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ARSENAL Four home programmes for season 1934/5 v. Middlesbrough slight creased and centre pages are very worn, v. Aston Villa slightly creased, small paper loss inside and rusty staples, v. Everton slightly creased and rusty staples and v. Derby County Championship Issue, vertical creases. Fair to generally good
FOOTBALL MISCELLANY Twenty two Press photographs of various sizes including England and Scotland International from the 1980's, a large greetings card with Tommy Smith leading out Liverpool and he has signed "Best Wishes" in the middle, full Sunday Express newspaper 31/07/1966 celebrating England winning the World Cup, a Sunderland 1973 FA Cup Final rosette, a small black & white magazine photo and separate signed white card, both mounted on paper of Stanley Matthews, a Wally Hardinge autograph, who played Football and Cricket for England and a small sepia team group of Eltham Football Club 1903 showing Hardinge and a photograph panel from Famous Footballer showing the Durham Rugby Team group on one side and Alfred Milward of Everton on the reverse. Generally good
1960'S FOOTBALL PROGRAMMES A Box of approximately 190 programmes for English teams with some of the home teams represented by Rotherham X 19, Barnsley X 30, Everton X 11 including 2 v. Tottenham 60/1, QPR X 18, West Ham Utd. X 10, WBA X 15 and England X 13 including a ticket v. Scotland 1963 and others including 1965 ECWC Final and 1960 European Cup Final. Generally good
FOOTBALL MISCELLANY Five 1960's postcard size black & white photo cards, Roy Vernon - Everton, Norman Hunter - Leeds United, Jimmy Robertson - Tottenham Hotspur, Dave Mackay - Tottenham Hotspur and Maurice Setters - Manchester United plus 3 programmes, 1985 European Cup Final and England v. Scotland 1967 & 1977 Good
FOOTBALL SELECTION Approximately 300 programmes, mainly modern with a few earlier issues, good London club content but also includes about 50 England homes from mid 1950s and several Reserve issues. Noted items: England v Brazil 1956 and v Scotland 1959; Spurs v Cardiff 1955; Man Utd v Birmingham 58/9 with token; Grimsby Res v York Res 1963; Fulham v Everton 61/2 and v Ipswich 62/3; Mansfield v Doncaster 61/2; Charlton v ASO Ostende Friendly 66/67; Swindon v Brighton 55/6 etc. Minor duplication. Some faults. Fair/Generally good
CUP AND SHIELD Approximately 34 programmes, F.L Cup Finals x 15 (74-75, 77, 81 and replay, 84-85, 2000-07); F.A Cup semi-finals x 7 (71 Arsenal v Stoke and replay, 72 Stoke v Arsenal replay, 75 WHU v Ipswich replay, 81 Man City v Ipswich, 89 Everton v Norwich, 2007 Watford v Man Utd) and Charity Shield x 12 (74-75, 83, 87, 2000, 2002-08). Some issues have the usual faults. Fair/generally good
MAN UTD - LIVERPOOL United programme for the home Cup-tie v Liverpool which was played at Everton as United could not play at their temporary home of Maine Road because City were also at home. Cup fourth round, 24/1/48, Everton style programme in red and white, folds, slight tear, small tear. Fair
ARMY INTERNATIONAL Scotland v England played at Hampden Park 28 Oct 1944 in aid of Army Charities. Very rarely were war time matches played at Hampden. Four page issue, number written in ink on front, scores/scorers noted in pencil on line-up page. England team included Swift and Sproston of Man City, Mercer and Lawton of Everton, Elliott and Kinsell of WBA etc. The Scotland team included Busby and Fagan of Liverpool, Macaulay of West Ham etc. Generally good
