Historical Football Kits

 

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Hartlepool United

Formed 1908

Founder member of Third Division (North) 1921. Relegated to the National League 2017

Promoted to League Two 2021

Kit History

 

 

 

Hartlepools United

 

1908

1908-1911 a j q A

1912-1920 q

1921-1922 k q w

hartlepools  united 1922-23

1922-1923 w z

Socks not confirmed
hartlepools  united 1924-26

1924-1926 w

hartlepools  united 1926-27

1926-1927 w

1931-1932 k w v

1932-1935 k q w

hartlepools united 1935-36

1935-1936 u w

1936-1937 k

1937-1939 q

1946-1947 k

1947-1952 d k

hartlepools united 1952-53

1952-1953 A

1953-1954 k w

1955-1956 d k

1956-1957 k

1957-1958 k

1958-1959 k

1959-Jan 1960 k n w

Jan 1960-1962 e l q w

hartlepools united 1962-63

1962-1963 v

hartlepools  united 1963-64

1963-1965 w

1965-1966 f q v

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hartlepools united 1966-67

1966-1967 v

hartlepools united 1967-68

1967-1968 w

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1968-1969 c w

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Hartlepool

 

1968

1969-1971 m w

1971-1972 g w

1972-1973 c w

hartlepool 1973-74

1973-1974 w j

1974-1975 q w

Umbro

1975-1977 f s w

 

 

 

Hartlepool United

 

1977

Bukta

1977-1978 f s

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Admiral

1978-1980 j q s w

Le Coq Sportif

1980-1981 j q s w

Umbro
hartlepool 1981-82 kit

1981-1982 t w

Spall
hartlepool  united 1982-83

1982-1983 w

Admiral

1983-1984 h s w

Umbro

Aug-Dec 1984 q w

Dates tbc
Umbro
hartlepool  united 1985

Jan-April 1985 j w

Dates tbc
Spall
hartlepool  united 1986-87

1985-1987 a j w

Spall

1987-1988 q

Scoreline

1988-1989 m q w

hartlepool united 1989-90

1989-1990 x

1990-1991 a o p w

Bukta

1991-1992 b i w

Umbro

1992-1993 p w

Loki

1993-1995 e i q r w

Cica

1995-1997 e q r w

Own Brand

1997-1999 c p r w

Super League

1999-2000 e r

Own Brand

2000-2002 e o y

TFG Sports

2002-2003 e o r

TFG Sports

2003-2004 e o r

Nike

2004-2006 c r

Nike

2006-2008 a

Nike
hartlepool united 2008-09 home kit

2008-2009 a

Nike
hartlepool united 2009-10 strip

2009-2011 a

Nike
hartlepool united fc 2011-12 home kit

2011-2013 a

Nike
hartlepool united fc 2013-14 home kit

2013-2014 a

Nike
hartlepool united 2014-15

2014-2015 a

Nike
hartlepool united 2015-16 kit

2015-2016 a

Nike
hartlepool united 2016-17 1st kit

2016-2017 a

BLK
Hartlepool united 2017-18

2017-2018 a

BLK
hartlepool united 2018-19

2018-2019 a

O'Neills
hartlepool united 2019-20 1st kit

2019-2020 a

O'Neills
hartlepool united 2020-21

2020-2021 a

O'Neill's
hartlepool united 2021-22

2021-2022 a

Errea
hartlepool united 2022-23

2022-2023 a

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Background

In 1881, West Hartlepool AFC was formed; they joined the Northern League around 1900 and went on to win the FA Amateur Cup in 1905.

In 1886, the West Hartlepool Rugby Club was founded and they built what became known as the Victoria Stadium in an old limestone quarry. When this club folded in 1908 a new limited company was formed to take over the ground and field a professional association football club. Despite being located in West Hartlepool, and over the objections of the incumbent amateur club, the new outfit took the name of Hartlepools United, representing the twin towns of Hartlepool and West Hartlepool. For a short period the two co-existed and even shared the same ground until 1910 when West Hartlepool AFC was wound up and their assets passed to the professional club.

Hartlepools United acquired the unusual nickname of “The Monkey Hangers” after a grisly story from the Napoleonic Wars of the early 19th century. Legend has it that a French vessel foundered in a storm off the Hartlepool coast, the only survivor being a monkey, washed up on shore and found by local fishermen. Unfamiliar with what a French sailor might look like and unable to communicate with it, the fishermen hung the unfortunate beast from the mast of one of their boats as a spy. Today, the club has a monkey as its mascot.

During the First World War, the Victoria Ground was twice damaged by enemy action, the first a naval bombardment and later on by zeppelin raid, causing the club to build a temporary wooden stand. For many years afterwards, the board pursued a claim for damages against the German government without success.

In 1921, having finished in the top half of the North Eastern League, “Pools” were invited to join the Football League’s new Northern Section of the Third Division. During the close season a Workington player was transferred to the club in exchange for £10 and a box of kippers.

