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Three football tickets, i) 1952 Helsinki Olympic Games Austria v Finland; ii) 1974 World Cup Netherlands v Uruguay played in Hannover 15th June; iii) East Germany v England played in Leipzig 2.6.63; together with a German 1936 Olympic Games booklet on football, number 5 from a series of 16 featuring different Olympic sports; and an England supporter’s rosette circa 1960s (5)
A collection of football tickets, the lot including 1966 World Cup final and Italy v Chile 1/8th final at Roker Park, F.A. Cup finals (including 1953), and other showcase games at Wembley including England internationals, plus a selection of tickets for various club games mostly for north-east fixtures; the lot also including two old postcards featuring Newcastle United and Sunderland (a qty.)
A signed ‘Golden Oldie’ luncheon menu in honour of Arsenal’s FC’s and Middlesex CCC’s Leslie Compton, held at Lord’s Banqueting Suite 8th March 1983, the back cover with numerous autographs including Denis & Les Compton, George Male, Stanley Rous, Joe Mercer, Laurie Scott, Reg Lewis, Bernard Joy, Geoffrey Green, Mike Gatting etc.; sold together with a 1974 World Cup postcard addressed to Jack Kelsey and signed by various personalities including Bertie Mee, Bobby Robson, Freddie Goodwin, Ian St John, Jimmy Sirrel etc.; a Football League Secretaries’ and Managers’ Association dinner menu 1975; & an Irish F.A. itinerary for the British XI v European XI match played at Windsor Park 13th August 1955 (4)
A 1950s football autograph collection, including original signatures on football club letterhead including Nottingham Forest & Charlton (also some with facsimile sigs), a Manchester United facsimile group but personally signed by Tommy Taylor complete with original postal envelope in Taylor’s hand, plus autograph album pages with team-groups for Chelsea, Soccer Springboks, Swansea, Celtic, Coventry, Leicester, Hull, Bury, Port Vale, Preston, Burnley, Wrexham, Wolves, Chester and others , plus individual cut-out signatures, signed match programmes, and signed newspaper pictures of sportsmen pasted onto album pages, also a signed letter from W E Houghton, Harry Johnstone, Les Shannon, Jack Burritt, Vic Rouse, Doug Rudham, Jimmy Gould, the lot including some non-football sporting content including speedway riders, boxers etc.; the lot also including signatures of cricket tourist to South Africa, 1969-70 Australians, the 1953-54 NZ tour, MCC 156-57; also a South Africa v British Lions 2nd Test programme 1974 signed by the two captains and others
A signed manuscript letter from the Corinthians and England football captain Charles Wreford-Brown dated 9th April 1893, in response to an enquiry, and detailing his sporting achievements at Oxford University and Charterhouse School, and his trip with Lord Hawke’s team to America in 1891; sold with a printed photographic portrait (2). Charles Wreford-Brown has been credited for coining the word soccer, but this claim lacks any hard documentary evidence. He was also a county cricketer for Gloucestershire. He captained the England football team on two occasions v Wales in 1894 and 1895, when the team was wholly comprised of amateur players.
A hotel brochure signed by the Great Britain football team who played the Rest of Europe at Hampden Park 10th May 1947, the Forest Hill Hotel, Loch Ard, Perthshire, brochure signed on the inside front cover by 14 signatures including Winterbottom (selector), Shaw (trainer), Hardwick (captain), Swift, Hughes, Macaulay, Vernon, Burgess, Matthews, Mannion, Lawton, Steel, Liddell and George Young (reserve)
A collection of six signed replica football jerseys, two blue Everton jerseys, the first signed in black marker pen by 9 team members, the other signed GAZZA by Paul Gascoigne; a reverse mounted red Manchester United No.4 signed by Steve Bruce, all mounted, framed & glazed; and three signed replica continental football jerseys, the first a squad-signed red & white striped Atletico Madrid, 18 signatures in black marker pen, a reverse-mounted Dani No.21 Atletico Madrid jersey signed in black marker pen, and a blue & red Paris St Germain with 9 signatures in black marker pen, some fading, all mounted, framed & glazed, the largest 84 by 100cm., 33 by 39 1/2in.
