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DERELICT LONDON SPORTS GROUNDS
A MAJOR REVAMP of this Derelict London website is being written offline using new software which will include lots of new content and photo galleries
along with easier to view galleries of the old content but its all taking months for me to write and uploading of this will not be until at least Easter 2012.
A few new pics will be added to the Derelict London Facebook page in the meantime as I go along.
Derelict London Sports Grounds
Why do Arsenal play in red? What was Jimmy Greave's last club? What is the only tube station in London named after a football team?
Read on:
FELTHAM ARENA - FELTHAM FC
Home of Feltham FC from 1963 until 2004. The grandstand was officially opened in 1966 by the Mayor of Hounslow and the ground, boasted a capacity of 10,000 of which 750 could be seated. The club played on an artificial pitch which was laid in 1984 though this pitch denied Feltham entry to FA competitions for over a decade. The roof of the stadium was removed in 2000 due to a scare about asbestos.Following a spate of vandalism the club moved from the Arena and are now ground sharing with Bedfont FC. After rumours of Brentford FC relocating to the Arena and turning it into a 25,000 seat stadium, plans are afoot for Feltham FC to return to their spiritual home and redevelop the whole arena, including five-a-side pitches, an athletics track, a boxing club and crèche.
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The changing facilities have certainly seen better days....
The arena also contains a disused running track.
Pete from Catford writes: “Feltham FCs alternative use was as a music venue in the early 1980s. A lot of young punk bands cut their teeth on the little stage by the bar area, but it was perhaps more famous for regular, chaotic gigs by legendary Psychobilly pioneers The Meteors and the Guana Batz (who were Feltham locals).”
Gray Newell writes "This was a punk/psychobilly venue in the early 80s, King Kurt, The Exploited, Toy Dolls and many others played there. The gigs stopped after the Angelic Upstarts played and the frenzied crowd kicked the plaster and lathe shell of the building to pieces."
SURREY DOCKS STADIUM - FISHER ATHLETIC FC
Fisher Athletic was founded in 1908 by the John Fisher Catholic Society whose aim was to provide football facilities for under privileged children in Bermondsey. The Fish are the highest ranked football club in London to take their name from a person rather than a place.
The 5300 capacity Surrey Docks Stadium in Rotherhithe is the traditional home of Fisher Athletic F.C. since 1982. The club moved out in 2004 to home of local rivals Dulwich Hamlet (a ground located almost 5 miles from Fisher's traditional catchment area) as the club had plans to redevelop the ground to bring it up to Football League standards by the start of the 2009/10 season.More recently the club announced that it would prefer to move to a new £36 million 10,000 seat stadium on the site of the athletics track in Southwark Park, but nothing has been confirmed yet so the rebuilding of Surrey Docks Stadium still remains a possibility. In the meantime the disused old stadium continues to decay. I had some happy times at this stadium when Aldershot Town visited for qualifying rounds of the FA Cup. A great bar and a friendly welcome.
Sadly during the 2008/09 season Fisher Athletic came bottom of the Conference South league and were made defunct by the High Court in May 2009. A new club named Fisher FC has been born and currently play at Dulwich Hamlet's ground playing in the Kent League.
2010 UPDATE - SURREY DOCKS STADIUM - FISHER ATHLETIC FC
The stadium seen in the sports ground section is becoming much more dilapidated.
PLOUGH LANE - WIMBLEDON FC

Founded in 1889, the "The Dons" spent most of their history in non-league football, before a rapid ascent to the top flight of English football in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The club won the FA Cup in 1988. Just days after winning the FA Cup, the club's directors announced plans to relocate to a new all-seater stadium in its home borough of Merton. But nothing came of these plans, and at the end of the 1990–91 season Wimbledon decided that its cramped Plough Lane ground was beyond redevelopment, and decided to move into Selhurst Park, sharing with Crystal Palace. Wimbledon's relatively low attendances, and the large number of rival clubs in London, had meant that Wimbledon could not enjoy the high gate receipts received by many other Premiership clubs. With the team homeless after the closure of Plough Lane, throughout the 1990s the club's directors mooted the idea of moving away from London entirely to a more profitable location - Milton Keynes (which had a non League Football team) as the best opportunity. This caused outrage amongst fans who formed their own team AFC Wimbledon who took most of the fanbase with them setting up home in nearby Kingstonian's stadium while the "original" club was renamed MK Dons.
