Autumn 1903.
Tom Wilkie settled at a table in the back room of Sloans Cafe with a glass of beer. His hand was shaking as he took a deep gulp of beer. It had been a strange day. In fact it had been a strange time since that eventful match in Port Glasgow. He really needed a drink to calm his nerves. It wasn’t every day that a working man from the east end of Glasgow met the President of the Scottish Football Association, never mind being interviewed by the whole SFA committee.
The story of the 1903-04 season has been published.
Read how the Thistle team recorded the highest league position since the club was founded, bringing back a number of old Thistle favourites to help the team.
Read to about the riot at Port Glasgow and about the first ever board of the newly constituted […]
In September 1903 the Scottish Weekly Record published an exclusive interview with Partick Thistle President William Ward.
“So far as I can see, there is a great future before Partick Thistle as a Limited Company. The chief difficulty that stands in the way is the conditions under which we hold the ground, but as these conditions have existed for seven years I do not see any immediate cause or know any reason to necessitate a change.”
Whether its bad behaviour from rich, petulant players, from unpleasant supporters or from dubiously funded clubs, money is regularly pinpointed as the reason why football in the early 21st century doesn’t compare to an imagined golden age of the sport of the recent past. This quote from 1904 shows its nothing new.
In October 1903 Partick Thistle, having had arguably the best start to a season in the club’s history, followed by a few poor results, looked to the transfer market to improve results.
From Ibrox returned John Wilkie, a popular Thistle player of old, and Tom Turnbull, a young defender from Sheffield United, also signed.
By far the highest profile signing at the time was Celtic great Alex ‘Sandy’ McMahon, and the experienced new arrival was seen as a big improvement to the young Thistle squad.
The 1902-03 season had been a successful one for Thistle. On the eve of the following season the Evening Times previewed the club’s prospects.
Recently Thistle fan Paul4Jags decided to jog a route around all the sites of Partick Thistle’s old grounds, starting at Overnewton and ending at Firhill, a route of 13 kilometres.
Iain Macdonald and Stuart Deans recently alerted me to the existence of film of the 1921 Scottish Cup 4th round match between Thistle and Motherwell, played at Fir Park on 5 March 1921.
Coverage of the Thistle game starts at around 2 minutes, after you have watched a Motherwell v Ayr match.
The film […]
Tall and straight-backed, blond with a handlebar moustache, Sam Kennedy looked every inch the late Victorian/early Edwardian gentleman. However, Sam was a plumber and he came from Girvan, and was a battering-ram centre-forward for Partick Thistle.
Robert Gray was a popular inside forward who played 215 times for Thistle over two spells at Inchview and Meadowside, and became a favourite with supporters for his exciting forward play and goalscoring. Robert was a speedy player who also had excellent ball control and was noted for his shooting from distance. He scored 45 […]
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