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Boothferry Park

Boothferry Park was a football stadium in Hull, England, which was home to Hull City A.F.C. from 1946 until 2002, when they moved to the KC Stadium.

Boothferry Park
Boothferry Park in 2008
LocationHull, East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Capacity15,160
Record attendance55,019 – Hull City vs Manchester United, February 1949
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Opened1946
Closed2002 (as a football stadium)
2007 (supermarket tenants)
Demolished2008–2010
Tenants
Hull City (1946–2002)

Grandways Supermarket (1980s–1990s)
Kwik Save (1990s–2007)

Iceland (1990s–2007)

In later years, financial constraints forced Hull City to allow Kwik Save and Iceland supermarkets to embed themselves into the stadium's structure.[1] Parts of the ground were demolished in early 2008, more than five years after the last game was played there, and the remainder in 2011.

History edit

The planning years edit

The ground was originally planned in 1929, and work began on the site from 1932 based near the Humber Estuary. Financial difficulties severely hampered this development, with the playing area and part of the terracing appearing over the following 12 months before work and progress ground to a halt. A proposal in 1939 for a sports stadium on the site was the catalyst for further development, as even though this threw up doubt for the original stadium plans, no suitable financial offer for the land was forthcoming, and instead the Hull City board enquired after, and were granted, a Football Association loan to the sum of £6,600. This meant the new ground would be ready for the opening of the 1941 season.

The onset of the Second World War was to again frustrate the development of the football ground, as during the war, the ground was used by the Home Guard, and was, for a period, used to repair tanks. This, not unexpectedly, had an adverse effect on the playing area – following the end of the war, the pitch was in very poor shape and prone to waterlogging.

Building materials were hard to come by in the post-war years for something as "frivolous" as a football stadium in the heavily bombed city, this and the state of the pitch meant that the ground was still not in a usable state by the 1945–46 season, so the club was forced to return to playing its matches at one of its former homes, the Boulevard, the then home of rugby league club, Hull F.C., one of the city's two major rugby league clubs.

Opening and continued construction edit

The ground was opened in August 1946, 17 years after its initial proposal, but only had planning permission for one stand along the west side with an upper cost limit of £17,000. The ground was still not fully completed and it became a race against time to make the stadium ready for its opening match against visiting Lincoln City.[2] Twenty-thousand people gathered to watch the opening ceremony performed by the city's lord mayor. The teams were led onto the pitch by Sergeant JT "Tommy" Brooke riding a white horse. Sergeant Brooke was a detective and mounted officer in the Hull Police and was a veteran of the First World War and the Battle of the Somme where he was a machine gunner with the Royal Horse Guards.

By 1948 the attendance record had swelled to 40,179 as the stadium hosted visitors Middlesbrough in the FA Cup. The terracing embankments were raised and by February 1949 a ground and club record which still stands was hit as 55,019 spectators turned out to watch Hull City play Manchester United. The locally famous Boothferry Halt opened in 1951. The ground now had its own railway station, its first use being a fixture against Everton when six trains ran the football service between Paragon Station, Hull's central railway station and Boothferry Park. At the same time, work proceeded on the covering of the North Stand.

The East Terrace was the next to be covered, albeit with a temporary structure. Despite being temporary, it was never replaced, and stood throughout the years of the ground. The popular East Terrace became known as the Kempton Stand after Kempton Road on the other side of the railway station. With the three stands completed, the ground was now suited to a floodlight installation. Two gantries housing 96 lamps were built, one on the west and one opposite on the east following a licence being granted. Although this lighting system was the envy of many clubs, advancements in stadium lighting came rapidly, and the system soon needed replacement. A six pylon system replaced the old gantries in 1963.

 
Lights of Boothferry Park

The new lights were used for the first time in 1964, using four of the six available, in an evening match against Barnsley which ended in a 7–0 win for the Tigers.

In 1965 a new South Stand was built over the Bunker's Hill Terrace. The new two-tiered structure included a propped cantilever roof, 2,500 seats in the upper tier and terracing for 4,000 more in the lower tier. The new stand was arguably the best stand at Boothferry Park, and a reminder of the golden days in the declining years to come.

