting out the finish.   The report in the ‘Courier’ read as follows:

In 1937  the race was held on 27th March and both Bellahouston and Plebeian were back for more of the same – Bellahouston wanting to win again, Plebeian hoping to gain revenge for the previous year’s defeat.   Both had good teams out to do battle with (principally) Edinburgh Northern, Edinburgh Southern, Dundee Thistle and Kirkcaldy YMCA.   The route was unchanged with change-over points at Aberargie (6 1/2 miles), Newburgh (5 5/12 miles), Auchtermuchty (5 1/4 miles), Freuchie (5 1/2 miles), Coaltown of Balgonie (6  5/12 miles), Esplanade, Kirkcaldy (6  3/4 miles).    The route can be seen on this representational map.

 Although the report the previous year had a 5 yard victory for the boys from Bellahouston, the pre-race review this time said that it had been won by a single yard.   It all adds to the excitement.

Any club or individual who wins a trophy twice, likes to go back to go for ‘three-in-a-row’ and Bellahouston Harriers had just that in Mind when they returned to Perth in March 1938.   The race was organised by the Kirkcaldy Hospital Pageant Commission and the race was part of the efforts to raise money for the hospital – a reminder that this was pre-NHS days and fund-raising was a necessary part of any such organisation.   The appearance of big name runners was a good selling point for the event locally.   Bellahouston had all the top men out for the event.   Like the Edinburgh to Glasgow relay, the winning club from the year before carried a special baton with a message from the Lord Provost of Perth to the Provost of Kirkcaldy.   The report read:

Bellahouston runners obviously liked Perth and they returned on 29th March 1939 for a fifth run in the race.   The photograph of two Edinburgh Northern runners below is another very good picture of all that the race entailed – determined runners, enthusiastic spectators and a road cleared by the local police – the race reports usually included a list of officials and the Chief of Police was usually mentioned and thanked for the traffic management for the event.  

The headline from the ‘Courier’ tells the story.   

The opposition in what was to be the last race included both Edinburgh clubs and both top Dundee clubs.   The results are below and Bellahouston are to be congratulated on winning the race in four consecutive years.   Over the 5 years of their participation, they only used nine runners:   Jacky Campbell ran in all five as did Tommy Lamb (a junior in 1935) and G Hunter, Hamilton, Lumsden and Gibson ran three each, Austin ran in two and Lawson and Lindsay ran one.   

That was to be the last of the Perth to Dundee road relays – the War put a stop to it and it was never resurrected.   It was a pity that the only six-man road relay disappeared.  The Scottish national 6-man road relay did not appear until 1979 and it is a very popular event with many of the country’s best running talent turning out for their clubs.   

Mildred Storrar

Hawkhill Lady Harriers’ Scottish cross-country champion team.   Back Row – Miss Tina Stevenson (trainer), Miss Helen Christie, Miss Elsie Patterson, Miss Jessie McKenzie (vice-president), Miss Bunty Carr (secretary)   Front Row – Miss Bella Allan, Miss Peggy Laird (captain), Miss Catherine F Robertson (president), Miss Mildred Storrar (Scottish cross-country individual captain), Miss Vera Murray (Vice-captain).

The picture above was taken after Mildred had won her first Scottish |Cross Country title at the end of the 1933/34 season.   A quick survey of her career tells that

  • she went on to win it in 1934/35 and 1935/36 running for Hawkhill and again in 1937/38 representing Merchiston Ladies.   
  • On the track, having been second in 1933, she won the SWAAA 880 yards in 1934 and 35 as a member of the Dundee club and for the third time in 1936 as a member of Merchiston Ladies Club.     
  • There were other minor medals after the war – third in the shot putt and discus in 1951 representing Edinburgh Harriers.     
  • The high spot maybe had to be when Mildred ran for Scotland in the 1934 British Empire Games in London – the second British Empire Games and the first major Games to have an 880 yards race for women.

Her career is certainly worth a closer look.   The picture below was taken for the local paper after the first individual (and team) victory in the national cross-country in 1934.

 

 Born in   Alberta, Canada on 9th March 1915, she is reported by one newspaper to have lived in Edinburgh but ran for Hawkhill because there was no club for her in Edinburgh.   However that came about, she won her first SWCCU National Championships  in season 1933/34.   

In the summer of 1933, Mildred was first reported in the Dundee Courier newspaper edition of Saturday 17th June in a report on the SWAAA Championships at Ibrox the previous evening.   No big write up, simply the result that she had been second to Constance Johnson of Maryhill Harriers.   We find elsewhere that Alison Ritchie of Clydesdale Harriers was third – Constance won the title twice, Mildred was to win in the next three years and Alison would be the winner in 1937.   There was a better press coverage when she ran in mid-July at the Aberdeen Football Club and North-Eastern Harriers Association Sports at Pittodrie Park.   The SWAAA hurdles and quarter mile champion, Lilias SF MacKenzie and the report in the Press & Journal read, “although putting up a gallant fight in both events, Miss MacKenzie had to take second place in the finals of both 100 yards and half-mile.   In both events her conqueror was Mildred Storrar, Dundee Hawkhill Harriers, to whom she had to concede handicap advantages.”   In the 100, MacKenzie was off 1 yard with Storrar off 6 1/2″, and in the 880 MacKenzie was running from 12 yards while Storrar was off the 30 yards mark.

The ‘Evening Telegraph’ for 21st December in 1933 previewed the club’s Christmas handicap saying that the ladie’s race would be framed on Mildred Storrar – in other words, as top runner in the race, she would be running from scratch and the estimated difference from her normal running would determine the ‘start’ that the others would receive.   The Women’s National Championship was held on 10th March at Bishopbriggs in Glasgow and the ‘Glasgow Herald’ report read:   “The annual cross-country championships of the SWAAA were decided at Auchinairn on Saturday afternoon.   There were changes in both team and individual honours, Dundee Hawkhill Harriers displacing Maryhill Harriers in the first and Mildred Storrar defeating Constance Johnston in the individual championship.   This was the Dundee club’s first success as a team although Nan Robson, one of their members, won the individual title two years ago.   The course of 1 1/2 miles was all cross-country with the exception of some 300 yards on road at the finish.   Constance Johnston led all the way until the road was reached, Miss Storrar being on her heels.   After the road was reached, the Dundee girl put in a spurt and breasted the tape five yards in front of the holder.   There was a big gap between the pair and the rest of the field..”