MAN UTD 54-55 Sixteen home programmes, all 54-55, games v Huddersfield, Cardiff, Preston, Newcastle, Arsenal, Leicester, Aston Villa, Blackpool, Bolton, Man City, Everton, Sunderland, West Brom, Shef Wed, Spurs and Charlton, some faults such as folds, slight ageing, changes, marks etc. Fair-generally good
MANCHESTER CITY Twenty home programmes from the 1950s to include: v Grimsby 1950/51; Stoke, Blackpool and Middlesbrough 1951/52; Swindon FAC, Luton FAC, Portsmouth and Sheff Wed 19523/54; Everton 1954/55, Man Utd 1957/58 etc. Others are mid to late 1950s. Some minor faults. Fair/Generally good
1960s A - G Over 410 programmes from the 1960s, a large proportion are early 60s to include Aldershot, Arsenal, Aston Villa, Barnsley, Barrow, Birmingham, Blackburn, Blackpool, Bolton, Bournemouth, Bradford City, Bradford P.A, Brentford, Brighton, Bristol City, Bristol Rovers, Burnley (includes FAC replay v Chelsea 69/70), Bury, Cardiff, Carlisle, Charlton, Chelsea, Chester, Chesterfield, Colchester, Coventry, Crewe, Crystal Palace, Darlington, Derby, Doncaster, Everton, Exeter, Fulham, Gillingham and Grimsby. Man Utd feature as the away team in several programmes. Some minor faults. Fair/Generally good
FOOTBALL LEAGUE CUP 60s/70s Collection of over 100 League Cup programmes, 16 x 65/6, 13 x 66/7, 13 x 67/8, 7 x 68/9, 4 x 69/70, 5 x 70/71, 8 x 71/2, 32 x 70s 72/3 to 76/7 plus a few from 61/2 to 64/5. Also includes Rules of the Football League Cup 65-66 issued by the Football League. Some semi-finals included and others include 65/6 Cardiff v Ipswich, Reading and Crewe, Brentford v Workington and Ipswich v Workington, Derby v Hull, Rochdale v Barrow: 66/7 includes Grimsby v Bradford PA, Wolves v Mansfield, Bury v Rochdale and v Workington, Preston v Leeds and v Crewe, 67/8 includes Shef Wed v Barrow, Bolton v Liverpool, Gillingham v Torquay, 68/9 includes Burnley v Swindon Semi replay at West Brom, Plymouth v Exeter second replay at Torquay, 69/70 includes Man Utd v Man City (Semi), Southport v Oldham, Watford v Lincoln, 70/71 includes Man Utd v Aston Villa (Semi), Aldershot v Man Utd, Carlisle v Man City, 71/2 includes Bolton v Liverpool and v Man City plus Barrow v Preston and Norwich v Chelsea. Others include Norwich v Man Utd 74/5 Semi (both legs), Chester v Leeds 74/5, Plymouth v Man City 73/4 (Semi), Birmingham v Luton second replay 72/3 at Northampton, Bolton v Sunderland 61/2, Millwall v Orient 76/7 second replay at Highbury, Bolton v Everton 76/7 (Semi), Bury v Chelsea 72/3, Crewe v Tottenham 75/6, Bournemouth v Gillingham 74/5 second replay at Brentford, Stoke v Chelsea 73/4 and 2 games 74/5 at Stoke v Chelsea. Plus various others. Condition is mostly good with a few minor faults. Generally good-good
BRITISH CLUBS IN EUROPE Over 310 programmes featuring British and Irish clubs against Foreign opposition in competitive matches, 1950s to 1980s. Many 1960s include Arsenal, Chelsea, Everton, Leeds, Liverpool, Man Utd, Man City, Celtic, Rangers, Hibs, Cliftonville, Shelbourne, Borough Utd etc. Issues include Fairs Cup/UEFA Finals 1967, 1968, 1970 and 1971, Barcelona v Wolves EC 1960 etc. Some faults. Fair/Generally good
ANGLO-SCOTS Collection of 39 programmes for games between English and Scottish Clubs, 1950s-70s, 5 x 50s includes Bury v East Fife 57/8, Bradford City v Airdrie 56/7, Scunthorpe v East Fife 58/9, Shef Utd v Hibs 53/4 and Shef Utd v St Mirren 54/5 (folds). 18 issues are 1960s and includes Newcastle v Hibs and v Celtic both 67/8, Everton v Rangers 63/4, English Players v Scottish Players 63/4 at Everton (Dixie Dean Testimonial), Oldham v St Mirren 63/4, Carlisle v Dundee Utd 65/6, Edinburgh Select v Burnley 62/3, Luton v Morton 68/9, Dunfermline v Arsenal 66/7, Morton v Coventry 64/5, Rangers v Tottenham 69/70. Seventies include Portsmouth v Celtic 75/6, Workington v Motherwell 72/3, Crystal Palace v Hibs 77/8 (single sheet) and 7 x Texaco/Anglo Scots programmes. Minor faults. Generally good
