Monday, 22 December 2025

CHRISTMAS FOOTBALL

on Christmas Day, all football fans know that the Christmas period is a wonderful time for watching football. Christmas Day, however, is a football free zone, with supporters having to find entertainment in cracker jokes and the Queens speech instead. However, back in the Victorian times and up until the 1950s, football on Christmas Day went hand in hand, like pigs in blankets and turkey with cranberry sauce. Back then, Christmas Day was a rare public holiday and the beautiful game was one of the only sources of entertainment available. There wasn't a TV to gather around, and so families ventured out into the cold to catch the big game. Every Christmas Day there would be a full programme of football, and usually another full schedule on Boxing Day. Football was very much a staple of the Christmas Day tradition and we think that is fascinating! Take a look at some of the amazing history that surrounds the beautiful game and the most wonderful time of the year. The Most Famous Christmas Day Match, The best-known Christmas Day football match took place in 1914, when one of the deadliest conflicts in human history was put on pause for a morning kick about. The First World War ? Christmas Truce? saw around 100,000 troops along the Western Front exchange gifts, sing carols and, of course, play football. This fascinating "slice of history" wowed the world through personal letters written by soldiers at the time. A recently uncovered letter written by Staff Sergeant Clement Barker of the 1st Battalion Grenadier Guards explains how the match started. A German looked over the trench no shots? he wrote. Our men did the same, and then a few of our men went out and brought the dead in and buried them. The next thing, a football was kicked out of our trenches and Germans and English played football.? During the war, league football was suspended, which lead to the emergence of several womens teams. The most popular of which was Dick Kerrs Ladies, who played their first match on Christmas Day 1917.

On a Boxing Day afternoon, in Liverpool, in 1920, more than 53,000 football fans crammed into Goodison Park with another 14,000 locked outside.You'd be forgiven for thinking it was a local derby, but Everton had played the day before and lost to Arsenal. The capacity crowd had come to watch a women's charity match between Dick, Kerr Ladies and St Helens Ladies.

Raising money for wounded soldiers, the game had huge support. But a year later, women's football was banned. "There were no women's league at the time so the women's games were all played for charity," says author and former Preston Rangers player and author Gail Newsham. "The war had touched everyone in some way or another - some of the girls lost their own brothers or brothers-in-law, and it was them wanting to give something back." Women's football took off during World War One when women who were working in munitions factories across the country started up teams to raise funds for injured soldiers returning from the front. With the men's league suspended during hostilities, the women's game grew in popularity "attracting big crowds", said Gail, a former player herself.

Yorkshire Ladies v Dick, Kerr Ladies in 1921Image source,National Football Museum
Image caption,

Dick, Kerr Ladies regularly played to large crowds of thousands in the 1920-21 season

"When I spoke to people who had been to the matches, they said it wasn't about watching women run around in shorts, but they just wanted to watch a good game of football," she said. But the big crowd at Goodison caught the attention of the FA who decided the game of football was "quite unsuitable for females" and claimed it could affect a woman's "frame" and fertility. Within a year the sport was stopped. "It's laughable now," said Gail, who tells the story of Dick, Kerr Ladies in her book In a League of Their Own, but it felt like they became victims of their own success. It was a seismic shock to the FA how many people turned up. If you think that's before the days of social media, its phenomenal".

Dick, Kerr Ladies were founded at Dick, Kerr & Co. munitions factory in Preston in 1917 and grew to be "the most successful" women's football team everBut the popularity of the women's game came at a time when the Football League was expanding, and division three was introduced.

Turning point Gail believes this could have had an impact as the grounds and crowds would be wanted for the new tier of men's football. The Goodison Park game seemed to be the turning point. In the months that followed, women's teams were tied by a host of new restrictions until finally, on 5 December 1921, the FA banned women's football. The Boxing Day match between Dick, Kerr Ladies and St Helens Ladies remained the biggest crowd at a women's game in this country for over 90 years until the London Olympics in 2012 when Great Britain played Brazil at Wembley in front of 70,584 people. And in 2019 a new record was set when 77,768 saw England lose to Germany at Wembley. Now 100 years on, women footballers will mark the occasion at 15:00 GMT on Boxing Day by raising a toast to those women who first kicked off interest in their sport.

Pictured left to right: Gail Newsham, Rachel Brown-Finnis and Sheila ParkerImage source,UCLAN
Image caption,

(L-R) Gail Newsham, Rachel Brown-Finnis and former player Sheila Parker unveiled a plaque for Dick, Kerr Ladies in 2017

One of them is former Liverpool, Everton and England international goalkeeper Rachel Brown-Finnis who said it's important to remember the women "put the first markers in the road. They were pioneers," she said. "People talk about my generation raising the profile of women's professional football but these ladies were drawing the crowds 100 years ago".

"Women's football was highly regarded in that era but it became that women didn't play for a generation and that certainly derailed women's football for a while". Burnley-born Rachel started playing aged seven at primary school in Accrington and she was allowed to play in the school's boy's team as there wasn't a team for girls. "The lads didn't treat me any differently because I was a girl," she said. "They were happy that I was good enough and it was never a problem."

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