The actual result was as follows: Individual:

1.   M Storrar  9:46 ;  2.  C Johnston   9:47;   3.   J Tait (Clydesdale Harriers)  10:21; 4.  BG Anderson (Shettleston Harriers) 10:26 ; 5. J Logan (Shettleston) 10:32;   6.   V Murray (Dundee HH) 10:34

Team:  1.  Dundee Hawkhill Harriers: M Storrar  1; V Murray 6; E Paterson  7; B Allan  9.   23 points

2.   Maryhill Harriers:  2.  C Johnson; S MacRae  10; K Robertson  12;  C Wright  14.   45 points

3.   Shettleston Harriers   45 points;   4.  Clydesdale Harriers  56 points;    5.   Bellahouston Harriers  68 points.

Not a huge margin, but a convincing enough win from a girl who had won handicap sprints the previous summer.   

The ‘Courier’ was much more excited about the race pointing out that it was much more difficult than the usual, in the past they had been held over race courses but this time they included a ploughed field, ten fields and a steep hill.   Approximately 70 years after the race I spoke to two Clydesdale Harriers women who had run in the race – Jean Tait and Georgie Ballantine – and they remembered Mildred as ‘ a big, strong girl’.  Given that description of the trail used, she would have needed to be.   

Maybe bigger than Jean Tait but the Courier described her as a 19 year old dairymaid who had joined the Hawkhill Harriers the previous summer because there was no club for her in the capital.   ‘She assists her father in the running of the farm and is up every morning delivering the produce’   She was coached by her father but the others were looked after by Mr George Rudd who was quoted as follows: 

A pretty strict regime but it would seem not too much in the way of running.   There were not too many races on the calendar for women but the final race of the cross-country was the club’s own road race championships at the start of April with 15 runners.   Mildred won by 15 seconds from Vera Murray and Cissie Riley (both on the same time); with E Christie fourth.  

The big event for any athlete of talent was the British Empire Games to be held in London from 4th to 11th August   It was the second of the series but the first with events for women.  The first meeting had a range of sports available for men but women could only take part in swimming.   The main selection event for the Games would be the Scottish Championships and Mildred Storrar was up for the challenge.   The meeting was on Friday 15th June, and the result of the 880 yards was a victory for the Dundee runner.   First, M Storrar   second,  N Aitken (Shettleston Harriers),   third, I McGovern (Shettleston) winning time: 2:31 4/5th.   The Scotsman reported: “The victory of M Storrar, the cross-country champion in the half-mile was a very easy one and had she been pushed her time would have been much better.    

The Scotrtish team for the 1934 Empire Games: Mildred is in the centre of the front row.

She was chosen – one of only five Scottish athletes to go to the Games – and prepared for her event.   Still only 19 years old, it was a big experience for her.

Photograaph and badges courtesy Janet Hardy

 In the actual race, Mildred started but collapsed in the second lap and, although the official results place her seventh, she failed to finish   She was Scottish cross-country champion, track half-mile champion, so what went wrong?   The ‘Evening Telegraph’ reported.

It must have been a bitter disappointment for the Dundee woman but at 19 she must have thought that there would be another chance.  The winter of 1935-35 was almost on her and there was the national to think of – and there would also be a women’s cross-country to contest too. In the Scottish women’s championship the club retained the Championship and Mildred won the title for the second time.   

Came the international and the Scots were well beaten by the English squad.  The rules were simple – six to run and four to count.   the Scots team was simply chosen with the first six in the National selected.  Mildred, twice Scottish women’s cross country champion finished behind  two other Scots in 10th place. The Aberdeen ‘Press & Journal’ reported that the course was heavy and the runners had to clear several brooks, going on to report that the more experienced English runners filled the first four places.   The ‘Courier’ reported:

‘The Scotsman’ reported in a bit more detail.

We might have expected a big, strong running woman like Mildred Storrar who worked on a farm to revel in a heavy cross-country trail, half a mile longer than the domestic championship, with several brooks to be crossed but she was a full 50 seconds behind Jean Tait and 54 behind Constance Johnson.   It was a very good week end by all accounts with a very good meal in one of the best local hotels for both teams to mingle and enjoy a social evening together.    It was now on to the track for summer 1935 and Mildred had a title to defend.   

Towards the end of May, the annual contest between Dundee Hawkhill and St Andrews University, took place and Mildred Storrar won the Women’s 440 yards in a time reported as 7 1/5th seconds (!) from Margaret Kennedy of St Andrews and Vera Murray of Hawkhill.   Mildred was also third in the 100 yards and in the high jump and was a member of the second p[laced relay team.

The SWAAA track and field championships took place at Ibrox Park on Friday 28th June on a warm, sunny and pleasant day.   Mildred retained her 880 yards title in a time of  2 min 32 5/10th seconds from BG Anderson of Shettleston Harriers.   BG Anderson was herself an interesting character – a very good runner on track and country she also ran for Maryhill Harriers and Clydesdale Harriers in the course of her athletics career.   On this occasion however the reports merely said that Storrar had ‘won easily.’   Only two runners finished.   She also won the discus throw – a preview of her two post war successes in the throws events.

In February 1936 The Dundee women held their club championship and Mildred won it for the third successive year.

