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The History
of Marlow Rugby Football Club.
Officially
the Club was formed at a meeting held at the Chequers Hotel in the High
Street, Marlow on Tuesday February 3rd 1947. However, a rugby match was
played on February 8th 1913 on Crown Meadow against High Wycombe and (not
for the first time), Marlow triumphed by 13pts to nil.
One
of the players who took part in this game, a Dr. G Berkeley Wills wrote
to the Club in 1964 to confirm the events of that day. He wrote :- “At
the end of 1912 one or two of us who had been at schools which played
Rugger thought it might be amusing to get together if possible a team
to show Marlow - which was then prominent at Soccer - what “The
handling game” was like.
When
it came to it we could only find four or five people who had played the
game before, nevertheless we persuaded others to make up a side under
instruction. We hired Crown Meadow, (this was before it became Riley Recreation
Ground) erected goal posts, marked out the pitch and had several intensive
practices to try and instil some basic principles and to form a team.
We
then challenged High Wycombe to a match, the result of which I think surprised
us all. The score of two goals and a try was a fair indication of the
run of the play. Quite a large crowd watched the game and yelled their
surprise and approved whenever a tackle was made - especially when a three
quarter was downed and hurled over the touch line. This was a strange
and exciting game indeed !
This
was the only match played - other interests intervened and in the following
year of course came the Great War. Nevertheless, it was a famous victory!”
Anyway
back to that Tuesday evening at the Chequers Hotel. Dick Simpson who was
in attendance on that evening recalled,
“
It was not long after the war that some rugby enthusiasts in Marlow led
by farmer John White started to talk about the possibility of forming
a local club. After a lot of jaw, principally in the bar of the Chequers
on Saturday nights and Sunday mornings, it was agreed to hold an inaugural
meeting. As a former player I was asked to help, but as I was an old member
of Thames Valley (now Maidenhead), I thought it right to find out first
if they were contemplating starting up again. A phone call to Roy Bonberry
at Thames Valley gave the news that they would not be operating in 1947.
‘I
printed a notice which was circulated to all the youth of the town and
the first meeting took place at the Hotel. The chair was taken by “Gerry”
Mason who was then the landlord of the Crown Hotel and who had played
(about seven stone lighter then) for the Bank of England.
‘There
wasn’t much money about, just enough to buy the meeting a drink.
Gerry then put the following question to the meeting “Do you want
a Rugby Club in Marlow?” The meeting was unanimously in favour of
a Club being formed.”
“Fran”
Francis, Marlow’s first captain remembers that the meeting passed
the following resolutions :-
1.
The Marlow Rugby Union Football Club should be formed.
2.
A provisional subscription of 5/- (five shillings) be paid by each
member.
3.
An account be opened at the National Provincial Bank.
4.
Trial games would be held and that some matches be arranged for
what remained of the 1947-48 season.
In
that very first season five matches were played, four by the first XV
and one by the ‘A’ XV. All first XV games played were won
with a creditable points record of 62 points for, 18 points against. This
was a remarkable achievement considering that very few of players who
played in that first season had played the game before. It also shows
how quickly the popularity of rugby spread as the Club was able to get
two sides out at the end of April.
The
first match of the newly formed Club was against Old Wycombensians’
who had challenged Marlow to raise a side to play them and this historic
game was played on the Royal Grammar School ground at High Wycombe.. The
result was the same as the match in 1913, a win for Marlow. The Club’s
first official fixture however was on March 13th 1947 away against London
Airport. The report of that opening game appeared in the Bucks Free Press
the following week. The other remaining two fixtures that season were
against two guest sides at home. These matches were played on Home Meadow
at Sir William Borlase School and teas were served at the Cross Keys pub
afterwards.
The
immediate problem facing members in the late 40’s was the acquisition
of permanent playing and changing facilities. At first the two did not
necessarily go together. The Club still continued to use the George and
Dragon to change in, but the pitches changed more frequently than the
weather. The Club used Borlase or Royal Grammar School pitches, then for
a brief spell a pitch was hired down Fieldhouse Lane where the Industrial
Estate now is. After which a pitch near Pound Lane was used. Players frequently
changed at home, played rugby and then returned home to wash afterwards.