After many years of wrangling & planning a new development of private apartments now stands on the site.
SNAKES LANE - WOODFORD TOWN FC
Founded in 1937, as a result of a public meeting for the express purpose of having a senior amateur club in the borough. A piece of waste ground was rented from the council and "officials, players and supporters worked prodigiously throughout the lose season" to get it ready.
WOODFORD TOWN FC was apparently a one-time hotbed of successful amateur football. In the post-war years, Town were much-loved by their many fans and much-feared by their rivals in the game.The club produced a succession of international players at amateur level. Jimmy Greaves played out his career for Woodford Town before retiring.
The club were trying to relocate to a ground within the borough of Redbridge since losing the rights to their Snakes Lane home (pictured above) in 1992. They were playing football at Clapton's ground until Woodford Town were kicked out of the Essex Senior League about 2003. The club is now believed to be defunct?
Woodford Bridge Junior School's football team from around 1949 taken at the Woodford Town FC ground.
more old pics above
WOOLWICH ARSENAL - DIAL SQUARE FC (later known as Arsenal FC)
The workers of Dial Square (the name of the workshops at the heart of the Woolwich Arsenal ammunition manufacturing complex) formed Dial Square FC in 1886 changing their name later to Woolwich Arsenal FC playing at nearby marshes (and NOT at the site of Dial Square pictured above!). Included in the founding group were two former Nottingham Forest players who wrote to their old club seeking kit. They responded with a full set of red jerseys and a ball. In 1915 a move was made north of the river to Highbury and the club dropped the Woolwich from its name to become Arsenal.
HIGHBURY - ARSENAL STADIUM
Arsenal Stadium, known almost universally by its original name of Highbury was the football ground of Arsenal Football Club between 1913 and 2006.The presence of the stadium led to the local Gillespie Road station being renamed Arsenal in 1932, making it the only London Underground station to be named after a football club.
The need for a higher crowd capacity led to Arsenal building the Emirates Stadium nearby, which they moved to in 2006. Currently, the stadium is undergoing redevelopment to turn it into an apartment complex, known as Highbury Square, with most of the stadium in being demolished; the exteriors of the listed Art Deco East Stand (pictured) and the matching West Stand are being preserved and incorporated into the new developments.
Pics below courtesy of Robert Fairchild
KINGSTON UPON THAMES - BEVONIANS RUGBY FOOTBALL CLUB
This rugby club in Kingston is now defunct due to lack of funds. In 2004 they suffered the problem of flytipping - a mountain of hardcore, shrubs, furniture & trees were dumped from a lorry damaging the pitch leading to the cancellation of games and the huge cost of removal of this regularly dumped rubbish helped contribute to this small club's demise.
BROOKLANDS (ROMFORD) - ROMFORD FC
Romford F.C. were established in 1876 and reached the Quarter-Finals of the FA Cup in the 1880-81 season. Brooklands was the home of Romford from 1929 until April 1977. The stadium's oval shape was similar to the original Hampden Park in Glasgow.Over 18,000 spectators watch Southall visit for an FA Amateur Cup match in 1953 and subsequently the capacity was increased to 25,000 when the entire terracing was concreted over and a 1,500 all-seater stand was built.
The grandstand and floodlights rivalled many a football league club and underlined the ambitions of the club who sought election to the Football League.Disappointingly for the club, Romford were beaten by Oxford United in the vote for a club to join the 4th Division in 1962. With no return on their investment in the facilities at Brooklands, Romford Football Club was heavily in debt and losing large amounts of money. Another feature of the stadium was a very wide playing area and oval perimeter wall which meant Brooklands was ideally suited for Speedway and the Romford Bombers competed there for a number of years from 1969. A bridge was built for the bikes to reach the track from the pits and Romford Supporters called this the "Bridge over Troubled Supporters." The club were forced to sell up & the final game was played in 1977, the stadium was demolished and the area is now a housing estate. Parts of the original boundary fencing still remains (see to the right of the pic above left)


SUNGATE GROUND - COLLIER ROW FC (and Romford FC)
Collier Row FC formed in 1966& were founder members of Essex Olympian League. Romford FC relocated here in 1996 and soon acrimoniously merged to form Collier Row & Romford FC (Division Two of the Isthmian League) and then renamed Romford in 1997. Sungate was vacated during the 2001-02 season due to the deterioration of the pitch and other facilities and a major clubhouse fire. Several issues at Sungate were never satisfactorily resolved and the Club moved out mid-season, playing out the season on borrowed grounds and reluctantly forwarding its resignation from the Ryman League. The highest recorded attendance at the ground that I can find was 820 (against Leatherhead). Aldershot Town were the high profile visitors in 1997 while working their way up the non league pyramid.
