Ten Things I Miss About Arsenal's Highbury

Hands up who still misses Highbury? Here's a few memories of the grand old place - why not share yours too...



Ten Things I Miss About Arsenal's Highbury


1) The mystery of the horse’s skeleton at the Laundry End

As a kid I’d heard the rumours of a horse being buried when they were building the foundations of the original North Bank in 1913, then known as the Laundry End. That a horse and cart that had fallen into the rubble and that the unfortunate creature had to be put down.

I’d also heard that when they rebuilt the North Bank in 1993 they failed to find any remains and was disappointed to think that the tale simply did not occur. I remember a mate sitting on his shiny new seat in the North Bank the first day they opened it as an all seater stand and wondering out loud whether he was sitting near ‘that horse’.

It got a round of hearty laughter from the fans around us who knew exactly what he was talking about. It was about the only highlight of that day as a certain Mickey Quinn of Coventry City scored as unlikely a hat-trick as you will ever see as the Sky Blues tonked George Graham’s side 3-0 on the first day of the 1993/94 season.

I had forgotten all about ‘that horse’ until the move from Highbury which necessitated further digging at the beloved old ground, as it turned into the Highbury Square residential development.

Would you believe it, far below the surface workmen found two horseshoes alongside the remains of some timber, believed to be the cart. The story was true. My ten-year-old self was delighted. To be fair my 21stcentury self was pretty pleased too, when I heard the news confirming such a romantic story in our long history had been confirmed.

As far as I know the horseshoes have been put in the Arsenal museum - not that they’ve brought much luck in the way of Premier League trophies just yet….

2) The Schoolboys Enclosure

This piece of hallowed concrete was a rite of passage for all young Gunners of a certain vintage. When I first started going it was 75p entrance into the shallow terracing. No-one could call themselves a true Arsenal fan unless they stood here as a youngster, up until they put seats there in the early nineties as the ground dutifully complied with the Taylor Report.

If you know someone who claims to be a life-long Arsenal fan approaching or already in middle age, ask them if they ever stood on the Schoolboys Enclosure. If they did then chances are you’re talking to a bona-fide Gooner.

Nick Hornby recalls being terrified there as a kid, and having his scarf nicked. When I started going in the early 80s I seem to recall it was a bear pit full of streetwise Islington rascals. It says something that I was actually glad to graduate to the Clock End, and onto a whole new set of ruffians…

3) The Peanut Man

What passes for food at Arsenal these days? Genuine handcrafted pies made by machine at a fiver a pop? Nachos? Arsenal goujons?

That’s not proper football fayre.

No-one who stood at Highbury can forget the Peanut Man.

Incidentally the first time a good mate saw a picture of Stefan Schwartz advertising ‘Arsenal goujons’ at the food counters in that cramped alleyway that passed for the entrance, exit and passageway in the Clock End he asked in all seriousness ‘What the f*ck is a goo-john?’ To me I still date his question as the first sign of the gentrification of Arsenal.

The Peanut Man did what it said on the tin. Or his brown paper sack of peanuts at any rate. He sold Peanuts. But he didn’t wait for you to come to him. He came to you. Via the terraces. He was in effect offering a delivery service for monkey nuts. I always thought he must have been a contortionist the way he weaved effortlessly through huge crowds.

It always felt like the larger the crowd the more you would see him on his circuit of the ground. I remember one game against Manchester United, Arsenal actually scored when he was selling peanuts (in their shells of course) to a bloke behind me. Despite the mayhem – and me and many others inadvertently crushing up against him – he not only kept hold of his bag of nuts but actually gave the right change to the man who was by now insensible with joy.

All the while uttering his immortal words, “peanuts, peanuts, cola”.

Even writing those words brought me back to a time before pubs stayed open all day, and if you didn’t meet your friends at a time and place you had agreed on you wouldn’t see them again as there was no chance of getting in touch in this distant pre-mobile phone era…

4) Queuing at the Clock End turnstiles for big match tickets

This may not seem like a memory to those who buy their tickets over the internet these days. But believe it or not kids, for FA Cup final replays, and FA Cup semi-finals – not to mention big away cup games where Arsenal had a large allocation – you had to take your place on the street for a chance to purchase tickets.

The queue would invariably start at the top of Highbury Hill as thousands of others had the same idea. You’d then wait as patiently as you could to pass through the turnstiles for the chance to buy a ticket for the particular game that you wanted to go to. Cash only, mind.

