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complex in all of England at a site in West Ham. The ‘Memorial Recreation
Ground’ was to house a stadium with a capacity for over one hundred thousand
spectators, as well as facilities for cricket, tennis, and cycling.
When the grounds opened on the sixteenth anniversary of Queen Victoria’s
ascension to the throne, it was everything for which Hills had hoped. The
London press trumpeted that the facility was ‘good enough to hold the Football
Association Cup final in.’ However, there were problems from the outset.
Hill’s football team became more competitive each year after moving into
their own posh grounds, and both the players and their fans were anxious to join
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the ranks of the professional leagues in order to continue their improvement.
Hills looked upon professionalism as a form of prostitution, for he strongly
believed in the purity of amateur sport. He reacted by throwing the would-be
professionals out of his facility in 1904, then promptly reformed a truly amateur
squad which had the exclusive use of the Memorial Recreational Ground. The
displaced team was forced to relocate to a cabbage patch next to Boleyn Castle
in Upton, a short distance from their former home. Here, they merged with
Boleyn Castle F.C. and became known as West Ham United F.C. They adopted
their nickname and symbol from the shipbuilder’s tool, and thence became
the ‘Hammers.’ This team continued to draw the majority of its support from
those involved with the shipbuilding trades. The Thames Ironworks amateurs
and the Memorial Recreation Grounds faded into history, along with their
authoritarian patron.
Back in 189, though, Arthur Russell had no such delusions about the
evils of professionalism as he put together the very first Canary Wharf side.
After accepting Hill’s challenge and the obligatory wager on a match between
the shipbuilders and the ‘sea rats,’ as the Thames Ironworks owner referred
to Arthur’s ragtag charges, the younger man set about town to hire a few
‘ringers.’
Emotions ran high among the hundreds of fans that had turned out as
the two teams took to the barely passable playing field on Hermit Road in
Canning Town. Hills was certain that his squad, with two years experience
under their belts, would wallop the upstart ‘dockies,’ but that was not to be
the case. Arthur Russell had spent his money wisely on three Southern League
players, a keeper and two classy forwards. He plugged his defense with rugged,
burly bruisers that manhandled the shipbuilders at every opportunity. The
two professional forwards earned their wages that afternoon, each scoring twice
to give the ‘sea rats’ a 4-1 victory. Arnold Hills left the grounds in a rage
after learning that he had been duped by young Russell and defeated by those
‘professional whores.’ He refused to pay over the wager money to Russell, even
though there had never been any discussion about the use of such players. The
two men never spoke again after that day.
Local support from the cockney residents on the Isle of Dogs was so
fervent that the team never did disband, joining the Southern League for the
following season. A site was needed for their own home field, and this prompted
the enthusiastic twenty-eight-year-old Arthur to ask for an audience with his
father, Reginald Eastwyck Russell, to resolve the matter.
Sir Reginald was a no-nonsense businessman who did not suffer fools
gladly. He had served in the Royal Marines in his youth, as was the family
tradition, and then had joined his father, Stuart Ridley Russell, in the family’s
lucrative import-export business. The heart and soul of that affair was located
on the Isle of Dogs, four miles east of Buckingham Palace.
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The Canary Islands Trading Company had been founded by a consortium
of prominent bankers and businessmen to capitalize on the rich and exotic
bounty that was found in the islands off the west coast of Africa. Thomas
Stuart Russell, young Arthur’s great-grandfather, had not only been one of the
consortium’s founding members, but had been the man most responsible for
convincing the Londoners that there were huge profits to be made from trading
with the islands.
Thomas Russell had spent all of his formative years at sea, initially as a
Royal Marine, and then as the captain of his own merchant vessel as he sought
to reap the benefits of his earlier nautical education. The riches of the world
lay at Thomas’ feet, and he was determined to capitalize on his knowledge and
good fortune.
Of all the places that he had weighed anchor, none so impressed him as
the Canary Islands. Due to their relative proximity to England, Russell felt
that there was a far better chance for trading success in the Canaries than in
the West Indies, which were several times the distance from London. Rich in
wine, tropical fruits, spices, sugar, and tobacco, the islands were, at this time, a
Spanish protectorate. But the King of Spain was anxious to open up commerce
on the islands. He accepted Thomas Russell’s proposal almost immediately,
and armed with a trade agreement signed and sealed by his majesty the King
of Spain, Russell sailed first to the Canary Islands to fill his ship’s hold with
wondrous cargo, and then on to London to show off his wares and raise the
capital required to open up this new frontier.
