『Episode 1 : The Hoops Are Born - Twelve Clubs, Nineteen Grounds, One Identity (1882–1920)』のカバーアート

Episode 1 : The Hoops Are Born - Twelve Clubs, Nineteen Grounds, One Identity (1882–1920)

Episode 1 : The Hoops Are Born - Twelve Clubs, Nineteen Grounds, One Identity (1882–1920)

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概要

1882 – 1920

The Hoops Are Born

Queens Park Rangers did not have a single founding moment — they had twelve. Born from a schoolboys' team at Christchurch School in Droop Street in 1882, the club spent twenty years absorbing neighbouring outfits, changing names, and searching for an identity. This episode tells the story of how those twelve clubs became one, how QPR earned the blue and white hoops that define them to this day, and how a club with no permanent home — nineteen grounds in fifty years — eventually found its way into the Football League in 1920. The nomad years, the hoop, and the beginning of something that refused to stop.


Research Sources

Gordon Macey, 'Queens Park Rangers: The Complete Record' (Breedon Books, 2004) — the definitive statistical history of the club. Essential for all dates, grounds, and season records throughout this series.

Dave Thomas, 'Queen's Park Rangers: A Pictorial History' — useful for early photographic record and context of the Southern League and early Football League years.

Hammersmith and Shepherd's Bush Gazette and West London Observer archives (British Newspaper Archive) — contemporary match reports 1899–1920. Invaluable for crowd atmosphere, ground descriptions, and how the club was perceived in its own community.

Football Club History Database (fchd.info) — complete season-by-season records, grounds chronology, and league positions from 1896 onwards.

QPR supporter research into the 'twelve clubs' origin — substantial primary research has been done by QPR fanzines and supporter historians. The figure of twelve merging clubs originates largely from this tradition rather than official club documentation.

John Bale, 'Sport and Place: A Geography of Sport in England, Scotland and Wales' (1982) — essential background on the formation of football clubs in rapidly urbanising Victorian and Edwardian England.

Charles Booth, 'Life and Labour of the People of London' (1889–1903) — the essential social geography of working-class London life in the period. Applicable to west as well as east London communities.

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