Episode 1: Dial Square "From Woolwich to the Football League" · 1886–1913
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Summary
"They came from a factory that made weapons. They built something that would outlast the empire it served."
The story begins not in north London but in south-east London — or rather, in what was then Kent — in the enormous, sprawling complex of workshops and warehouses that made up the Royal Arsenal at Woolwich. In the autumn of 1886, a Scotsman named David Danskin had a simple idea: there were too many men from the north and midlands working at the munitions factory who wanted to play football, and nowhere to play it. He passed a subscription list around the workshops. Fifteen men contributed. A football was purchased. Dial Square Football Club was born.
This episode covers the foundational quarter-century: the name changes from Dial Square to Royal Arsenal to Woolwich Arsenal, the move to professionalism in 1891 (which got them banned from local competitions and forced them to look beyond their neighbourhood), their historic entry to the Football League in 1893 as the first southern club to join, and the chronic financial difficulties that plagued a club geographically isolated from the rest of London's growing football community. It ends with the pivotal decision that would change everything: the move north, away from Woolwich, away from the workers who built the club, to a new home in a more accessible part of London.
Research Sources
Phil Soar & Martin Tyler, Arsenal: The Official History — essential for the Woolwich and early Football League period; good on the founding circumstances and first managers.
Bernard Joy, Forward Arsenal! — one of the earliest serious histories of the club; firsthand accounts of the pre-war period, invaluable for atmosphere and detail.
Spartacus Educational online archive (spartacus-educational.com) — excellent compilation of primary sources on the early Arsenal, including the Danskin subscription story and the first match details.
The British Newspaper Archive — Woolwich Gazette, Plumstead Gazette, and local southeast London papers for contemporary match reports and social context 1886–1913.
Royal Arsenal History (royal-arsenal-history.com) — detailed maps and location guides to the club's early grounds; useful for the Cold Open's sense of place.
Wikipedia, History of Arsenal F.C. (1886–1966) — reliable for dates, results, and factual scaffolding throughout this episode.
Arsenal.com historical archive — official club record on the founding period, useful for corroboration of key facts.