KENDALL HOWARD: (1946- ) English Footballer & Manager. Signed 6.5 x 8.5 photograph of the Everton manager in a smiling three quarter length pose holding the European Cup Winners Cup trophy following his teams 3-1 victory over Rapid Vienna in the final at the Feijenoord Stadion in Rotterdam on 15th May 1985. Signed by Kendall in bold black ink to a clear area at the head of the image. EX Kendall is most famous for his managerial career with Everton from 1981-87, 1990-93 and 1997-98. As well as the European Cup Winners Cup victory in 1984-85, Kendall also steered his team to victory in the FA Cup 1983-84 and the FA Charity Shield 1984-85, 1985-86 and 1986-87 as well as leading Everton to Champions of the Football League First Division in 1984-85 and 1986-87.
FA CUP FINAL: A good signed colour 10 x 8 photograph by both Manchester United footballer Mark Hughes and Everton footballer David Unsworth individually, the dramatic image depicting the two players grappling for control of the football during the FA Cup final at Wembley Stadium on 20th May 1995. Signed by both Hughes and Unsworth in black inks with their names alone to clear areas of the image. EX Everton beat Manchester United 1-0 to win the FA Cup final of 1995 and is their most recent major trophy to date. In contrast Manchester United were left without a major trophy since the 1988-89 season and were denied the opportunity to become the first club to win the FA Cup nine times.
WEST INDIES: A hardback edition of Days at the Cricket by John Arlott, First Edition published by Longmans, Green & Co. Ltd., London, 1951, being Arlott's account of the historic West Indies tour of England in 1950, signed by eighteen members of the West Indian team individually to the front free endpaper, including John Goddard, Robert Christiani, Gerry Gomez, Hines Johnson, Prior Jones, Roy Marshall, Allan Rae, Sonny Ramadhin, Jeff Stollmeyer, Alf Valentine, Clyde Walcott, Everton Weekes, Frank Worrell etc. All have signed with their names alone, most in blue fountain pen inks. Accompanied by the dust jacket. Together with a printed 8vo menu card for the Bicentenary of the Marylebone Cricket Club, MCC v Rest of the World, 24th August 1987, signed to the cover by Ray Lindwall and Graeme Pollock individually, and also including individual signed cards by the cricketers Godfrey Evans (pencil), Len Hutton and one other. G to generally VG, 5 The West Indies cricket team toured England in the 1950 season to play a four-match Test series, winning the series 3-1 with no matches drawn. The second Test at Lord's was the first time that the West Indies had won a match in England.
A good clear ink signature of Winston Churchill on the back of an irregularly-cut Barclays Bank form, signed W. Churchill, together with a selection of autograph books containing mostly sporting signatures from the late 1950s and 1960s, including various touring cricket teams (Australia `61, Pakistan `62, West Indies `63). Also, county cricket teams including Glamorgan `59. One book has full signatures from football teams in the 1922-3 season, including Cardiff City, Bolton Wanderers, West Ham, Everton, Liverpool, Wolves, Burnley, Spurs and Newcastle. Also included, a clear Biro signature of Jimmy Wilde, dated 1959.