Romford now have a groundshare deal and play at Aveley Football Club. Meanwhile, the Sungate is barely recognisable as a football ground apart from the old floodlights.
ISLEWORTH - CENTAURS RUGBY GROUND
Reinforced concrete sports pavilion built in 1935. Tiered spectator stand beneath a cantilever roof with a clubhouse underneath.Owners are trying to find a new occupier and use for this grade 2 listed building. Set within sports fields that are still in use although the Centaurs relocated elsewhere a while ago. This derelict clubhouse is easily accessible but I declined the opportunity to enter it after seeing a guy crouched in the corner inside drinking a can of Stella.......
ISLE OF DOGS - LONDON ARENA
Built on the site of the old Fred Olsen tomato and banana warehouse, the London Arena was opened in 1989, and is large enough internally to hold a football match. The capacity of the Arena can be altered hydraulically, and can seat up to 12,000 people. As well as pop concerts,
(The Brit. awards were held here - the one when Fruitbat from Carter USM infamously manhandled presenter Philip Schofield onstage), and sporting events, the main flooring space could be converted into an ice-rink.
The arena now closed, will be replaced with new homes, offices, a hotel and leisure facilities, plus an upgraded DLR station.
WHITE LODGE GROUND, OSTERLEY - HARROW HILL ROVERS FC (Later known as Hounslow Borough FC)
HARROW HILL ROVERS were established in 1987 & joined the Chiltonian League in for the 1998-99 season and joined the Hellenic League in 2000. After the 2000-01 season, the club changed name to Hounslow Borough. For the 2005-06 season, they were champions of the Hellenic League Division One East and were promoted to the Premier Division, but in April 2007 they resigned from the league. This old clubhouse which in its prime was probably quite pleasant has now in a sorry state after a spate of vandalism and squatter.
Record Gate according to an old website = 65 v Chalfont Wasps – September 2003
Looks like someone still sleeps here
MORDEN - MORDEN PARK SPORTS CENTRE
Whilst the fields seem to be in pretty good condition and maintained the 3 pavilions have a bad case of vandalism and have been left to decay.
HANWORTH - HANWORTH PARK
More derelict sporting facilities. Decaying tennis courts & bowling green in SW London
LONDON FIELDS TENNIS COURTS
WALTHAMSTOW STADIUM
Falling profits and attendances forced the original owners of the dog track to sell-up after 75 years. Last week's shocking news that the most iconic greyhound stadium in Britain has been sold for housing and will close in August has left the sport reeling. Despite pulling in the highest attendances at any of the UK's remaining venues, the owners cite taxation changes, an increase in general costs and extended opening hours of betting offices as the reasons behind the decision.
Walthamstow's Tote turnover alone has fallen by 35 per cent since the abolition of General Betting Duty in 2001, which deprived dog tracks of the unique advantage of tax-free betting only on-course. The closure of next-door club Charlie Chan's, the famous pulling spot for lucky punters and wannabe WAGs, was a clear indication that all was not well. A greyhound stadium where a teenage David Beckham had a part-time job collecting glasses is to close. Brad Pitt attended as a guest of Vinnie Jones when he was filming Snatch, one of Guy Ritchie’s gangster films.Winston Churchill, Lana Turner and Gracie Fields were proud to be seen alongside thousands of East Enders who flocked to the stadium on a Saturday night.
Danny writes: "im born and bread in walthamstow, and we only ever had the racetrack and the market.and the market is unfortunetely a plaice to steer clear of now unless u r looking for trouble.if the dog track dont reopen then im afraid to say there will be even less londoners in london as thats all the working man as round here now as the pubs are even shutting down everywhere now.if it dont reopen then ill be moving away as well ."
