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1950's PROGRAMMES, 1951-1956, a collection of 4 football programmes from the period, 27/01/1951 Everton v Notts County [Friendly], 1955/1956 Accrington Stanley v Fulham [Friendly], 1963/1964 Crystal Palace v Chelsea, 24/01/1951 Birmingham City v Manchester United [FA Cup] (various conditions).
BRENTFORD SPECIALS, 1972/1973, 13 football programmes from the season, Homes (4) Sixes Competition, Cambridge United [Football League Cup], Everton [Denis Piggott Testimonial], Portsmouth [Friendly], Away's (9) Aldershot [Friendly], Tottenham Hotspur [London Challenge Cup], Rotherham United [Football League Cup], Yeovil Town [FA Cup], Amateur Managers XI [At Staines Town], Hampton [Friendly], Exeter City [Friendly], Hillingdon Borough [Friendly], Bournemouth Youth [Southern Floodlit Cup] (Various conditions).
FRIENDLIES, 1961-1968, 31 football programmes from Friendly games, to include - ARSENAL (5), BRADFORD PARK AVENUE (1), BOURNEMOUTH (2), BOLTON WANDERERS (1), BRADFORD PARK AVENUE (1), CHARLTON ATHLETIC (5), CORINTHIAN CASUALS (1), COVENTRY CITY (1), CHARLTON ATHLETIC (1), CRYSTAL PALACE (4), HARTLEPOOL UNITED (1), HENDON (1), IPSWICH TOWN (1), EVERTON (1), EXETER CITY (1), LEICESTER CITY (3), LEYTON ORIENT (1).
MANCHESTER CITY, 1955-1959, a bound volume of 33 programmes, not a complete run. 1955/1956 (17) 13 League Games - Aston Villa, Arsenal, Manchester United, Cardiff City, Blackpool, Preston North End, West Bromwich Albion, Tottenham Hotspur, Newcastle United, Luton Town, Wolverhampton Wanderers, 4 FA Cup - Blackpool (postponed), Blackpool, Huddersfield Town Everton. 1956/1957 nil. 1957/1958 (14) 13 League Games - Chelsea, Portsmouth, Sheffield Wednesday, Leicester City, Luton Town, Everton, Burnley, Nottingham Forest, West Bromwich Albion, Birmingham City, Blackpool, Arsenal, Sunderland, 1 Friendly - Hibernian. 1958/1959 (3) League Games - Blackpool, Aston Villa, Leicester City (programmes in various condition, some folds, some team changes, some crosswords filled in, some token missing).
ALAN HINTON 1963, football autographed 12 x 8 photo, a superb image depicting the Wolves left-wing striking a superb full length action pose for photographers prior to a First Division encounter with Everton at Goodison Park in 1963, signed using a fine blue marker. Good Condition. All autographed items are genuine hand signed and come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £4.99, EU from £6.99, Rest of World from £8.99.
Ronald Koeman Everton Signed 12 x 8 inch football photo. Good Condition. All autographed items are genuine hand signed and come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £4.99, EU from £6.99, Rest of World from £8.99.
Trevor Steven Everton Signed 12 x 8 inch football photo. Good Condition. All autographed items are genuine hand signed and come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £4.99, EU from £6.99, Rest of World from £8.99.
Peter Beardsley Everton Signed 12 x 8 inch football photo. Good Condition. All autographed items are genuine hand signed and come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £4.99, EU from £6.99, Rest of World from £8.99.
Don Hutchinson Everton Signed 12x 8 inch football photo. Good Condition. All autographed items are genuine hand signed and come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £4.99, EU from £6.99, Rest of World from £8.99.
Pat Van Den Hauwe Everton Signed 12 x 8 inch football photo. Good Condition. All autographed items are genuine hand signed and come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £4.99, EU from £6.99, Rest of World from £8.99.
Derek Temple Everton Signed 12 x 8 inch football photo. Good Condition. All autographed items are genuine hand signed and come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £4.99, EU from £6.99, Rest of World from £8.99.
Joe Royle Final Everton Signed 12 x 8 inch football photo. Good Condition. All autographed items are genuine hand signed and come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £4.99, EU from £6.99, Rest of World from £8.99.
Bob Latchford Everton Signed 16 x 12 inch football photo. Good Condition. All autographed items are genuine hand signed and come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £4.99, EU from £6.99, Rest of World from £8.99.
Howard Kendall and Colin Harvey Everton Signed 12 x 8 inch football photo. Good Condition. All autographed items are genuine hand signed and come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £4.99, EU from £6.99, Rest of World from £8.99.