Players
in that 1947 season included Eric Page a lightning fast winger who scored
a prodigious number of tries for the Club. On the other wing was George
Wooster, landlord of the Cross Keys pub and, like his fictional relation,
was quite a character in his own right. Phil Mason was, along with Norman
Jameson in the back row, a devastating tackler. His time keeping for away
matches on occasions left a lot to be desired as startled pedestrians
would confirm. Not wanting to be late for an away game, he would often
arrive in his ancient Rover outside the Chequers via the pavement in front
of what was then the Post Office.
The
first AGM was held on 27th April 1948 at the Chequers Hotel. The Club
now had sixty members of whom 42 were players. The 1st XV had almost a
full fixture list for the 1948 - 49 season although difficulties were
experienced in getting a full list for the ‘A’ XV.
The
opening fixture of the 1948 season was away at R.E.M.E Aborfield where
the team triumphed by 6 pts to 3 pts. In the 1947-8 season the Club was
affiliated to the Oxfordshire Rugby Union and it was only on the 1st of
September 1948 did the Club become affiliated to Rugby Football Union.
In those days you could be affiliated to more than one county, so by December
1951, Marlow was affiliated to Bucks, Berks, Oxon as well as the RFU.
The
Club’s first full season went with a swing, the 1st XV won 17 out
of the 24 games played, with one drawn match and six losses. Twice as
many points were scored as were conceded with the final tally being 207
points for, 104 points against. The second XV played 16 matches winning
seven, losing eight with one draw.
At
the second AGM on the 16th August 1949, Brigadier R.H.R Steward was elected
as the Club’s first president and the Club had a bank balance at
the end of the season of £29 4s 4d. It was decided at this meeting that
the Rugby Club should join with the newly formed Sports Club in Pound
Lane.
The
decision was regarded by some with trepidation, as theirs was the view
that the Club should remain independent; however, the decision had been
made and Marlow at last had permanent if not independent headquarters.
Like
all amateur organisations Marlow was, and still is, dependent on subscriptions
and fund raising exercises from the membership. The moneys raised from
subscriptions alone were not sufficient to cover the running costs of
the Club and at the third AGM on the 22nd May 1950 is was decided that
the rules should be changed and that “a match fee of one shilling
and sixpence,1/6, (8p in 2006 money) per match was to be paid by all members
taking part in a game.”
For
the next thirteen years the Rugby Club was a member of the Sports Club
sharing facilities with the Hockey and Cricket Clubs. During this period
the club gradually expanded and became quite a prominent feature of Marlow
sporting life. Conditions at the Sports Club were far from ideal both
in the relationships with the various sporting sections and in the facilities
provided. However, Marlow found here a chance to function regularly as
a Club without the difficulties, which it had experienced in its first
years.
Rugby
in these early years was by today’s standards primitive but the
pioneering spirit shown by the early members was no more obvious than
when it was reported that the changing accommodation at the Sports Club
had been delayed because of the bad weather. Although the changing rooms
where now ready all they lacked was a cess-pit!
The
pitch at Pound Lane was lent to the Club from a Farmer White who owned
a field next to the Sports Club. There were immediate difficulties with
the pitch, two trees had to be removed but the prime obstacle was ‘the
hump’, this was a pronounced mound which ran across the width of
the pitch. Marlow used ‘the hump’ to great effect as a natural
defence for six years before it was removed. Whole three-quarter lines
are said to have fallen over the first time they mounted an attack and
movements were often broken-up when a player looked to pass as he ran
onto it.
Throughout
this period traveling away presented difficulties as there were very few
cars and in 1952-3 the club hired 19 coaches from Taylor’s Garages.
The after game sociability, which is apparent at Marlow, owes a lot to
the long sessions enforced by coach travel in these formative years.
