Monday 14 August 2023

John Hammond, Rest in Peace.

It is very regretful that we have to report the death of another former Dulwich Hamlet footballer. 

This morning saw the peaceful passing of John Hammond, The 84 year old had been taken seriously ill a few weeks ago. Coming only a week after the sudden death of Kimm Connett it has been a very sad period for the club. 

John was born in Islington on 27 Oct 1938 and became a Dulwich player in the late 1950s. 

Victorious captain Hammond held aloft by his Army Pay Corps teammates 
including Roy Wootton, second from right.


During his National Service – when young men in their late teens were conscripted into the Armed Forces for a couple of years – John served in the Royal Army Pay Corps. It was whilst playing for the football team that he met and became close friends with Roy Wootton. Roy encouraged John to get a trial with Dulwich Hamlet as soon as he finished his service. Both Roy and John went on to have good careers with the Hamlet. 

His position in the Dulwich side also meant a job opening as a junior clerk with Office Cleaning Services. OCS were connected with Dulwich Hamlet for decades and many players worked for the company. 

A solid defender, right fullback or centre half, John was elected the club’s vice-captain several times over a career that spanned the 1960s. John’s son Richard told me that although his father escaped major injuries …he did manage to collect several broken noses!

One of the highlights of his playing days was the opening of the Champion Hill floodlights in October 1964, when Football League leaders Chelsea brought their first team squad of professionals to take on the Hamlet amateurs.


He retired from his playing career with Dulwich Hamlet at the end of the 1969/70 season, having made 247 appearances. He then became an active member of the board. His achievements included organising the building of the squash courts at the old Champion Hill ground. 

Our deepest sympathies to son Richard and the rest of the family.

John Hammond, second player from left middle row.


John Hammond’s Dulwich Hamlet career. Seasons in which he made more than 10 appearances.

1959/60           12        

1960/61           26        

1961/62           29

1962/63           39

1963/64           24

1964/65           30

1965/66           

1966/67           35

1967/68           26

1968/69           14

1969/70

Wednesday 9 August 2023

The Passing of Kimm Connett

 Kimm Connett


It was with the greatest of sadness that we learned of the passing of former Dulwich Hamlet player Kimm Connett at the age of 65. Only a few days ago I was wishing him a happy birthday on social media.

 

Kimm was often updating his Facebook groups and Twitter page. Whether it was promoting Hug A Bug World which he co-founded, a parent-run organisation that encourages the well-being and natural emotional development of children, or flagging up anything Dulwich Hamlet related, Kimm was there posting and tweeting.

 

A meek and caring individual online, he was the same in the flesh. It was a real pleasure when he sought you out in the crowd to have a chat. In the last seven or eight years Kimm reacquainted himself with the club he had held dear to his heart from a child, setting up the Dulwich Hamlet Former Players Association and creating a network of links to encourage and inform. In so doing he reunited many old teammates from the 1940s, 50s, 60s and on to the present day.

 

And yet he never hogged the limelight and certainly didn’t ask financial help in organising a number of events that brought other former stars together. These included golf days against ex-Sutton United players that were very popular. Kimm, in fact, had been the chairman of the Dulwich Hamlet Former Players Golf Society for more than a quarter of a century. His father Pat Connett was one of the founder members in 1960. Kimm was a little boy at the time and spent many a Saturday afternoon in the sixties roaming round the vast edifice that was the Hamlet’s previous Champion Hill ground, where Pat, had moved upstairs to an officer role at the club. 

 

Despite having been a playing legend himself during the immediate post war period, Pat Connett said in later life that his greatest memory was when his son Kimm pulled on the pink and blue shirt for the first time.

 

That moment took place in 1977 when Dulwich Hamlet manager Alan Smith plucked the nineteen year old centre forward from Charlton Athletic where he had begun his career. I’m not sure if Kimm ever played a first team game for Charlton, but not long ago he produced the team sheet for his professional debut match in the reserves v Millwall. Strangely his captain that day in 1975 was the iconic 'Lion' Harry Cripps playing against his old club. And in the Millwall side, two of Kimm’s future teammates at Dulwich, Alan Hart and George Borg! For the record Kimm bagged a brace in a 5-4 win.