Howard Kendall Everton Signed 12 x 8 inch football photo. Good Condition. All autographed items are genuine hand signed and come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £4.99, EU from £6.99, Rest of World from £8.99.
Everton and Army Football Items. A small collection of items that belonged to Jimmy Tansey. A letter from the War office dated 1951 stating the wearing of R.E.M.E colours for the 50/1 season, his R.E.M.E badge and a photo dated May / June 1956 of Tansey in Everton changing rooms whilst away on in America on a pre-season tour (3) Good
The Historically Important Football Association Challenge Cup, 1896-1910Vaughton & Sons, Birmingham, 1895The silver trophy formed as a two-handled cup and cover, surmounted by a figure of a footballer with a football at his feet, the body with four oval cartouches engraved with the winning teams from 1872 to 1910 (1872 to 1895 being the winners of the first F. A. Cup – now lost – see footnote below), the loaded base underside inscribed 'Made By/P.Vaughton & Sons/Birmingham/1896/From A Cast Of The Old Cup/Which Was Lost' with ebonised plinth bearing two later silver plaques, both with maker's mark for Charles Edwards, London, 1910, the first inscribed 'Presented by/The Football Association/To/The Right Hon. Lord Kinnaird/in appreciation of long/and very valuable services rendered to the game/6th February 1911', the second inscribed 'The Right Hon. Lord Kinnaird/International 1873./Final Cup Competition/1873.7.8.9 & 1882./Member of Council since 1868./President/of The Football Association since/1890', the cup 40.6cm high, 50.7cm high with plinth; sold together with a copy of The History of The Football Association 1863-1952, published for the Football Association by the Naldrett Press 1953Footnotes:Provenance: Presented to The Right Hon. Lord Kinnaird by The Football Association for services to the game on his 21st Anniversary as President of The Football Association, thence by family descent until sold at Christie's, lot 100, 19th May 2005 for £478,400, including Buyers Premium.Private UK Collection Exhibited: The National Football Museum, Preston and now Manchester from 2005 until June 2020The first F. A. Cup used between 1872 and 1895 was stolen from the Birmingham football outfitter William Shillcock's window on 11th September 1895 when it was on display after Aston Villa had won it that year. A £10 reward was offered for the recovery of the cup but sadly the trophy was never seen again. In 1958 an 80-year old Harry Burge came forward and said he had stolen it to make counterfeit half-crown coins and in 1975 Joseph Piecewright was implicated in the original theft but neither of these claims have been substantiated. As current holders of the trophy and therefore custodians of it Aston Villa FC were fined £25 for the loss of the trophy. In 1953, 90 years after the formation of The Football Association, Geoffrey Green wrote his seminal work 'The History of The Football Association' and page 173 notes that '......and at a Council meeting on January 22nd, 1896, it was proposed by A. Sharman that the new Cup to be purchased for competition in place of the old one lost, should be of gold, the cost not to exceed £200. The proposal was lost, and a resolution put forward by R. P. Gregson, seconded by Dr. Morley 'that a cup as nearly as possible like the old cup should be purchased' was carried. Thus another trophy, costing £25 and of twin design to the original, was set upon its high pedestal'. Fortunately, a cast of 'the old cup' existed and Vaughton & Sons of Birmingham were commissioned to produce an exact replica of it at the cost of £25. This is the cup offered here for sale. It bears the winners' names from 1872 onwards including Wanderers who won five of the first seven finals including three in a row (they were then presented with the trophy in perpetuity only to apply the true 'Corinthian' spirit of the amateur game at the time and return it to The Football Association – ironically, they never won it again!), Oxford University, Royal Engineers, Old Etonians, Clapham Rovers (who were strong in both codes of football – association football and rugby union) and Old Carthusians. In 1883 Blackburn Olympic won the 'the little tin idol' and the game of Association Football changed forever. The domination of the former pupil's public-school teams had come to an end and the North of England and Midlands teams began a new era in the game.The present cup offered for sale was contested for on 15 occasions before being retired and subsequently presented to The Right Hon. Lord Kinnaird in 1911. First time winners of this actual trophy include Manchester City, Manchester United, Everton, Newcastle and Tottenham Hotspur to name but a few. Below are listed the details of each final this cup was played for with all the matches taking place at the Crystal Palace with the exception of the replay's of 1901 (Burnden Park, Bolton) and 1910 (Goodison Park, Liverpool)1895-1896 Sheffield Wednesday defeated Wolverhampton Wanderers 2-1 in front of 48,836 spectators. FIRST F. A. CUP FINAL WIN AND FIRST MAJOR TROPHY WON BY THE CLUB.1896-1897Aston Villa defeated Everton 3-2 in front of 65,891 spectators. Villa became only the second team ever to win 'the Double' this year of the Cup and Football League First Division Championship Trophy.1897-1898Nottingham Forest defeated Derby County 3-1 in front of 62,017 spectators. FIRST F. A. CUP FINAL WIN AND FIRST MAJOR TROPHY WON BY THE CLUB.1898-1899Sheffield United defeated Derby County 4-1 in front of 73,833 spectators. FIRST F. A. CUP FINAL WIN BY THE CLUB.1899-1900Bury defeated Southampton 4-0 in front of 68,000 spectators. FIRST F. A. CUP FINAL WIN AND FIRST MAJOR TROPHY WON BY THE CLUB.1900-1901Tottenham Hotspur defeated Sheffield United 3-1 in the replay at Burnden Park, Bolton in front of 20,470. The first match had ended in a 2-2 draw and had drawn a then record crowd of 110,820. FIRST F. A. CUP FINAL WIN AND FIRST MAJOR TROPHY WON BY THE CLUB.1901-1902Sheffield United defeated Derby County 2-1 in front of 33,068 after the first match ended in 1-1 draw in front of 76,914 spectators1902-1903 Bury defeated Derby County 6-0 in front of 63,102 spectators.1903-1904Manchester City defeated Bolton wanderers 1-0 in front of 61,374 spectators. FIRST F. A. CUP FINAL WIN BY THE CLUB.1904-1905Aston Villa defeated Newcastle United 2-0 in front of 101,117 spectators.1905-1906 Everton defeated Newcastle United 1-0 in front of 75,609 spectators. FIRST F. A. CUP FINAL WIN BY THE CLUB.1906-1907Sheffield Wednesday defeated Everton 2-1 in front of 84,594 spectators.1907-1908Wolverhampton Wanderers defeated Newcastle United 3-1 in front of 74,697 spectators.1908-1909Manchester United defeated Bristol City 1-0 in front of 71,401 spectators. FIRST F. A. CUP FINAL WIN BY THE CLUB.1909-1910Newcastle United defeated Barnsley 2-0 in the replay at Goodison Park, Liverpool in front of 69,000 spectators. The first match had ended in 1-1 draw in front of 77,747 spectators. FIRST F. A. CUP FINAL WIN BY THE CLUB AND LAST CLUB TO WIN THE FAMOUS 'LITTLE TIN IDOL'.The Right Hon. Lord KinnairdArthur Fitzgerald Kinnaird, later 11th Lord Kinnaird was born on 16th February 1847 in Kensington, London. He was educated at Cheam school, Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge where he became an all-round sportsman and represented Cambridge at numerous sports, including association football. He played and scored a goal in the second-ever F. A. Cup final in 1873 when Wanderers defeated Oxford University 2-0 and went on to play in a further eight finals for either Wanderers or Old Etonians and ended up on the winning side on five occasions in total between 1873 and 1883. Although born in England, the family seat was at Rossie Priory, Perthshire and he made a solitary appearance for Scotland against England in 1873 when England won 4-2.He was football's first superstar, the equivalent of Cricket's W G Grace, and was described as 'without exception the best player of the day'. He played in several positions including goalkeeper, half-back and forward and was an imposing figure on the field of play in his white long trousers and distinctive red beard. A hugely popular figure he celebrated by doing a hand-stand in front of the pavilion to a standing ovation after he captained Old Etonians to... For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A North Devon slipware harvest jug, dated 1850Probably Bideford, of generous globular form with a pinched cylindrical neck, the loop handle with a curled lower terminal, sgraffito decorated to the front with a stylised woolsack inscribed 'Mr Everton/ Come fill me full/ with Liqour Sweet/ for that is good/ when Friends do meet/ But pray take care/ don't let me fall/ Lest you Lost your/ Liqour Jug and all/ aug 8th 1850', flanked on the right by a large bird perched on a flowering branch and on the left by a bird in flight above a flowering tree, 24.5cm highFootnotes:A harvest jug dated 1835 inscribed with the same verse and decorated with stylistically very similar birds and a similar zigzag border to the neck is illustrated by David Barker and Steve Crompton, Slipware in the Collection of the Potteries Museum and Art Gallery (2007), pp.62-3, where it is attributed to Bideford. Another, also dated 1835, was sold by Christie's on 19 June 2012, lot 557. See also the example in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (accession no. 13.27.2).For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
1904/05 Daily Graphic Album Of Football Teams: 34 page large booklet containing 50 team groups from the 04/05 season. Two team groups to one large page. Includes Manchester United Everton Tottenham and Glasgow Rangers. One team group cut out and missing inside. Good with tea stain to cover.
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12049 item(s)/page