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Club History

Shaftesbury Youth Club has played an integral role in the heart of the Birkenhead community for decades.
  • 1885
    William Norrish, born on 25th April 1862, is a shy, bearded optician who teaches at Chester Street Mission Sunday School and runs a small weekly boys' club in an Ivy Street shop. He begins to plan for a larger club to replace it and gathers the first committee, led by H. J Legge, the first Chairman.
  • 1886
    The larger club, located within the Chester Street Mission Sunday School, is opened on 15th January by William Laird and meets on Friday evenings throughout the winter. Initially called the Shaftesbury Street Boys’ Club after Lord Shaftesbury, it is renamed The Shaftesbury Club for Street Boy and Working Lads several years later. In its first year, the club opens a small library from donated books to assist its educational efforts and reaches a membership of 270. On 30th April, the first year of club meetings ends with a festival including entertainment and a tea party paid for by Alice Laird, an early benefactress of the club. This festival tea subsequently becomes the traditional end to the club's winter meetings.
  • 1887
    The club begins to open on Tuesdays for younger boys, with older boys continuing to attend on Fridays.
  • 1889
    The club arranges to take over the Sunday School's lease at the Chester Street Mission and, as a condition of this, also its Savings Bank and work for Boys' Temperance.
  • 1890
    The club begins to meet on six evenings a week, with membership costing one penny each year. The Shaftesbury Aid Club, with Vivian Couche as Treasurer, is set up to raise funds.
  • 1902
    For the first time, the club organises a summer holiday in North Wales, near Caergwyle. Such holidays are continued, moving to Delamere Forest two years later.
  • 1903
    In August, with the membership now too large for Chester Street Mission to accommodate, the club buys the Ebenezer Baptist Chapel on Jackson Street for £1,250 and launches an appeal for funds to pay off the mortgage, which will last until the beginning of 1905. By 15th October the chapel has been renovated according to plans drawn up by the architect Glen Dobie, and the club holds its first meeting there, with an attendance of 600. In November, bank manager Harold C. Paul becomes Chairman.
  • 1906
    In July, the Shaftesbury Old Boys' Club is formed under E. Vivian Couche. The annual meeting, held as usual at the Town Hall, is addressed by General Baden-Powell.
  • 1907
    On 1st January, the twenty-first birthday party for the club takes place. The first summer camp at Penmaenmawr is held; Penmaenmawr will become the customary place for camping in North Wales. Except during wartime, camping is undertaken every year hereafter.
  • 1909
    The club decides to build a new building to Glen Dobie's design on vacant land on Thomas Street that was bought at the same time as the existing club building alongside it, to allow the club to open to all on the same nights.
  • 1910
    The club decides to buy additional land on Thomas Street as part of its plan, and launches its second appeal, which will last until early 1914, in order to raise the £2,700 total.
  • 1911
    On 18th May, the new building's foundation stone is laid. In November, the new building is officially opened and provides space for the Old Boys' Club and the Seniors' Club, which serves boys over
    14 1/2.
  • 1914 - 1918: The Great War
    Throughout the war, the Pioneers, a self-governing year-round group of boys founded by Norrish shortly before the war, prepare for army service and run frequent errands. With food rationing preventing festival teas from being held, Norrish arranges Good Friday rambles in the countryside, which will continue until WWII, and organises an annual basketball championship. At this time, he abandons his optician's business to concentrate on running the club as Secretary, and the committee begin to pay him a salary. In 1916, the club is renamed The Shaftesbury Boys' Club.
  • 1923
    In September, the club decides to buy a recreation ground near Prenton Park for £1,900 and conducts a short appeal to raise the funds needed. The new ground is opened on 24th October, enabling regular organised Saturday football to begin.
  • 1924
    On 8th June, the playing field is ceremonially dedicated to the members who died fighting in the war.
  • 1927
    The 31st Birkenhead Scout Troop is formed at Shaftesbury with the aid of Herbert Bickersteth, a cotton broker, and his wife Edith, both of whom are great benefactors of the club. It will last until the beginning of WWII.
  • 1932
    With membership around 1,300, the club decides to demolish the former chapel and replace it with a new building. Another public appeal for funds is undertaken.
  • 1933
    On 16th September, Herbert Bickersteth opens a new pavilion on the recreation ground, built at the Bickersteths' expense.
  • 1936
    The new building is opened on 2nd October, with the gymnasium dedicated to Norrish's memory who died in 1934. Membership reaches a peak of 1856.
  • 1939 - 1945: World War II
    The outbreak of WWII initially reduces club activities. In 1940, the basement of the new building is commandeered for use as a bomb shelter, and in May 1941, the ground floor rooms at Jackson Street are taken over for use as a kitchen and canteen; however, in the winter of that year, reduced bombing enables the club to begin operating again.
  • 1946
    January, the club holds a celebration for the troops' homecoming and its sixtieth anniversary.
  • 1954
    The Shaftesbury Supporters' Association is set up to conduct continuing fund-raising. Improvements begin on the recreation ground and membership fees are raised from one penny to three pennies for the first time.
  • 1965
    At Easter, a party of twelve boys are taken to play basketball at Grenvilliers to celebrate its twinning with Birkenhead. The traffic congestion around the Birkenhead tunnel entrance results in a large-scale clearance of housing around the club to make way for measures to control it.
  • 1970
    In the autumn, work begins on a new club at Mendip Road, by the Recreation Ground, and a public appeal for funds is begun to supplement the grant money obtained from government. Annual membership fees are raised again as a condition of the grants.
  • 1971
    On 28th October, the new club building at Mendip Road is opened by Lord Leverhulme, where it remains to this day.
  • 2019
    The Shaftesbury Youth Club's Borough Road site is acquired from Wirral Borough Council as an asset transfer.
  • 2024
    The facilities at Shaftes undergo a huge transformation with the new offering including a state of the art 3G All Weather Pitch, a Pavilion, and a purpose built Community Hub
"Thanks for the fun and friendships made."

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Registered Office: Shaftesbury Youth Club, 60 Mendip Road, Prenton, Birkenhead, Merseyside, CH42 8NU

Telephone: 0151 608 7165                Email: info@shaftes.org.uk

A registered UK charity, Charity Reference Number: 520021


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