The worst was when the powers that be decreed that tickets would go on sale for a predetermined game after the final whistle of a game that was actually taking place at the time. I recall as a kid waiting in a drunken crowd of big blokes who were all straining to hear on Avenell Road what exactly was going on at the game we had paid to see. It was like some surreal Kafka-esque experiment.

I went after school once to get tickets for a semi-final and had my new sports “Head” bag trampled in the melee, then ripped to piece by the wrought iron turnstile it had got trapped in.

It was worth it. I had just bought myself a ticket for Tottenham v Arsenal, Littlewoods Cup semi final replay at the Lane, March 4, 1987.

5) The Marble Halls

If you ask any football fan to name something about Highbury chances are that they would mention the Marble Halls. All Arsenal fans were proud of this fact.

They used to sell tickets at the counters inside under the brass metal railway plate so you were able to enter this hallowed area if you had a good enough excuse back in the day.

I loved the way your school shoes would echo to the solid stone when you walked over it. I always made sure I cleaned them if I knew I had to pop up after school to Arsenal to get tickets or transport for some away game or other.

There always used to be a gaggle of touts outside on non-match days if there was a big game approaching. Eyes darting and speaking out of the side of their mouths like all touts used to do they would pull big rolls of extremely used tenners from their pockets, and ask kids to go in and buy some tickets for them.

As a serious child who knew even then that talking out of the side of your mouth was a Bad Thing I never trusted them.

That fact holds true even today. And I’d still like to have a quiet ‘word’ with the one who sold me a stolen ticket for a ton for Chelsea away in the Champions League in 2004, but that’s a story for another day.

My mates were far less fastidious. They used to get a quid a ticket if they followed the touts’ orders. When one tried to undercut the rest by offering 50p per ticket, it prompted less than the normal efficient response from my pal when lying to those behind the counter. “Are they for the touts outside”, a terrifying club stalwart of the Travel Club asked us. As he was losing 50p a ticket on the deal my unmotivated mate simply replied ‘yes’. “F*ck ‘em then”, replied this Arsenal administrative legend who only recently left the club.

I have also seen with my own eyes an Arsenal player (who shall remain nameless) brazenly hand over a wad of tickets to a well-known tout who in turn gave him a brick of fivers. Although to be fair it’s far less annoying than learning a Spurs player splashed out £250k on a Rolls Royce during a deadly global pandemic…

The amount of dodgy dealing that used to go on there – and in front of those immaculate commissionaires resplendent in their starched uniforms too…

6) The Arsenal locomotive nameplate

I always thought that the art deco style of the famous marble halls was complemented even more by the most random item. Hands up who remembers the curved Arsenal locomotive nameplate with the small football underneath?

LNER, in 1936 rolled out a new class of engine. To publicise the feat they decided to name them after various football clubs. As befitting Arsenal’s status as the most well-known football club in England - some would say the world at the time, the first train off the production line was named Arsenal. On March 15, Lord Lonsdale, the chairman of the club, unveiled the nameplate at Kings Cross station, and the engine stayed in service until it was withdrawn in 1958, upon which the nameplate was presented to the club and hung in the Marble Halls sometime after.

For those with trainspotting tendencies the Arsenal number was 2848.

Other prominent numbers included Leeds United, 2856, and Manchester United, 2862. (Did I really just write that sentence?)

7) The Bloke Who Shouted “Come on you Rip-Roaring Reds” every time the game went quiet late in the second half

I was never sure if he was certifiably insane or just drunk. Either way it formed the soundtrack to my youth down at The Arsenal.

8) The advertising sign on the East Stand that read “JVC and Arsenal – The Perfect Match”

The power of marketing on impressionable minds. For years I only ever bought JVC branded electrical goods. More to the point I never drank Holsten Pils – and still don’t. Even now I won’t ever buy a Hewlett-Packard laptop, or heaven forbid purchase Under Armour gear, or Under Arsenal as I call it.

9) The “Make Money” sellers

Arsenal’s first venture into commercialism. People selling raffle tickets as they walked round the cinder track before games and at half-time. I’m sure one prize once was a “tray of meat”. Who says the eighties wasn’t a simpler age?

10) Shouting “We’re the North Bank/We’re the Clock End/ Highbury” to each other at loud volumes.

