The fourth part of Philip Grant's series on the history of Wembley Park
The Pool was opened on 25 July 1934, just in time for the swimming and diving events of the Games. The boxing and wrestling competitions followed, in a ring on a bridge across the pool. Then the public could enjoy the pool for swimming throughout the summer. As soon as the speedway season finished in October, its fans could support a new Wembley Lions ice hockey team. The pool was drained for the winter, and the rink on a floor above it could be used for public skating, when the Lions or a second team, the Wembley Monarchs, were not playing.
The Borough of Wembley really got behind the Games. Many residents took paying guests into their homes, as there were few hotels for spectators to stay at. Entertainments for visitors were arranged by the Council. A school in Alperton was one of those used to house male competitors, and the families of several pupils played host to some of their female team mates.
On 29 July 1948, packed crowds watched the opening ceremony. Boy Scouts from Wembley carried the names of the 59 countries taking part, in front of their teams in the parade. Thousands of residents lined the streets, as a relay of local runners carried the Olympic torch on its way to the stadium, ready to light the flame that marked the start of the Games.
The Olympic Games (1948) – BFI / National Archives
Philip Grant.
We left Part 3 (“click” if you
missed it) just after the British Empire Exhibition had closed in 1925. Its
site and the buildings on it had cost around £12m (equivalent to over £700m
now), but the Liquidator’s attempt to sell them at auction as a single lot was
withdrawn, with the highest offer at £350k. It was later bought for just £300k
by Jimmy White, a speculator who paid 10% of this “up front”, with the balance
payable as the buildings were sold off.
Many of the
people who worked at the exhibition had been unemployed ex-servicemen. Arthur
Elvin was one of these, working in a cigarette kiosk in 1924. He saved as much
of his £4 10s wages as he could, and leased eight kiosks himself when the
exhibition reopened in 1925, selling sweets and souvenirs as well. He bought and
demolished his first small building on the site in 1926, selling the metal for
scrap and rubble as hardcore for road construction. After reinvesting the
profits several times, within a year he offered £122,500 for the stadium.
1. Wembley Stadium, after demolition of the BEE pavilions,
c.1927. (Image from the internet)
Elvin had paid
£12,500 deposit to White, with the balance payable over ten years, when in
August 1927 the Official Receiver demanded it all within a fortnight! Jimmy
White had only ever paid the initial £30k for the buildings, gambled away the
rest, and then shot himself. By working together with friends and banks, Elvin
managed to complete the purchase. Aged 28, he was the managing director of the
Wembley Stadium and Greyhound Racecourse Company Ltd.
2. Greyhound and speedway racing events at Wembley Stadium. (Images from old
books on the stadium)
Few had thought
the stadium could be saved from demolition, with the Cup Final as its only
annual booking. The company name is a clue to how Elvin believed it could be
made profitable. He introduced greyhound racing, three times a week, from 1928,
and motorcycle speedway, with his Wembley Lions team, from 1929, both with
regular crowds in excess of 60,000. The pre-match entertainment he put on for
the football final, including community singing (“Abide with me”), attracted
the Rugby League cup final in 1929, with Wembley as its home ever since.
With greyhounds
the only winter attraction, Elvin saw another possibility to keep Wembley’s 400
employees in full-time work during the early 1930s depression, after watching
an ice hockey game at Earls Court in 1932. His plans crystalized when the
second British Empire Games were planned for London in 1934. Working with Sir
Owen Williams, who had designed the stadium, the Empire Pool was constructed of
reinforced concrete in just nine months.
3. L-R, Duke of Gloucester, Sir Owen Williams and Arthur
Elvin at the Pool opening. (From an old book)
The Pool was opened on 25 July 1934, just in time for the swimming and diving events of the Games. The boxing and wrestling competitions followed, in a ring on a bridge across the pool. Then the public could enjoy the pool for swimming throughout the summer. As soon as the speedway season finished in October, its fans could support a new Wembley Lions ice hockey team. The pool was drained for the winter, and the rink on a floor above it could be used for public skating, when the Lions or a second team, the Wembley Monarchs, were not playing.
4. A 1934 Empire Pool advert, and swimmers enjoying it. (From a Pool
programme, and an old book)
5. Ice hockey programme, and a match at the Empire Pool, both
late 1930s. (From old programme and book)
While Arthur
Elvin was making Wembley Park a major sporting venue, the exhibition buildings
that had not been demolished were put to new uses. The former Lucullus Restaurant,
alongside Wembley Park Drive, became a film studio. The huge Palaces of
Industry and Engineering were split up into units for manufacturing or
warehouses. Elvin used the Palace of Arts as storage space, for the platform
which supported the ice rink, and the banked timber track used for cycling
races inside the Empire Pool, but it was soon to be required for another
purpose.
In the late
1930s, Germany under Adolf Hitler aimed to become a dominant force. The Empire
Pool hosted the European Swimming Championships in 1938, and Germany easily
topped the medal table. After war broke out the following year, Wembley Council
took over the Palace of Arts as the centre for its A.R.P. organisation.