Kimm Connett standing 4th from left

Over the five seasons from 1977/78 to 1981/82 Kimm amassed 63 goals in 191 games. In his first season Dulwich achieved promotion from the Isthmian League Division One back to the Premier. Other highlights would have included participation in the Anglo-Italian Cup in 1979/80, with trips to Italy to play Triestina and Mantova, and Cavese and Campobasso at home, and in reaching the quarter final of the FA Trophy that same season. Dulwich were overcome by Boston United of the Alliance League, whose manager commented at the time that Connett was one of the best headers of a ball he had seen. Like most of us who saw Kimm play, he could not for the life of him understand why he was taking all the throw-ins when his aerial ability suggested he should be in the penalty box himself.

 

Bitter rivals Tooting and Mitcham United signed Kimm for the 1982/83 campaign but he was back at Dulwich before the season was out, re-joining in March to bump his appearances up to 202 and his goal tally up to 64.

 

The close season saw him represent Middlesex Wanderers in a tournament in Dhaka, Bangladesh ,where he played matches against the home nation, Malasia, China, India and Iraq.

 

Then he was gone, crossing the Thames to East London and Walthamstow Avenue.


On his return to Champion Hill in September 1983, as a member of the opposition, Kimm played in a game that is now part of Dulwich Hamlet folklore. The Avenue were leading 2-0 at half time before Dulwich reduced the arrears early in the second half. Cometh the hour-mark cometh the man. Off the bench comes Karl Richards and in a twelve minute spell scored four goals to win the match for the home side. I’m sure Kimm would have had a wry smile at that comeback.

 

Kimm kindly put so much back into his beloved Dulwich Hamlet in the last few years. His contributions have been appreciated by dozens, if not hundreds of people. He will be sorely missed, not just by his close family and friends, to whom we offer our deepest condolences, but by many of us, supporters, staff and ex-players.

 

May he rest in Peace.

Monday 10 July 2023

DULWICH HAMLET IN PRINT

 DULWICH HAMLET IN PRINT



Pa Wilson, the founder of Dulwich Hamlet Football Club, perceived early on that his young players might like to see their names in print. A keepsake, something to file away in a drawer or in a scrapbook and show their parents and friends. After all, most of them were still teenagers.


Pa arranged for local printers Lydall & Sons to print the matchday programmes with team line-ups, and a paragraph or two introducing the visitors and a brief report of the previous week’s game. And when his charges went off to war Pa produced regular information sheets – ‘News of the Pink and Blue Brigade’ – which were mailed to the Hamlet boys on the Western Front. Lydall’s was there from the club’s inception right through to the 1970s churning out the annual handbooks, season tickets, stationery and all other club literature.

 

Pa Wilson was long gone by the fiftieth anniversary of his club. By then another world war was raging. Celebrations were understandably muted, and as far as I am aware there was nothing printed up. That had to wait for another 25 years.

 

The ‘75th Anniversary’ book was published in 1968, with over a hundred pages of text charting the history of the Dulwich Hamlet Football Club from its beginnings in the late Victorian period to the swinging sixties. The book is split into three sections: ‘The Growth of the Club’ tells the story of the early days, and the rise from a junior side to become one of the most respected teams in the south east. The ‘Success Between the Wars’ chapter shows Dulwich Hamlet as arguably the finest Amateur club in the country.  In ‘The Struggle After the War’ the club is in real decline, having to seek re-election on more than one occasion to remain in the Isthmian League.

 

The book’s content is really made up of text from the annual handbooks, and in many cases verbatim. All the Hamlet results in the Isthmian League from the 1907/08 to 1966/67 season are documented. Players’ individual honours are also listed, as are the names of every club officer from 1893. The foreign tours record long forgotten wins against some well-known European clubs like Borussia Monchengladbach, Ajax and Athletic Bilbao. 


The preface by Sir Stanley Rous, Head of FIFA, who in his earlier days had refereed at Champion Hill, shows he held Dulwich in very high regard, despite the barren period they were going through.

 

This publication is well worth seeking out and adding to your collection. 

 

It was a further quarter of a century before the next official publication. The ‘100thAnniversary Centenary Brochure 1893 – 1992’ was a great disappointment and a wasted opportunity. The booklet, A4 in size, gave a potted history of the club and reproduced a handful of rare photographs. But 18 of those 32 precious pages …were advertisements! Presumably to pay for the printing. 

 

The centenary ushered in a new era for Dulwich Hamlet, and took place at the time of demolition of the old Champion Hill ground and the building of the present one.

