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Display Ground information
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Burnden Park was a League ground for 103 seasons;
from July 1st, 1895 to
August 30th, 1997
.
Burnden Park was the 47th
ground
to be used for a League game.
Year opened 1895 Year closed 1997
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GROUND HISTORY adapted from "The Ultimate Directory of English & Scottish Football League Grounds" |
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Bolton Wanderers FC moved to Burnden Park, sited on industrial wasteland, from Pikes Lane in 1895 and opened it on August 15th with the towns 9th Annual Athletics Festival. The pitch was surrounded by an oval cycle track and the facilities included a 1,600 seat stand on the east side, a standing enclosure for 5,000 on the west and embankments around the remainder of the ground. Further improvements in 1905 included the removal of the cycle track and construction of a main stand on the west side whilst, one year later, the south end was terraced and covered.
The club bought the freehold to the ground in 1914, added an angled extension to the main stand in 1915 and replaced the stand on the east side with the 2,750 seat Burnden Stand in 1928. Following these alterations the record attendance of 69,912 was set at the FA Cup 5th Round tie v. Manchester City (2-4) on February 18th, 1933.
Immediately after the end of WWII a major disaster occurred at the ground during the FA Cup 6th Round, 2nd Leg with Stoke City (0-0) on March 9th, 1946 when hundreds broke into the packed ground at the north end, resulting in the death of 33 people and injuries to 400. Apart from modernizing the north end in the wake of this event, the only other alterations to the ground over the next forty years or so involved the installation of seats at the south end.
In 1986 part of the north end of the ground was sold to a food retail chain, resulting in the demolition of the west end of the terracing and construction of a supermarket, the back wall of which extended for over half of the pitch width. As an interim measure when Bolton Wanderers FC was promoted to the Premier League in 1995 a temporary 252 seat stand was squeezed in between the wall and the pitch.
The club moved to the Reebok Stadium in 1997 and the site is now totally occupied by the supermarket. |
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GROUND DETAILS adapted from "The Extreme Groundhoppers Guide" |
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