 
Celebrations taking place on the pitch on the last day that football was played before demolition

On 20 March 1967, Boothferry Park hosted an FA Cup 2nd replay between Leeds United and Sunderland. Over 40,000 fans attended and Leeds United won 2–1. It was standard procedure in the pre penalty shoot-out days for 2nd and subsequent replays to be held on neutral grounds.

On 16 February 1972 Boothferry Park hosted a full international match between Northern Ireland and Spain. The result was drawn at 1–1.[3]

The final football match to be staged at Boothferry Park saw Hull City lose 0–1 to Darlington in December 2002.[4] The goal was scored by Simon Betts; it would be his only goal in Darlington colours. Darlington goalkeeper Michael Ingham played in both the final match at Boothferry Park and the first match to be played at Hull City's new home (in Sunderland colours).

Boothferry Park was also the scene of a rugby league international when it hosted the first Ashes series test of the 1982 Kangaroo tour between Great Britain and Australia on 30 October. The Aussies ran in eight tries to nil in a 40–4 thrashing watched by a vocal crowd of 26,771.

In January 1990, the Taylor Report required all clubs in the top two divisions of English football to have an all-seater stadium by August 1994. Hull were in the Second Division by this stage, but their relegation at the end of the 1990–91 season meant that the club was not covered by these requirements. Attendances fell throughout the 1990s as Hull suffered a further relegation in 1996 and financial problems almost put the club out of business, with strained finances meaning that Boothferry Park was not properly maintained and fell into increasing disrepair. By 1998, however, a move to an all-seater stadium elsewhere was in the pipeline, and Hull left Boothferry Park in December 2002 after 56 years to play at the new Kingston Communications Stadium.

Rugby League edit

Boothferry Park hosted nine top grade rugby league matches, including five internationals, from 1980 to 1985.[5]

Test No. Date Result Attendance Notes
1 29 February 1980   England def.   Wales 26–9 7,557 1980 European Rugby League Championship
2 18 March 1981   England def.   Wales 17–4 5,617 1981 European Rugby League Championship
3 6 December 1981   Great Britain def.   France 37–0 13,173 1981 Great Britain vs France
4 30 October 1982   Australia def.   Great Britain 40–4 26,771 1982 Ashes series
5 6 March 1983   Great Britain def.   France 17–5 6,055 1983 Great Britain vs France

Other than the five internationals, Boothferry Park also hosted a further five top grade rugby league games.

Game No. Date Result Attendance Notes
1 3 April 1953   Hull F.C. vs   Hull Kingston Rovers 27,670
2 5 October 1980   New Zealand def.   Hull F.C. 33–10 15,945 1980 New Zealand Kiwis tour
3 27 October 1984   Hull F.C. def.   Hull Kingston Rovers 29–12 25,237 1984 Yorkshire Cup Final
4 5 January 1985   Hull F.C. def.   Leeds 18–6 13,362 1984–85 John Player Special Trophy Semi-final
5 26 January 1985   Hull Kingston Rovers def.   Hull F.C. 12–0 25,326 1984–85 John Player Special Trophy Final

Demolition edit

 
Boothferry Park being demolished in March 2008

Demolition of the ground eventually started on 10 January 2008, over five years after the final game was played there, and was completed during March. The North Stand and the terracing on the South and East Stands were eventually demolished in January 2010 after years of vandalism and arson attacks. Humberside Fire and Rescue Service had to be called out nearly 100 times during 2009 to deal with the situation.[6][7][8] The six floodlights that had dominated the West Hull skyline were finally dismantled in early 2011.

Records edit

The highest attendance before the new stand was built was 40,179 in 1948 when Hull City played Middlesbrough in the FA Cup. After the height of the terracing had been increased, 55,019 spectactors witnessed the visit of Manchester United in 1949.[9] The highest scoring game came in a friendly match in 1950 when Hull City played Nuneaton Borough. The game ended 8–6 to the Tigers, who had been 1–0 down at half-time.

