The Old Dixonians Rugby
Football Club was founded in 1913 by the 'Old Boys' of George Dixon
Grammar School for Boys
in City Road ,
Edgbaston, and will therefore celebrate its centenary in 2013.
The first game which led to
the formation of the Old Dixonians Rugby
Football Club was played in Balden Road ,
Harborne between a school side and the Old Boys in harsh December weather in
1913.The Old Boys XV lost 16-11.
It is interesting to note that
one of George Dixon Grammar School 's
most famous former pupils Michael Balcon (later Sir Michael Balcon and Head of
Ealing Film Studios) played for Old Dixonians RFC after The Great War.
Michael Balcon later chose
the name of his old school as the name for his 'Everyman policeman’ George
Dixon in the film 'The Blue Lamp'. The character PC George Dixon played by Jack Warner later became the lead
in the highly successful and long-running 'Dixon of Dock Green' police series
on BBC TV.
'George Dixon' was a
stalwart of the BBC TV schedules throughout the 1960's. Balcon did not like the
name writer Ted Willis originally had wanted to use for his show, the first
long-running police procedural TV series, pre-dating 'Z-Cars' and 'The Bill'
and renamed the character after his old school.
Rugby started officially in
the 1913-14 season mainly at the instigation of W G Haigh and AT Ridout who
worked together at Chances Glass Works in Smethwick, then one of the most
famous industrial names in the West Midlands .
Chances manufactured the glass optics in Britain 's lighthouses for Trinity House.
The first ground was
somewhere behind Warley Woods on the border between Harborne and Bearwood and
washing facilities were tubs in farm outhouses.
Selection meetings were held
in The Mikado cafe in Martineau
Street in
At that time negotiations
for a new ground in Erdington fell through just as the First World War broke
out. Several Dixonian players were killed and many were wounded in The Great
War. A memorial was placed to the Dixonian dead in the George Dixon
Boys Grammar
school building in City Road .
Fixtures were revived in the
1919-20 season after hostilities ceased in November 1918.
In the Dixonians club
archive here is a copy of the menu for a Dixonians RFC Dinner held at The
Exchange in Birmingham City Centre in March 1914 – 4 courses for 3/6d!
In 1925 Neville Chamberlain
MP a former Chancellor of the Exchequer and founder of the Birmingham Municipal
Bank, the forerunner of Lloyds TSB was a dinner guest. This may have been an
Old Dixonians'
Association dinner.
The first official games
were played by the Old Dixonians Rugby Football Club in Ridgacre Rd , Quinton in Birmingham in the 1920’s.
At some time in the 1930's
the club moved to a new ground in Illey
Lane , Romsley where they played until 1958.
In that year the club moved
to a bespoke rugby ground with a new clubhouse in Wassall Grove Lane in Hagley, next to old
rivals Old Halesonians, another successful 'Old Boys' club linked to Halesowen Grammar School .
The new ground at Wassall
Grove opened at the start of the 1958/59 season on 10th September 1958. Chairman
of the club at that time was Philip 'Pip' Jones the husband of 1969 Wimbledon
Women’s singles tennis champion Ann Jones, who lived in Westfield Road , Edgbaston, the Birmingham suburb from where the Old Dixonians drew most
of its players and where the George
Dixon Grammar
School was based in City Road .
The official opening of the
Wassall Grove ground was performed by G M Seldon, the President of the Rugby
Football Union. Peter Robbins the England
back row forward played as a guest for the Old Dixonians in a 3-3 draw against
a strong North Midlands side which included Brian Whiteman another England
international.
The move to Wassall Grove
heralded an unprecedented period of success for the club in the 15-a-side game,
although the club had enjoyed some success in 7's, winning several North
Midlands 7's titles in 1953, 56, 58, and 1959. The club also won the Staines 7's in 1955, 56, and 1958.
