How the FA banned womens football in 1921 and tried to justify it
A year after more than 50,000 turned up to watch Dick, Kerr Ladies play St Helens, a ban was introduced that was to last half a century
https://www.theguardian.com/football/2022/jun/13/how-the-fa-banned-womens-football-in-1921-and-tried-to-justify-it
Despite women having been turfed out of the workplaces in large numbers and the return of mens football after its suspension between 1915 and 1919, the womens game was thriving at the turn of the 1920s, with the Dick, Kerr Ladies a famous factory team from Preston at the forefront.
In 1920, the team would play four international home fixtures against a French team led by the womens sport advocate Alice Milliat at Deepdale, Stockport, in Manchester and then Stamford Bridge. The team then headed to France and played in Paris, Roubaix, Le Havre and Rouen. It would prove to be a hugely popular tour and on the teams return to England, the hype for a scheduled Boxing Day match against rivals St Helens at Goodison Park was building. Few, though, could have predicted the seismic impact the fixture would have on the future of womens football.
On the day of the match 53,000 fans would file into the ground for the game with, according to the diary of the player Alice Stanley, a further 1015,000 supporters turned away from the at-capacity ground. It set an attendance record that would not be surpassed for 92 years until Team GB beat Brazil at Wembley during the London 2012 Olympics in front of 70,584 and remains the biggest domestic game in womens football in England, with the 38,262 who watched Arsenal defeat Tottenham at the new Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on 17 November 2019 at No 2.
It reportedly broke another record too, with the Lancashire Evening Post on 28 December 1920 saying: The most remarkable gate of the holiday, however, was at Goodison Park yesterday morning [Boxing Day] where the Dick, Kerr Ladies beat St Helens ladies 40 in a match on behalf of the unemployed and disabled ex-service men. The attendance was estimated at 53,000 and the receipts were over £3,000 exclusive of tickets. This being an easy record for a charity match in England.
snip
Dick, Kerr Ladies F.C. played the first women's international in 1920 against France. The French team was from Paris and was led by the great patron of Women's sport in France, Alice Milliat.
The team captains kiss before a match v France in 1920. Dick, Kerr Ladies in striped shirt