Why Ipswich Town were the only club in country not to play during WW2
This weekend, as they did in Suffolk last weekend, Ipswich Town will join clubs across the UK in wearing poppies on their shirts and bowing their heads to remember the country's fallen heroes.
And whether you're in the stands, watching the game remotely or just paying your own private tribute, there's an added reason to wear your poppy with pride.
Town players remember the fallen at Portman Road last weekend (Image: PA) For Ipswich Town stand alone among football clubs and conflict. The Blues were the only club in the country who didn't kick a ball during World War Two, a stance which caused controversy and much conversation.
It's a fascinating period in both national history and the story of Ipswich Town, and one which deserves highlighting as we prepare to remember the fallen this weekend.
Hence, with the help of an excellent paper penned by Richard Mills - An Exception in War and Peace: Ipswich Town Football Club, c. 1907-1945 – at the University of East Anglia, and a delve into our archives, I’ve done just that.
It’s important, first, to look at the war which preceded the 1939-45 conflict, and without which there probably wouldn’t have been a Second World War at all.
Ipswich Town in action at Portman Road in the early 1930's. The team stopped playing after war broke out in 1939 - and didn't play again until 1945 (Image: Dave Kindred) The First World War had a deep impact on Town, just as it did the whole country, as a generation of young men were either killed or seriously injured in what was the first global conflict featuring modern warfare weaponry, machinery and tactics.
Ipswich were in the Southern Amateur League at the time, playing at Portman Road, and played three friendly matches after war broke out in 1914, the last of which was a tussle against Norfolk Yeomanry in January 1915.
Just three days later, a fatal zeppelin raid on Great Yarmouth dragged East Anglia into the war.
The Blues saw Portman Road commandeered by the military during the conflict, and it was used for housing soldiers, storing wagons and guns and tethering horses.
The ground wasn’t actually returned to Ipswich until September 1919, almost a year after the armistice ended the war in November 1918.
By the time Town returned to action in a friendly against Old Bancroftians on September 4, 1920, the club had paid a heavy price.
Players Cecil Fenn, ER Pallett and Alf Liffen had given their lives, while Ernie Bugg, the club’s leading scorer in the 1913/14 season, lost a leg in the fighting.
As the EADT reported from that first match in more than five years: "It was quite like old times to be watching a match on the Portman Road enclosure, with the difference that it was an altogether new Ipswich Town which took the field.
"Alas! the old team suffered from war casualties greater, probably, than any other local club in the Eastern counties."
Two photographs were joined to give a panorama of the Ipswich Town Football Club ground in February 1938, when Ipswich played Colchester in the Southern League. The match, which Ipswich won 3-2, was attended by 23,983. This photograph was taken looking towards Portman Road with the North Stand, now the site of the Sir Bobby Robson stand, on the left. (Image: Dave Kindred) It was against this backdrop of loss and sacrifice, then, that the Blues – now professional, with Captain John Murray Cobbold as president – arrived on the eve of the Second World War 19 years later.
Town’s last game before the hostilities was a 1-1 draw with Norwich City in Division Three South on September 2, 1939.
The very next day, Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain told the country that Britain was at war with Germany.
Just 10,792 people attended the game against Town’s bitter rivals, a match which had been expected to challenge the attendance record of 28,194 set against Aston Villa in January.
As it was, the looming spectre of war apparently put fans off.
Town in action at Portman Road in the early 1930s, when they played in blue and white stripes (Image: Dave Kindred) We reported in the Evening Star: "Even with the clouds of war threatening to break there was quite a big crowd to greet the teams, and although hundreds of Norwich supporters were unable to make the journey, excursion trains and booked buses having been cancelled, the Canaries were not without local support...
"Few people had brought their gas masks with them, but there was a sprinkling of boys in khaki and blue who apparently had managed to get time off.”
It was to be Town’s last match for six years. The Football League was suspended, prompting the removal of the goalposts from Portman Road, and the players received their last pay packets on September 2 – a clause allowing clubs to cancel contracts 'on any reasonable grounds' had remained since the First World War.
Many took jobs at Churchman’s Tobacco Factory or Cobbolds Breweries, as did boss Scott Duncan.