A signed Hampshire F.A. Golden Jubilee celebration dinner menu 1937, held at the South Western Hotel, Southampton, 13th April, with a special presentation to Mr William Pickford (Life Vice-President & Hon. Treasurer), signed by Pickford and seven other guests including Charles Sutcliffe (President of the Football League) and Stanley Rous
A group of nine multi-signed boys’ football annuals 1950s, Charles Buchan’s Soccer Gift Book and other titles, each containing a variety of players autographs, usually over illustrations of the subject, including Duncan Edwards, Tommy Taylor, Roger Byrne, Johnny Haynes, Tom Finney, Maurice Setters, Stan Mortensen, Danny Blanchflower, Denis Law, Don Revie, Billy Wright and many others
A 1950s autograph collection, football and cricket, the lot comprising three hardback ruled books pasted with signed newspaper and magazine photographs of payers and teams, including a Busby Babes example, A Buchan’s annual with numerous autographs, and a cricket tour brochure signed by the 1956 Australians, overall with a good representation of stars and teams of the day (5)
Our Footballers, a scarce publication circa 1894, containing numerous b&w plates of football and rugby team-groups and player portraits including an image of Rotherham’s Arthur Wharton, the first black professional footballer in the world, rebound in brown cloth bindings, no publisher’s details
A Football Association 75th anniversary Celebrations report 1938, 40 page illustrated booklet chronicling events including the match between England & Europe at Highbury and culminating in a grand banquet; sold together with a Football League Golden Jubilee banquet menu, Dorchester Hotel, 30th May 1938, several autographs of guests to back including club directors from Arsenal and Fulham; and a South Wales Football Annual 1950-51 (3)
The Sports Dispatch, a bound volume of 52 copies of the broadsheet newspaper from No.320 4th January 1930 to No.371 27th December 1930, a full year’s illustrated coverage of Scottish sport notably football and rugby, covering every league and cup game, a unique record, in excellent condition
A collection of 176 black and white glass magic lantern slides mostly of Scottish football interest circa 1930, With just a handful of slides that are non-football related, printed positive, including match action, team line-up, crowd and stadium views, player portraits, the Ibrox Disaster, with damaged, examples, all 8cm., 3 1/4in. square. This photographic archive represents a fascinating insight into football from the early part of this century. The images are in positive rather than negative and cover the era from the late 19th Century up to circa 1930. The images are most likely taken from newspaper and press negatives of the respective eras and are likely to have been taken, on the whole, from the Glasgow Herald and Evening Times Collection around 1930. Whilst not unique, it is unusual to find a large collection such as this from a single source.
Two French football prints, both colour lithographs the first originally published in L’Assiette Au Beure, 1902, and titled FOOT-BALL, mounted, framed & glazed, the image 24.5 by 19cm., 9 1/2 by 7 1/2in.; the other a First World War period chromolithograph featuring soldiers playing football titled LE FOOT-BALL, SPORT MODERNE DANS L’ARMEE, mounted, framed & glazed, 35 by 25.5cm., 13 3/4 by 10in.; sold together with a chromolithograph portraying a France v Switzerland international match, published by Editions Rossignol, Montmorillon, Vienne, unframed, 56 by 76cm., 22 by 30in; and After Philip Hermogenes Calderon (1861-1926), CAPTAIN OF THE ELEVEN, a chromolithograph cricket print presented with Pear’s Soap Christmas Annual 1898, repaired, mounted, framed & glazed, the visible image 71 by 45cm., 28 by 17 3/4in. (4)
Mike White (20th century). ROY OF THE ROVERS (A GROUP OF APPROX. 250). a quantity of original comic-strip artwork in black ink & watercolour, mostly 42 by 30.5cm., 16 by 12in. Mike White was one of six artists who drew the famous Roy of the Rovers comic strip over a 40 year period. White was employed between August 1986 and October 1992. The artist gave Roy a far more muscular, powerful look than his predecessors. Collectors of football philately will be familiar with Mike White’s work as he designed one of the four Royal Mail Millennium postage stamps, namely the 26p first class stamp that featured Bobby Moore holding aloft the Jules Rimet Trophy in 1966.
