Station Road, Wallsend Boys Club
Station Road, Wallsend Boys Club
HER Number
              16934
          District
              N Tyneside
          Site Name
              Station Road, Wallsend Boys Club
          Place
              Wallsend
          Map Sheet
              NZ36NW
          Class
              Recreational
          Site Type: Broad
              Club
          Site Type: Specific
              Youth Club
          General Period
              20TH CENTURY
          Specific Period
              Early 20th Century 1901 to 1932
          Form of Evidence
              Demolished Building
          Description
              The first Wallsend Boys Club was set up by directors and employees of Swan Hunter shipyard on 14th November 1904 to educate apprentices and to 'develop their physical, mental and spiritual capacity'. It hosted football, boxing, gymnastics, trampolining, judo, cross country running and snooker. Wikipedia says it initially specialised in boxing. In 1938 Sheriton Clements Swan, director, became president of the new Wallsend Boy's Club, based at Station Road. The club had an L-shaped wooden club house. Classes in woodwork were run. The boys put on an annual pantomime. An early fund raising event was a pram push from Wallsend to Edinburgh Castle and back, undertaken as a 24 hour relay race. In 1960 the original wooden huts were destroyed in a fire. A brick sports hall was built on the same site on Station Road in 1966. An Astro Turf five-a-side pitch was later installed inside. Since the mid 1970s, football has been the main sport, but judo, martial arts and skateboarding also take place. The club is famous for training a number of top class footballers including Steve Bruce, Peter Beardsley, Alan Shearer, Lee Clark and Michael Carrick. In 2008 the club was awarded the Freedom of the City of North Tyneside for its 'factory line of talent' and community work. In 2011 the club moved to new premises next to their football pitches at Rheydt Avenue, Bigges Main, close to Wallsend Golf Club. This was funded through grants from the Football Foundation, The FA and North Tyneside Council. The club raised £114,000 towards the project. The building on Station Road was demolished in February 2012 after high winds blew the end wall inwards. The site is proposed for houses.
          Easting
              429480
          Northing
              566940
          Grid Reference
              NZ429480566940
    Sources
              Lynn Pearson, 2010, Played in Tyne and Wear - Charting the heritage of people at play, p 104-5; Houses to be built on former Wallsend Boys Club Site, 1 January 2013, http://www.chroniclelive.co.uk/news/local-news/houses-built-former-wallsend-boys-1350380; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wallsend_Boys_Club; White, Jim (26 October 2011). "No end in sight to Wallsend production line". Daily Telegraph; "World famous Wallsend Boys’ Club officially opens its first football facility". Northumberland FA. 29 June 2011; "Wallsend still building for the future". Daily Telegraph. 6 Oct 2005; "Wallsend Boys Club heritage". Our History. Wallsend Boys Club; "Wallsend Boys move to new home". Wallsend Boys Club. 21 March 2006; "End of era as club is reduced to rubble and memories". News Guardian. 1 March 2012; "Peter Beardsley indebted to his Wallsend roots". Daily Telegraph. 29 Nov 2007; "Wallsend Boys benefit as Shearer hands £1.6m to charity". The Independent. 27 Oct 2006; http://wallsendboysclub.org.uk/; Vince Carrick, Michael McGill and Margaret Scott, 2013, The History of Wallsend Boys Club;