Nicknames edit

 
Boothferry Park from the car park with the "o" missing.

The stadium became affectionately known by supporters as "Fer Ark" in its later days, due to the lack of finances for maintenance which meant that only those letters were illuminated on the large "boothFERry pARK" signage.[10] Before this it had been known as "Bothferry Park" when one of the illuminated "O"s fell off.[11] It was also known simply as "BP".

References edit

  1. ^ Photos at Tim's 92, http://tims92.blogspot.co.uk/2011/03/hull-city-boothferry-park-with-wolves.html 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Peterson, Mike (2005). A Century of City. Yore Publications. p. 49. ISBN 0-9547830-7-7.
  3. ^ "Northern Ireland vs. Spain 1 – 1". Retrieved 10 July 2011.
  4. ^ "Hull 0–1 Darlington". BBC Sport. BBC. 14 December 2002. Retrieved 3 February 2018.
  5. ^ Boothferry Park @ Rugby League Project
  6. ^ "Soon all we'll have is ... memories". This is Hull and East Riding.co.uk. 10 January 2008. Retrieved 10 January 2008.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ "Sun Sets on Boothferry's South Stand". This is Hull and East Riding.co.uk. 26 January 2008. Retrieved 28 January 2008.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ . Vital Hull. Vitalfootball.co.uk. 10 January 2008. Archived from the original on 22 February 2008. Retrieved 28 February 2008.
  9. ^ Peterson, Mike (2005). A Century of City. Yore Publications. p. 52. ISBN 0-9547830-7-7.
  10. ^ When Saturday Comes – The Half Decent Football Magazine – Hull on earth 22 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ Soccerprint Football T Shirts – Hull City B'othferry Park T Shirt[permanent dead link]

External links edit

  • . Hull City A.F.C. Archived from the original on 13 February 2010.
  • Boothferry Park on Worldstadia.com
  • Photo Gallery of Boothferry Park