Famously Old Dixonians
appeared in the world-renowned Middlesex 7's at
Twickenham in the 1957 season
playing against senior clubs like London Welsh and Harlequins.
The vintage 1957 Old Dixonians
7's team reached the final 12 teams from
preliminary rounds which
originally involved 186 teams in front of a crowd of over 40,000 at Twickenham.
In the quarter-finals Old Dixonians
led in the second half against favourites London Welsh fielding 4
internationals including Cliff Morgan, the famous BBC TV rugby commentator and
Carwyn James who was later to go on to manage the legendary 1971 British Lions
who defeated the All Blacks in a series in New Zealand for the first time.
Two late tries by Carwyn
James snatched victory from Old Dixonians as they tired. Carwyn James took over
the red number 10 shirt from Cliff Morgan as fly-half for Wales as part
of Max Boyce's Welsh 'fly-half factory'. London Welsh, currently playing in the
AVIVA Rugby Premiership in Oxford, knocked out a plucky Old Dixonians team not
before they became the favourites of the crowd, particularly Dave Jeffries at
6' 9" who was a one man line out "tapping the ball back like swatting
gnats" as described in The Times newspaper reports.
At that time the club had a
number of excellent players, most notably
Arthur Coulthard, a centre
who went on to play for the premier senior rugby club in Birmingham, Moseley
and Harold Jessop, who went on to become Head of Sport at King Edward's School,
Aston and was a fine player for Old Dixonians throughout the 1950's and 60's. Another
contemporary to Arthur and Harold, Roy Reynolds played for England
schoolboys in 1957.
At this time the club
captain was Rex Harrison who in many ways was ahead of his time in junior rugby
circles, instigating regular training and coaching at the club, which made the
club so successful on the field.
His legacy was carried
forward by Jim Kendrick in the 1970's and 1980's.
Jim proved to be an able
administrator and Chairman of the club. The club being well-run off the field
attracted good players which led to success on the field.
The club commemorates Jim
Kendick's contribution to the club by holding
'Jim Kendrick Day' every
year for its former players, Vice-Presidents and friends of the club to
celebrate Jim's lifetime contribution to Dixonians:
As a player: Jim played in 5
different decades for the club in all of the sides, and as an administrator: he
was involved with Dixonians for most of his adult life from the 1930's to the
1990's, combining able administration of the club with a very successful
business career.
For many years Old Dixonians
played Five Ways Old Edwardians in the 'Arthur Coulthard Memorial Match' on
Boxing Day to commemorate its greatest player. The two schools had once shared
the same site at Five Ways
in Edgbaston. The two rugby clubs also had strong links, both being stalwarts
of the Greater Birmingham Rugby Football Union and the 'Combined Old Boys'
(or'COBS' as the representative side were known) and the North Midlands RFU.
The fixture ceased to be
played in the early 1990's as league rugby came in and friendly games ceased to
be as important as they once had been.
The club became 'open' to
non-Old Boys of the school in the early
1960's. Many clubs became
open to non-Old Boys, as there was a decline in the number of former pupils who
played rugby. The name of the club changed to Dixonians to reflect the club's
new found 'open' status.
This move coincided with the
club's 'Golden Years' which led to their first North Midlands Cup win in 1975,
Dixonians defeating a strong Luctonians side 21-3 at The Reddings.
At this time the club were
coached by former Moseley winger Keith Hatter, who also played for the club
after leaving senior rugby. There were a number of players who had turned out
for Moseley in Hatter, Mike Evans, Malcolm Hall, who was probably one of the
finest players to play for Dixonians, and Collin Osborne.
Collin Osborne, went on to
play for Moseley as a quick, hard-tackling centre and has had a long career
coaching and playing in senior rugby. Collin coached Zimbabwe
in the 1995 Rugby World Cup in South
Africa . He is now Skills Coach to AVIVA
Premiership Champions Harlequins and retains links with the Edgbaston Dixonians
club.