When thousands of British troops were evacuated from Dunkirk in May 1940, many
were brought to the stadium, which was used as an emergency dispersal centre.
Refugees from France, Belgium and Holland followed, and were given temporary
accommodation in the Empire Pool, before being rehomed across the country.
6. A Civil Defence review at Wembley Stadium, October 1942. (Image from
Brent Archives)
Wartime parades
and reviews made use of the stadium, and other events, including greyhound
racing, continued throughout the war. Service men and women could attend free.
There were many charity matches, like an England v. Scotland football
international in February 1944, with King George VI, Princess Elizabeth and
Field Marshall Montgomery in the Royal Box, which raised a record £18,000.
Others were inter-service games, including baseball and American Football between teams
from the U.S. ground and air forces in 1943/44, ahead of D-Day.
The stadium was
used as a landmark by the Luftwaffe, on their way to raids north of London, but
Wembley Park was also a target. A German airman, whose bomber was shot down
locally, had a map marking the location of an R.A.F. storage depot (the former
Palace of Industry!). Bombs hit the stadium on three occasions, and a V1
“doodlebug” landed on the kennels, killing a number of greyhounds, in 1944.
Each Christmas, during the war, Mr and Mrs Elvin and their stadium team
provided a free Christmas dinner for hundreds of local service personnel who
could not get home. In 1945, Elvin was awarded the M.B.E. for his wartime
efforts.
There had been
no Olympic Games in 1940 or 1944, and when London was invited to stage the 1948
Olympiad, the Government almost declined the offer because of post-war
austerity. Then, at the start of 1947, Elvin offered his facilities at Wembley
Park, free of charge, so the Games could go ahead. The Stadium company also
agreed to build a new access road from the station. Until early 1948, about one
third of the labour on this project was provided by German prisoners of war.
The new road, named Olympic Way, cost £120k and
opened in July.
8. German P-o-W’s at work on Olympic Way in 1947. (Still image
from a film made at the time)
9. Wembley Town Hall, in Forty Lane, decorated for the
Olympics in July 1948. (Brent Archives image 3829)
The Borough of Wembley really got behind the Games. Many residents took paying guests into their homes, as there were few hotels for spectators to stay at. Entertainments for visitors were arranged by the Council. A school in Alperton was one of those used to house male competitors, and the families of several pupils played host to some of their female team mates.
10. The Olympic Games opening ceremony at Wembley Stadium. (Brent Archives,
1948 Olympics Report)
On 29 July 1948, packed crowds watched the opening ceremony. Boy Scouts from Wembley carried the names of the 59 countries taking part, in front of their teams in the parade. Thousands of residents lined the streets, as a relay of local runners carried the Olympic torch on its way to the stadium, ready to light the flame that marked the start of the Games.
11. Olympic Way, with crowds going to the stadium for the
Games, July 1948. (Image from the internet)
For over two
weeks, Wembley Park and its new Olympic Way were full of visitors to this great
sporting occasion, and they were not disappointed. New heroes emerged, like
Emil Zatopek of Czechoslovakia, who won gold in the 10,000 metres and finished
second in the 5,000m by just 0.4 of a second, and Arthur Wint, winning
Jamaica’s first ever Olympic gold medal in the 400m, after silver in the 800m. Housewife
and mother, Fanny Blankers-Koen of The Netherlands was the heroine of the
Games, winning four athletics golds.
The Olympic Games (1948) – BFI / National Archives
Elvin, now Sir
Arthur, must have enjoyed the event that made “his” venue the centre of the
sporting world. As well as the opening and closing ceremonies, the stadium
hosted the athletics events, football and hockey finals and the show jumping
competition. The Empire Pool staged the swimming and diving, the water polo
final, and then, after bridging the pool again, the boxing bouts. Part of the
Palace of Engineering was used for the fencing competitions, and the Palace of
Arts was taken over by the BBC, to become the Broadcasting Centre for the
Games.
Could Wembley
Park ever match the “high” of the 1948 Olympic Games again, or would it simply
be forgotten as the years moved on? There will be more of its story to discover
next weekend, and I look forward to sharing it with you.
Please use the
comments section below if you have any questions from the series so far, or if
you have information on Wembley Park that you would like to share, with me and
others.
Philip Grant.
Great Stuff. Well researched as always.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Philip, really interesting.
ReplyDeletePity that Elvin, a man with obvious local integrity and substance, had to suffer the indignity of his name being 'selected', through a phoney vote, to be the name for a school set up by a bunch of chancers with little integrity or affinity for the area which Elvin himself made such a contribution to.
Really enjoying reading looking forward 2 more
ReplyDeleteThank you, Unknown! There will be two more parts of the Wembley Park story, with more local history to discover after that - let's hope you enjoy the future articles as well.
Delete