Thomas Russell had come by his seafaring nature quite honestly. The
family roots could be traced back to the late fourteenth century, when the
Russells were thriving wine importers, distributors, and traders. The family
had settled in Weymouth, Dorset, which was an active mercantile port at the
time. The Russells were also involved in local politics, sending family members
to parliament on several occasions.
In 1506, John Russell, a young, well traveled, multilingual lad with a
charming disposition, was sent to the Court of Henry the Seventh to act as a
gentleman usher. The royal court quickly became enamored of young Russell,
and when seventeen-year-old Henry the Eighth ascended the throne a few years
later, he entrusted his most important affairs to the talented, yet discreet,
young man from Weymouth.
John Russell served his Majesty as a soldier, courier, and intelligencer
during the wars with France that commenced in 1513. He gathered valuable
experience and made many important contacts. He lost an eye in combat at
Morlaix and was subsequently knighted for bravery by the Earl of Surrey.
Ever trustworthy, Russell’s real work lay in the subtle, unprincipled world
of international diplomacy. He was increasingly employed as a special envoy
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of the king, handling the most delicate affairs of state. His faithful service to
the erratic Henry continued with flawless tact, and in 1539, John Russell was
raised to the peerage as Baron Russell of Weymouth and made a Knight of the
Garter.
Baron Russell continued to serve his master in any capacity required
of him, including traveling to the continent with Henry’s armies t
hat were
constantly warring with France. Through the years, he had acquired many
estates and tracks of land in his native Dorset, and it was to his beloved home
county that he returned to be by the sea as his health failed in the summer of
1554.
His career had spanned four reigns as a trusted courier, soldier, diplomat,
and administrator. When John Russell died in March 1555, he was accorded
a state funeral befitting a man of his standing and prominence. The first Earl
of Weymouth had an immense fortune, as well as his good name to pass on to
his descendants. Much of the family remained close to their roots by the sea,
developing a reputation as merchant mariners, traders, and when duty called,
officers and gentlemen of his Majesty’s Royal Navy.
Two hundred and forty-three years after the death of the first Earl of
Weymouth, Thomas Stuart Russell, the tenth Earl of Weymouth, arrived at
the London dock yards with his tropical treasures. His reputation as a stalwart
businessman and global navigator allowed him to assemble a consortium of
enthusiastic entrepreneurs that were eager to invest in such a venture. A site for
dockage and warehousing was secured on the Isle of Dogs and named ‘Canary
Wharf’ after the source of their expected riches.
The Canary Islands Trading Company flourished almost immediately, and
three generations later, the Russell family was still in control of the lucrative
operation.
Now Arthur Russell sat facing the corporation’s chairman, his dour
father, Reginald. The elder Russell was devoid of any interest in the sport itself,
but news of Arthur’s sea rats’ thumping of the shipbuilders had the whole
community abuzz. His son’s passionate plea for the continuation of the team
and what it would mean to the men that toiled on Canary Wharf was not lost
on Reginald Russell. The team spirit had already given the locals a focal point,
a sense of belonging, a community source of pride.
The work on the docks was thankless, backbreaking toil that could
easily wither a man’s body and soul. “Football could give the workers strength
through pride in their team,” Arthur had told his father. Much to the younger
Russell’s surprise, the elder Russell agreed with him.
The corporation held a long-term lease on several acres of reclaimed
marshland southeast of the Wharf, about ten minutes’ walk from where father
and son sat formulating the future. Despite his enthusiasm, Reginald Russell
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told his son that all he could do was bring the matter up at the next director’s
meeting for discussion. He did, nevertheless, assure his son that he personally
would speak favorably for the proposed ‘Canary Wharf Football Club.’ That
was more than Arthur had hoped, for he knew that his father was held in great
esteem by the other directors. Arthur was certain that those men would be
reluctant to deny their chairman such a request.
Two weeks later, Arthur Russell was called into his father’s office.
“Pack your bags, my boy. We are taking a trip north to Glasgow. There is
an engineer up there by the name of Archibald Leitch. He specializes in stadia
design and construction. You have your team, Arthur, and soon, you will have
one of the finest stadiums in London to play in as well.”
With a howl of delight, the younger Russell embraced his father. Their
journey to Glasgow was a great success, with the engineer proving both
approachable and professional. A design was settled on consisting of one main
covered grandstand in two tiers housing roughly nine thousand seats. This
section of the grounds would be reserved for people of the carriage trade,
gentlemen of wealth and influence and their families.
