Played in Britain

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Played in Britain
Type Book publisher and Research project
Founded London, United Kingdom (2002)
Headquarters Flag of the United Kingdom London, United Kingdom
Key people Simon Inglis, Series Editor
Industry Publishing
Website [1]

Contents

[edit] Played in Britain

Played in Britain is a ten year research project for English Heritage which seeks to record and celebrate Britain's sporting and recreational heritage, coinciding with the period from the staging of the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester to the 2012 Olympics. Much of the research has been made publicly available in a series of books, also called Played in Britain, featuring historic buildings (such as grandstands, pavilions, swimming pools and billiard halls) and sportscapes (such as golf courses, racecourses, rivers and lakes). The series also looks at sporting artefacts and archaeology.

The Played in Britain research project is led by author and architectural historian Simon Inglis, best known for his books on football grounds, stadiums and football history. Simon Inglis is also the series editor of the Played in Britain books.

[edit] Background

The Played in Britain series was launched in 2004, following a pilot study conducted in Manchester in 2002 as part of English Heritage’s contribution to the cultural programme of the 2002 Commonwealth Games. It frequently cites as its inspiration the words of Joseph Strutt, author of the seminal book The Sports and Pastimes of the People of England, first published in 1801. Strutt wrote, “In order to form a just estimation of the character of any particular people, it is absolutely necessary to investigate the sports and pastimes most generally prevalent among them.”

Sporting heritage in Britain is expected to gain increased attention as the 2012 Olympics approach, but such attention is often dismissed as tokenism. For example, as government and lottery money was lavished on a new swimming pool in Manchester for the 2002 Commonwealth Games, a few hundred yards away one of the most important historic swimming pools in Europe, the Victoria Baths (built 1903-06) lay empty and abandoned by its owners, Manchester City Council. Some of the other threatened Victorian and Edwardian baths around Britain are in Birmingham, Nottingham, Glasgow and most recently, Ripon. More historic sports venues in London are expected to suffer as funds are increasingly diverted towards projects for the 2012 Olympics. These include the Herne Hill Velodrome and Haggerston Baths, Hackney.

[edit] Research so far

Played in Britain has published studies of the sporting heritage of Manchester, Birmingham and Liverpool. Further studies are scheduled for Glasgow (for Historic Scotland), Tyne & Wear and London (for the 2012 Olympics).

The series has also featured three thematic studies:

Uppies and Downies by Hugh Hornby, on the so-called ‘extraordinary football games of Britain’ such as the Royal Shrovetide Football match at Ashbourne, the Kirkwall Ba Game at Christmas and New Year and the annual Haxey Hood game in Lincolnshire. Hornby is a former curator at the National Football Museum in Preston.

Liquid Assets by Janet Smith, is a study of the lidos and open air swimming pools of Britain, of which there are approximately 100 left, down from a peak of around 300 in the early 1950s. The book’s foreword was written by artist Tracey Emin, herself a great fan of outdoor swimming from her youth in Margate.

Engineering Archie by Simon Inglis, looks at the life and work of the Scottish football ground engineer Archibald Leitch.

Future thematic studies include Great Lengths, on indoor swimming pools; Played at the Pub, on pub games; Bowled Over, on the bowling greens of Britain and The British Olympics by Dr Martin Polley, an academic with a special interest in Olympic history.

The series has been regularly reviewed in the national press and media, but received its most surprising boost from the TV programme Richard and Judy, which featured a pocket book in the series, called A Load of Old Balls. Although apparently a flippant title, the book is actually about the design and manufacture of balls in sport, and the decline of the British ball manufacturing industry.

Another strand in the series is devoted to reproducing the archives of Charles Buchan’s Football Monthly, a pioneering magazine founded by Charles Buchan and first published in 1951. Three books from the archive have been published so far - The Best of Charles Buchan's Football Monthly, Charles Buchan's Arsenal Gift Book and Charles Buchan's Manchester United Gift Book. Gift books for Liverpool and Spurs are in the pipeline.

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[edit] External links