 

At this point it may be worth mentioning John Lawrence. John took over producing the programme in the early 1970s, and until his recent ill health had faithfully written all the copy, updated all the stats, arranged the printing, and so on for nigh on 50 years. His sterling efforts have been very much appreciated far and wide and if anyone is worthy of the moniker Hamlet Historian, it is JL. We trust he makes a speedy recovery.

 

In the 1980s another club legend, the young Mishi Morath took it upon himself to produce, almost single-handedly, a fanzine dedicated to Dulwich Hamlet. After a couple of attempts he came up with the ‘Champion Hill Street Blues’, the king of the Hamlet fanzines, a title that ran for over a decade. CHSB was far from official, and was initially sub-titled ‘the independent supporters magazine.’ It allowed contributors to make fun of the club, the players, officials and fellow fans, as well as make necessary or unnecessary criticism. And there was always the right to reply, which Mishi would always publish. Sometimes we went over the top – it seemed like fun at the time – and we may now be slightly embarrassed at one or two of the things we published.

 

Other notable fanzines include Four Goals With His [H]’ead, Thinkin’ Pink n’ Talkin’ Blues, Pink n’ Booze and The Moral Victory. 

 

By the mid-nineties I had started to gain an interest in the history of the club. I read the 75 Year book at the Local Studies Library at the Borough, and dug deep through untold microfilms of old local newspapers. This resulted in my first professionally produced book ‘The Story of a Season’ about the 1919/20 campaign when Dulwich won the Isthmian League and FA Amateur Cup double. The print run was 600 and to our amazement they sold out.

 

I followed this up with something similar about the ‘1912/13 Season’. Produced on the office ink duplicator, collated and stapled, with a print run of 100, it went like hot cakes. It was clear there was an interest in the history of the Hamlet. What better time to produce a magazine called the Hamlet Historian. Again, this was another of Mishi’s initiations. ‘The occasional magazine for those interested in the history of Dulwich Hamlet’ as he called it, was exactly that. I am extremely proud of my association with the HH, especially some of the books that have sprung from it.

 

The ‘war dead’ books by Roger Deason (When Shall Their Glory Fade) and Steve Hunnisett (For Freedom) commemorated over two dozen players who paid the ultimate sacrifice in the two World Wars. These books were notable for delivering fresh information of the lives and service records of those whose names we only really knew from the bronze war memorial located in the foyer at the entrance to the present ground. It is now in the boardroom and was originally above the players’ tunnel at the old ground.

 

Roger’s interest in the period, combined with his excellent research skills, saw him put together much information about football at Champion Hill during WWI, when Dulwich were depleted of playing staff and eventually had to rely on a group of teenagers. Led by the legendary Edgar Kail the youngsters filled the boots and pink and blue shirts of those on active service. The result was another book ‘Quite Wrong To Do So’. Although this was published independently, the HH did commission Roger to write a book about the football teams in Dulwich in the 1870s and 1880s before a certain Dulwich Hamlet FC was formed in 1893. ‘Before The Hamlet’ is a welcome addition to the library.


The Only Way Is Up’ is a lovely book, recounting the extraordinary Isthmian League Division One South championship winning season of 2012/13. It has a proper fanzine feel about it, with its different styles of writing and contributions from both nouveau and old school Rabblers.

 

A handsome full colour photo essay ‘Home – Dulwich Hamlet 10 Months In Exile’ by club photographer Duncan Palmer, chronicles the club’s fight with property developers to remain at Champion Hill, and the tenure at Tooting & Mitcham United’s Imperial Fields. It was there, at the home of our bitter rivals, that Dulwich won the Isthmian League play-off final and promotion to the National League South in 2018.

 

For another HH project we teamed up with former Finnish footballer Harri Laine to recount the amazing career of one of Finland’s pioneer sportsmen. ‘Niilo TammisaloHamlet Stroller to Hall of Famer’ is a concise biography of the acclaimed bespectacled goalkeeper, who spent several months in England in 1922 and made a number of appearances for the Dulwich Hamlet Reserves and the Strollers team. 

 

Edgar and Adolf’ by Phil Earle and Michael Wagg is a fictional account of Dulwich Hamlet’s greatest son and the friendship he had with his Altona 93 counterpart. Kail and Jager did actually play against each other in 1925 – between the wars – in a friendly match during the Hamlet’s Easter tour of Germany. The book is aimed at teenagers but is just as easily enjoyed by adults. Almost a century after that original game took place the two celebrated figures names still live on. Altona 93 play at the Adolf Jager stadium whilst the Dulwich ground is located at Edgar Kail Way. Even more importantly is the wonderful friendship which has developed over the past decade between the two clubs following the chance meeting of Mishi and Jan Stover.

