A post card from the Robert Wood collection showing the existence of another Junior club, Empress Rovers, who took part in quite a Cup Saga to reach the Final of the Junior Cup.
Disputes between clubs were common at this time as happened during the 1901/1902 season the Empress’s Durham Junior Cup run; when they drew New Stranton Celtic, with the first meeting being abandoned due to poor light, 20 minutes early. The replay saw Empress home by 16-9, however Celtic protested and the game was ordered to be replayed. Empress failed to show for this new date but at the 4th attempt Empress came out on top by 3 – 0.
Empress Rovers then went on to eventually win the County Cup defeating Hetton Old Boys at Hollow Drift in Durham City by 6 pts to 3. Scant records of the club survive even the winning XV is elusive but in the semifinal (where they defeated West Hartlepool Nomads) the side was A N Other, H Daurge, T Stratford, A Frame, A Richardson, R Lindsay, T Walker, T Brogden, A Foggon, A Ryton, J Scott, W Gowan (Captain), H Randall H Havelock, T Whitecross, T Hardwood.
The Club name, besides reminding us of the Queen Empress of those times, Victoria, appears to have come from the Empress theatre better known as the Palladium in later years, which had changed its name to the Empress in 1899 and was near the Cleveland Hotel. The building still stands at the corner of Brig Open and Northgate though nowadays it is converted to flats, there was also an Empress Hotel in Durham Street, Like so many of the Junior clubs of this era, they do not appear to have lasted long, the name next appears a few seasons later when a team of that name was playing Soccer. The name also briefly appears at the end of the 1880s when another Empress Rovers was playing Rugby in the area!
Date (of image) : 30/4/1900
Donor : Hartlepool Museums Service
Creator : Mason, High Street, Hartlepool
Part of the "Robert Wood Collection" collection
Location
Images from the earliest days of the Durham County Junior Cup Competitions; which brought success to local clubs from the outset of the Competition in 1887/88 season.
W. L. Oakes, (1859-1920) was prominent is promoting the Cup, along with Arthur Hill who was County Secretary and is a reminder of some of the small clubs and colliery villages and churches that supported Football played in the Rugby Code at this time. By the early 90s there were approx. 40 County Junior Clubs with as many as 25 of them playing in the Competition.
Will Oakes was the older brother of Bob Oakes and moved with his parents to Hartlepool as a small child on his father’s appointment to the Heugh Battery. He played for Durham on 10 occasions, skippering the side for a season, and for five years between 1882 and 1888 he Captained the Rovers XV when he led them to their first Senior Cup win in 1884 and again in 1887.
On retiring as a player, he became a Vice President of the County Union until 1894 as well as being Rovers secretary and Treasurer from 1892-1895. He did not serve as County President, resigning his County post in 1894 but continued to support Rovers until his death in 1920.
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The Cleveland Hotel, 67 Northgate, Hartlepool Headland. Closed in 1970.
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