That was first title that was retained and the big one was still to come.   The National was held again on the Bishopbriggs course in Glasgow and the trophy was returned safely to Dundee.   The individual trophy that was – and that was after a struggle with Clydesdale Harrier Jean Tait whom she finally defeated by only 4 seconds – but the team title went to Clydesdale Harriers who had their first four runners placed 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 7th against the Hawks 1st, 6th, 9th and 10th with Greenock Wellpark Harriers’ team in third with placings at 5th, 17th, 18th and 19th.   

The first big meeting of the summer was the international against England France and Holland at Blackpool where she finished fourth in the 800 metres. but the BIG one was the SWAAA championshsips.   The issue of the ‘Courier’ for Saturday 20th June reported on Mildred’s third consecutive SWAAA champioship victory at Ibrox the previous day but with a twist.   It read:

The Edinburgh farmer’s daughter had switched from Dundee Hawkhill Harriers to Merchiston Ladies Club.    The ‘Scotsman’ gave us a bit more detail in the results column after saying that 

Note that the second placed athlete was Jean Tait of Clydesdale Harriers who had been second to her in the national cross-country championships.   The move to Merchiston was probably  a practical decision taken after four years of being driven to Dundee from Edinburgh and back for training and racing after an early rise to deliver the produce followed by a day’s work on the farm.   It would have been difficult to cut the ties to Hawkhill after almost four years of membership and friend ships forged with the other team members.   

Because of the adverse weather conditions – no teams from Aberdeen or Dundee travelled – the national championships at Bishopbriggs were not called a championship but a sealed handicap race was run instead with all the major places filled by the really unchallenged Clydesdale Harriers.   When it came to the SWAAA Championships in 1937, Mildred Storrar competed only in the discus where she won for the second year in succession.   It is not clear why she did not turn out in the half mile, she may have been injured but where the ‘Courier’ reported in some detail on her progress, the Scotsman, a bigger paper with a bigger circulation, was not as forthcoming.

She was however back in action over the longer distances by the time of the 1937/38 cross-country season.   This time, she was running as an individual since there was no Merchiston team forward – Clydesdale had a team forward and BG Anderson had by now migrated to Bellahouston Harriers.   The Scotsman report is below.

 

Clydesdale with four in the first six won the team race – had BG Anderson stayed with the club with whom she had already won team gold, she would have had another and the club would have had five in the first six.   If you are wondering what happened to Jean Tait – well she was third under the name of Mrs Jean McMillan having married fellow Clydesdale Harrier Andy McMillan.   

Mildred was 24 in March 1938 at a time when women’s sporting careers tended to be relatively short.   She was to be no exception.   The events on the continent at the end of the 1930’s maybe hastened her departure but 1938 was her last season at the top of the Scottish women’s endurance running tree.   There were not very many events for women at the time and the Scotsman did not report on women’s sport as much as the ‘Dundee Courier’ did either.   For instance the Hawkhill women’s club championships were reported every year while the same is not true of the Merchiston Ladies Club.   As an example of the attitude to women’s sport in the community at large, the following extract from an article on the school prize giving where Mildred won the athletics prize is informative.

 

No results were found in searches for Mildred Storrar in either the Scotsman or the Courier for 1939.   She did compete after the war but to nothing like the pre-war standard and although she did win some medals at the SWAAA  championships in 1951 and 1952 they do not appear to be of equal significance to those that she won so well and so profusely before 1939.   It would be interesting to find what her involvement after the war had been but unfortunately it is not an easy trail to pick up, and the current difficulties with government restrictions do not make it any easier.   

Alex Wilson sent the above photograph showing Mildred in hurdling action.   There are two things about the picture that strike one immediately.   The first is the remark that she ‘recently formed the Merchiston Ladies Club’ which adds to our store of information about her reasons for leaving Dundee Hawkhill Harriers.   The second, as Alex himself comments, is that she would have been a very good pentathlete.   We know from other results that she was a good sprinter at distances up to 440 yards, an international class half-miler, a medal winning shot and discus performer, a high jumper and here she is as a hurdler.   More information about her post-war athletics involvement would be invaluable.   

Mildred Storrar died in 1985 in Cardenden in Fife at the early age of 70 and is buried in Bowhill Cemetery. 

 

 

Heart of Midlothian Sports: 1881 – 1884

Hearts was formed as a football club in 1874 and it held its first sports in 1881 at Tynecastle.   They were held on 14th May but they were not amateur sports like those of most football clubs.  In Glasgow the principal club holding professional sports meetings was Clyde FC – and that was probably due to some extent to the tradition going back to the earlier century of pedestrian racing being held on a weekly basis at Shawfield.

 

14 May 1881 (above and below)

29th April 1882  (below)

 

1884 (above and below)

Ian Ross: A Short Look At His Career in Athletics

If it is true that the definition of a good club man is the fact that he does what his club needs him to do is correct, then Ian Ross is an exemplar.   In fact the definition could be stretched to a good man for athletics is one who does what his sport needs him to do, then you still come up with him as a role model.   

* As a runner, he started his career as a runner and, joining Edinburgh Southern Harriers club in 1927, he ran in the National cross-country championships seven times between 1928 and 1939.   Hie also ran in the Edinburgh to Glasgow in 1931 when he was sixth on the first stage for the team that finished 10th of 17 competing, and he ran the first leg in 1931, finishing seventh of 20 teams with Edinburgh Southern being seventh.   He ran track, road and cross country for the club, and in summer ran on the track.   His performances are detailed on the previous page along with a good photograph of just some of the ‘glittering prizes’ that he won in his career.

*As an administrator, he worked his way up through the cross-country committees f club and District to join the ranks of the NCCU to become President  in season 1959-60.   The Cross-Country Union has a system where club representatives are nominated to the District Committees and then those Committees elect their representatives to the National Union.   He served his time there and deserved the Presidency when it came.   The SAAA had a different system and the members of the District Committees were elected at the AGM and then were all part of the National Association after serving their time effectively on various sub-committees and in a variety of capacities.   He became President of the SAAA in 1966.   Both associations also employed him as a team manager for district and for Scottish representative teams.