53°44′25.52″N 00°23′23.02″W / 53.7404222°N 0.3897278°W / 53.7404222; -0.3897278

boothferry, park, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, july, 201. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Boothferry Park news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Boothferry Park was a football stadium in Hull England which was home to Hull City A F C from 1946 until 2002 when they moved to the KC Stadium Boothferry ParkBoothferry Park in 2008LocationHull East Riding of Yorkshire EnglandCapacity15 160Record attendance55 019 Hull City vs Manchester United February 1949SurfaceGrassConstructionOpened1946Closed2002 as a football stadium 2007 supermarket tenants Demolished2008 2010TenantsHull City 1946 2002 Grandways Supermarket 1980s 1990s Kwik Save 1990s 2007 Iceland 1990s 2007 In later years financial constraints forced Hull City to allow Kwik Save and Iceland supermarkets to embed themselves into the stadium s structure 1 Parts of the ground were demolished in early 2008 more than five years after the last game was played there and the remainder in 2011 Contents 1 History 1 1 The planning years 1 2 Opening and continued construction 1 3 Rugby League 1 4 Demolition 2 Records 3 Nicknames 4 References 5 External linksHistory editThe planning years edit The ground was originally planned in 1929 and work began on the site from 1932 based near the Humber Estuary Financial difficulties severely hampered this development with the playing area and part of the terracing appearing over the following 12 months before work and progress ground to a halt A proposal in 1939 for a sports stadium on the site was the catalyst for further development as even though this threw up doubt for the original stadium plans no suitable financial offer for the land was forthcoming and instead the Hull City board enquired after and were granted a Football Association loan to the sum of 6 600 This meant the new ground would be ready for the opening of the 1941 season The onset of the Second World War was to again frustrate the development of the football ground as during the war the ground was used by the Home Guard and was for a period used to repair tanks This not unexpectedly had an adverse effect on the playing area following the end of the war the pitch was in very poor shape and prone to waterlogging Building materials were hard to come by in the post war years for something as frivolous as a football stadium in the heavily bombed city this and the state of the pitch meant that the ground was still not in a usable state by the 1945 46 season so the club was forced to return to playing its matches at one of its former homes the Boulevard the then home of rugby league club Hull F C one of the city s two major rugby league clubs Opening and continued construction edit The ground was opened in August 1946 17 years after its initial proposal but only had planning permission for one stand along the west side with an upper cost limit of 17 000 The ground was still not fully completed and it became a race against time to make the stadium ready for its opening match against visiting Lincoln City 2 Twenty thousand people gathered to watch the opening ceremony performed by the city s lord mayor The teams were led onto the pitch by Sergeant JT Tommy Brooke riding a white horse Sergeant Brooke was a detective and mounted officer in the Hull Police and was a veteran of the First World War and the Battle of the Somme where he was a machine gunner with the Royal Horse Guards By 1948 the attendance record had swelled to 40 179 as the stadium hosted visitors Middlesbrough in the FA Cup The terracing embankments were raised and by February 1949 a ground and club record which still stands was hit as 55 019 spectators turned out to watch Hull City play Manchester United The locally famous Boothferry Halt opened in 1951 The ground now had its own railway station its first use being a fixture against Everton when six trains ran the football service between Paragon Station Hull s central railway station and Boothferry Park At the same time work proceeded on the covering of the North Stand The East Terrace was the next to be covered albeit with a temporary structure Despite being temporary it was never replaced and stood throughout the years of the ground The popular East Terrace became known as the Kempton Stand after Kempton Road on the other side of the railway station With the three stands completed the ground was now suited to a floodlight installation Two gantries housing 96 lamps were built one on the west and one opposite on the east following a licence being granted Although this lighting system was the envy of many clubs advancements in stadium lighting came rapidly and the system soon needed replacement A six pylon system replaced the old gantries in 1963 nbsp Lights of Boothferry Park The new lights were used for the first time in 1964 using four of the six available in an evening match against Barnsley which ended in a 7 0 win for the Tigers In 1965 a new South Stand was built over the Bunker s Hill Terrace The new two tiered structure included a propped cantilever roof 2 500 seats in the upper tier and terracing for 4 000 more in the lower tier The new stand was arguably the best stand at Boothferry Park and a reminder of the golden days in the declining years to come nbsp Celebrations taking place on the pitch on the last day that football was played before demolition On 20 March 1967 Boothferry Park hosted an FA Cup 2nd replay between Leeds United and Sunderland Over 40 000 fans attended and Leeds United won 2 1 It was standard procedure in the pre penalty shoot out days for 2nd and subsequent replays to be held on neutral grounds On 16 February 1972 Boothferry Park hosted a full international match between