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back to Another 'Grand Tour' index
Another 'Grand Tour' of the Potteries
- David Proudlove &
Steve Birks -
buildings in
Burslem
next: Burslem - Kismet Indian
Restaurant
previous: Tunstall - Oldcourt
Pottery
contents: index of buildings in Burslem
No 9 -
Burslem [ location map ] |
'Wembley
of the North' “If the normal laws of business applied to football, Port Vale would no longer exist” To say 2012 has been a difficult year for Port Vale Football Club would be like saying George Best enjoyed a pint: a bit of an understatement.
It is a credit to the management, players, staff, and most importantly the supporters that football is still being played at Hamil Road, Burslem.
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No one should be at all surprised by the latest crisis to hit Port Vale; the club’s history is littered with stories of financial disaster, mismanagement, incompetence, and borderline criminality. The above quote from Simon Inglis was from 1996, and recently, leading football magazine Four Four Two branded the Vale “Britain’s most dysfunctional football club”. Over the years they have gone out of business, though subsequently reformed. They have been thrown out of the League twice, resigned once, though have always managed to return stronger. As Simon Inglis has pointed out, Stoke-on-Trent is “the smallest English city to sustain two full-time clubs…somehow, Port Vale have endured”.
It was clear from the outset that Valiant 2001 did not have serious resources, but on a wave of good will, they stabilised the club, and set out to try to return Port Vale to the Championship. However, the club stagnated on the pitch, and were eventually relegated back to the fourth tier of English football. Since Brian Horton left the club in 2004, Martin Foyle, Lee Sinnott, Dean Glover, Jim Gannon and Micky Adams have all struggled – albeit in very constrained circumstances – to turn the club’s fortunes around.
For many years, supporters of Port Vale have seen the City Council as the club’s bogeyman, accusing them of favouring their neighbours and great rivals Stoke City, and accusing them of starving the club of income through the forced closure of Vale Market. However, as the club once more descended into chaos, Bill Bratt and other board members departed, leaving them with two few officials to legally function, meaning that the club could not place themselves into administration. The City Council are one of the club’s main creditors due to them providing the club with a loan in recent times, and were urged to take the decision to place them into administration. This, the Council did, a decision which effectively saved Port Vale. This led to the club being deducted ten points, thus derailing their 2011/12 promotion campaign, and harbouring in Port Vale’s Summer of Discontent.
Vale
Park
Vale Park is seen as the Vale’s traditional home, but in actual fact, Port Vale are the city’s footballing nomads. Indeed, the Vale have spent more time drifting than they have in Burslem.
Port Vale Flour Mill alongside the Trent and Mersey Canal
Staffordshire Blue Brick from the Midland and Port Vale Tileries, Longport
Although the club was formed in the late 1870s (the ‘official’ date is 1876, though research by club historian Jeff Kent suggests 1879), the Vale’s first games were on meadows off Limekiln Road. By 1881, they made their first move to nearby Westport Meadows, which is now the home of Westport Lake. Shortly afterwards they relocated to their first ‘proper’ football ground on Moorland Road in Burslem, adjacent to Burslem Station. The ground opened in 1884 with a game against Everton, and had a cinder cycle track and a small stand. Here the club adopted the name ‘Burslem Port Vale’, turned professional, and in 1885, became a limited company (it is thought that the Vale were the first club to do so).
The ground’s favourable location made it attractive for development, and in 1910, a stand with a capacity of 1,800 was built. However, mining subsidence wreaked havoc (this would prove to be a recurring theme for the club), and following the appearance of craters in 1912, the club took the decision to seek yet another new home.
On the Vale’s arrival, the ground was renamed the Old Recreation Ground, and improvement works were still incomplete when the club played host to Blackburn Rovers Reserves in their first fixture in Hanley in September 1913.
