
Everton Heritage Society
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The EFC Heritage Society is a voluntary group researching and chronicling the rich history of Everton Football Club. The Society was founded by Dr David France in 2008 to promote and preserve the rich heritage of our great football club.
Everton Heritage Society
2d ago
by Rob Sawyer, with members of Everton FC Heritage Society
Members of Everton FC Heritage Society were saddened to learn of the death of Barry Hewitt on 12 November 2023 from cancer. He may have been Suffolk-born, but his devotion to the Toffees was absolute for more than half a century, and he was a great friend to the Society.
Barry was born in Ipswich on 19 May 1953. Always keen on football, he had been a talented goalkeeper in his youth – he represented Suffolk schools and had a trail at Ipswich Town but chose not to pursue it when invited back. He became an Everton fan as a teenager, wor ..read more
Everton Heritage Society
3d ago
Rob Sawyer
Unlike many clubs, Everton FC has always eschewed the use of in-match music to spur on the team or celebrate a goal – or so I thought.
Tom Walker
A conversation with veteran Toffees supporter Tom Walker gave me this nugget about the late 1940s, “‘The Everton Bugler used to sit in the top of the Bullens Road stand and sound the charge if we were attacking.”
Further corroboration of the existence of a supporter (or supporters) bringing a touch of brass to Goodison comes from Sir Paul McCartney. When recalling his childhood for the mid-1990s Anthology project he stated:
‘I went occasi ..read more
Everton Heritage Society
5d ago
by Rob Sawyer with Derek Temple
Derek Temple with his wife Maureen, pictured at home with Rob Sawyer in July 2023
As Everton kicked off their 1966 FA Cup campaign the omens were inauspicious, the club’s previous taste of cup glory had been 33 years previously when Dean, Stein and Dunn hit the goals to defeat Manchester City. A season of underachievement in the league had boiled over the previous weekend. In the aftermath of a 2-0 defeat on an icy pitch at Bloomfield Road, the infamous ‘Blackpool Rumble’ (© David France) took place in the car park. Some Toffees were incandescent that Goodison i ..read more
Everton Heritage Society
2w ago
Armistice Day Service, The Fallen of Everton FC Memorial, Goodison Park
[This year, due to the away fixture at Crystal Palace on 11 November, the Armistice Day service was pulled forward to 9 November 2023].
Many thanks are due again to Paul Kelly (right) of Everton FC Heritage Society (supported as ever by his wife Jean), in organising the service, despite a period of very poor health – this is an event they have now organised with dedication for a decade.
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Click to open PDF leaflet
The service was conducted by the Reverend Henry Corbett, Chaplain to Everton Football Club
Many thanks to all ..read more
Everton Heritage Society
3w ago
John Shearon (The Ruleteros)
The Background to the Everton FC War Memorial Plaques
When Dr. David France first started the search for the Everton players who had given their lives in the two World Wars, who would have thought the net would have fallen as far as South America? While Paul Wharton, Dr. John Rowlands and Dr. France set about identifying the Goodison fallen, Frank Gorman and Linda Lines from the Ruleteros Society were busy tracking down the details of two ex-pats, Frank Boundy and Malcolm Fraser. These co-founders of Everton Football Club in Chile both died on the Somme in 1916.
Se ..read more
Everton Heritage Society
1M ago
Our condolences go to Bill Kenwright’s family and loved ones, plus all those affected by his recent passing.
Ken Rogers, Chairman of Everton FC Heritage Society, spoke to Paul Salt of Radio Merseyside Sport about his time spent with the late Everton chairman when working at the Echo: (22 mins in):
Below is the official statement released by the club on the Chairman’s passing;
RIP, Chairman Bill Kenwright CBE ..read more
Everton Heritage Society
1M ago
By Rob Sawyer
[Above photo: Dickie Boyle of Everton c.1894
(colourised by George Chilvers) ]
Everton was awash with Sons of the Rock in the early years of the Football League: fellow Dumbarton-raised John Bell, and the long-serving Jack Taylor, the latter being the captain of Everton’s first victorious FA Cup side in 1906. No less vital and dedicated to the Toffees cause in the last years of the nineteenth century was Richard Hill Boyle. Commonly known as Dickie (or Dicky), he was one of those indomitable Everton servants, like Peter Farrell and Mike Lyons, who never earned the silverware he m ..read more
Everton Heritage Society
1M ago
Mike Royden
The year 1892 was iconic in the history of Everton Football Club, famous for the dispute with John Houlding, which cumulated in the potentially club-ending gamble of moving to a new, undeveloped site, in time for the opening of the forthcoming 1892-93 season on 3 September.
It was a tall order of course, but once the decision had been made, the directors and club officials went into overdrive to ensure their dream move would become a reality in the very short time available to them.
Work began in May 1892, contractors were engaged, and the pitch area – which had been a ‘commo ..read more
Everton Heritage Society
1M ago
In the week commencing 14 September 1970, Edward Heath was in residence in 10 Downing Street, Tears of a Clown by Smokey Robinson and the Miracles was top of the charts, back and white television sets were still in higher demand than the newly introduced colour sets, and one hundred pounds back then would now (in 2023) have the purchasing power of around £1,900.
Meanwhile, the newspapers rocked the music scene with reports of the shocking death of the brilliant young guitarist Jimi Hendrix, as a result of a barbiturate overdose on 18 September 1970. The ‘Twenty-Seven Club’ had claimed its late ..read more
Everton Heritage Society
1M ago
Tammy Byrne (now Burgess) was one of the emerging talents in the Everton Ladies squad which won, to date, the club’s only league title. Not a follower of a particular club, or football in general, as a child, the course of her life was changed by an encounter at Moss Farm in the mid-1990s. Here, Tammy describes the transformative impact on her of football and her Everton clubmates.
I had older brothers and played football in my area, Croxteth, with the likes of Francis Jeffers. I hadn’t played football in a team, so I didn’t actually know how good I was, but I knew I could compete with the boy ..read more