Marlow
had black shirts at first, because with clothing rationed, any available
shirt was produced and dyed black to obtain uniformity of colour. In the
season 1949-50 the Club changed the style to match the hooped playing
shirts of Sir William Borlase School.
This
design did not last long and in 1951 the Club reverted back to the all
black shirt. At AGM’s in 1952 and 1954 a proposal to change the
design of the jersey was defeated on both occasions, however in 1956 a
compromise was reached and a black shirt with a narrow white band was
adopted. In our 50th anniversary season in 1997 a gold band was added
to the design.
The
growth of the Club was such that in 1958 a more permanent 2nd pitch was
required. Up to that point the 1st XV played at the Sports Club, but if
the ‘A’ XV was at home a pitch still had to be borrowed in
the town somewhere. Home Meadow at Borlase school, a pitch along Dedmere
Road, Alder Meadow in Pound Lane were just some of the places were the
‘A’s had to play their rugby. No wonder the Club formed a
Nomads XV later on in its history!
Eventually
a pitch was acquired in Gossmore Lane. The players still had to change
in Pound Lane, but unlike the pitch at the Sports Club, the players did
not have to use a shovel to clear to relics of the cattle that farmer
White had put out to graze on the 1st team pitch during the week!
However
there was one task that had to be completed before any rugby could take
place, and that was to collect the posts from Alistair Findlay’s
house in Lock Road. ‘A’ team players did keep fit, as after
the game the posts had to be taken down and returned to Alistair’s
house, and then it was a dash to the Sports Club pavilion to see if there
was any hot water left. Occasionally they made it before the hockey players,
but regrettably this didn’t happen very often.
In
the 1960-61 season it became clear that the Rugby Club was outgrowing
the facilities at the Sports Club, and when they were unsuccessful in
negotiating with a Mr. Saunt who owned a piece of ground flanking Pound
Lane to use as an additional pitch, the Club decided to look for a larger
home.
At
a Special General Meeting on Tuesday, 11th September 1962 at the Chequers
Hotel, Richard Welsford and a Mr. Wedlake outlined the negotiations that
had taken place with regard to 21 acres of land down by the river. Ten
acres of this land were owned by a farmer William Morris, who at that
time owned Town Farm at the back of Borlase School and the other eleven
were owned by Marlow Urban District Council.
The
minutes of that night record that, after discussion, the following motion
was put to the meeting and approved. ‘‘That this Special General
Meeting of The Marlow Rugby Club empowers the General Committee to act
on its behalf to negotiate and complete a lease on land situated at Riverwoods
Drive. They are to obtain the best possible terms with a maximum rental
of £300 per annum to be offered”. This set the wheels in motion,
which enabled Marlow to move to its current location.
A
21 year lease at £300 per annum was agreed with Mr. Morris, and a rolling
one year lease at £15 per annum was agreed with Marlow UDC. The land rented
from Mr. Morris was on the higher ground at Riverwoods and it was on this
land that it was decided to build Marlow’s Clubhouse. In March 1963
work commenced. Whilst the building work was going on the New Ground Committee
was still working feverishly in trying to obtain funds to help pay for
the Clubhouse.
To
show how much faith the Club had in it’s own ability to raise the
necessary money, the Club’s bank balance at the 31st December 1962
stood at £101 4s 2d, and the cost of building the Club and preparing the
pitches in readiness for the start of the 1963-64 season was £6,400.
At
the end of May the Clubhouse appeal fund stood at £700. Marlow wrote to
a variety of organisations to seek financial assistance in the form of
loans. In the end Thomas Wethereds, who were the town brewery company
and Middlesex County Rugby Football Union agreed to loan the Club £2500
each over a period of 10 years. It is interesting to note that the Club’s
application to the RFU was turned down as they themselves were short of
money! .
In
September 1963 the Club started the season in it’s new home. By
this time Marlow was running 5 sides and the future was looking bright
for all those people who had put so much hard work into moving the Rugby
Club to Riverwoods.
