Stevens Memorial Library (North Andover)

The Ruhleben Football Association, how Steve Bloomer's footballers survived a first world war prison camp/, Paul Brown

Label
The Ruhleben Football Association, how Steve Bloomer's footballers survived a first world war prison camp/, Paul Brown
Language
eng
resource.biographical
contains biographical information
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The Ruhleben Football Association
Responsibility statement
Paul Brown
Sub title
how Steve Bloomer's footballers survived a first world war prison camp/
Summary
In 1914, at the outbreak of the First World War, several of Britain's greatest footballers were interned in a brutal German prison camp at Ruhleben, near Berlin. Among them was Steve Bloomer, the prolific England striker widely regarded as the best player of his generation. Surrounded by barbed wire and armed guards, living in squalor and on meagre rations, and with their families and freedom far out of reach, Bloomer and the others found salvation in what they knew best – football.They bartered for balls, marked out pitches, and formed the Ruhleben Football Association, organising league and cup competitions involving hundreds of players and watched by thousands of spectators.The conditions at Ruhleben – a former horse racing track – were appalling, with around 4,500 men packed into 11 filthy stables. Food was scarce, the guards were cruel, and the commandant was incompetent. Gradually, though, as the Great War for Civilisation raged around them, Bloomer and his fellow prisoners established some order within the confines of the prison camp.This is the true story of how the prisoners used the game of football to survive, and how some of them used it to escape
Classification
Content