Lexington Books
Pages: 312
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4985-2943-3 • Hardback • April 2017 • $143.00 • (£110.00)
978-1-4985-2944-0 • eBook • April 2017 • $135.50 • (£105.00)
Catherine Budd is associate lecturer of history at De Montfort University.
Introduction
Chapter 1: "This Smoky Ironopolis of Ours": The Economic and Social Development of Middlesbrough
Chapter 2: An Emerging Sporting Culture, 1870–84
Chapter 3: "A Noble Game Became Degraded": The Rise and Fall of Professional Football, 1885–94
Chapter 4: Amusement and Recreation: An Expanding Sporting Culture, 1885–1900
Chapter 5: "An Increasing and Often Unreasonable Demand for Pleasure": The Diversification of an Urban Sporting Culture, 1901–14
Chapter 6: “Going Football Mad”: Football in Middlesbrough, 1895–1914
Conclusion
Appendix 1: Ironopolis Football Club Shareholders
Appendix 2: Middlesbrough Amateur Boating Club members, 1899–1901
Appendix 3: New members of Middlesbrough Golf Club, June 1909–December 1914
Appendix 4: Middlesbrough Bowling Club members, 1901
Appendix 5: Local Football Leagues
Appendix 6: Involvement of Middlesbrough Councillors in Sport
Appendix 7: Involvement of Middlesbrough Mayors in Sport
Appendix 8: Involvement of Members of Parliament in Middlesbrough’s Sport
Appendix 9: Subscriptions
Northern England’s Victorian "new town" of Middlesbrough offered a variety of sports to its residents. The amateur ethos held for the elite activities of boating and golf, while elite and working class alike enjoyed cricket. Both professional and amateur football (soccer) dominated the city. Budd’s case study confirms many theories of the role of sports while modifying or overturning others. Sports were class-based, but the elite maintained a good deal of control through managing and/or officiating most athletic endeavors, regardless of class. Sports helped establish a local identity while they provided a healthy and morally uplifting outlet for working-class residents. Largely populated by immigrants from throughout the British Isles and Continental Europe, sports helped create a cohesive identity. Sporting opportunities for women multiplied and were encouraged, as long as they did not impact either the participant’s beauty or femininity. Both sexes enjoyed swimming and tennis, though cycling had both champions and naysayers who feared damage to the woman’s reproductive capabilities. Perhaps the biggest challenge to the sporting culture came from the town’s rapid expansion, which made it difficult for the various clubs to find suitable space for playing fields. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.
— Choice Reviews
This impressive and meticulously-researched book is an important contribution to the historiography of British sport. Not only does it shed fresh light on a largely neglected topic—namely, the history of sport in urban Britain—but it also provides perceptive and original insights into the vibrancy of the Victorian era more generally. Using Middlesbrough as its case study, Catherine Budd reveals not only the origins and extent of this ‘frontier’ town’s rich and diverse sporting culture, but also how deep sport was part of the town’s social fabric. In engaging with contemporary debates, such as over amateurism and professionalism, Budd skillfully teases out the complexities of Victorian cultural and social relations at a time of great upheaval and the role of sport in creating and re-creating social identities. In particular, Sport in Urban England demonstrates how soccer emerges as the game of the people during its formative years as a professional sport and its essential place in the popular culture of Middlesbrough’s overwhelmingly industrial working class populace.
— Neil Carter, De Montfort University
This book provides a fascinating, well-researched, and important account of the sporting world of perhaps the most famous late Victorian and Edwardian ‘new town,’ Middlesbrough, a predominantly working-class urban port and leading iron and steel industrial center. Particularly interesting is Catherine Budd’s detailed, authoritative, and engaging analysis of the way a small male middle-class minority, with an amateur ethos, was able to dominate most of its sports clubs, organizations, and leagues, limiting opportunities for women and the less well-off. The major exception was football, which gained huge working-class interest and massive local press coverage, and which eventually saw Middlesbrough briefly with two strong professional sides capable of competing on the national stage. With its clear structure and rich detail it should appeal to the scholar, student, and general reader alike.
— Mike Huggins, University of Cumbria
Catherine Budd offers here a significant contribution to the scholarship on sport in urban, industrial Britain, reasserting the dominant role of class on sports provision and participation. This study is more than a history of sport, as it links the development of clubs and other sporting organizations with social and cultural change in an industrializing town, one that experienced massive inward migration of male workers. The research is local but the conclusions have much wider implications.
— Wray Vamplew, University of Stirling
Perhaps there is no better example of how the Victorian drive for industrialization transformed British society than the astonishing story of Middleborough, a small town that grew to ‘Ironopolis’ in less than fifty years. Catherine Budd’s excellent study provides lucid insight into how sport became an important component in urbanization. She argues convincingly that sport helped shape urban life and that it was influential in defining civic identity, class, and gendered relations. This book is a ‘must’ for historians, sociologists, and sport scientists, and undoubtedly advances our understanding of sport and civic identity in a tumultuous period of history.
— Brad Beaven, University of Portsmouth