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Sunday, December 22, 2024

AN ENGLISHMAN IN NICARAGUA: REMEMBERING THOMAS CRANSHAW

The name Thomas Cranshaw will mean virtually nothing to the inhabitants of modern-day England, but, until recently, there was one little corner of Central America which bore the name of this particular Englishman, and for good reason.

Cranshaw was born in the town of Chorlton-upon-Medlock, Lancashire on 22 September 1892. He, his father William, who was a policeman, mother Agnes (who worked as a seamstress) and his four siblings, lived in Molyneux Street in the town until 1898, when his father died at just 36 years old. William himself was predeceased by his youngest daughter, who had died in infancy a couple of years earlier.

It seems that Thomas and his siblings were either interred in - or attended school at - Nicholls Hospital in Arndale, then an orphanage, from 1898 to 1901, when the five surviving family members
moved to the south of Manchester.

Little else is known about that stage of his life, but it has been claimed that he moved to Nicaragua as early as 1914, where he worked in the import/export business for a company called Laberne and Thompson before setting up on his own in the city of Granada in 1917. He met a local girl, Isabel Ramirez Váldez, and married her two years later.

"Mister Cranshaw", as he was popularly known, proved to be an astute and successful businessman, and was well-liked by the locals, not least for his generosity towards the poor - he was a man who never forgot his roots - but also for his enthusiasm and sense of humour. At the start of the 1920s, he took up refereeing in his spare time as football slowly became more popular in Nicaragua, spreading outwards from its cradle of Diriangén (in the south-west) and the country's capital, Managua, where the game was first played more than twenty years earlier.

Thomas and Isobel had three children: Tom, born in 1921, William, born a year later, and Gladys, who was born in 1926, the year Cranshaw helped create the first proper football league in Nicaragua. The family was a happy unit, but tragedy struck in August 1930 when Isobel died in Managua, aged just 34.

A year later, in 1931, Cranshaw was instrumental in the creation of the General Secretariat of Football, which fell under the umbrella of the CNDO, the Nicaraguan National Sports Commission, and became its first general secretary.
 The Secretariat was renamed FENIFUT in 1958, and retains its position as Nicaragua's official football governing body.


Thomas Cranshaw (Photo: Salon de Fama Deportes Nicaragüense; photographer unknown)


Cranshaw later branched out into other sports, adjudicating at swimming meets and organising boxing matches in Managua, and, in 1935, not only competed in a tennis tournament but was a delegate in the Nicaraguan team at the third Central American Games, which were held in March of that year in El Salvador. (Nicaragua did not take part in the football tournament, however.)

However, football remained his first love and, apart from continuing to referee football matches - and being a founder member of the national referees association, the ANAF - he helped organise a friendly between Costa Rican side Alajuense and a team representing Managua.

Cranshaw helped organise sports competitons in both Nicaragua and Costa Rica during the 1940s while continuing to referee matches and work for the CNDO. He eventually retired from all sporting activity in Nicaragua in the 1950s - although he did become honorary president of the ANFA - and before he did so, wrote to FIFA in 1951 enquiring about the possibility of global football's masters getting involved in women's football after seeing women playing football across North America in countries as diverse as Costa Rica and the USA. 

He received the rather curt response that FIFA had no jurisdiction over women's football and had just as much interest in getting involved in it. 

After spending more than 35 years in Nicaragua and playing an integral part in the development of the country's sport scene, Cranshaw moved to Costa Rica in 1953.

After spending eleven years in the country, he moved to Los Angeles in August 1964 with the aim of helping kick-start football in that part of the United States, although there is no information as to which sector of the game he wanted to get involved in. 

Upon hearing the news of Don Tomas's impending departure for the States, in a gesture hardly showing a sign of appreciation of his life's work, the ANFA stripped him of his honorary presidency. 

Sadly, Cranshaw never got to achieve his latest dream. He died in Los Angeles on 4 October 1964, aged 72, felled by a severe stroke.


Thomas Cranshaw, just weeks before his death (Photo taken from his obituary in La Prensa; supplied by Javier Hernández)


Thomas Cranshaw is remembered to this day in Nicaragua, but only in a somewhat piecemeal fashion at best. Until earlier this year, his name lived on in a more real sense. In 1960, a newly-constructed stadium in what is now the Barrio El Boer area of Managua was given his name, and the Estadio Thomas Cranshaw became the city's premier football venue. Prominent clubs such as Juventus and Walter Ferretti used it as their home stadium. (A wake for Cranshaw was also held at the stadium when his remains were brought back to Managua for interment.)

In more recent years, the 2000-capacity stadium, which became more and more run-down as time went on, lost its status, especially after the Estadio Naciónal de Fútbol de Nicaragua was built in 2011. (International matches had also been held for many years at the old Estadio Naciónal baseball stadium.) 

The Estadio Thomas Cranshaw hosted lower-league matches and was used as a training ground until last year, when Managua city council announced that both it and the old, disused baseball stadium (the Estadio Denis Martinez) behind it were to be razed and replaced by a new sports complex under the name of Complejo Deportivo Dignidad. 


The Estadio Thomas Cranshaw, Managua (Photo: Javier Hernández)


The new complex will include a baseball stadium, two practice baseball pitches, two small-sized baseball pitches and a 1950-capacity football stadium named after Miguel Buitrago, a former Nicaraguan footballer of note from the 1960s and 70s. (Both Buitrago and Cranshaw, as it turns out, were inducted into the Nicaraguan Sports Hall of Fame in February 1995. The Salon de Fama Deportes Nicaragüense will also find a new home in the complex.)

