Irons Through The Ages - A Brief History of West Ham Utd Titelbild

Irons Through The Ages - A Brief History of West Ham Utd

Irons Through The Ages - A Brief History of West Ham Utd

Von: Trevor Daivid Delves
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Irons Through the Ages is a ten-episode history of West Ham United, told from the very beginning.
From a shipyard on the Thames in 1895 to Prague in 2023. Bobby Moore and the 1966 World Cup. Clyde Best. The 1980 FA Cup. Paolo Di Canio. The farewell to Upton Park. And Jarrod Bowen's ninetieth-minute winner that ended a fifty-eight-year wait for a European trophy.
128 years. One club.


Come on you Irons.

© 2026 Irons Through The Ages - A Brief History of West Ham Utd
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  • Episode 3 : The White Horse Final (1919 - 1930)
    Mar 6 2026

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    West Ham enter the Football League for the first time in 1919 and, within four years, find themselves in an FA Cup Final at the brand new Wembley Stadium — the famous White Horse Final, played in front of an estimated 200,000 people. They lose to Bolton Wanderers, but two days later they win promotion to the First Division. This episode also covers the club's all-time record goalscorer Vic Watson and how 'I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles' became the Upton Park anthem.


    Research Sources

    Wikipedia: 1923 FA Cup Final — comprehensive detail on the crowd situation, match timeline and aftermath.

    Wikipedia: George Scorey — biography of Billy's rider; the detail about his disinterest in football is from here.

    Spartacus Educational: Jimmy Ruffell — source of Ruffell's direct quotes about the Wembley final and the team's passing style. Excellent primary material.

    Spartacus Educational: Vic Watson — biography, goalscoring records, the £50 fee, and match details.

    West Ham United official site (whufc.com) — confirmation of promotion details, first Football League fixture, and season records.

    Wikipedia: 'I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles' — full history of the song's adoption including the Billy Murray / Cornelius Beal / Charlie Paynter connection.

    West Ham United official site — 'The Story of Bubbles' (John Helliar, 2007) — nuanced discussion of disputed origins. Note: establishes that first documented use was 1940, not 1920s.

    Goal.com — 'How I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles became a West Ham anthem' — additional context on the Swansea alternative theory.


    Key Dates

    30 August 1919 — First ever Football League match: West Ham 1-1 Lincoln City. Goal scored by James Moyes.

    February 1920 — Vic Watson signed from Wellingborough for £50.

    March 1920 — Jimmy Ruffell signed by Syd King.

    February 1922 — Syd Puddefoot sold to Falkirk for British record £5,000.

    1922-23 season — FA Cup run: beat Southampton (three attempts), 5-0 vs Derby in semi.

    28 April 1923 — FA Cup Final: Bolton Wanderers 2-0 West Ham United. Official attendance 126,047; actual est. 200,000+. First match at Wembley Stadium.

    30 April 1923 — West Ham beat Sheffield Wednesday 2-0 (Watson, Moore). Two days after the final.

    5 May


    All book references across the series:

    John PowlesIron in the Blood: Thames Ironworks FC, the Club That Became West Ham United (Soccerdata, 2005) — amazon.com/dp/1899468226 — Out of print; second-hand copies available.

    Charles KorrWest Ham United: The Making of a Football Club (Gerald Duckworth & Co., 1986) — amazon.co.uk/dp/0715621262 — Out of print; second-hand copies available.

    Elliott TaylorUp The Hammers!: The West Ham Battalion in the Great War 1914–1918 (2012; Third Edition 2015) — amazon.co.uk/dp/1479279463

    John SpurlingSyd King: The Man Who Built West Ham — Referenced in Episode 2 for King's management years.

    Charles BoothLife and Labour of the People of London (1889–1903) — Referenced in Episode 1. Searchable free via LSE Digital Library.

    John LovellStevedores and Dockers — Referenced in Episode 1. Background on dock labour conditions in Victorian East London.

    Jonathan SchneerBen Tillett: Portrait of a Labour Leader — Referenced in Episode 1. Context on the 1889 Great Dock Strike.

    Jeff PowellBobby Moore: The Life and Times of a Sporting Hero (Queen Anne Press, 2002) — amazon.co.uk/dp/1861055110

    Matt DickinsonBobby Moore: The Man in Full (2014) — amazon.co.uk/dp/0224091727 — Supplementary to Powell.

    Josh C...

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    26 Min.
  • Episode 2 : West Ham United is Born (1900 - 1919)
    Feb 24 2026

    Let us know what you think so far

    West Ham United FC is officially incorporated on 5 July 1900. This episode covers the early years of the new club: how they came to wear claret and blue, the move to the Boleyn Ground in Upton Park in 1904, and the long managerial reign of Syd King, who built the club from the ground up. It ends with the First World War and the West Ham Pals — the battalion of supporters and players who left Green Street for the Western Front, and did not all come back.


    Research Sources

    West Ham United Official History — whufc.com/club/history/club-history/1900s — excellent primary source on the early club years.