The
first home game at Riverwoods was between Marlow ‘A’ XV captained
by Geoff Spinks against Newbury 2nds. The result was a win for Marlow
by 25 pts to 8 pts. On October 2nd, the Club was officially opened by
Mr. A.
G.
Butler, President of the RFU. The 1st XV played an invitation game against
a combined Bucks and Berks XV. The side put up a worthy performance but
the visitors proved too strong and ran out winners by 18pts to 6pts.
To
help pay for the clubhouse, Marlow embarked on a variety of fund raising
ventures. One of the most successful was the annual Donkey Derby run by
Jim Platt, ( of Platts Garage in Quoiting Square, Marlow), and his helpers.
Special buses were laid on to transport the ‘punters’ from
all points in Marlow. Weekly football draws were run by Colin ‘The
Swindle’ Trundell. Gilbert North collected for the East Berks Sportsman’s
Association (EBSA) and the Club erected a shed at the end of the drive
to collect waste paper. Three legged and wheelbarrow pub crawls were organised
and with more than 20 pubs at that time in Marlow, only the strongest
and the soberest completed the course. The Club organised a Pantomime
much to the amazement and amusement of the membership. The was nothing
that the Fund Raising and Social committees would not do well almost anything.
The
effect of the new improved facilities was immediate. The playing strength
of the Club increased from three sides to as many as eight as new players
were attracted by the superb clubhouse. Less then two years after moving
to Riverwoods it was found necessary to expand the Club further, a shower
room and new changing rooms were built, the kitchen and bar extended and
a new pitch added. Marlow benefited from this as a number of first-class
players who have joined the Club admit to having gone to other Clubs,
seen their clubhouses and immediately joined Marlow. These additions to
the Riverwoods facilities attracted more players and as a result more
income.
By
1967 the original £6,400 loan was reduced to under £5,000 due to the fundraising
efforts of the membership. The Club was always looking for novel ways
to raise money and in 1969, the 200 Club was formed which as the name
suggests was limited to 200 people. It cost £25 a year to join and there
were monthly prizes of £100 and every six months there was a draw for
£500. In 1969 that was a substantial sum of money, as is shown by the
fact that the alternative choice for the lucky winner was a Morris Mini
car which was then selling at £499. 19s. 11d.
Fund
raising brought in regular income but Bill Murphy, then President of the
Club, had bigger and better plans for raising money. So on the 21st July
1972, Marlow held the first of many Bar-B-Q’s at Riverwoods for
a few friends - 1500 to be exact. Through his extensive contacts Bill
persuaded many of his Irish friends to attend - people like Terry Wogan,
Willie John McBride and Fergus Slattery all were in attendance at a Marlow
Bar-B-Q sometime or other.
In
October of that year Marlow started a Sunday morning activity that was
to change the lives of young boys and their parents who attended that
inaugural meeting forever - Mini Rugby was born at Riverwoods.
The
training lights were upgraded during the season and Marlow was now running
between eight and nine sides on a Saturday. Not content with having a
superb set of lights to train under, in 1973, Marlow knowing that improved
facilities were the only way to stay as the top side in the area, decided
that another set of lights were required. By the time the players returned
for the start of the season, floodlights had been erected around the 1st
team pitch. At that time Marlow was the first junior Club and certainly
one of the very few Clubs in the Country to offer this facility to its
playing membership.
On
a Thursday night in November, the Club played against an International
XV raised by International Referee - Mike Titcomb - to officially open
the lights. It would be no exaggeration to say that the team he brought
down to Marlow that night consisted of probably the greatest collection
of International talent that was around in Britain at that time.