 

Most of the above books from recent times are out of print and very difficult to find. The exception is Waggy and Phil’s book which is available on Amazon and from all good booksellers. However, my ‘Hussein Hegazi – Dulwich Hamlet’s Egyptian King’ from 2019 has taken on a life of its own. Hegazi was a pre-First World War sensation at Champion Hill and marvelled fans at home and abroad with his great skill and trickery. Aside from Dulwich he also represented Cambridge University, the Corinthians and the English Wanderers. On his return to Egypt he was one of the key figures in the development of Egyptian football. Earlier this year an Egyptian publisher made a request to translate the book into Arabic. We gave them permission and it has now been showcased at the Cairo International Book Fair and in Abu Dhabi. Absolutely amazing!


 

Jack McInroy,

June 2023.            

www.thehamlethistorian.blogspot.com





Thursday 6 July 2023

Dulwich Hamlet in Print

Dulwich Hamlet in Print

This evening (6July 2023) 8:00pm at The Shirker’s Rest, New Cross, will be an informal meeting to chat about books. 

See poster attached for details. 

The Hamlet Historian has produced a little booklet for the occasion marking some of the literature that relates to Dulwich Hamlet FC. 

I hope to have some at Saturday’s game against Altona 93.

£1 each / cash only.

This evening's gig is part of a wide range of events to coincide with the visit of Altona's team and supporters from Hamburg, Germany.  

The most important part of course is Saturday's match at Champion Hill. Please turn up for that as our visiting friends have come a long way.





Monday 10 April 2023

Pa Wilson - The Father of Dulwich Hamlet Football Club

 Pa Wilson

The Father of Dulwich Hamlet Football Club

by Jack McInroy


In 1923 the Dulwich Hamlet Football Club celebrated its first thirty years. Known in all quarters as one of the friendliest amateur clubs, the Hamlet had achieved the highest of things from the humblest of beginnings. A feat entirely due to the fine efforts of its loyal personnel. Among those committed to the administration of the club were a number of officials who had progressed through the ranks, having originally joined on the playing staff. Men such as Arthur Knight, Stan Hann, Cecil Lawrence and Tom Smith. These trusty men had taken heed to the wise words of a great man. A man whose motto to junior footballers was “Stick to your club.”


That man, the honorary treasurer Mr Lorraine Wilson, had dedicated all thirty of those .years to the love of his life – a love at first sight that began way back in 1893. Wilson, it can truly be said, was very much in love with Dulwich Hamlet Football Club. It was probably the reason why he remained a bachelor. How could he devote time to a wife when he was married to Dulwich Hamlet?

No marriage is complete without a family, and Wilson created a family atmosphere throughout the club. The excellent way that he, and the Hamlet’s secretary George Wheeler, ran things in the midst of trials was a credit to them. When Wheeler died in December 1921 the wave of grief that permeated Champion Hill affirmed that Dulwich Hamlet had lost more than a great club man, they lost a member of the family.

Within two years it was unanimously agreed upon that Wilson be offered the esteemed position of President of the Dulwich Hamlet Football Club. A more suitable candidate for the post would have been impossible to find. Wilson was inspirational, inducing the spirit of pure amateurism among his colleagues with a burning passion. The marvellous gesture by the club was gratefully accepted by Wilson, who, arguably, did more for Dulwich Hamlet than anyone before or since. Sadly, he would be President for only a short time.


Born in Fallowfield in the heart of Manchester on 2nd December 1865, Lorraine .Wilson, .the son of a merchant, came to live in Dulwich as a thirteen year old in 1879. The next year he was accepted into Dulwich College, leaving the upper fifth in 1883. From school he went on to private tuition at Lausanne in 1884. In business he was a very accomplished book-keeper, serving as a clerk with Hart & Tibbits Chartered Accountants from 1887 for a year or so. By 1891 he was a fully fledged Drapers Hall accountant.

Lorraine Wilson, a bespectacled stocky little man, was affectionately known by all and sundry as ‘Pa’ surely because of his warmth and fondness. His fatherly affection was seen most clearly in the help and guidance he showed to the youngsters that came under his wing. Whether Pa had adopted his nickname before he was thirty, when he was treasurer of the Dulwich Hamlet School Old Boys Cricket Club, we do not know. 

