ABSTRACT

The Emergence of Football fuses sports history into mainstream economic, social and cultural history, setting the development of the people’s game against the backdrop of the Industrial Revolution.

The book challenges conventional histories of nineteenth-century football that surrounded mass games and the public schools and extends the revisionist critique of those histories with the imaginative use of new and original empirical evidence. It outlines the continuing presence of a working-class footballing culture across the century, arguing that the structure of football was a product of industrialisation, urbanisation and population growth that had resulted in a far-reaching restructuring of the class system and urban hierarchies. It was these new hierarchies and class system that gave birth to professional football by the late 1870s.

It is essential reading for students of sports studies, economic, social and cultural history, urban and local history, and sociology, as well as a valuable resource for scholars and academics involved in the study of football across the world. This is an absorbing and fascinating read for any of the millions of fans of the game who are interested in the early history of football. 

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|9 pages

A short history of early football

chapter 3|29 pages

Cultural change

Football’s demise in the Eastern Counties before 1830

chapter 4|12 pages

Folk, mass and festival football

The arguments

chapter 5|31 pages

Folk, mass and festival football

The evidence

chapter 6|30 pages

Cultural continuity

Football outside the public schools, 1800–1830

chapter 7|30 pages

The missing years, 1831–1840

chapter 8|22 pages

Football in the 1840s and 1850s

chapter 10|29 pages

Class, clubs and football

The unfolding century