The
Old Recreation Ground, Hanley © onevalefan.co.uk
Again, this was another decision which the club was forced to backtrack on. Their plan was reliant on the Corporation buying back the Old Recreation Ground, who refused to pay the club more than what they had paid for the ground when they acquired it a few years earlier. Thus the club resigned itself to staying put, and in 1931, invested £10,000 in the building of a new 3,500 seat stand. By 1943, with the country fighting the Second World War, and the club engulfed in debt, the board took the decision to sell the ground back to the Corporation (without consulting shareholders), and took out a short-term lease until they could secure a new home. It only took the Vale a year to identify a new site, but it took six years for them to build their new stadium, and so they remained at the Old Recreation Ground until 22nd April 1950, when Aldershot were the last visitors. The Vale’s final fixture in Hanley ended in disappointment, with the Shots running out 1-0 winners.
Port Vale identified their new site in 1944 – a large former marl pit off Hamil Road in the Mother Town, and a site which provides English football’s second highest ground (West Bromwich Albion’s the Hawthorns is the highest). The club managed to pull off a clever deal which more or less financed their move and new stadium plans, by selling on part of the site immediately to a mining company. This left the Vale with around 13.5 acres on which to lay out their new home.
Some £50,000 was invested in the building of Vale Park, but progress was slow: by the time the ground opened its doors on 24th August 1950 for a fixture with Newport, the ground was still entirely uncovered, and had temporary dressing rooms. Nevertheless, a record crowd for a Port Vale fixture of 30,042 witnessed the dawning of a new era.
Artist’s
impression of proposed Vale Park
Building
of Vale Park
Works to the ground continued
slowly, and it took some time for the club to settle into its new home, with plenty of teething problems along the way. A new pitch was laid within a year, and only 1,000 seats were available, and despite the initial increased support for the club following Vale Park’s opening, gates actually fell. The Old Recreation Ground in Hanley was a tight and compact stadium and produced a special atmosphere. Vale Park’s vast open spaces, combined with the fall in attendances, led to more subdued crowds. As Stoke City would discover at the Britannia Stadium, it took time for Vale Park to become home.
As manager John Rudge built a successful team during the late 1980s, Vale Park had become an embarrassment, leading to taunts from Stoke City supporters: in 1989, Stoke City fanzine the Oatcake published a cartoon entitled ‘Build Your Own Vale Park’, which saw a trampled on cardboard box cut up, glued and moulded into a model of Port Vale’s home. Although humorous, the cartoon illustrated perfectly the depths to which Vale Park had plummeted.
However, Vale’s on the pitch success – along with the recommendations of the Taylor Report – led to a series of renovations at Vale Park: an all-seater stand was built at the Bycars end, and this was followed by the installation of seats in the Railway Paddock and the Hamil Road End, where a roof was also erected following its purchase from Chester City, where it formerly covered the Main Stand at Sealand Road. In the mid-1990s, the club prepared plans to redevelop the part-completed Lorne Street Stand with a new £4million stand that would seat 8-10,000, and also include executive boxes, a restaurant, offices, and new dressing rooms.
Port Vale’s problems are well documented and very complex, but hopefully now there is light at the end of the tunnel. The club’s administrators say there are a number of bidders looking to take on and invest in the club, and it is hoped that whoever the club’s new owners are will provide the support and stability needed in order to enable the club to grown and flourish once again.
Blue
skies over Vale Park
One of my hopes is that the new owners will look to complete the Lorne Street Stand as a priority, once they complete the urgent task of stabilising the club’s finances. Vale Park may not be the ‘Wembley of the North’ originally envisaged, but Port Vale will have a home as good as any in the lower leagues, and one certainly capable of hosting Championship football again some time in the future. This would be great for the Vale, great for Burslem, and great for the Potteries.
Dave Proudlove October 2012 |
next: Burslem - Kismet Indian
Restaurant
previous: Tunstall - Oldcourt
Pottery
contents: index of buildings in Burslem
Related Pages 'On the Waterfront' - Port Vale Flour Mill The Midland and Port Vale Tileries external pages..
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