In January 1893 two teenage boys who had played in the school’s cricket and football teams approached the fatherlike figure with a proposition. They were now at school leaving age, but they had a desire to form an Old Boys Club with as much help as possible from Pa. No doubt impressed with the one shilling and eightpence that J.W. Williamson and his mate (some think it to be Teddy Booker) had got together, Pa Wilson duly obliged, taking on further treasury duties. His accountancy skills made him well qualified to guide them in monetary matters. The young chaps could now continue their athletic activities all year round – in the winter sport of association football, and cricket in the summer months. What they did not realise is how often Pa Wilson kindly dipped into his own pocket to meet the needs of the newly founded club. Were it not for this generosity the football club may well have died in its infancy.


Besides being a very charitable man Wilson was also a great supporter of things. After leaving Dulwich College he became a founder member of the College Chapel Committee with the Rev. Canon George William Daniell. Canon Daniell, the College chaplain, and a great friend of Wilson, was elected President of the Dulwich Hamlet Football Club at its inception. He retired from the position in 1915. [Note: There was no President from 1915 until Wilson in 1923. After Wilson’s death the position remained vacant until 1956!] The connection with Dulwich College allowed the Hamlet’s footballers to use the College Reading Rooms in the village for dressing rooms; five minutes walk from the playing field in Woodwarde Road, and across the track from Dulwich Park where the team preferred to play. The Hamlet were off to a good start. In a few short years they transferred from College Farm in Burbage Road to a pitch in Sunray Avenue, with the description “part swamp, part jungle”. They eventually settled in the surrounds we are familiar with today, in 1900 simply known as Freeman’s Ground after the landlord Thomas Freeman.

Quickly progressing through the local junior leagues, Dulwich Hamlet had .accomplished senior status by the turn of the century, and in1907 joined the Isthmian League where they have remained ever since. Stops along the way included the Southern Suburban League and the Dulwich League – both creations of Pa Wilson. The founder became President of each one.

Dulwich Hamlet enjoyed much cup success at that time, and Pa Wilson used the well earned prosperity by improving the facilities at Freeman’s Ground. When the lease held by Thomas Freeman expired in 1912, one section of the land was enclosed with a fence, terraces and a stand erected, and thus the Hamlet’s famous Champion Hill headquarters for the next twenty years came into being. 


During the First World War Pa Wilson published a quarterly magazine for the Dulwich Hamlet Football Club’s staff and players. The ‘News of the Pink & Blue Brigade’ was posted to about 100 members on service at home and abroad, informing them of the latest news regarding the club and the matches played at Champion Hill during wartime. The team Wilson assembled at Dulwich was made up of local teenage boys who perfected their craft against visiting Forces sides. Pa Wilson nurtured this second generation of youngsters throughout the latter half of the war period, thus preceding Matt ‘Busby’s babes’ by forty years. It was a stroke of genius and showed great foresight on the part of the Dulwich maestro. 

Indeed, following the war the Hamlet side continued to meet success with success, most notably in the 1920 side that destroyed everyone in its path to glory. All this is documented elsewhere of course. [See this author’s The Story of a Season for an in-depth look at the 1919-20 season, and more on Wilson’s efforts in securing the Hamlet’s Champion Hill stadium.]

Pa Wilson’s enthusiasm for all things football-shaped was most clearly expressed in the energy he afforded the club he had built into one of the most famous amateur clubs in the country. It was said that on the day of a big match when the team was doing well, and the receipts were good, his beaming smile was almost a landmark. “Pa’s pleased today.” the crowd would say.

Pa’s greatest love was obviously Dulwich Hamlet, but his attentions were not just confined to local interests. Far from it, such was his widespread popularity that he was invited to take on greater responsibilities. Not only was he honorary treasurer of the London Football Association, but also the Surrey FA as well, where he eventually occupied the seat of Vice President. These offices spoke volumes of the vast amount of work he did and the confidence placed in him. It must have been a great thrill for him to see Dulwich Hamlet win Surrey’s county cup on six occasions. Pa enjoyed the big occasion, and in one of his official capacities he attended the first ever Wembley FA Cup Final in 1923. And although he was shaken up in the famous crush, he nevertheless, (up until a few weeks before he died) spoke of going again the following year. It is also fascinating to discover that Pa Wilson made out his last will and testament in the week following his Wembley ordeal. 