*As an official, Ian was a Grade 1 official on the track, in the Throws events and in the Jumps events.   It was unusual for all three to be maintained at Grade 1.   These also qualified him to act as a referee at sports meetings and championships.

*As a coach, Ian was Senior Coach for Middle Distance running, Senior Coach being the highest level that a coach could attain.   

Part of a Generation of officials that included such able men as Willie Carmichael, Neil Campbell, Fred Graham, Joe Walker and others he was a man who did more than his share for the sport in Scotland.   

IAN ROSS

Alex Jackson, a well-known, popular official and statistician, wrote:

Ian Ross in 4 photos. 1st one as an athlete in the 1930s. 2nd one as an Edinburgh Southern official with athletes in the 1950s. 3rd one at a club presentation night in the 1970s. 4th one some of the prizes he won as an athlete. I knew Ian as an SCCU official but not very well, yet I feel through his scrapbook I’m getting to really know him. He did a lifetime of service for Edinburgh Southern, He died in 1990 during the SCCU centenary season.”

There is a short, complementary account of Ian’s involvement in the sport at this link.

Colin Youngson (who, wearing ESH colours, won the 1975 Scottish Marathon Championship) remembers, “When I was fortunate to race for ESH between 1974 and 1981, the club was extremely successful: not only in Track and Field; but also in Cross-Country and Road Running (with Allister Hutton and John Robson often starring). Glory years! I remember Ian Ross as a well-liked, respected, kindly official and, since Alex Jackson and Ron Morrison (SCCU President from 1985-86; then SAF President; and now SAL President) have sent me photographs of Ian’s Athletics Scrapbook, it is a privilege to select several for this website and to add some comments. Ian Ross had every right to be very proud of his long association with Scottish Athletics.” 

                                                                           Ian Ross, wearing spectacles, second from left

                  Hamish Robertson, future ESH Club Secretary and, between 1972-75 and 1984-86, ESH President, in athletics kit, standing on the far right of the photo.         

Ian Ross standing in the middle, suit and spectacles

      1975, when ESH was one of the top Clubs in the UK. Standing, far left, is a very young Allister Hutton (Future London Marathon winner). On the far right, Ian Ross.

                                                                                         Some of Ian Ross’s running trophies

 

 

                                                                   Ian Ross, President of the Scottish Cross-Country Union from 1959-60

                                                         Ian Ross, President of the Scottish Amateur Athletic Association in 1966

 

 

                                                                                                                          ESH History

                                                                                                         ESH history continued

                                                                     Ian Ross, President of Edinburgh Southern Harriers from 1960-63

                                                                     Jimmy Smart, a real gentleman, was ESH President from 1971-72

 

Ian McKenzie, an excellent team manager, was ESH President from 1975-77. Ian Clifton, a very popular Scottish official, was ESH President from 1978-80, SCCU President from 1977-78 and SAAA President in 1986. Martin Craven, a GB and Scottish International runner, and a great team man, was ESH President from 1980-82. George Brown, another fine runner and invaluable team man, was ESH President from 1982-84. 

          Season 1978-1979: the Grand Slam (or Clean Sweep) of Autumn and Winter Scottish Cross-Country and Road Relay trophies

Ian Ross’s good friend, and fellow ESH enthusiast Ian McKenzie wrote the following tribute:

“I first got to know Ian Ross back in the early 1950s, when ESH were constructing the clubhouse at Fernieside. As a qualified carpenter/joiner, Ian was Clerk of Works on the build and was part of the team of club members involved every weekend in the construction. He was very much the driving force behind the completion by 1955.

Edinburgh Southern Harriers and Athletics played a major part in his life, initially as a good class middle distance runner and then later as an official for club and governing bodies, He attended the 1966 Commonwealth Games in Jamaica as Head of the Scottish Athletics team, and later played a part in getting the Games to Edinburgh in 1970, where he was Technical Manager.

His enthusiasm for the sport was unparalleled and remained so. Towards the end of his life, he was Honorary President of ESH, a position he greatly treasured, and he continued to attend every monthly meeting, where his knowledge and wisdom was invaluable.

Personally, I benefited greatly from his grasp of the sport. Outside of Athletics, he owned a very successful joinery business and enjoyed visits to the pub for a beer and a nip of whisky. However, Athletics was his overwhelming passion and even most of the pub visits were to meet those with a similar interest. This is only a brief insight into the person I knew and held in high esteem.”

Singers Sports

The stand at Singer’s Recreation Ground, Clydebank

The Singers Sports was a regular fixture on the SAAA Calendar after the Second World War and was held on the first Saturday in June with some of the very best athletes in the country competing there.   Its history goes back well before the war however and the picture of the stand above, situated on the north side of the track, dates from the 1930’s.   Many factories and manufacturing firms had their own sports sections and, even as recently as the 1960’s, Babcock & Wilcox (Renfrew), Dirrans (Kilwinning) and Singers had their own sports.   Singer was a massive factory: read the following from ‘Glasgow Live’.

The factory came into being thanks to Scots born George Ross McKenzie, who, while serving as General Manager of The Singer Sewing Machine Company, the first successful American multi-national company in the world.   …   Benefited from a location both next to a railway line and the Forth and Clyde canal, then Vice President McKenzie breaking ground on it in 1882 in a construction that lasted three years and required 20 million bricks before it opened in 1885.   Originally featuring two main buildings 800ft long and 50ft wide and 3 storeys high connected by three wings, it was designed to be fire proof with water sprinklers making it the most modern factory in Europe at that time.   And barely a decade later, the Kilbowie factory would become Singer’s flagship factory, with a workforce of over 5000 strong manufacturing 80% of the world’s sewing machines.   So big was the factory that it had its own train station (still present today), with production levels so high that two-and-a-half miles of railway track were laid to link up assembly lines, foundries, tools hops, storage and distribution centres.   And so productive was the factory that in 1905 the US Singer Company set up the Singer Manufacturing Company Ltd. as a UK registered company, with demand so high that each building in the factory  (then the world’s largest) was extended upwards to 6 storeys high.

