Groundtastic GT84 | Page 4

GOODBYE E13, HELLO E20 Unlike the grander London football grounds, a masterplan or blueprint for the development of the Boleyn Ground never really existed. Rather, it was allowed to evolve as circumstances demanded, though one of its lasting characteristics, the proximity of the crowd to the field of play, was present from the start. Knocked into shape in just seven weeks during the summer of 1904, initially, the ground's principal feature was a long low grandstand on the Green Street side, the first of four different West Stands to occupy that part of the ground. A changing shed was set in one corner, an odd-shaped elevated pavilion was erected for the benefit of club directors and the press, and the pitch was tightly enclosed by a wooden fence. Below: A Book of Football shot from 1905, taken from the Football Grounds of the Early 1900s by Mike Floate A Southern League derby against Millwall on 2 September 1904 marked the first match at the Boleyn Ground, with an encouragingly large crowd of 10,000 in attendance. As well as complimenting the ground, the capacity of which was estimated at 20,000, press reports remarked on the exceptional closeness of the stands to the pitch. West Ham did not join the Football League until 1919, but gathering support from the working class population of the East End, between 1904 and the outbreak of the Great War, the club established its enduring identity as standard bearers for East London. Big matches during this period could sometimes pull in crowds of 20,000 or more, with 27,000 cramming into Boleyn Castle in 1911 when West Ham defeated Manchester United in an FA Cup tie. Having outgrown the first incarnation of the Boleyn Ground, in 1913 a bigger West Stand was built, comprising an elevated seating deck and a large area of covered standing. At the same time, terraces that would later become the North and South Banks were raised at either end. 4 Groundtastic - The Football Grounds Magazine