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‘Unique piece of women’s football history’ restored

'Unique piece of women's football history' restored

Emma StanleyNorth West

BBC/Ricochet Ltd Chris Shaw, Gail Newsham, Sonnaz Nooranvary standing in the Repair Shop barn. Gail is in the middle holding the damaged scrapbook with is large with a red/brown cover wit patches of tape on it. She is wearing a denim jacket and is smiling, with short white hair and black-frames glassesBBC/Ricochet Ltd
Chris Shaw, Gail Newsham and Sonnaz Nooranvary in the famous Repair Shop barn

A women's football historian who had a scrapbook repaired on BBC One's The Repair Shop said it was "the most wonderful experience of my life".

Gail Newsham visited the barn with her scrapbook of newspaper cuttings, photographs and letters from 1917, compiled by Alfred Frankland who was manager of the Dick, Kerr Ladies football team.

The team got its name from the munitions factory in Preston, Lancashire, where most of the team worked during World War One – and chalked up more than 200 games without defeat.

"They are the most important team in the history of women's football," Gail said. "They weren't the first, but they were the best."

BBC/Ricochet Ltd A close up of the inside of the book before its repair, showing yellowing pages that are rolling at the edgesBBC/Ricochet Ltd
Book restorer Chris Shaw said repairing the scrapbook was "a fascinating delve into the women's achievements"

Dick, Kerr Ladies was founded at Dick, Kerr & Co. munitions factory in 1917 to raise money for wounded soldiers.

They raised £600 in their first game on Christmas Day that year, which took place at Preston North End's Deepdale ground before 10,000 spectators.

Newsham's unique scrapbook was given to her by former manager Kathleen Latham and charts "the origin of the Dick Kerr's Ladies", she told BBC Radio Lancashire.

"I was a football lass myself," she said.

"As soon as I could walk I was kicking a ball about and I grew up in the same streets that they did and somebody had to tell their story before it was too late."

She said the book was "a unique piece of women's football history", but it had got to the point where she was "scared of touching it".

"I couldn't pick it up without it falling apart, so consequently it had been stored away in a dark corner so that it didn't deteriorate all together, so you couldn't really show it anybody," she said.

BBC/Ricochet Ltd Gold leaf inscription of Dick, Kerr, Ladies on a brown leather book spineBBC/Ricochet Ltd
Book restorer Chris Shaw mad the pages stronger, re-bound them and tooled the team's name in gold to the leather spine

Book restorer Chris Shaw said repairing it was "a fascinating delve into the women's achievements".

He worked his magic, making the pages stronger, re-binding them and tooling "Dick, Kerr Ladies" in gold to the leather spine.

The finished scrapbook was "beyond anything I could have imagined", Gail said.

"I was over the moon, it was the most wonderful experience of my life.

     
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