Northern Ireland and Spain The result was drawn at 1 1 3 The final football match to be staged at Boothferry Park saw Hull City lose 0 1 to Darlington in December 2002 4 The goal was scored by Simon Betts it would be his only goal in Darlington colours Darlington goalkeeper Michael Ingham played in both the final match at Boothferry Park and the first match to be played at Hull City s new home in Sunderland colours Boothferry Park was also the scene of a rugby league international when it hosted the first Ashes series test of the 1982 Kangaroo tour between Great Britain and Australia on 30 October The Aussies ran in eight tries to nil in a 40 4 thrashing watched by a vocal crowd of 26 771 In January 1990 the Taylor Report required all clubs in the top two divisions of English football to have an all seater stadium by August 1994 Hull were in the Second Division by this stage but their relegation at the end of the 1990 91 season meant that the club was not covered by these requirements Attendances fell throughout the 1990s as Hull suffered a further relegation in 1996 and financial problems almost put the club out of business with strained finances meaning that Boothferry Park was not properly maintained and fell into increasing disrepair By 1998 however a move to an all seater stadium elsewhere was in the pipeline and Hull left Boothferry Park in December 2002 after 56 years to play at the new Kingston Communications Stadium Rugby League edit Boothferry Park hosted nine top grade rugby league matches including five internationals from 1980 to 1985 5 Test No Date Result Attendance Notes 1 29 February 1980 nbsp England def nbsp Wales 26 9 7 557 1980 European Rugby League Championship 2 18 March 1981 nbsp England def nbsp Wales 17 4 5 617 1981 European Rugby League Championship 3 6 December 1981 nbsp Great Britain def nbsp France 37 0 13 173 1981 Great Britain vs France 4 30 October 1982 nbsp Australia def nbsp Great Britain 40 4 26 771 1982 Ashes series 5 6 March 1983 nbsp Great Britain def nbsp France 17 5 6 055 1983 Great Britain vs France Other than the five internationals Boothferry Park also hosted a further five top grade rugby league games Game No Date Result Attendance Notes 1 3 April 1953 nbsp Hull F C vs nbsp Hull Kingston Rovers 27 670 2 5 October 1980 nbsp New Zealand def nbsp Hull F C 33 10 15 945 1980 New Zealand Kiwis tour 3 27 October 1984 nbsp Hull F C def nbsp Hull Kingston Rovers 29 12 25 237 1984 Yorkshire Cup Final 4 5 January 1985 nbsp Hull F C def nbsp Leeds 18 6 13 362 1984 85 John Player Special Trophy Semi final 5 26 January 1985 nbsp Hull Kingston Rovers def nbsp Hull F C 12 0 25 326 1984 85 John Player Special Trophy Final Demolition edit nbsp Boothferry Park being demolished in March 2008 Demolition of the ground eventually started on 10 January 2008 over five years after the final game was played there and was completed during March The North Stand and the terracing on the South and East Stands were eventually demolished in January 2010 after years of vandalism and arson attacks Humberside Fire and Rescue Service had to be called out nearly 100 times during 2009 to deal with the situation 6 7 8 The six floodlights that had dominated the West Hull skyline were finally dismantled in early 2011 Records editThe highest attendance before the new stand was built was 40 179 in 1948 when Hull City played Middlesbrough in the FA Cup After the height of the terracing had been increased 55 019 spectactors witnessed the visit of Manchester United in 1949 9 The highest scoring game came in a friendly match in 1950 when Hull City played Nuneaton Borough The game ended 8 6 to the Tigers who had been 1 0 down at half time Nicknames edit nbsp Boothferry Park from the car park with the o missing The stadium became affectionately known by supporters as Fer Ark in its later days due to the lack of finances for maintenance which meant that only those letters were illuminated on the large boothFERry pARK signage 10 Before this it had been known as Bothferry Park when one of the illuminated O s fell off 11 It was also known simply as BP References edit Photos at Tim s 92 http tims92 blogspot co uk 2011 03 hull city boothferry park with wolves html Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Peterson Mike 2005 A Century of City Yore Publications p 49 ISBN 0 9547830 7 7 Northern Ireland vs Spain 1 1 Retrieved 10 July 2011 Hull 0 1 Darlington BBC Sport BBC 14 December 2002 Retrieved 3 February 2018 Boothferry Park Rugby League Project Soon all we ll have is memories This is Hull and East Riding co uk 10 January 2008 Retrieved 10 January 2008 permanent dead link Sun Sets on Boothferry s South Stand This is Hull and East Riding co uk 26 January 2008 Retrieved 28 January 2008 permanent dead link Boothferry Park It s Coming Down Vital Hull Vitalfootball co uk 10 January 2008 Archived from the original on 22 February 2008 Retrieved 28 February 2008 Peterson Mike 2005 A Century of City Yore Publications p 52 ISBN 0 9547830 7 7 When Saturday Comes The Half Decent Football Magazine Hull on earth Archived 22 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine Soccerprint Football T Shirts Hull City B othferry Park T Shirt permanent dead link External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Boothferry Park A History of Boothferry Park Hull City A F C Archived from the original on 13 February 2010 Boothferry Park on Worldstadia com Demolition photographs More pictures of the ground Photo Gallery of Boothferry Park 53 44 25 52 N 00 23 23 02 W 53 7404222 N 0 3897278 W 53 7404222 0 3897278 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Boothferry Park amp oldid 1180997694, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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