Football-themed smoking memorabilia, i) an unusual nickel plated table cigarette lighter, surmounted by a figure of a footballer, 18cm., 7in.; ii) three clay pipe bowls, two with football themes, the first inscribed CUP TIE, the other GOEDE WAAGEN, both with pipes attached; the third bowl decorated with a cricket stumps, bat, & ball iii) a cigarette multi-holder advertisement piece for Olympia footballs, designed as a brown leather panelled football stamped which opens at the equator to reveal numerous gilt-metal cigarette holders, extended height 23cm., 9in.; iv) and a cigarette advertisement piece formed as a resin model of a football attached with cigarette packaging and inscribed DAVROS, DERBY CIGARETTES, 30.5cm., 12in.; v) an advertisement chromolithograph for Davros Derby cigarettes featuring a footballer, mounted, framed & glazed, the image 33 by 45cm., 13 by 17 3/4in.; vi) two French Art Deco gilt-metal ashtrays, lozenge-shaped, both with a central colour tinted print under glass, one with the Eiffel Tower, the other the Arc de Triomphe, flanked by figures of footballers, possibly 1938 World Cup souvenirs; vii) and Miss Blanche Cigarettes Spelfotos Competitie Wedstryden KNVB 1932-33, a fine album of 100 large colour tinted prints of match action from Dutch football in season 1932-33 as featured in the FIFA Collection book, p.118-119 (12)
A group of four pocket watches with football decoration, comprising: a large Ferrovia Patent Cronometro example engraved with a football scene circa 1920s, the white metal case to the reverse of the pocket watch finely engraved, the white dial with black and red painted Arabic numerals and trademarks; a fold-out example commemorating the 1962 World Cup by Mirabo, fitted inside a fold-out case modelled as a panelled football and inscribed MUNDIAL DE FOOT-BALL, 1962, ARICA-CHILE; another by Eska commemorating the 1974 World Cup, the dial inscribed COPA DO MUNDO 74, with a brass case to the reverse decorated with a footballer and inscribed CM, 74; the final pocket watch, a Harold Lloyd with a portrait of the silent movie star on the paper dial, lacking original watch glass, the reverse with machined decoration of a football match
The outstanding collection of Arthur Berry England footballer and double Olympic Gold Medal winner 1908 and 1912, (a) Olympic Gold Medal, London 1908, in gold, by Vaughton, hallmarked 15ct, edge engraved Winner Association Football, in case of issue, lid gilt stamped Olympic Games, Winner, Association Football, London, 1908 (b) F.A. Tour of South Africa medal, 1910, in gold, by Vaughtons, hallmarked 18ct, obverse seated figure of Britannia holding shield with football at feet, 1910 in exergue, reverse the Football Association South African tour 1910 and engraved A. Berry, in case of issue, lid gilt stamped the Football Association 1910 (c) Belgium v England medal, 1910, in silver, by Paul Fisch, of shaped cruciform, the central disc with football scene, reverse match Angleterre Belgique 1910, in gilt tooled case of issue (d) Belgium v England medal, 1912, in silver, by Paul Fisch, of shaped rectangular form, obverse with scene of football match, reverse match Iternations Belgique-Angleterre, Bruxelles, 8 Avril 1912, in case of issue (e) Olympic Gold Medal, Stockholm 1912, in bronze gilt, in case of issue, lid gilt stamped Olympiska Spelen I Stockholm 1912, I Pris, Lagtaflan (f) The Football Association Amateur Cup Runners-Up medal, 1912-13, in gold, by Vaughton, hallmarked 9ct, in case of issue, lid gilt stamped The Football Association Amateur Cup 1912-13; together with an unknown medal (g) England Full International jersey badge, 1909, white cloth embroidered in blue and red thread with three lions on shield surmounted by crown (h) Two England jersey badges, similar to the full international badge but with a shaped shield; together with an English Wanderers F.C. jersey badge (i) Sixteen England Amateur International jersey badges (j) a photopostcard of Berry in England Amateur strip. Arthur Berry, son of Edwin, a Liverpool F.C. director and chairman (1904-09), was born in Liverpool on 3rd January 1888 and educated at Denstone College where he captained the rugby XV. On going to Wadham College, Oxford, he concentrated on football with extraordinary success. He won blues in 1908 and 1909 and at the 1908 Olympic Games was described as ‘the only English forward to play at all consistently well’. Berry was one of just two Great Britain players who achieved the Olympic football gold medal double of 1908 (London) and 1912 (Stockholm), the other being Vivian Woodward. Although an amateur he did win one full international England cap in 1909, while still at Oxford University. Berry won 32 England caps at Amateur level. His club sides comprised Fulham, Everton and Oxford City with whom he played in the F.A. Amateur Cup final. He retired from football in 1913 on being called to the bar, and after service in the First World War returned to Liverpool to join the family law firm. He died in Liverpool on 15th March 1953.
An autographed photographic display of the Uruguayan 1924 Olympic football champions, comprising a central black and white photograph of the 1924 Gold Medal winners at a 25th anniversary reunion dinner (16th June 1949), the surrounding card mount fully signed in ink by the Uruguayan team, framed and glazed, 27 by 38 cm., 10 1/2 by 15 in.
A collection of seven match tickets for the 1924 Olympic Games football competition, comprising: two tickets for the series 30 match Uruguay v. Yugoslavia 26th May; three tickets for the series 34 match France v. Uruguay 1st June; and two gratis tickets for the series 39 match, the Olympic football final, Uruguay v. Switzerland, 9th June
A group of six lapel badges relating to Uruguay’s football successes in the 1924 & 1928 Olympic Games and the 1930 World Cup, two identical examples issued by the Uruguayan Football Association on the 50th anniversary of the 1928 triumph in gold and enamel, the first issued to A. CANAVESI the other R.FIGUEROA; two identical AUF gold & enamel lapel badges, the first named to Canavesi, the other to A. Supicci, in commemoration of the 1924 & 1928 Olympic victories and the 1930 & 1950 World Cup wins; and a pair of silver & enamel lapel badges inscribed CAMPEONES OLIMPICOS , 1924, 1928. Adhemar Canavasi and Roberto Figueroa were both Uruguayan gold medal winning footballers at the Amsterdam Olympic Games of 1928.