Football programmes, Aston Villa-West Ham 3/1/59, Rotherham United 10/1/59, Leeds United 7/3/59, Ipswich and Portsmouth 12/9/59 and 14/9/59 (2), Leyton Orient 26/9/59, Swansea and Sunderland 29/8/59 and 31/8/59, Everton 8/11/58, W.B.Albion 11/10/58, Newcastle United 4/10/58, Blackpool 20/9/58, Notts Forest 30/4/58, Man United and Burnley Reserves 29/3/58 and 31/3/58, Burnley 8/3/58, Sunderland 11/1/58, Stoke 8/1/58, Luton Town and Derby County Reserves 14/9/57 and 16/9/57, Sheffield Wednesday 13/4/57, Preston North End 30/3/57, Tottenham 15/9/56, Bolton 4/10/52, Man United 29/9/52, Blackpool 6/9/52, Blackpool 19/1/52, from (Denmark) 19/5/51 and Hibernian 11/2/50
1930'S FOOTBALL AUTOGRAPHS - ARSENAL & EVERTON a sheet of Arsenal autographs from the 1933-34 season, signed in pencil and including Cliff Bastin, Alex James, David Jack, Bob John, Charles Jones, Frank Moss etc. Also with a sheet of Everton autographs from 1932-33 season, and two sheets of Leeds Utd autographs from the 1960's.
A small collection of programmes including an issue for the Leigh v Wigan rugby league friendly specially arranged to be the debut of the Trinidad-born Olympic sprinter Emmanuel McDonald Bailey on 16th December 1953, together with seven other programmes in the lot a mixture of rugby league & football, RL including North Island v South Island (NZ) 29.8.59, Southern Districts of N.S.W. v England May 1946, and football including Manchester City v Everton F.A. Cup 6th Round 2nd Replay at Molineux 5th April 1966, and European Cup finals for 1963, 1968, 176 & 1981 (8) Bailey turned professional in July 1953 joining Leigh for the sum of £1,000 per season for three seasons plus match fees. However, the Wigan match proved to be his one and only game of Rugby League. Reports state he handled the ball 9 times, dropping it twice. He did, however, score a try although there was more than a whisper that the opposition defence were reminded that the game was a non-competitive friendly to introduce a new star to the game! Bailey won a bronze medal in the 100 yards at the 1952 Helsinki Olympic Games.
Bolton Wanderers programmes and tickets, F.A. Cup final programme Bolton Wanderers v Portsmouth 27th April 1929, lacking covers, last page numbered p.26; sold with the match ticket; the lot also including a League away at Arsenal 28.9.29; 1953 F.A. Cup final programme Blackpool v Bolton Wanderers and ticket and a programme for the semi-final v Everton; and a Bolton Evening News Illustrated Wembley Souvenir for the 1958 Cup Final (7)
20 Sunderland programmes season 1948-49, homes v Huddersfield (x 2, 1 bearing some autographs), Liverpool, Newcastle United, Arsenal, Middlesbrough (x 2), Birmingham (x 2), Stoke City, Preston, Burnley, Portsmouth, Aston Villa, Charlton, Preston & Everton; and aways at Aston Villa & Birmingham & Yeovill (FAC)
A collection of 23 football supporter's rosettes for showpiece games at Wembley Stadium 1960s and 1970s, including Fulham, Newcastle United, Tottenham Hotspur, West Ham, Liverpool, Wolverhampton Wanderers, Manchester United, Manchester City, Everton & Chelsea, also England, Scotland, Wales & Hungary, and 1966 World Cup issues for Italy and Brazil; the lot also including Oxford & Cambridge and Ireland rugby rosettes for Twickenham
An early example of a rose England amateur international football cap awarded for the match v Holland played at Stamford Bridge, Chelsea, 11th December 1909, inscribed E v H, 1909-10; sold together with A photstat from A reference with England line-up (2) England won this match 9-1. The original recipient of the cap is unknown, but the England line-up was a s follows: Ronald Brebner (Darlington), Walter Corbett (Birmingham), Arthur Knight (Portsmouth), Kenneth Hunt (Leyton), Frederick Chapman (South Notts), Robert Hawkes (Luton), Arthur Berry (Everton), Vivian Woodward (capt., Tottenham Hotspur), Harry Stapley (Glossop North End), Alfred Owen (Leicester Fosse) & Ernest Williams (Portsmouth). The first official England amateur international was against France in Paris 1st November 1906, so the present cap is an early presentation.