With 11,500 workers employed at the plant at its peak, in 1913 Singer shipped 1,301,851 sewing machines from its factory doors to households and businesses around the world.”

The Singer clock was the world’s largest four faced clock, five feet bigger than Big Ben

was a massive operation and encouraged its employees to take part in all kinds of sports – there was a football team, a cricket team, a bowls club, an athletics club and it also catered for indoor sports.   The bowlers had their own green and clubhouse and the others took place at the recreation ground.   Among the thousands of employees, were many members of Clydesdale Harriers, based in the town, many of whom were in promoted positions.   Therefore when the idea of an annual sports and gala day came up, they helped with the organisation.    

Clydebank and its environs always a sport loving community and there had been several athletics meetings held over the years.   In 1919 there had been a good one held at Old Kilpatrick with many athletes from Clydesdale Harriers as well as repr3sentatives of all the Glasgow clubs.   The first Singers Sports reported in the Glasgow Herald on 6th June 1921.   The report in its entirety is below.

The reference right at the start to ‘their annual sports’ seems to indicate that there had been similar sports previously but there is no indication for how long.   They also seem to have been exclusively for employees and local schools.   Note that the High School w as HG   which was Higher Grade (or Senior Secondary) as opposed to Dalmuir School which was not Higher Grade.   George McQuattie was a member of Clydesdale Harriers but the club affiliation was not given.    The Sports were always on the same weekend – the first in June.   This meant a clash with Queen’s Park FC Sports and the Scottish Universities Championships as well as several of the major schools events.   But, given that it was at this point a ‘closed’ meeting with a restricted range of events, this would not have been a factor in their calculations.

The following year, on 3rd June 1922, the events were largely the same with a Ladies Race as well as a ladies relay – women’s athletics were just starting to appear in the country and this was an interesting venture.   There were also boys races and relay.   There was also a tennis tournament and a five a side football competition.    This was the pattern for the 20’s – confined races, races for local schools as well as tennis and the almost mandatory 5-a-sides.   The origins of the Sports – or Sports Gala as it was sometimes referred to – were not reported on at the time but the report on the 1927 meeting started by saying: “In showery weather, the twelfth annual sports gala in connection with the Singer works was held at the Recreation Ground, Dalmuir on Saturday.”   So 1915 was the first year.   Names that appeared in the results included A Gailey (later a member and treasurer of Clydesdale Harriers before he emigrated), G McQuattie and in the women’s 75 yards race the winner was Peggy Ellison who was a prominent member of the Clydesdale Harriers Ladies when it started up in 1930.   

They were always trying new ways to entertain the  crowd and in 1929, there was a children’s pageant with historical tableaux, songs and dancing, there were also gymnastics exhibitions by members of the YMCA.   The pageant would develop to the crowning of the Singer Queen with her retinue of the 1950’s.  There were also the usual athletics events and the piping was also a feature although the tennis and 5-a-side seemed to have disappeared by then.

The first sports of the new decade was on 9th June 1930 and the pageant led to the crowning of the Queen of the Fair (Margaret Pattison).   One of the other innovations during the thirties was the introduction of a relay for the school girls as well as the existing one for boys.   This was however the format until the war started in 1939.

During the War, the factory was devoted to making equipment and supplies for the war effort and there was no time or room in the year for such niceties as the Sports Gala.   During this period the factory received over 5000 government contracts, made 303 million artillery shells, shell components, shell fuses, aeroplane parts as well as grenades, rifle parts and 361,000 horseshoes.   The company labour force of 14,000 at the end of the war was 70% women.

After the war the sports started up with a difference or two.   The ‘Glasgow Herald’ report read as follows:   “Singer Recreation Club’s Sports were distinguished by the performance of Any Forbes (Victoria Park) who won one of the Mile handicaps from the small allowance of five yards to win in 4 min 24.6 sec over a course of six laps to the mile and against a strong wind.   Other winners:   100 yards  W McDonald (Clydesdale Harriers) (8 1/2) 10.9 sec; 220 yards:  J O’Kane (Garscube) (14)  23 sec; 880 yards: W McCrimmon (Vale of Leven) (44)  2 min 1 sec;  Mile B:  J Stirling (Victoria Park) (105)  4 min 34.9 sec.”   There were several points to take from that report, brief as it is.   First is the fact that there are no results of the confined events although there were still many to be seen on the day.   Second, there was a full programme of open events which were well supported and which, in the eyes of the reporter, took precedence over the confined races.

Not mentioned:  1.   The pageant was still a feature of the sports and would be there until the sports came to an end in the late 60’s.   2.  The tennis had gone altogether from the Gala and 3.  the football was held away from the meeting too.   It had in fact become a genuine open sports meeting albeit on a short grass track.   The Recreation Ground was also used by other community groups – the photograph below is of the invitation half mile race in the mid 1950’s at the Clydebank High School Sports which were held there.

Photograph by Jim Young, leading above

A year later and again, it was a short report but the papers were only 6 or 8 pages long, there was a full spoprts programme and a local meeting was maybe fortunate to have the results printed at all.   This time the man mentioned first was George McDonald of Victoria Park who was second in both open and confined 100 yards races.   The winners of the sprints were J Wilson of Clydesdale in the 100 yards from a mark of 7 yards in 10.1 sec and the 220 by DT Clark of Garscube, also off 7 yards in 23.2 seconds.   Jim Young of Clydesdale won the 880 in 1:58.6 from 45 yards and Ben Bickerton of Shettleston took the Mile from a mark of 40 yards in 4 min 38.5.   The Junior one lap race was won by R Whitelock of Victoria Park in 36.9 from 17 yards and the Women’s 100 yards was won by I Irving (Clydesdale ) 11.3 sec from a mark of 8 yards.   

