Author Topic: Woodcroft Park - lost ground in Wavertree  (Read 2260 times)

Offline redbyrdz

  • No to sub-optimal passing! Not content with one century, this girl does two together. Oh, and FUCK THE TORIES deh-deh-deh-deh!
  • RAWK Supporter
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 24,197
Woodcroft Park - lost ground in Wavertree
« on: February 8, 2015, 12:34:07 pm »
Just read [urlhttp://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-merseyside-31148503]this bit[/url] on the bbc about a lost ground in Wavertree. Also something in the Echo about it.

The mystery of Liverpool's lost stadium
By Rumeana Jahangir

While millions around the world watch Everton take on Liverpool in the Merseyside derby, local historians are pondering one of the football-mad city's great "what-ifs".

Long before the blue and red rivalry that dominates derby day another team - Liverpool Caledonians FC - were among the city's leading Victorian era clubs.

They took up residence at a 30,000-capacity stadium in Wavertree, known as Woodcroft Park, at a time when Everton had just settled into Goodison Park having previously played at Anfield, later the home of Liverpool FC.

An appeal has now been made for information about Liverpool Caledonians, with local councillor Tim Beaumont admitting "there does not appear to be a great deal known about them or where they played".

It appears the club, which gained admission to the Lancashire League, didn't last for long.

Local historian Mike Chitty, from the Wavertree Society, says: "They were around in 1891 and they sought entry to the Football League a year later, and they went into liquidation by December 1892 so that was the end of the club."

Despite their short existence, Mr Chitty says they reached the fourth qualifying round of the FA Cup in 1892 - "one round further than Liverpool FC" - before losing to Northwich Victoria.

Mapping mystery

In a Liverpool Mercury report from 1892, the Caledonians were described as being "so successful during [their] first season that, besides being in the semi-final in the Liverpool Senior Cup Competition, [they] won the Liverpool Challenge Shield".

Ultimately their bid for a place in the Football League was unsuccessful.

Their Woodcroft Park stadium was described as "suitable for football and cricket" while a "fast cinder track of a quarter of a mile fits them for cycling and athletic purposes".

It also possessed "perfectly level and well-drained" turf - more than can be said for some current grounds - while reporters enjoyed "ample press conveniences".

Yet the Woodcroft Park stadium doesn't appear on the Ordnance Survey maps published in 1893 and 1905, says Mr Chitty.

"It looks like the football ground had come and gone in between... but other clubs are known to have played on the ground until around 1900 or possibly a bit afterwards," he adds.

According to a Mercury story from 1893, the Liverpool Old Boys club took over the ground from the Caledonians, although it's not clear whether the former was a football or rugby team.

"There may be stories in families about an ancestor who played for [the Caledonians]," says Mr Beaumont. "Or there could be medals or other memorabilia which have been gathering dust in a loft but which could provide valuable information."

The Mercury cuttings say Woodcroft Park was "a minute's walk from Wavertree Station, and within easy distance of Sefton Park, Wavertree, and Fairfield".

Scottish connection?

Attempts to pinpoint the stadium's exact location throw up various possibilities, including a now-demolished country house known as Woodcroft Cottage, and a nearby housing development close to Lawrence Road.

As the team's Roman suffix suggests, they may have had a Scottish link.

"Liverpool was a very cosmopolitan place around 1900," says Mr Chitty.

"It had drawn people from all over the world but mainly from different corners of the British Isles, being a port.

"Therefore there were very strong communities - Irish, Welsh and Scots - and we assume that Liverpool Caledonians FC was set up to appeal to the ex-pat Scots who lived in Liverpool."

Mr Chitty initially thought a cluster of streets in Wavertree - possibly named after Scottish men with connections to the South African Boer War between 1899 and 1902 - could have been a nod to the Liverpool Caledonians.

But he now believes this could be a red herring.

"As the Caledonian FC was only in existence for a few months - whereas Woodcroft Park continued in use for another eight years or so - would anyone really have remembered the Caledonian connection when choosing to name a set of new streets?"

He adds: "This is the thing about local history - you start off on one thing and it leads you off on all sorts of other things."

Anyone with information is asked to contact the Wavertree Society.




Any suggestions from Rawks resident historians about the whereabouts? :wave
"I want to build a team that's invincible, so that they have to send a team from bloody Mars to beat us." - Bill Shankly

Offline Medellin

  • Self-confessed daft meff.
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 7,543
  • Sound
Re: Woodcroft Park - lost ground in Wavertree
« Reply #1 on: November 15, 2021, 12:34:10 pm »
Very interesting this..some incredible research done.
Ain't read it all yet, superb work.

https://bygoneliverpool.wordpress.com/2021/10/31/finding-woodcroft-park-liverpools-lost-football-ground/
Support the team,Trust & Believe.

Online kesey

  • Hippy - Scally - Taoist - Rafiki - Dad - Trichotomist. Hill Climber, David Cassidy Fan Club
  • Legacy Fan
  • ******
  • Posts: 26,927
  • Truth , Love and Simplicity ♡
Re: Woodcroft Park - lost ground in Wavertree
« Reply #2 on: November 21, 2021, 12:03:55 am »
I'd hazard a guess and say it's were Woodcroft Road is now  ;)

I've read the link and it says that it's in the middle of Picton and Smithdown and a minutes walk from the old station which was on Gainsborough ( the bridge by the Mystery ) . On old maps of Smithdown and Wavertree there was  a place called Woodcroft which looks like a patch of land.

http://www.disused-stations.org.uk/w/wavertree/

https://gerryco23.wordpress.com/2014/06/18/arundel-avenues-quaker-burial-ground-a-secret-garden-hidden-from-view/

* Edit * The red circle is the old Quaker burial ground 

I've just found this .

http://www.liverpool.ndo.co.uk/wavsoc/wcroft/page9.html
« Last Edit: November 21, 2021, 12:39:36 am by kesey »
He who sees himself in all beings and all beings in himself loses all fear.

- The Upanishads.

The heart knows the way. Run in that direction

- Rumi

You are held . You are loved . You are seen  - Some wise fella .