The match ball from the Arsenal game v Everton at Goodison Park 16th March 1935 when Frank Moss became the only goalkeeper in the entire history of Arsenal FC to score a goal, signed by the Arsenal and Everton team in ink and with a match inscription for the Moss game with 2-0 final score & goalscorers (the other being Ted Drake), in a cubic perspex display case with an original press cutting, 25cm., 9 3/4in. Moss is also the only Arsenal goalkeeper to score in a first-class match. On 16 March 1935, in a First Division match against Everton at Goodison Park, Moss dislocated his left shoulder. With no substitutes allowed in those days, Moss was forced to play the rest of the game on the left wing with an outfield player deputizing for him between the sticks. Incredibly, he scored Arsenal's first goal in a 2-0 win. He kept the match ball as a souvenir and both teams autographed it for him. However, that match also proved to be Moss's downfall. He found it hard to recover from the injury - he played five more matches the following season but the injury recurred. He was finally advised to retire in the summer of 1937, at the age of only 27. He played 161 matches for Arsenal in total having joined them from Oldham Athletic in 1931 for a fee of £3,000. He also won 5 England caps and played in the famous 'Battle of Highbury' international v the World Champions Italy. After retiring as a player, Moss was appointed manager of Herts, where he became both the club's youngest manager and the first to enjoy complete autonomy in matters of team selection. He led his side to a second-place league finish in his first season in charge, but retired early in 1940, returning to his native Lancashire and left football altogether. He died in 1970 at the age of 60.
A yellow football shirt worn by George Best at Anfield in a legends match before the Bruce Grobbelaar Testimonial 10th October 1992, signed by Best in black marker pen; sold together with a red opposition jersey from the same occasion signed by George Best, Bruce Grobbelaar and four others; together with a scan of an original photograph showing George Best wearing the yellow shirt just prior to him signing it, and an opposition player wearing the red shirt (3) On 10 October 1992 Liverpool FC legend Bruce Grobbelaar celebrated his career with a testimonial match at Anfield, with a game between Liverpool and Everton football clubs. As a precursor to the match, a legends game took place involving players who wished to pay tribute to Bruce Grobbelaar. The main star was George Best and his match shirt, which he later signed, is being offered here together with an opposition shirt from the game also signed by Best together with Grobbelaar and others. The Best shirt is in original, unwashed match-worn condition perhaps preserving the DNA of the great man especially as it has been kept long term in a sealed bag.
A signed Everton 1933 F.A. Cup Final commemoration dinner menu, held at the Hotel Victoria - Edward VII Rooms, London, 29th April, signed inside by guests including some of the Everton players, Cook, Britton, Johnson, plus an amusing hand-drawn pen & ink cartoon by Tom Webster of the Manchester City goalkeeper having a bad dream about being a pawn-broker, a reference to the three balls that ended up in his net during the final
17 Chelsea programmes season 1923-24, Football League fixtures v Spurs, Southampton, WBA, Sunderland, Notts County, Middlesbrough, Manchester City, Huddersfield, Everton, Cardiff, Burnley, Birmingham & Bolton; and London Combination v Southend, Crystal Palace, Millwall & Clapton Orient; sold with a blue modern Chelsea FC programmes binder inscribed in gilt to the spine for season 1923-24 (18)
Two original 1920s architectural drawings for Everton FC's Goodison Park ground, i) A large 3/8” to one foot coloured structural drawing of Everton Football Club's Bullens Road stand by architect Archibald Leitch date stamped by Liverpool Building Control 25 Feb 1926, detailing the construction of the stand ii) a very large 1” - 10' coloured plan of Everton FC showing the ground, terracing and seating, by Archibald Leith architect date stamped 12 April 1926
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12048 item(s)/page