The main grandstand would have a multi-span roof with the individual
letters of the word ‘Canaries’ painted on the front of each gable. Reginald
Russell had chosen the name for the team personally, and also insisted that the
colors be black and yellow, in deference to their namesake. The balance of the
stadium would consist of standing terraces on three sides, all uncovered and
accommodating some fifteen thousand patrons. These were the working man’s
vantage points, for it was from the terraces that true football fans watched their
heroes play, or so was the popular belief of the time.
Total cost for the work was estimated at fourteen thousand pounds, a
hefty sum in that era. But the Canary Wharf directors were caught up in the
enthusiasm of their new project and the attention that it was drawing to their
company in the London press. Leitch, seeing this enthusiasm firsthand on a trip
to London, suggested to Reginald Russell that the ground be called ‘The Bird
Cage,’ and sketched two distinctive cupolas resembling traditional bird cages
on the end spans of the main grandstand roof. The chairman loved the idea,
and ‘The Bird Cage’ became reality less than a year later.
One other item that arrived back in London with the Russells was a design
for the Canary’s team crest. Father and son had spent the entire trip home
designing and refining the perfect logo. The end result of their collaboration
centered around a bold, black, letter ‘C.’ Inside the initial proudly rested a black
ship’s anchor, representative of the team’s seafaring roots. To add a dash of color,
Arthur suggested that the anchor be set on a field of blue, as close to the color
of the sparkling Atlantic Ocean off the Canary Islands as possible. When the
graphic artists in London transferred the rough sketches and ideas produced by
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the Russells to finished form, the result was uniformly praised by the team’s
board of directors and adopted as the official team crest and corporate logo
forthwith. The same crest would be worn on the Canaries’ jerseys right into the
last quarter of the new century.
That new century ushered in the Canaries’ rise to the football league
division two, and three years after that, promotion to the first division. The
team had done all that was expected of it and more, giving the residents and
workers of the Isle of Dogs a focal point that would shine some light on their
dreary, workaday lives. The Canaries were the talk of the town, at least that
part of the town, and sellout crowds became a Saturday tradition at The Bird
Cage.
Young Arthur had proven to be a shrewd and resourceful manager. Each
year, the team climbed steadily up the league ladder, until finally in 1913, the
Canary Wharf Football Club won their first Football Association Cup. It was
a triumph that would bring the last rays of sunshine to Arthur Russell’s days
in England.
With the outbreak of the First World War, the Canary Wharf manager
rejoined his old Marine Battalion, the Fourth, and served his country for the
next four years. Then, on April 23, 1918, during an attack on the German
submarine base at Zeebrugge, Belgium, Major Arthur Grainger Russell was
killed in action during the bloody, but successful operation.
The tragic news of Arthur’s death was too much for seventy-nine-year-
old
Reginald, who suffered a stroke within hours of the telegram’s delivery
and passed away within a fortnight of his son. It had been the formation and
ongoing operation of their beloved Canaries that had bonded father and son
together, turning an icy, distant relationship into one of true love and warmth.
The rest of the Russell family knew this for a fact, and in their honor, a bronze
statue depicting the founding father and son team was erected outside the main
grandstand entrance to the Bird Cage shortly after the end the war.
The family mantle was passed to Arthur’s eldest son, twenty-eightyear-
old Elliott Stuart Russell. The hostilities had also touched Elliott, who had
been mustered out of the Royal Marines two years earlier after suffering the
loss of his left arm, when his ship was sunk by one of the Kaiser’s U boats.
The missing limb did not hinder Elliott Russell from fathering a son,
born Reginald Arthur Nelson Russell, in the fall of 1919. Elliott had sired
three daughters before the great conflict had commenced, and he was elated to
finally have an heir to his title and business interests.
It was his business interests that totally preoccupied Elliott Russell, and
the fortunes of his football team were left to hired managers. Working with
a reduced budget and with minimal interest from the executive suite, the
fortunes of the postwar Canaries soon hit the skids. They were relegated to
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the league second division in 1922, where they languished for the next nine
seasons. Attendance suffered as a result, and the bottom-line attitude of their
chairman, Elliott Russell, nearly caused the team to fold in the early 1930s.
It was primarily the avid interest of Elliott’s only son that convinced him to
keep the team afloat, even though the world was suffering through the Great
Depression.
Trade and commerce were severely affected by the global economic woes,
and the profits of the Canary Wharf Trading Company were no exception.
Thousands of workers were laid off from their jobs on the docks and from the
seafaring vessels. But in spite of all this gloom, the amazing fact was that those
same discarded workers turned to the football club to relieve their personal
woes. Attendance at The Bird Cage actually increased in the first three years of
the depression. By 1935, the Canaries were in a position to challenge for their