Scott Duncan was the the Ipswich Town boss before and after the Second World War. Here he is with the Town team of 1953-54 (from the left back row) Billy Reed, Jim Feeney, Tom Garneys, Jack Parry, George McLucky, John Elsworthy and Dia Rees. Front row: Scott Duncan (manager) Basil Acres, Alex Crow, Tommy Parker (captain), Neil Myles, Tom Brown and Jimmy Forsyth (trainer) (Image: Dave Kindred) The two games Town had already played – a 2-2 draw at Clapton Orient and a 2-0 win over Bristol Rovers – were declared void, as was the Norwich draw. Player appearances and goals were wiped from the records.
The outbreak of war saw a ban on mass gatherings, and all football was duly suspended by the FA.
On September 13, 1939, at a special meeting of Town’s directors, Captain Cobbold proposed that the club be closed down for the duration of the war. The motion was unanimously passed.
Notes from a board meeting two weeks later recorded: "It was also decided to inform season-ticket holders that because of the many interests involved no refund of their money could be made but on resumption of League football they would have special consideration."
However, the FA and Football League soon changed their minds. Plans for a regional competition were finalised on October 2, but Town were one of just six league clubs out of the 88 who refused to play.
The Town board, packed with nobility and army officers, and led by veteran Captain Cobbold, apparently saw their patriotic duty to support King and country as more important than playing football.
That stance was not popular with fans, however, and, with the Home Office encouraging war-time entertainment and other professional clubs up and down the land organising friendly fixtures, anger grew.
The houses in Felixstowe Road, Ipswich, were destroyed by a bomb during a Second World War air raid on March 24, 1941. They stood opposite Murray Road. In the breakfast time raid, three Heinkle 111 and two ME 109s dropped bombs on Felixstowe Road and two more on Nacton Road near the airport. The airport was also machine gunned. (Image: Dave Kindred) According to Mills: "The Evening Star ran an editorial on the situation.
"It questioned why Ipswich Town was taking a unique path: 'Is Ipswich alone to remain unaffected by the changed conditions, and by a quite unnecessary act of abnegation to rob thousands of loyal supporters of a means of distraction from their war worries?”
Cobbold though, was unmoved. Mills wrote: "A man... described as 'a gentleman in every sense of the word' clearly felt that football was not a priority as he prepared to rejoin his regiment.”
Town's players embraced the war effort too. By March 1941, nine of the club’s players were serving in the Army, with an additional three on active duty in the Royal Air Force.
And so it was then, that even as clubs played and competitions continued across the country, Town remained steadfastly dormant.
Portman Road was again used by the military, but this time for hosting football matches, with more than 20 games featuring Armed Forces representatives during the conflict.
Ironically, even Norwich City played there three times!
Sadly, just as in the First World War, Town suffered losses again.
A bomb landed in Romney Road in Ipswich in 1941. A seven month old baby was killed at number 6 Romney Road and his parents seriously injured. At nearby Fletcher Road an elderly lady was killed at number 14 (Image: Dave Kindred) Mills wrote: "In particular, Ipswich mourned the death of the most important individual at the club.
"In June 1944 chairman Captain Cobbold, who had become a Lieutenant-Colonel during the course of the war, was killed by a bomb while attending a service at the Guard’s Chapel in London
"In addition to this monumental loss, club director Major Robert Cobbold was killed in action in Italy earlier in the same month."
By the end of the war, only Town and Exeter City could claim not to have played any competitive football at all – though Exeter played three friendly matches against local rivals Plymouth.
Skipper Sam Morsy and the Blues wore poppies on their shirts last weekend - and will do so again this weekend (Image: Ross Halls) Town, then, stood alone as not having kicked a ball.
Boss Duncan returned to his role – having secured release from his war-time position at Churchman’s – and the Blues finally got back to action at Portman Road in the autumn of 1945 with a Division Three South match against Port Vale.
They lost, but professional football was finally back in Ipswich – and a remarkable chapter in the club’s history was closed.
Lest we forget.
Portman Road remembering the fallen last weekend (Image: PA Sport)
1 min read
Ipswich Town Football Club played a role during World War Two, which made an impact on the club and community. The club chose not to play any matches during the war, a decision that was controversial and highlighted during Remembrance activities.
The EADT reported from the first post-war match at Portman Road regarding how the atmosphere felt after a long hiatus:
“It was quite like old times to be watching a match on the Portman Road enclosure, with the difference that it was an altogether new Ipswich Town which took the field. Alas! the old team suffered from war casualties greater, probably, than any other local club in the Eastern counties.”