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Thread: Colour pic of Meadow Lane in 1968

  1. #11
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
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    Quote Originally Posted by Frigiliana Pie 1 View Post
    I think it might be the game against Brentford on 2nd March 1968. I still have a programme for that match which states that Brentford would be playing in navy blue shirts and white shorts (no information about the socks). That would fit with the red and white scarves.

    There was another game against Brentford on 26 October 1968 but the state of the pitch suggests it was the earlier game.

    Notts won the March fixture 2-1 with goals from Jim Murphy and Ron Farmer. The attendance was 4486. We lost the October fixture 0-2 in front of 4173. I have a vague recollection of Notts being ripped apart by a winger called Allan Mansley who later played a few games for us without success. The Brentford Manager at the time was Jimmy Sirrel.
    Thanks for that. I think this is historically significant for being the first Notts match in history to be captured in colour.
    2nd March 1968 v Brentford would make sense. There's no badge on their shirts, which Southend had and would be clearly visible as it was on a large white backdrop.
    If these pictures were commissioned by the club then it would probably be no coincidence that it was the first time Notts played Brentford at home after Chairman Jack Dunnett left them for us.
    I've found a slightly larger version of the pic and magnified it, but it's still very difficult to make out any of the players.

  2. #12
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
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    11,262
    It's Brentford then, that clears that up. The fans with the red and white scarves look too cool to be Forest anyway, they have always been a scruffy bunch. The Brentford fans are clearly dedicated followers of fashion, with a bit of a mod look. Apart from the girls in mini skirts and white boots, we've got a pork pie hat in there, an Arthur Daley leather coat and a couple of matching donkeys jackets (in 1968?).

  3. #13
    Join Date
    Feb 2002
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    6,937
    Thanks for posting these. For people like myself who were not alive in the 70's and before it's good to see pictures of what Meadow Lane used to look like before it was redeveloped in the early 90's as it's current guise.

  4. #14
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
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    Definitely the Bees [ how appropriate ]


    The May Southend game was a blazing hot day.

  5. #15
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    Feb 2010
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    Quote Originally Posted by MAD_MAGPIE View Post
    Thanks for posting these. For people like myself who were not alive in the 70's and before it's good to see pictures of what Meadow Lane used to look like before it was redeveloped in the early 90's as it's current guise.
    Perhaps for you young folk we should explain that we had cable TV back in those days! - note the Rediffusion advert on the Meadow Lane stand.

    Oh and weren't the floodlights, only installed a few years before, the most advanced in the country at the time?

  6. #16
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    Jun 2003
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    Quote Originally Posted by Old_pie View Post
    Perhaps for you young folk we should explain that we had cable TV back in those days! - note the Rediffusion advert on the Meadow Lane stand.

    No extra channels though, unless you count Yorkshire TV (or the larger Granada TV area as it was until that summer). It would have been a necessity in parts of Arnold, Carrington, Daybrook, Mapperley, Sherwood and Woodthorpe because of the hills obscuring the transmitter signals. They eventually got four extra stations in 1984 including a pre-Murdoch owned SKY TV channel, the impact on the football world soon to be felt to the point of the Football League itself being ripped apart. Astonishing really, looking back.
    The ad on the Meadow Lane End roof was probably more to do with encouraging people to rent sets from Redifussion rather than take up cable which supplied about 10,000 homes. My parents rented from them until 1982, but TV sets often broke down so it did make sense until they became more reliable in the 1980s.

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