Ciaran writes: "I first went to Walthamstow stadium when I was about 9 years old with my Dad. We used to live in Tottenham and used to get the 34 bus to the Crooked Billet roundabout (thats when the Crooked Billet pub was still there). I remember at that age I had little interest in betting and was more interested in the playground that was set up in one of the corners. As I got older I'd go there about 3 or four times a year and recently up until it closed, me the missus and a few mates would go down there. I was really sad to hear the announcement that it was going to close and I remember hearing that on the last night it was to be opened, the queues to get in were absoloutley huge. Sad really - if half of these people had have gone there regularly it may have never closed.
Was also in Charlie Chan's once or twice - not really my scene being an ex-skinhead / punk but one interesting fact about the place is that it was named after its original owner Charles Chandler, the one-time Animals bass player and manager of the Jimmi Hendrix Experience. "
LEA BRIDGE STADIUM (Former Home of Clapton Orient FC & Lea Bridge Speedway Team)
The skeletal remains of one of the stands still exists on this site..The O's played here (often nicknamed The Bridge) between 1930 and 1937, however Orient also played at Wembley Stadium and Highbury due to Lea Bridge Stadium being deemed as unsafe for spectators (a complaint over perimeter fencing which meant that pitch invasion frequently occurred). Lea Bridge gates averaged 7000, and in 1936/1937 Orient's match versus Millwall attracted the ground's highest attendance, 20.400. But the club was never happy at the speedway stadium, and in 1937 rode their final move to Brisbane Road, a mile away in Leyton renaming themselves Leyton Orient.
In 1933 Lea Bridge Stadium was used for filming racing scenes for the movie Britannia of Billingsgate.
CATFORD - CATFORD STADIUM
The Greyhound Racing Association (GRA) closed its Catford track in south-east London on 5/11/03.The track had been losing money because of declining attendances in recent years and the site has now been bulldozed and is a housing development..
This is the 2nd track in the London area to close in recent years. Greyhound racing at Wembley came to an end in 1998 due to poor attendances. At least half a dozen greyhound tracks have closed in and around London in the past 20 years.
Catford was founded in 1932 and attracted large crowds until the legalisation of betting shops in 1961,which hit attendances at tracks throughout the country. The rich and famous, Hollywood stars andthose from the world of sport all visited this corner of Catford . The Gold Collar trophy, its most prestigious race, regularly had a ' personality' to present the winning trophy, the likes of Henry Cooper, Lester Piggott, Lennox Lewis, Frank Bruno, Leslie Grantham and even Red Rum stepped across the famous sand track to the presentation podium, where starstruck owners, trainers and well-wishers celebrated before being joined by their heroes in a lap of honour.
Catford Stadium was the subject of scandal in August 2002 when a greyhound called Football Focus died in the kennels there of heat exhaustion and, on the BBC TV exposé of greyhound racing in December 2001, a trainer who ran greyhounds at Catford was caught on camera admitting that he gave large meals to dogs before racing to slow them down, so big money could be won on them in subsequent races.
The first meeting took place on July 30, 1932, when dual Derby winner Mick The Miller, the most legendary greyhound in the history of the sport besides Ballyregan Bob and Scurlogue Champ, was paraded around the track.Back in its heyday, Catford used to have as many as 80 bookmakers, while only four were operating in the main ring when it closed. A female member of staff was once abducted by a gang and £30,000 – the night’s tote takings – stolen. The late Roy Dwight – cousin of Reg Dwight (Sir Elton John) – who famously scored and then broke his leg in the 1959 FA Cup Final for Nottingham Forest against Luton, was assistant racing manager during the mid-1980s.
Here's some pics of the interior (courtesy of Derelict London visitor Danny Black)
Heres some pics of the stadium just before demolition taken by Fred:
and some taken by Evan Jones:
HACKNEY STADIUM
The London Stadium, once renowned as the greatest greyhound racing track in the world but now the home of flytipping and a few small businesses and about to be cleared for the forthcoming Olympics in 2012.