    Elliot Taylor, 'Up The Hammers!' — the definitive history of the West Ham Pals and the 13th Essex Regiment. Essential reading before recording the war section.

    John Spurling, 'Syd King: The Man Who Built West Ham' — if available, excellent background on King's management years.

    Aston Villa official history / flashscore.com article on claret and blue origins — useful for the kit story context.

    West Ham United club archive — contemporary records on the Memorial Grounds and move to Upton Park.

    Daily Mirror, 2 September 1904 — original match report on the first game at Upton Park vs Millwall.

    westhampals.blogspot.com — Elliot Taylor's research blog on the Pals battalion, with individual stories.


    Key Dates

    5 July 1900 — West Ham United FC officially incorporated.

    First match as West Ham United: 7-0 win over Gravesend in the Southern League.

    Summer 1899 — William Dove wins the sprint race; claret and blue shirts acquired.

    1903 — Claret and blue permanently adopted as home colours.

    1 September 1904 — First match at the Boleyn Ground (Upton Park): West Ham 3-0 Millwall, 10,000 crowd.

    1904 — Iconic claret body / sky blue sleeves kit combination first worn.

    1902 — Syd King appointed manager (age 29); serves until 1932.

    1907 — West Ham win the Western League championship.

    1912-13 — Best ever Southern League finish: third place.

    August 1914 — First World War begins; Football League suspended from 1915.

    December 1914 — Mayor of West Ham raises the 13th Essex Regiment (West Ham Pals).

    December 1915 — West Ham Pals land in France.

    Late 1917 — Last sta


    All book references across the series:

    John PowlesIron in the Blood: Thames Ironworks FC, the Club That Became West Ham United (Soccerdata, 2005) — amazon.com/dp/1899468226 — Out of print; second-hand copies available.

    Charles KorrWest Ham United: The Making of a Football Club (Gerald Duckworth & Co., 1986) — amazon.co.uk/dp/0715621262 — Out of print; second-hand copies available.

    Elliott TaylorUp The Hammers!: The West Ham Battalion in the Great War 1914–1918 (2012; Third Edition 2015) — amazon.co.uk/dp/1479279463

    John SpurlingSyd King: The Man Who Built West Ham — Referenced in Episode 2 for King's management years.

    Charles BoothLife and Labour of the People of London (1889–1903) — Referenced in Episode 1. Searchable free via LSE Digital Library.

    John LovellStevedores and Dockers — Referenced in Episode 1. Background on dock labour conditions in Victorian East London.

    Jonathan SchneerBen Tillett: Portrait of a Labour Leader — Referenced in Episode 1. Context on the 1889 Great Dock Strike.

    Jeff PowellBobby Moore: The Life and Times of a Sporting Hero (Queen Anne Press, 2002) — amazon.co.uk/dp/1861055110

    Matt DickinsonBobby Moore: The Man in Full (2014) — amazon.co.uk/dp/0224091727 — Supplementary to Powell.

    Josh C...

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    28 Min.
  • Episode 1 : Thames Ironworks — The Birth of the Hammers (1895–1900)
    Feb 24 2026

    Let us know what you think so far

    Episode 1: Thames Ironworks — The Birth of the Hammers (1895–1900)

    Before there was West Ham United, there was a shipyard. In June 1895, workers at Thames Ironworks — one of Britain's largest shipbuilders — formed a football club on the banks of the River Thames in East London. This episode tells the story of those origins: the industrial landscape of Victorian Canning Town, the visionary owner Arnold Hills, the foreman Dave Taylor who first organised the players, and the fierce early rivalry with Millwall that began almost immediately. Five years after the club's founding, Thames Ironworks FC was dissolved and reborn as West Ham United. This is where it all started.


    All book references across the series:

    John PowlesIron in the Blood: Thames Ironworks FC, the Club That Became West Ham United (Soccerdata, 2005) — amazon.com/dp/1899468226 — Out of print; second-hand copies available.

    Charles KorrWest Ham United: The Making of a Football Club (Gerald Duckworth & Co., 1986) — amazon.co.uk/dp/0715621262 — Out of print; second-hand copies available.

    Elliott TaylorUp The Hammers!: The West Ham Battalion in the Great War 1914–1918 (2012; Third Edition 2015) — amazon.co.uk/dp/1479279463

    John SpurlingSyd King: The Man Who Built West Ham — Referenced in Episode 2 for King's management years.

    Charles BoothLife and Labour of the People of London (1889–1903) — Referenced in Episode 1. Searchable free via LSE Digital Library.

    John LovellStevedores and Dockers — Referenced in Episode 1. Background on dock labour conditions in Victorian East London.

    Jonathan SchneerBen Tillett: Portrait of a Labour Leader — Referenced in Episode 1. Context on the 1889 Great Dock Strike.

    Jeff PowellBobby Moore: The Life and Times of a Sporting Hero (Queen Anne Press, 2002) — amazon.co.uk/dp/1861055110

    Matt DickinsonBobby Moore: The Man in Full (2014) — amazon.co.uk/dp/0224091727 — Supplementary to Powell.

    Josh C...

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    17 Min.
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