The sports were becoming a bit better known and the calibre of athlete was getting higher.  This was helped by the Guest of Honour in 1951.   Like many other local sports meetings and highland gatherings, Singer Sports and Gala Day had a guest of honour – the best known of there was Dorothy Lamour who came along a few years after this but in 1951 it was Olympic sprinter June Foulds from London.   She had come to prominence as a 16 year old and would go on to run in the 1952 and 1956 Olympics.   After opening the Sports she took part in both 100 yards races (open and invitation) with the results seen below.  Scots M Carmichael and Willie Jack were also international athletes.     

Things just continued to progress.   The meeting in 1952 provided a big shock in the women’s events where two British International athletes came face to face.  One was Pat Devine of the Q Club in Dundee who would be the first Scottish woman to compete in the Empire Games, the European Games and the Olympic Games.   She and her clubmate Elspeth Hay were the first Scottish women ever to be selected for a GB team.   Of course, the handicaps had something to do with the final results but the winners in both 100 and 220 yards were off quite short handicaps.    Wotherspoon of the YMCA would go on to become a good, medal winning, member of Shettleston Harriers.

 

The competition between meeting organisers on the first Saturday in June was fierce, coming as the date did a mere three weeks before the national championships and with the short track and grass surface, Singers Sports were at a disadvantage.   In 1954 for instance, they were competing against the big budget and 440 yards track at Shawfield where the Lanarkshire Police were holding their sports,    The Scottish Universities were big players in the sport in the early 50’s and they had their national championships on the same date, and on this date in 1954 the new cinder track at Caird Park was having its grand opening meeting with home girls Pat Devine and Elspeth Hay taking part and Joe McGhee of Shettleston Harriers taking on local hero Chick Robertson over 13 miles on the road.   There were many schools championships being held too     The draw at Singers however was star long distance runner Ian Binnie who was taking his chances over the half mile distance as a test of how his speed work was coming along in the run-in to the SAAA event.   As it turned out, he won his heat but could only come fourth in the final behind W Gall of Maryhill Harriers off 68 yards in 1:58.6 seconds.   Binnie had won his heat in 2:00.4.   The meeting went as well as usual but Binnie was the only star name that yea.   There is a clip of the meeting which is more of a general interest programme with the emohasois on the pageant and the Gala Queen than on the athletics  at 

   Watch Singer Sports and Gala 1954 online – BFI Player

The 50’s were good for Singers Sports Gala the 60’s were better.   The programme grew – in 1960 there were the events that we know of already – open races, schools races and confined races ,but there were also more field events, more women’s events (there were open relays as well as confined for instance) and Inter-Works competitions against such as John Brown’s shipyard.   And there was the pageant which was something that none of the other meetings of the summer could equal – if a sewing machine factory could not produce elegant dresses, who could?

In 1961 Ronnie Whitelock won his heat of the 100 yards off half a yard and was beaten by that much in the final by Gibbons of Vale of Leven who was running from 6 yards.   Whitelock’s time was 9,8 seconds.  The works relay which was won by Babcock & Wilcox was run over stages of 3 laps, 1 lap, 1 lap and 2 laps on a track that was 6 laps to the mile.   The women’s events were dominated by the Ardeer Recreation AC who won the 100 yards and the relay while Moira Carmichael took the 220 yards.

The 1963 event is summarised in the results above – top quality athletes all through the programme.   Tom Cochrane from Beith was a superb runner who won the South Western District Cross Country championship 7 times and was a Scottish international runner, Bill Purdie who competed in open races, scratch races and invitation events all summer, every summer and the women who took the prizes above were all international or international class.   Note particularly Anne Wilson, Sheila McBeth and Georgena Buchanan.   1964 was even better, see below

And Colin Martin and Jim Brennan were not even mentioned in the report.   

John Maclachlan (4) just beats Pat Younger (2) in the confined half mile.

The 1965 meeting was certainly the one with the biggest celebrity roll call of them all -Ian McCafferty, Graeme Grant, Cyril O’Boyle, Ian Logie, Avril Beattie, Jinty Jameson, Linda Carruthers  were all winners and there were other down the field in many of the events.   Have a look at the report.    

Nearly 40 runners in the Mile on a 6 lap to the mile grass track!   This had previously been the longest race on the programme but by now there was a ‘Round the Factory’ race which was won by Cyril O’Boyle.   The pole vault was relatively new to the sports and was won by Ian Logie who was an SAAA Internationalist and championship medallist.   The entire Western Ladies team was almost certainly all international in make up.    Unfortunately it was probably the last ever.   It is the last one that we have found reports on.   

Any other sports organising committee having the success of this meeting would have been happy to keep it going –  the sport was good and the crowds were coming every year.   It was a successful community event. The factory was starting to have a hard time however – read about it on google and many cuts were being made all the way through the factory and it closed finally in 1980.    It was a pity that a factory which, true to the spirit of the time was interested in and catered for the welfare of its workers and the community in which it found itself.   The Burgh still has the Singer Bowling Green and the Singer Hall, donated by the firm, however to thank the company for in addition to all its great memories.

..

Tom Vallance


Tom Vallance was a sporting giant: Scottish long jump record holder, Rangers FC first captain and rower.   Away from the sports field he was a first rate artist who had two paintings accepted for show by the RSA, he was also a prize winning breeder of dogs and birds.   His story can be read at this link    On this page we are looking at his athletics career – or what we can find of it.  

Not only was he the Rangers first  captain  he was one of the founders of Clydesdale Harriers, Scotland’s first open athletic club.   .Born on 27th May, 1856, he was born in Succoth Farm, north of Helensburgh and the family moved to Helensburgh.   By the time he joined Clydesdale Harriers he was living in Craigmaddie Terrace, Glasgow while brother Alex lived at Rose Street in Garnethill.   By now Alex was competing and winning prizes mainly as a hurdler – he was SAAA hurdles champion in 1888 but Tom does not appear in the results columns at all.   In season 1891-92 the brothers moved in together to a house at 26 Paisley Road in Glasgow – to be their address for the rest of the century.   The family back in Dunbartonshire kept up the athletics tradition with first of all a young Thomas Vallance starting in Shandon then moving to Helensburgh and later an Adam Vallance competing from the Shandon farm address.   All four were members of Clydesdale Harriers.   Alex was a club member until his death in 1898.   

