The Dell in Milton Road,
Southampton
, England
was the home
ground of Southampton Football Club, between 1898 and
2001.

The Dell, 2000
Early days
The stadium was opened in September 1898, with the inaugural match
on 3 September being against
Brighton United. The first goal at the
stadium was scored by
Watty Keay, with
the others from
Abe Hartley,
Jim McKenzie and
Tom Smith, as Saints won
4-1. The stadium had been built for an estimated £10,000 by George
Thomas, a local fish merchant, who had bought the land just off
Hill Lane and had transformed what was a natural dell, a lake
flanked by banks of woodland. Thousands of tons of rubble had to be
used to provide the foundations for the new ground. Initially the
stadium had open staging behind each of the goals with stands along
each side. The estimated capacity on opening was 24,500, of which
4,000 were seated.
Redevelopment
In 1927, the original West Stand was demolished (together with the
club secretary's house) and the new West Stand was built.
This was
designed by Archibald Leitch, one
of the greatest football stand designers of the day, who had also
designed stands at Fratton
Park
, Roker
Park
and at Goodison Park
. A year later, on the last day of the
1928-29 season a dropped cigarette caused a fire which destroyed
the East Stand. A replacement stand was built which mirrored the
West Stand, increasing the ground capacity to approximately
30,000.
Wartime incidents
On 30 November 1940, a German bomb fell on the stadium during
The Blitz, creating an 18-foot crater in
the Milton Road penalty area.
While the pitch was being restored, Saints
had to play their remaining fixtures in 1940-41 away, although in
February 1941, they played a "home" War Cup tie with Brentford at Fratton Park
, Portsmouth
.
In March 1941, an explosion of munitions stored at the ground
caused a major fire in the West Stand although this was rebuilt
soon afterwards.
At the
start of the 1941-42 season they played their home games at Dew
Lane, Eastleigh
, before the Dell was re-opened in October
1941.
Post-war
In 1950, The Dell became the first ground in England to have
permanent floodlighting installed. The first game played under the
lights was on 31 October 1950, in a friendly against
Bournemouth & Boscombe Athletic,
followed a year later by the first "official" match under
floodlights, a Football Combination (Reserve team) match against
Tottenham Hotspur on 1
October 1951.
During the post-war years, huge crowds packed into The Dell. The
attendance record was broken on 8 October 1969, when 31,044 watched
Saints lose 3-0 to a
Manchester
United team which included
George
Best and
Bobby Charlton.
Further redevelopment
In the 1980s, there were several changes at the ground, with the
makeshift
chocolate boxes at the Milton Road end being
replaced by a new stand used for family ticket holders a two level
concrete structure. The standing areas under the East and West
stands being fitted with bench seats, before The Dell became an
all-seater stadium in the early 1990s in the wake of the
Hillsborough disaster on 15 April
1989, which obliged all clubs in the top two English divisions had
all-seater stadiums. New stands were erected at both ends of the
stadium, but by the
1993-94
season the stadium now had a capacity of just over 15,000, the
smallest in the top level of English football. The Milton Road
Stand was notable for its wedge-like appearance.
[82729]
Final days
By this time, the Saints were looking for a new home.
By the mid 1990s it
seemed as if the search was over as the club announced plans to
move to a new stadium at Monks Brook
playing fields near the village of North Stoneham
, Eastleigh
. However, the club fell into a dispute with
the local council about the lack of community facilities. Many
people in Eastleigh were also unhappy with having another town's
football club in their area.
The dispute was resolved when the chairman,
Rupert Lowe, declared new plans for the
club to move to a new 32,000-seat stadium
, for a cost of £32 million, on Brittania Road on
the banks of the River Itchen.
The relocation was confirmed at the end of the
1998-99 season (when Southampton
achieved a late escape from relegation for the sixth time in eight
seasons) and work began soon afterwards.
The new St Mary's Stadium was ready for the
2001-02 season.
On 19 May 2001, legendary midfielder
Matthew Le Tissier (who retired from
playing a year later) said goodbye to the stadium that had been
host to his entire professional career by scoring a spectacular
volley in the final minutes of the last league game securing a 3-2
win against
Arsenal.
On 26 May, the club's fans said goodbye to The Dell by stripping
all of its seats, the pitch and one man even walked off with an
advertising board at the end of a friendly with
Brighton and Hove Albion - making
them the first and last club to play Southampton at the stadium.
Saints won this game 1-0, with the goal (the last ever at The Dell)
being scored by
Uwe Rösler.
During its 103-year life, The Dell had been home to Southampton
during some of its finest moments - most of all during the
1976 FA Cup run, which finished with a win
at Wembley.
The Dell was demolished later in 2001 and a housing estate was
built on the site.
[82730]. The apartment blocks on the site bear
the names of Saints Legends:
References
External links