A group of photographic items relating to the Uruguay 1924 and 1928 Olympic football champions, comprising: (i) two small black and white photographs showing the Uruguayan national flag being flown above the scoreboard (USA 0 Uruguay 3) after the final of the 1924 Olympic football competition; (ii) a group of four black and white press photographs, portraying team-groups of competing nations in the 1928 Olympic Games football competition-Uruguay, Germany, Holland and Italy; (iii) two black and white press photographs featuring the Uruguay 1928 Olympic football champions during their stay in Holland; (iv) an official black and white team-group photograph of the Uruguay 1924 Olympic football champions, in presentation mount; (v) and a printed photographic montage of the Uruguay 1924 Olympic football champions, mounted, framed and glazed, various sizes (10)
Olympic Games & World Cup memorabilia, comprising: (i) an advertisement card for ‘Cafiaspirina’, featuring the Uruguay 1924 Olympic football champions; (ii) a Uruguayan philatelic over commemorating the 1928 Olympic football champions; (iii) an original newspaper ‘El Diario’, 13th June 1928, celebrating the victory in the Olympic football competition; (iv) a gilt-metal official’s badge from the 1930 World Cup; (v) a small publicity booklet for the 1936 Olympic Games; (vi) and a plastic match box holder with the Jules Rimet Cup in raised relief, and inscribed with Uruguay’s achievements between 1924 and 1950 and three associated matchboxes
An Olympic gold medal winner’s diploma for Roberto Figueroa the Uruguayan Olympic football champion at Amsterdam in 1928, printed on paper with an Olympic design heightened in gold and inscribed ix e Olympiade Amsterdam 1928 1 e Prijs, r. Figueroa Uruguay Voor Voetbal, signed by the president of the Dutch Olympic Committee and the president of the International Olympic Committee, and set with an official seal in the form of a commemorative medal, framed overall 81.5 by 62 cm., 32 by 24 1/2 in.; sold with a related newspaper article, taped to the backboard (2). Roberto Figueroa played for Wanderers F.C. and was a goalkeeper.
An 18ct. gold and enamel lapel badge presented by the Uruguayan government to the 1928 Olympic gold medal winning footballer Adhemar Canavesi, named to Canavesi on the reverse; sold with a photocopy of the magazine Mundo Uruguayo 16th August 1928 with a feature on the Governmental presentation of these medals, including an illustration of the medal, and photographs taken at the ceremony (2). Adhemar Canavesi was the vice-captain of the 1928 gold medal winning Olympic team. He played his domestic football for Bella Vista and Penarol.
A large bronze medal presented by the Uruguayan Football Association to their President Dr Raul Jude in commemoration of the 1928 Olympic Games victory, sold together with a bronze commemorative medal, the obverse struck with a footballer, the reverse inscribed PARIS, 1924; and a metal & enamel badge inscribed COMITE DE HOMENAJE A LOS OLIMPICOS, 1928 (3)
A large brass plate commemorating the 1928 Olympic Games in Amsterdam, embossed with vignettes of Football, rowing, fencing, gymnastics, equestrianism, lawn tennis, javelin, athletics, cycling, swimming, hockey and yachting, inscribed OLYMPISCHE SPELEN, 1928, AMSTERDAM, diameter 50cm., 19 3/4in.
A 1922 presentation rugby ball, applied with a silver metal plaque engraved Presented to James Sullivan by the Directors of the Wigan Football Club Ld. as a Mark of Appreciation and in Commemoration of his Kicking 100 Goals during his First Season of Northern Union Football 1921-22. Sullivan sent notice of his scoring talent by kicking five goals on his Wigan debut (at Central Park v Widnes on 27 August 1921, at the age of seventeen). He went on to kick a century of goals every season until the outbreak of the Second World War, an incredible nineteen consecutive seasons.
A 15ct. gold medal issued to Halifax R.F.C.’s G. Millar to commemorate the club’s 1886 victory in the Yorkshire Challenge Cup, the obverse cast with an image of the Yorkshire Cup trophy and inscribed 1886, Halifax Football Club, the reverse inscribed YORKSHIRE CHALLENGE CUP, G. MILLAR, 1886, also later engraved AND 1888, rugby ball beneath ring suspension Originally issued in 1886, Millar’s medal was further inscribed when Halifax won the Cup again in 1888.
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151229 item(s)/page