The Estadio Miguel Buitrago, which will cost around US$10.9 million (€10.1 million) is already nearing completion, will host Segunda División and Tercera División matches as well as Liga Primera club Managua FC's home matches - although mentioned in local media, the latter is yet to be confirmed.

A new football ground was badly needed, but there was surely no reason to drop Cranshaw's name. It would have been a fitting tribute to the man, sixty years after his death, for the stadium to keep its name, even if it fell under the new sports complex. 


The façade of the old Estadio Thomas Cranshaw (Photo: photographer unknown; supplied by Javier Hernándea)


Thomas Cranshaw might not have been the man who introduced football to Nicaragua, but he did a massive amount to modernise and improve the game in the country, not to mention giving a leg up to various other sports. Don Tómas is virtually unknown in his native England, and little more than a name from the past for most Nicaraguans, but he left behind an impressive legacy which remains to this day and will be hard for anyone, anywhere to beat.

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AUTHOR'S NOTE: The information contained in the article came from several different sources: La Prensa, Onda Local, The Blizzard, Facebook and the Salon de Fama Deportes Nicaragüense. Many thanks to Nicaraguan chronicler Javier Hernández for his assistance, which was considerable.

Attempts were also made to contact FENIFUT, La Prensa and the Alcadia de Managua (Managua City Hall), amongst others, for more information on the life and times of Thomas Cranshaw; unfortunately, none of them were successful. As ever, any errors and/or omissions in the article will be corrected upon notification.

Saturday, November 23, 2024

IN PICTURES: WISMARI STAADION

It doesn't look like very much nowadays, but this little football ground is one of the most historic in Estonian football and it should have a little place in the hearts of every local football fan worth their salt. This is Wismari staadion, the oldest football ground in continuous use in Tallinn and in perhaps all of Estonia.


The Wismari staadion was originally built in 1916 at the back of what was originally a German poor school, the Toomvaestekool, which itself was constructed in 1867 and has its own rather interesting history, having been used as an Estonian primary school from 1917 until the outbreak of the Second World War, and later as an industrial school, an Oncology dispensary, the Tallinn Republican dispensary and, since 1985, a five-bed psychatric hospital dealing in alcohol and drug addiction. It is even a listed building (no. 1250) in the Estonian National Register of Cultural Monuments.

The Wismari staadion with the former Toomvaestekool to the right of the pitch, behind the dressing-rooms



The Toomvaestekool owned a piece of land immediately behind it, and it was rented out to local sports club Tallinna VS Sport in 1916, a gymnastics and sports club founded in June 1912, who built dressing-rooms, an athletics track and a wooden toboggan hill, which was used in winter along with a skating-rink. Both were dismantled a few years later and replaced by a football pitch. In winter, bandy and ice-hockey were played there.


The Wismari staadion was used only once for an international match, when Estonia took on Finland on 30 September 1923. According to records, the game was moved from the Kalevi Aed staadion (now home to the Viru Keskus shopping-centre) because the pitch at the latter was apparently "too muddy."


ESS Kalev : Kaiserwald (Latvia) at the Wismari Staadion, October 1922 (Photo: Karl Hugo Akel; held in the archive of the Eesti Sporti- ja Olümpiamuuseum)


Four thousand people crammed into the Wismari staadion to see Estonia win the match by two goals to one. Vladimir Tell put the home side in front just after the hour mark, but Torsten Österlund soon levelled for Finland. However, Ernst Aleksandr Joll scored the winner for Estonia with six minutes left.


In 1932, the Wiismari staadion was apparently taken over by Eesti Spordi Selts Kalev - which modern-day Tallinna Kalev claims as its mother club - and Tallinna Velodroom, with a 250 metre-long track, which was regarded as the best in the Baltic countries at the time, was opened on 15 May of that year. After only a few years, however, it, too, was dismantled.








The deciding match in the 1924 Estonian championship final series: Tallinna Sport 2:0 ESS Kalev, 2 November 1924 (Photo: unknown; held in the archive of the Eesti Sport- ja Olümpiamuuseum)



Most of those Estonian clubs which survived until the early 1940s were disbanded when first the Soviet Union and then Germany invaded and took over the country. Others, such as Dynamo Tallinn, were founded at around that time, and went on to win a plethora of titles in what became the Estonian SSR first division, using the Wismari staadion as their home base for a number of years in the 1950s and 60s.


In recent years, the ground was being used less and less  frequently and had fallen into a state of disrepair. Finally, in 2007, the Estonian FA took action and renovated the ground, replacing the artificial pitch seven years later.


Alongside an indoor training facility, the ground is currently being used by Esiliiga (third level) side Tallinna JK Legion as a training ground for their first team and the home ground for the club's reserve and junior teams.  


Sadly, the Wismari Staadion is once again looking rather run-down and in a state of disrepair, and tenants Tallinna Legion have been finding it increasingly difficult to make ends meet, let alone find the money to do some much-needed repairs to the ground, which is owned by the Estonian FA, and now find themselves in the third level of the national football pyramid after two relegations in a row. 

The Wismari staadion is a very small ground which will most probably never again be one of Estonian football's premier stadia, but it does deserve some care and attention and it certainly should have a role to play in the future of football in the country, especially when one considers the role it has played in its past. The average historically-minded groundhopper could do worse than put the Wismari Staadion on their bucket-list

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AUTHOR'S NOTE: Much of the information contained in the above article was taken from the Estonian FA website, Wikipedia and archive issues of Eesti Spordileht (via www.digar.ee).

Photos are author's own unless otherwise stated. Link to Karl Hugo Akel's photo:  

https://www.muis.ee/et/museaalview/3222246

Many thanks to the Tallinna Kesklinna Valitsus for their assistance.