A fitting tribute to William McGregor, the man who founded the Football League


The grave of William McGregor in St Mary's Church, Handsworth

Over the years, it could be argued, Birmingham has often been too modest about its achievements.

Other cities vaunt themselves shamelessly, sometimes gracelessly and groundlessly, to the skies.

Birmingham has plenty to shout about, make no mistake, but has not always felt the need to shout. Even when the subject is a source of enormous and fully-justified pride.

The grave of William McGregor was a prime example of such modesty. Until this week.

When McGregor died, 100 years ago, on December 20, 1911, the city lost a giant of a man.

His input into his community was many-stranded. Scotland-born, but warmly-adopted Brummie from early adulthood, McGregor was a long-standing member of Wheeler Street Congregational Church, a staunch Liberal and a prominent businessman through the family firm of drapers.

A teetotaller, he was a man of much energy and many interests but none of his passions were greater than football – and his beloved Aston Villa where he held, at various times, every significant off-field position, including chairman.

McGregor was deeply embedded in Birmingham life but possessed too much talent for his influence to remain merely parochial.

And that influence was to spread not just beyond the city limits around this country but worldwide.

As founder of the Football League, in 1888, ‘Mac’ left an indelible mark upon English history.

In that single visionary act he shaped the spare time of a nation (and the world, as the English League was copied around the globe) for generations to come. Perhaps forever.

Statue of William McGregor outside Villa Park

William McGregor took the unwieldy mess that was football in its formative years and transformed it into a structure that became integral to day-to-day life.

One that would supply comfort after the horrors of war, maintain spirits through austere times and, year in and year out, simply give millions of lives a lot of fun.

Yet when McGregor passed away, aged 61, although his funeral drew the great and the good of English football to St Mary’s Church, Handsworth, the monument upon his resting place was plain, containing a simple family inscription.

In 1911, of course, the Football League was still relatively young, in its 23rd year. The magnitude it was to assume could not then be known.

But it is known now. A 100 years on the immense legacy left by McGregor is clear.

Worth a mention for posterity on his headstone, for sure. And, thanks to Aston Villa Supporters Trust, the omission, humbly made, has been respectfully rectified.

On Tuesday, a century to the day since McGregor died, his gravestone, restored and amended, was rededicated by the Bishop of Aston the Rt Revd Andrew Watson.

Representatives of the Football League's 12 founding clubs at the grave of William McGregor in Handsworth for the re-dedication ceremony

Among those in attendance were Football League president Lord Brian Mawhinney, former Villa chairman Doug Ellis and representatives of all 12 original members of the League.

Speaking inside St Mary’s, Mawhinney speculated that McGregor, a man of great humility, would be “chuffed” to see his centenary marked in this way and “gobsmacked” to learn that, between 2000 and 2010, the competition he created, now 72-strong, attracted, annually, more than 16 million spectators.

That impressive figure was achieved, added Mawhinney, without the “luminaries” of the Premiership.

Here, perhaps, was the elephant in the room.

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