ENFIELD - QUEEN ELIZABETH 2 STADIUM
Opened in 1953, the year of the Coronation, this stadium served many generations of school athletes. Apparently maintenance of the infrastructure waned and the athletics running track was closed in mid 2008 after it failed a UK Athletics safety inspection. Perhaps ironically, one of the last athletes to use the track was Dwain Chambers. Still committed to his Olympic dream he had been maintaining his fitness there in isolation.
Enfield Town FC (who currently play at nearby Brimsdown Rovers) apparently are trying to raise money for venue to be ready for the scheduled grand opening at the start of the 2010-11 season. The club and Enfield Council have both submitted bids to try to secure funding from the Football Foundation, with Town’s own fundraising activities already under way, and the chairman said the club had set up a timetable of events to help them reach the total.
Work has yet to begin at the site.
* Enfield Town FC are a team set up by fans (bit like the AFC Wimbledon scenario) of Enfield FC (recently renamed Enfield 1893 FC) who were fustrated at the old Enfield being moved out of the borough.The original Enfield FC was one of the most successful amateur clubs in England and at one point was seen as a potential Football League entrant due to its Football Conference exploits, but went into freefall due to the club's former chairman decision to relocate to Borehamwood.
(these 2 interior pics courtesy of Sara Gonzalez)
EDGWARE - EDGWARE TOWN FC - THE WHITE LION GROUND
Edgware Town were established in the summer of 1939 and played in the Middlesex Senior League.The name of the club was changed to Edgware F.C. in 1972, and back to Edgware Town in 1987. In 2006-07 Edgware Town enjoyed their most successful season in the club's history, winning a treble of trophies, the Spartan South Midlands League Premier Division, the Spartan South Midlands Football League Premier Cup, and the Spartan South Midlands Football Challenge Trophy. Noteable ex players include Dave Beasant (goalkeeper who later went on play in the FA Cup final victory for Wimbledon) & Ralf Little (who is also an actor - perhaps best known in the Royle Family).A "sell-on" clause in the Dave Beasant contract meant that Edgware received a substantial sum when Wimbledon sold him to Newcastle United and the money was spent on improvements to the ground
The record attendance (approx 8500) at the White Lion ground was set in October 1947 for the F.A. Cup tie against Wealdstone.
After playing for 68 years at the White Lion Ground in Edgware, the freehold of the ground was sold & the new landlord was subsequently granted planning permission by Harrow Council to build houses and flats on the ground. The team carried on playing through the 2007/08 season but the sponsorship could not be found to continue to pay the ground rent. After finishing a respectable 8th in the Ryman Division 1 North.The club were forced to resign from the Ryman League in the summer of 2008, and are currently dormant, though the club's name continues to be registered with the Middlesex FA.
Meanwhile, presumably the credit crunch has put a delay on the building of the forthcoming houses & flats.
HENDON - THE LOOT STADIUM (HENDON FC)
Considered one of the most respected London non league teams, Hendon Football Club currently play in the Isthmian League & after the closure of Claremont Road (their home for 81 years), Hendon FC's home games are being played at Wembley FC's Vale Farm - the less famous of Wembley's two stadiums!
Originally formed as Christ Church Hampstead in 1908, a year later the club became Hampstead Town FC. "Town" was then dropped from the title in 1926. Six seasons later another name change saw the club become Golders Green FC. In 1946 that the present name of Hendon was adopted due to the ground lying within the Borough of Hendon (at the time).
Claremont Road was officially opened in 1926 before an FA Cup tie with Berkhamstead.The original bench seats were only replaced in 1993 when they received some bucket seats from Watford FC's Vicarage Road.Claremont Road became such a popular venue it went onto host three England Amateur International matches and a Great Britain v West Germany qualifying match for the Olympic games .The attendance record of 9,000 was set for the visit of Northampton Town in a FA Cup-tie in 1952.
In the 1990s, Claremont Road served as an occasional home for the rugby league team then known as London Crusaders. Until its demise as a football ground,Claremont Road remained a popular location for production companies with over 30 films, television programmes and adverts being shot there over the years including Nuts TV and the home ground of Fash FC.
The stadium site was sold to a property developer for approaching £20 million in 2006 & the team carried on playing there until September 2008 when after 81 years, the club were forced out. Rumours of a deed of covenant preventing the stadium and associated buildings from being used for anything other purpose than football or being returned to parkland has delayed redevelopment. Meanwhile squatters have moved in on the ground.
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