Fallowfield Stadium
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Fallowfield Stadium was an athletics stadium and velodrome in Fallowfield, Manchester, England. It opened in May 1892 as the home of Manchester Athletics Club after it was forced to move from its home next to Old Trafford Cricket Ground. Fallowfield was most regularly used for cycling by the Manchester Wheelers' Club, who held their annual competition there until 1976.{{cite book |last=Inglis |first=Simon |author-link=Simon Inglis |title=Played in Manchester |publisher=English Heritage |location=Swindon |year=2004 |isbn=1-873592-78-7 |page=62}}
File:FA Cup Final 1893 Wolves Everton.jpg
The stadium came to national attention on 26 March 1893 during the FA Cup final between Wolverhampton Wanderers and Everton which Wolverhampton Wanderers won 1–0. With a capacity of 15,000 the attendance of 45,000 meant the majority of spectators had no view of the match. The stadium hosted the second 1899 FA Cup semi-final replay between Sheffield United and Liverpool, the match had to be abandoned due to a crush in the crowd.
The cycle track was originally of shale, later resurfaced with concrete, 509 yards in circumference with 30-degree bankings. The stadium hosted cycling events for the 1934 British Empire Games and the 1919 national championships. In 1955 sprint cyclist Reg Harris bought the stadium and it was for a period renamed the Reg Harris Stadium.
The stadium hosted the AAA championships in 1897 and 1907. Sydney Wooderson set a world 3/4-mile athletics record at the stadium on 6 June 1939 with 2:59.5.
In rugby union, the last England home international versus Scotland held outside London was hosted in 1897. In rugby league, two Northern Union Challenge Cup finals were held in 1899 and 1900.
File:Fallowfield_stadium,_Manchester,_1985.jpg
Manchester University bought Fallowfield Stadium in the early 1960s. It was demolished in 1994 and the site is now the Richmond Park Halls of Residence, part of the Fallowfield Campus.
Results of FA Cup Finals at Fallowfield Stadium
class="wikitable" |
Year
! Attendance ! Winner ! ! Runner-up ! |
---|
1893
| 45,067 | 1 | Everton | 0 |
Results of Rugby league Challenge Cup Finals at Fallowfield Stadium
class="wikitable" |
Year
! Attendance ! Winner ! ! Runner-up ! |
---|
1899 during 1898–99 season
| 15,763 | Oldham | 19 | Hunslet | 9 |
1900 during 1899–1900 season
| 17,864 | Swinton | 16 | Salford | 8 |
Sources
- {{cite web | title = The Harris Stadium (formerly Fallowfield Stadium) | publisher = UK Running Track Directory | url = http://www.runtrackdir.com/details.asp?track=manchester-fa | format = HTTP | accessdate =15 April 2007}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{commons category}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20020601041449/http://www.wheelers.org/ Manchester Wheelers' Club]
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{{succession box
| title = FA Cup
Final Venue
| years = 1893
| after = Goodison Park
Liverpool
}}
{{succession box
| title=Challenge Cup
Final Venue
| before=Headingley
Leeds|
after=Headingley
Leeds| years= 1899–1900}}
{{s-end}}
Category:Defunct sports venues in Manchester
Category:Defunct football venues in England
Category:Demolished buildings and structures in Manchester
Category:Demolished sports venues in the United Kingdom
Category:Sports venues completed in 1892
Category:Sports venues demolished in 1994
Category:1892 establishments in England
Category:1994 disestablishments in England
Category:Defunct football venues in Manchester
Category:Defunct rugby league venues in England
Category:Defunct rugby union venues in England
Category:Defunct athletics (track and field) venues in England
Category:Defunct velodromes in the United Kingdom