People who talk about the “positive matchday experience” at Arsenal these days don’t remember that going to Highbury simply used to be fun.

Although I’m lucky enough to report from the press box at the Emirates these days, on the rare occasions when I catch up with old pals for home matches and sit on my padded seat in the new ground watching non-Arsenal fans devour a box of goujons, a bag full of overpriced club shop tat at their side, while they prod me, and demand a photo of them gurning inanely during the game with their backs to the pitch, unable to name half the current team, let alone the three statues outside - I think back to the days of supporting The Arsenal at Highbury.

And die a little death at the loss of that glorious old place.

And one thing I don’t miss….

Millwall and West Ham United attempting to take the North Bank

As a kid I’d always start to get worried when I came out of Arsenal tube and saw huge mobs of shifty looking blokes I’d never seen before, desperately trying to look inconspicuous while they walked up to the turnstiles. It never worked but I must admit as I queued for the schoolboys enclosure I would let out a sigh of relief that when it did kick off I would be able to watch it from the relative safety of the enclosure.

The day the ICF let off a smoke bomb at the front of the North Bank was a particular low, as were the 12,000 Lions fans who came to N5, in the infamous FA Cup game of 1988 - all of whom seemed intent on taking a piece of Highbury back to south east London with them. Even if The Arsenal brotherhood always gave as good as they got – and then some…

What are your memories of Highbury? Share them here or on Twitter with @laythy29 and @GoonerFanzine


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comments

  1. Jack K

    Aug 04, 2020, 16:59 #117024

    So many memories... this is just the tip of the iceberg... - My first game. I was so young, I'm surprised that I remember it at all, but I distinctly remember our winning goal. - Being in the Schoolboys section and getting to (very briefly) shake Pele's hand. - Bunking into the North Bank from the Schoolboys section with my mates when no-one was looking. - Waiting for players in the Marble Halls and getting to meet my then idol - Pat Jennings (I was an aspiring 'keeper when I was very young) - Watching the marching band play before games, with everyone hoping the leader would drop the baton, as he threw it high in the air (I never saw him drop it). - Applauding Spartak Moscow (who took us apart) after the game, as they stood in the centre circle waving to all of the applause they got from Arsenal fans for their sublime performance that night. - Being 2-0 down to West Brom, and leaving a few minutes before the end, to beat the crowds on my walk home, only to hear a huge cheer, then racing back up the stairs to the Clock End just in time to see the equalizer (I never left early again). - Being invited into the dressing room before a reserve game to meet some of the players, and being given a stick of gum by Richie Powling, who was very good with a young fan. - Getting to sit in the press box for a UEFA Cup game (mum knew someone in the offices, as she sometimes did travel arrangements for the team when I was little). - Deciding to sneak in with the West Ham fans (who were given the entire Clock End), reasoning that the hooligans would try to take the North Bank, on the day they threw a yellow smoke bomb into the North Bank. I made no attempt to hide my allegiance, and the West Ham fans there were very welcoming to a young boy cheering for Arsenal after I told them why I was there - buying me hot drinks and apologizing profusely for what was happening at the other end. - Watching Sol Campbell almost single-handedly keep us out in a 0-0 draw and wishing that he played for us (little did I know that wish would come true). - After being told that I couldn't go into the new development by security guards, sneaking through an open gate after a car left, and spending a bunch of time exploring it, walking on the hallowed turf, touching it, and taking lots of video to share with friends... I could go on, but I'm probably already boring people. :-D

  2. gooner658

    Apr 28, 2020, 20:54 #116801

    Can remember my Aunt standing by the gate between main North Bank Terrace and the Schoolboy enclosure, asking the guy on the gate to pick up my brother! The guy asked her "What was he wearing". My Aunt being my aunt, said "He the kid in the red and white bobble hat and scarf". Great lady my Aunt!!

  3. John F

    Apr 03, 2020, 20:35 #116699

    The queues for tickets was something I had forgotten about. I never used to worry about playing any team apart from West Ham.The atmosphere was horrible and as you say mobs of shifty looking blokes hanging around everywhere.

  4. Rob Admin

    Apr 03, 2020, 17:35 #116698

    In the late 80's I was doing several morning and evening paper-rounds - saving up for a hifi "stack" systrem. I had eyes only for a JVC which I paid just shy of £350 for. The Sharp brand was a little pricier and probably shaded it when it came to quality but there was only ever one real choice.....