As an athlete, Tom was a big man – 6′ 2″ at a time when the height of the average Glaswegian was 5′ 7″ – and this gave him a tremendous advantage in many events.  We will come back to his build and strength later when we look at his activities in 1881.   

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The first competition to look at was when he competed on 24th August, 1878, at the  Parkgrove FC Amateur Sports held at the club grounds,  Trinidad Park in Copeland Road on the south side of Glasgow.   The ‘relevant parts of the ‘Glasgow Herald’ report reads: 
“A novel feature of the gathering was a four a side football competition, the first ties of which were were played off on the Saturday previous. Six teams were left to struggle for first honour, and after the ties had been gone through the final contest lay between a team from the Rangers Football Club, consisting of WG Struthers, Moses McNeil, H McIntyre, and Alexander Vallance, and a team from the Parkgrove Football Club comprising A Watson, W Cooper, W Docherty and W Campbell. A somewhat unequal game took place between two teams , the representatives of the ‘light and speedy’ securing an easy victory by two goals, and, according to the rules of the four a side game, two touchdowns to nothing.” (ie Rangers won).   Meanwhile in the athletics competition Tom Vallance was very active.    He won the Broad Jump with a clearance of 21’ 1” and was second in the Final of the 120 yards hurdles after winning his Heat.

Two weeks later, on 7th September, 1878, at the Queens Park FC Sports,  Tom won the ‘Running Long Jump’ with another 21’’ + .   He didn’t seem to compete the following year but at the Queen’s Park Sports on 4th September, 1880, he won the Broad Jump with a leap of  21’ 3”.  


ALEX VALLANCE

1881 was his big year though.   The first Rangers Sports were held on 20th August, 1881.  Tom took part in and won four events:= 
1. Devised by and won by T Vallance., the tug-of-war was different from the usual contest. Instead of teams facing each other and pulling one rope in opposite directions to force their opponents over the mark, the new method consists of two ropes of equal length with loops at either end and securely tied together in the centre. Four only compete at a time, each putting the fixed loop over his body and standing at opposite corners where flagstaffs are fixed in the ground about two yards behind. All pull in opposite directions, the first who seizes his flagstaff and drags it from the ground to win. The contest was most amusing.   He had two rounds of this competition.  
2. Broad Jump: Won by T Vallance, 21’ 6”  with brother Alex second having a best leap of 19′ 5″
3. Hurdle Race: Won by T Vallance, 18 seconds
4. Obstacle Race.  Won by T Vallance. For the obstacle race (about 400 yards), 24 entered, who were set off in three heats and a final, and as the difficulties proved rather trying to the competitors, few completed the distance. At the start the men ran about thirty yards backwards, turned round and got over the first barrels by leap frog, the next were crept through, the hurdles were crawled under and leaped over as best they could, where fresh difficulties had to be overcome. The first of these consisted of poles placed at an angle and resting on the top of horizontal bar about 10 feet high, from which ropes were suspended, the poles were clambered up sailor fashion, the ground being reached by sliding down the ropes. Further on, young trees, divested of branches, and supported at either end by trusses about 2 feet high had to be walked along, and as they were placed at a distance from each other, and about 35 feet long, the vibration in the centre caused most of the competitors to lose their equilibrium when they had to try again or give up. The last obstacle was a horizontal bar over which the men had to throw a somersault. When this was reached the best gymnast both in the heats and the final, was 30 or 40 yards in front, when he had an easy finish.   There were Heats and a Final in this event and he won his Heat as well as the Final.   

This was a prodigious afternoon’s work by any standards – two rounds of the obstacle race, two rounds of a strenuous tug o’war, two rounds of the hurdles and a long jump competition.   He would have needed all his strength for such a feat.   Had there been a multi events competition such as a pentathlon, heptathlon or decathlon, he would have been a fearsome opponent.  Meanwhile, young brother Alex was third in the confined half mile – this was the longest distance that we have found for either brother.

Two short weeks after this demonstration performance, on 3rd September, 1881, he was back at the Queen’s Park FC  Sports which he seemed to like.   Both brothers were in action that afternoon.   In the 120 yards hurdles race, Alex was second in the first Heat and Tom was first in the second Heat.   Into the Final with four runners, one fell and was out of things but Tom won the race in 21 seconds  with Alex third.   In the Broad Jump, Tom won with a leap of 21′ 11″, defeat in the Englishman Charles Cunliffe from St Helen’s who had a 20′ 2″ clearance.   This was  Scottish record for the distance and it significance was later recognised by the SAAA: John Keddie in the Centenary History of the Scottish Amateur Athletic Association comments: “An International footballer, Tom Vallance (Rangers FC), had cleared 21′ 11″ (6m68) … a performance which, though ante-dating the SAAA, was passed as the initial Scottish record.”   The record stood until 27th June 1895 when Hugh Barr of Clydesdale Harriers did 22′ 01″.   He was not finished for the afternoon though – he was also fourth in the high jump.   

This seems to be the end of his competitive career.   On 22nd February in 1882 he left Scotland for Calcutta to become involved in tea planting in Assam.  He was back a year later after contracting black water fever.   He was not the same man when he returned and his football was almost non existent.   

William S Legge

William S Legge

Cheshire Tally-ho and Clydesdale Harriers

In March 1886 WS Legge ran for Clydesdale Harriers in the first Scottish Cross-Country Championships but was not selected, only ran to ‘make up numbers’ and didn’t properly finish the course coming in last of the 14 finishers. He is still recorded as the 6th counter for the Clydesdale team.