The opening months of the 1923-24 season saw Dulwich at their best, despite losing .Edgar Kail for eleven weeks after the amateur international fractured his collar bone in one of the early games. It was not until the Saturday before Christmas that Dulwich Hamlet’s unbeaten league run came to an end at Woking. During this time, plans were being drawn up to sort out the immediate drainage problems with the Champion Hill pitch, which after a good shower, invariably turned into a mudheap. Looking further ahead, a scheme was being finalised to create a brand new ground with a pitch for the reserves. Pa strove for the best. Whether it was the condition of the playing surface for his footballers, or the view and comfort of the spectators, he always had the good of the club in mind. It was an exciting time to be involved with Dulwich Hamlet.

During the week of Sunday 9th December 1923, Pa Wilson sustained a very nasty fall, really suffering the consequences. Everyone showed concern for the ailing Dulwich President, who had recently celebrated his fifty eighth birthday. Pa lived with his seventy four year old spinster sister Annette at their residence, ‘Birchwood’, 57 Alleyne Park, Dulwich. It is difficult to work out whether brother looked after sister or vice versa. Although his Christmas was somewhat spoilt by his infirmity, Pa could take consolation in the fact that Dulwich Hamlet headed the Isthmian League table.


The new drains were fitted at the end of January and the work continued well into the next month. On the new turf the London Caledonians became the first team all season to beat Dulwich at Champion Hill.

Some newsreel footage was recorded at the cup-tie with Nunhead at Brown’s ground in February. The following week pictures of the two sets of players, action from the game and the customary spectator shots were shown in cinemas to huge roars of approval. It is doubtful that Pa Wilson ever got to see these pictures. His ill health continued, and by mid March he had two nurses in constant attendance. Everyone wished him a speedy recovery.

That same month Dulwich made their exit from the Amateur cup, going out at the hands of Chilton Colliery Recreation. It had been a miserable month for all at the club. The final week saw the popular President’s condition become critical. The prolonged illness was taking its toll. In the middle of April Pa Wilson was forced to retire from his position with the London Football Association. In so doing, the LFA lost one of its longest serving members.

By the run-in St Albans had become the team to beat, which nobody had done in the league for seven months. Returning from their Easter tour, the Hamlet players knew they were still in with a shout of the championship, providing they didn’t slip up, and if St Albans dropped a point or two. The Hamlet soundly thrashed Oxford City 4-0 on Saturday 26th April. The same score was recorded against the Casuals on Monday 28th at Crystal Palace. Right up to the last Pa Wilson’s thoughts were with ‘the boys’ as he fondly called the Dulwich Hamlet team. At his home in Alleyn Park he received the news of their doings with great eagerness. Particularly the description of the hat-trick scored earlier that evening by his favourite son, Edgar Kail. It was the last news that Pa Wilson would receive about his beloved club. He died the next day.


The funeral was hastily arranged for eleven o’clock on the morning of Saturday 3rd .May at Old College Chapel with the cortege going on to West Norwood Cemetery for the interment. As the funeral was set for the morning of the final league match with Tufnell Park, it was hoped that the game would be postponed. It was not to be. Permission would have to be granted from the Football Association and Tufnell Park, and with the championship hanging in the balance, it was felt by some that the club’s founder would have wished for the game to go ahead.

Tufnell Park were in a lowly position and in danger of having to seek re-election. There was everything to play for. Dulwich, on the other hand, were playing for a possible chance of the championship. St Albans were leading the pack in their first shot at the Isthmian League having won the previous season’s Athenian League. One point ahead of Dulwich Hamlet, they had not lost a single league match since September, and their opponents Civil Service, who despite playing exceptionally well, were not going to hinder them. But there was a slim chance that they would buckle under the pressure – and surely Dulwich would easily overcome lowly Tufnell Park.

In the end it was academic. St Albans won their game easily, and against all odds Dulwich were remarkably defeated, having run the show, and after hitting the crossbar twice through Jones and Jonas. Even when Kail was brought down in the box Pilkington failed to convert the spotkick. Dulwich finished runners-up, 3 points behind the champions.


The matchday programme, with its black border, illustrated the severity of Pa Wilson’s loss locally. “Today .marks what is beyond doubt the direst calamity that has befallen the club since its inception; for we have laid to his last rest one who was the keystone of the whole edifice which has come to be built up around the name of Dulwich Hamlet.”