Dixonians went onto to win
their second North Midlands Cup in 1976,
defeating Stourbridge in the
final 21-9. In the period 1974-76 Dixonians were the pre-eminent junior club in
the North Midlands union and often defeated
strong Moseley United and Worcester sides.
Throughout the 1970's and into
the 1980's the Dixonians club enjoyed great success on the field winning
several Midland Merit Table titles which were the precursor to League Rugby.
This culminated in Dixonian’s
third North Midlands Cup success in 1986, the club defeating Droitwich 26-0 in
the final again at The Reddings.
At this time Graham Viney,
one of the finest scrum-halves produced by the club was one of the players who
captained Dixonians to its successes with the Fenney brothers, Ian and Guy also
being major contributors to the club’s success.
Tim Butler and Pete
Richardson were two of the hardest-nosed forwards ever to play for Dixonians
and played a significant role in the club’s success, captaining the club to
several Midlands Merit Table titles.
The club's success was built
around its abrasive pack, marshalled by the expert probing of Viney behind. Graham
Viney went on to play for Moseley and was one of the finest scrum-halves
playing the game at that time, being voted Moseley Supporter’s Club player of
the year during one of the two seasons he played for the club in the mid
1980's.
The club had several North Midlands representatives at this time, including brothers
Clive and Richard Meanwell who both played for Moseley. Richard Meanwell became
an England Colt full-back while representing Moseley.
Graham Viney, Collin
Osborne, Neil Sullivan and Malcolm Hall, who memorably scored a try for North
Midlands when they played the touring Argentinians at The Reddings in October
1978, all played County Championship rugby for North Midlands during this
halcyon period for the Dixonians club.
In the early 1990's the club
moved from Wassall Grove, back to the George Dixon school in City Road , Edgbaston. Dixonians had
always drawn its players from Bearwood, Harborne and Edgbaston in Birmingham , and Wassall Grove in Hagley was proving to be
too distant from its player base in the west of Birmingham .
The club continued to be
successful into the 1990's and early 2000's rising to Midlands
2 under the captaincy of Lee Irwin, one of the most athletic forwards ever to
play for the club. Lee also represented North Midlands in the County Championship .
This was the highest that the Dixonians club has risen to in the rugby pyramid,
to the fifth tier of English rugby.
Around the turn of The
Millennium the club played for a few seasons at the former St Philips Grammar
School sports ground in Knightlow
Road , Harborne, renting it from The Oratory
Fathers. Following disagreement with The Oratory Fathers as to how the ground
should be developed the club left Knightlow
Road and entered into an arrangement with Lordswood School on Hagley Road in Bearwood, with the club
changing its name to 'Lordswood Dixonians RFC'.
The new Lordswood Dixonians
club now has its base at the school and it is hoped that through this
arrangement the club will be able to grow and develop junior players from boys
attending the school, by providing
coaching and support.
In 2005 Lordswood Dixonians
reached the final of the North Midlands Shield, which has now replaced the
North Midlands Cup, played at Stourbridge RFC. In an entertaining high-scoring
encounter, which was a great advert for junior rugby, Lordswood Dixonians were
only defeated by a spirited Solihull side late
in the game.
The club currently plays in the
Midlands West (North) Leagues and plays its 1st XV home games at the former
Birmingham RFC ground at Portway after several seasons playing at the
Birmingham City University sports ground in Moor Lane, Witton.
Edgbaston Dixonians RFC, as
the club is now known, is hosting a Grand Centenary Dinner at The Botanical
Gardens in Westbourne Road ,
Edgbaston on Saturday September 14th 2013.
Edgbaston Dixonians invites
those associated with the club and their partners and friends to celebrate 100
years of Old Dixonians rugby in Birmingham
and beyond and hopes to attract over 400 guests to a traditional rugby dinner
with good food, good company and entertaining guest speakers
Keith Bracey
Dixonians RFC Player
1976-2002, current EDRFC Vice-Presidents Secretary
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