john68 wrote:Thanks again Gary,
I have spent time within the confines of those places...(you can access almost anywhere with a taxi and a grin) but never managed to work out the angle of the ground or exactly where the pitch was. That sorts that out for me.
There have been references to various stands, the Maine Stand (Grandstand?), the Stone Yard End, Galloway End, with its multi span roof? (similar to the one at Molineux). Was the Boys' Stand the smaller stand offset in the corner, with the railway track running in front of it? Would it be possible to name those areas please?
Also, are there any copies of, or have you had sight of, the feature film "The Ball Of Fortune" from the 1920s that had images of the great Billy Meredith?
Cheers Gary.
Where to start....
"Ball Of Fortune" - only a short piece of film survives and I've seen it (and used it in "History of Football" the Channel M series I wrote and produced). It shows Meredith running with the ball (all staged - he passes the same player twice).
Meredith's last ever game was filmed (1924 FAC semi).
At Hyde Rd - this might help (from 1st edition of "Manchester The Greatest City")
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2 ... 15&theaterThe names varied but in general were known as (I'm including the Maine Rd equivalent names in brackets to give you a feel of the layout):
Main Stand - obvious, sometimes called The Grand Stand and sometimes just The Stand
Stone Yard Stand/Hotel End (Platt Lane)
Popular Side (Popular Side/Kippax)
Galloway End (North Stand)
The Boys Stand (in corner behind railway loop; equivalent to Main Stand/North Stand corner) also sometimes called The Lads Stand or enclosure.
The multispan roofs covered 2 stands when they were built in 1910 - all but the Main Stand (and presumably not the Boys stand but no photo seen that proves it). On the above photo link you can see an image of the Popular Side with its multispan.
At the top of this page is the Stone Yard stand roofed in Sept 1910 (that's the first photo of the completed roof):
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2 ... 15&theaterThe metalwork for one of the multispan roofs is still at a football ground today but now forms a traditional roof - it's at the Shay (Halifax) and was sold to the club when City left Hyde Rd.