The tone of the day was set a few hours earlier when over twenty cars made up the large funeral procession. Among the congregation were most of Dulwich Hamlet’s players and officials; distinguished members of various football associations; the Isthmian League and several of its clubs were represented; teachers and boys from Dulwich Hamlet School; Dulwich College; and the Dulwich Conservative Association. The pall bearers were six prominent Dulwich Hamlet officials:- Tom Smith (Hon. Sec.), Alf Garratt (Hon. Treasurer), Arthur Knight, Stan Hann, Cecil Lawrence and Dick Jonas (Captain).

Further large crowds were at the graveside. The extent of Pa Wilson’s popularity and esteem were seen in the flowers and wreaths from a variety of teams, schools, leagues, including some from as far away as Norway and Holland, The most outstanding was the beautiful pink and blue floral tribute from Dulwich Hamlet in the form of the club badge.



At the beginning of the 1924-25 season the Dulwich Hamlet Football Club Handbook paid tribute to the great man:


LORRAINE WILSON


One short year ago it was our pleasure and pride to devote the place of honour in the .Handbook to our newly appointed President. We recounted the circumstances under which the foundation, the building up. And the carrying on of the Club were the product of thirty years of earnest endeavour and self-sacrifice; and we looked forward with the greatest pleasure and confidence to the Club’s progress under the pilotage from the Presidential chair of the one who, of all others, was most fully equipped with the essentials to the prosperous passage of Dulwich Hamlet. 

The season 1923-24 had not ended ‘ere the life that was so devoted to the Club had run its course; and on April 29th our founder and President – Mr Lorraine Wilson – passed away, leaving us in a flood of sorrow as intense as it was universal. The sharpness of the blow was keenly felt in a very large circle, centring in his grief stricken family, extending through the Club to the London and County Associations and the many organisations within their jurisdictions, and widening out to the furthest realms of amateur football, as well as to other spheres of sport.

His was an influence, the absence of which will without doubt be sorely missed for many days to come. Noble tributes have been paid to his memory in the highest football circles, but all that can have been said or written of him must fall short of what we know him to have been during the many years that he devoted his time, his health and his substance to the elevating of those by whom he was immediately surrounded, amongst whom the Dulwich Hamlet Football Club figured not least in his affections. And now that, for him, is peace, there remains to those who are left to carry on a legacy that may well be the envy of many. A high standard has been set, and it is for us to profit by the noble example of him who has shown the way, to maintain the Club’s dignity at all times and to order its affairs that the bond of honour by which the name ‘Pa’ Wilson and Dulwich Hamlet have been, and still are mutually entwined, may ever be preserved in that purity, freshness and vigorous vitality which neither time nor circumstances can weaken.


        (Phew! At this point the writer’s pen must have exploded.)



In 1996 I paid a visit to the site of the burial plot in West Norwood Cemetery but came .away rather disappointed. Pa Wilson’s family gravestone had been removed from the site and is gone forever. The Friends of Norwood Cemetery later informed me that Wilson purchased the actual plot as far back as 1888. It is not clear when the tombstone was removed, but in the past some stones were hauled up because of natural decay and wartime bomb damage. However, during the 1970s and 80s, it was Lambeth Council’s policy to demolish thousands of gravestones in the interest of tidying up the cemetery and releasing more available burial space. Understandably, the Council came in for widespread criticism, especially from relatives and descendants of the deceased, but by then it was too late, the damage had been done.

It is a travesty that anyone, let alone one of the most important figures in amateur football, should have his last resting place desecrated in such a way. I for one would like to see some sort of memorial stone replaced, and the name of Lorraine ‘Pa’ Wilson rightly remembered for his large contribution to amateur football in general and Dulwich Hamlet in particular.



This article was originally published in the Champion Hill Street Blues No.50 in March 1997. It was republished with additional material in the Hamlet Historian No.10 in January 2003.

Wednesday 22 March 2023

Non-League Day 2023


A new commemorative Issue of the Hamlet Historian has been published for Non-League Day 2023. This takes place on Saturday March 25 when followers of professional football clubs support their local non-league side.

This year Champion Hill welcomes a contingent of supporters making the trip all the way from the Athletic Club of Bilbao in the Basque Country. Amazing.

This special limited edition of HH reproduces a couple of articles relating to the match that took place a century ago, when the Hamlet party traveled to Bilbao for two matches.

We trust the guests of the club enjoy their stay and take back with them some happy memories and new friendships. 

If you would like a copy of the magazine please try and find me at the ground from 2pm.