John
Dawes, JPR Williams, Geoff Evans, John Taylor, (members of the victorious
1971 British Lions team in New Zealand), Mike Burton, Roger Hosen, Bill
Gittings were just some of the glittering array of talented players on
display that night. The final score didn’t matter (26pts - 8pts
to the visitors by the way). What did matter was that players of this
calibre were prepared to give up an evening, and for many of them a long
night and early morning, to come and help a Club such as Marlow celebrate
the addition of facilities that would help to advance the cause of Rugby
A
year later was the formation of a team that was to extend rugby players
careers (and their waist lines) even further - a Vets team - The Stragglers
was started at Marlow. Charlie Child was the first Captain and Past President
David Sumpter was his Vice-Captain. With an entry age of 35, many players
who were nearing the end of their playing days were able to enjoy a more
sedate, less intensive game against teams of similar ages and abilities.
Vets teams took on an identity of their own, with teams calling themselves
names such as Chiltern 100’s, Beaconsfield Boars, Wycombe Bodgers,
Feltham Ponderers and Camberley Gin and Tonics.
Vets
rugby became well established around the country and such was the attraction
of this type of rugby that in April 1975, the Stragglers played a team
consisting of the Fleet Street Rugby Winters under floodlights at Riverwoods.
It was probably the only time that players could get their own back for
what may have been written about them!
The
Club now had all the pieces of the jigsaw in place to attract players
who moved into the Thames Valley area and were looking to join a progressive
rugby club. The number of sides that the Club ran grew in the next five
years to seven sides every Saturday, and with Mini players now becoming
Youth players, Sunday mornings saw upwards of over 140 boys between seven
and seventeen enjoying first class coaching to prepare them for the senior
game.
Marlow
because of its accessibility to the M4 and M40 motorways soon became popular
as a training venue for International training sides from as far away
places as Argentina to Russia during this period. Marlow’s population
was still growing and the outskirts of Greater Marlow spread to embrace
Marlow Bottom during this time. Players from first class clubs in London,
were attracted to this beautiful Thames side setting and naturally Riverwoods
was their first port of call. 1980 Being Champions of 6 Counties saw Marlow
drawn against Bath (included 3 current Internationals) to become the 1st
Junior club to reach the last 32 in the John Player Cup on 3 occasions
( Played Rosslyn Park 1972 and 75) The team acquitted themselves so well
on the day, that Jack Rowell (later to become England Manager) brought
the Bath team to play a pre season warm up game at Marlow under lights
1985,
saw Marlow realise one prime ambition - to become owners of their own
ground. For many years leading up to this time, the Club had been in negotiations
with Willie Morris, the farmer who owned approximately half of the land
that was Riverwoods. On his death, his sons agreed to sell this land to
the Club and after lengthy discussions with his family, in September of
1985, Marlow bought the freehold to this parcel of land and at long last
the Club could said to be at last masters of their own destiny.
Marlow
has never forgotten that it has always been an integral part of the town
and county. A game against the ‘Anti-Assassins’ in 1986 raised
over £500 for Stoke Mandeville Hospital, and many other functions have
been held to help raise money for other worthy causes.
The
World Cup held in England in 1991 was yet another opportunity for Marlow
to show that when it comes to organising events, not many Clubs can hold
a candle to us. A celebration dinner was held in September for the Romanian
National side. This coincided with the arrival of the World Cup Rugby
ball at Marlow. The ball was brought into the dinner by members of Marlow’s
Youth team who had carried the ball on this leg of the journey around
the country before its arrival at Twickenham in time for the opening World
Cup match between England and New Zealand.
The
50th Anniversary October 1997 dinner with attendance by guests such as
Peter Brooks (President of the RFU)Will Carling (Former England skipper
and British Lion) and former Marlow player Paul Burnell (Scotland and
British Lions) was a further example of the esteem Marlow is held in Rugby
If
there is one thing that sums up Marlow Rugby Club, it is the phrase “The
only constant is change”. As we move into the next decades of the
Club’s existence, further changes are proposed to keep Marlow as
the Club of choice for any rugby player moving into the Thames Valley
as we have never been a Club to rest on our laurels
Riverwoods today is the legacy of our forebears - Riverwoods tomorrow
is what we leave for future generations.
We trust they will cherish, honour and respect this Club of ours, remembering
all the while, the efforts of those visionary members who brought us here
all those years ago. |