The archive searches are somewhat vague but he appears to have been born in Salford in January, 1860 to Alfred and Martha Legge. Alfred is listed as an author from Fakenham in Norfolk. They were resident in Barton Upon Irwell in 1871 and had 1 step daughter and 4 children including William and a servant. Martha was some 11 years older than Alfred. William was still living in Barton in 1881 with his parents aged 21 and is listed as a General Manger/Warehouseman. It is possible that his middle name was Stowell.

His athletic career appears to start around 1882/83 when he would have been 22/23 years old but It probably would have been earlier (further work needed here). He appeared for the Boxing Day run on 26th December 1883 with the Cheshire Tally-ho Hares and Hounds over a 16-mile course and ran 66th in the Northern Championships at Manchester Racecourse on 23rd February, 1884. He followed this up with 38th in the National at Sutton Coldfield as 3rd counter.  Later in 1884 he was 3rd in the club steeple-chase handicap off 2mins on 29th November at Bowden. He served on the Cheshire Tally-ho Committee for the season 1884-1885.

He then disappears from view. It appears that he had moved to Scotland for a while, something noted in the Cheshire Tally-ho history of 1893 ‘… who had been residing in Glasgow where he had assisted in the formation of the Clydesdale Harriers, now the leading Scotch club …’. (p67). While there is as yet no evidence that he was one of the group who founded Clydesdale Harriers at their meeting in May of 1885, he did take part in their opening run on Saturday 24th October from the Black Bull, Milngavie. The course was over 12-13 miles over the estate of the Duke of Montrose with WS Legge acting as pace-maker. However, The Athletic News has the Clydesdale Harriers running at Shandon near Helensburgh on Saturday 17th October near to where the brothers Vallance used to reside but there is no mention of Legge on this run. Attention now turns to a run on the 21st November at Bridge of Weir by the Lanarkshire Bicycle Club Harriers section which was whipped by Legge over 8 miles. JF Fergus, Captain of the LBC Harriers acted as pace and in the run in over 1 mile, Legge won.

The first Clydesdale Harriers – Edinburgh Harriers inter-club run took place on 28th November at Coltbridge with 27 from EH and 8 from CH. The course was over 8-10 miles and Legge took part listed as one of the CH team. Legge also acted as pace for the pack at the CH meeting at Half-Way House, Ibrox on Saturday 26th December coming 3rd in the run in.

Legge then made it back to England to take part in a run on 2nd January, 1886 with his Cheshire club mates but is listed interestingly as a member of Clydesdale Harriers.

Entering 1886, CH ran in a snow storm on Saturday 16th January at Chryston with Legge acting as pace over 6 miles but there was a some issue of the paper becoming obscured in the snow and the pack being unable to follow the hares. There were two members of the Lanarkshire Bicycle Club Harriers (Fisken and Sanderson) also running. On 29th January at the inter club with Edinburgh Harriers and the Lanarkshire Bicycle Club Harriers, Legge was in the ’quick pack’. There was tea at the Langholm Hotel and arrangements were made for the National at Lanark Racecourse. Legge ran again on 13th February at Rutherglen with CH.

In The Athletic News on 9th March, Legge is not named in the Clydesdale Harriers team for the inaugural Scottish Cross-Country Championships. This may have been down to the fact that as an ‘Anglo’ and as a member of another club as well as the rules being somewhat vague, only Scots and ‘first claim’ members were eligible. After the postponement of the original date of the Championships on 13th March due to snow, it eventually took place in pouring rain on Saturday 27th March. It didn’t go well. It was unfortunately rescheduled on the 27th against an International football match at Hampden and also against a backdrop of rumour and counter rumour of it having been postponed until 3rd April. This limited the potential to attract spectators. It didn’t however fail to attract bookmakers (despite the later protestations of DS Duncan). The bookies however had a lean day as few spectators turned up. While Edinburgh Harriers turned up with 11 of those originally named, Clydesdale could not muster a team, with only 5 turning up out of the original 12 plus 3 reserves.  This would have put paid to the team race. However, an ‘elegant’ solution was at hand in the shape of William S Legge. The Athletic News reported that Legge, who had only turned up to act as a judge, volunteered to run to make up the team for Clydesdale. One can only imagine the discussions that ensued while this was debated. But given that Edinburgh had a ‘Anglo’ in John WL Beck (who it must be remembered had competed only in August for Blackburn Harriers) and weighing up the potential for this ‘scratch’ team of Clydesdale to win the team race, Edinburgh clearly (graciously?) allowed Legge to run in order that Clydesdale could finish a team. Running attire was somehow cobbled together and Legge ran in order simply to finish, which he did in last place (14th). 3 failed to finish the course.  Although ……. he didn’t quite finish. When the last four ‘entered the course for the home run, seeing that any effort on their part would not affect the result of the contest, did not finish but entered to the dressing rooms by the wrong course.’ So, Clydesdale did not in fact finish a team but by general ‘acclaim’ Legge was allowed the accolade of counting team member and, one assumes, the runners up medal. There are at least 3 accounts of the race with The Glasgow Herald the most detailed, The Athletic News adding context and The Sporting Life adding some further detail (not all of it accurate). The teams dined afterwards.

It is not able to be determined for how long William Legge was in Scotland, but after the championships in March 1886 he seems to disappear until the cross country season of 1887-1888 when he was once again elected on to the committee of Cheshire Tally-ho Hares and Hounds and ran in a club race at Chelford near Alderley on 4th November, 1887. There were a few more runs including one at Norbury on 28th January. He ran in the club championships at Bowden on 4th February and finished 13th and then was selected for the Team for the National Championships on 3rd March at Manchester Racecourse. This was not to be sadly.

The Athletic News 13 March 1888

 

The very day that the Alderley and Wilmslow Advertiser announced the Cheshire Tally-ho Hares and Hounds team on the 2nd March for the race the next day, William Legge passed away in his 28th year.

 

By Hamish McD Telfer 19 Jan 2021