Prior to the outbreak of the Second World War the team made little impression and were forced to seek re-election on three occasions.During the late 1940s and throughout the 1950s there was still little for the fans to cheer about although they did enjoy some stirring FA Cup ties, most notable of which was a narrow 3-4 defeat by Manchester United’s “Busby Babes” in 1957.

hartlepools united crest 1959The first time that a crest appeared on 'Pools' shirts was the 1959-60 season when a simple shield bearing the club's initials was worn on the white shirts that season. This was dropped in January 1959 or thereabouts when a new set of blue and striped shirts were adopted.

That Pools survived the early 1960s is something of a miracle, as they applied for re-election on five successive occasions between 1960 and 1964. They were rescued by the young Brian Clough who, as manager, brought in Peter Taylor from Burton Albion as his assistant. Clough famously visited every pub in the two towns to raise money (and, no doubt enjoying a few free pints on the way.) Before Clough and Taylor went on to make history at Derby County and later Nottingham Forest, they built a side that won promotion for the first time in 1968.

hartlepools united crest 1974In August of 1968 the twin towns were amalgamated and to mark the occasion the club changed its name to Hartlepool FC. They could not survive in the higher level, however, and after a single season they were relegated back to the Fourth Division. It would be more than 20 years before the club won promotion a second time and six times they had hartepool fc crest 1975to go cap in hand to the League AGM to ask for re-election.

In 1974 a crest appeared once again, a leaping hart within a triangle above the new club name. The motif was taken from the official crest of the newly enlarged town, which featured a hart at bay above a pool of water (a hartlepool united crest 1977typical heraldic pun). This was replaced the following season by a simple HFC monogram but was adopted once again in 1977, reversed out on a blue background with the new title of the club, Hartlepool United, added. The constant financial struggle that the club faced may explain why the hartlepool united crest 1985club crest did not appear again until 1985.

In 1985, following the Bradford fire disaster, the 60 year-old “temporary” wooden stand was finally demolished. That same year a new, very contemporary crest was designed and was worn for the next five seasons.

hartlepool united crest 1990In 1989 former Spurs star, Cyril Knowles, was appointed manager and built the club’s second promotion winning team. Tragically, Knowles died of a brain tumour shortly before the club won promotion in 1991. This success signaled an extraordinary burst of creativity in the design of the club's strips. All the various shades of blue previously worn were combined in the chequered kit of 1991-92. The badge of this period, first worn in 1990 was an even more modern, almost abstract interpretation of the traditional hart theme. Several variants appeared with the club's initials over hartlepool united crest 1991the next few seasons.

In January 1993 the club played Crystal Palace in an FA Cup Third Round tie with a winding up order hanging over them. They were rescued by a local business man, Harold Hornsey but the new regime could not stop them from being relegated in 1994 to the hartlepool united 1995new Third Division (formerly the Fourth) where they resumed their traditional struggle to avoid finishing in the bottom four. Hornsey oversaw a £2m investment in the Victoria Ground that included the building of two new stands and ran a competition in 1995 to design a new club crest that would represent 'our town.' The winning entry celebrated the twin town's maritime connections with a central motif of an old fashioned ship's helm with the motto "The Town's Club" underneath.

Having stabilised the club's finances and restored their reputation in the town, Hornsey sold his interest to an Aberdeen based company, Increased Oil Recovery Ltd. Despite local skepticism about IOR’s intentions, Hartlepool have been resurgent in recent times. With more than £2m invested in ground improvements, they reached the play-offs three times in succession (1990-2002) before hartlepool united 2008winning automatic promotion in second place in 2003. Against all expectation they continued to challenge for promotion, reaching the play-offs again in 2004 and 2005 before relegation in 2006 took the 'Pool back into the basement, now known as League Two.

For their centenary season, 2008-09, the team reverted to their original white shirts before returning to their more familiar stripes (generally standard Nike templates).

hartlepool united 2014Hartlepool seemed bound for relegation to the National League (previously the Conference) in 2014-15. Ten points adrift in January newly appointed manager Ronnie Moore steered the team to safety in the penultimate match of the season. The owners, Ken Hodcroft, having lost the confidence of supporters sold the club to Peter Harris in December 2014 but the takeover fell through hartlepool united 2015after Harris was charged with fraud and Hodcroft continued as chairman. In 2017, Hartlepool lost their place in League Two and were relegated to the National League.

A new badge was introduced in June 2017 ostensibly because the complexity of the previous version made it impractical to reproduce digitally. There was also some question about the the relevance of the ship's wheel to the club's heritage so the new version revived the hart that first appeared in 1974, seen standing on two hartlepool united crest 2017horizontal bands that represent water: hart-le-pool.

In early 2018 HMRC took out a winding up order over unpaid taxes but the club was saved after a young supporter, Rachel Cartwright set up a fund-raising campaign and paid off the tax bill. However, Hartlepool remained on the brink with debts increasing by £130,000 every month. In April 2019 local businessman, Raj Singh, and Sky Sports presenter, Jeff Stelling, took over the club. The takeover was not universally welcomed as Singh had previously driven Darlington FC effectively into liquidation.

In the 2020-21 season, which was played mainly behind closed doors, Hartlepools were unbeaten in their final 16 matches and finished fourth to qualify for the play-offs. After defeating Bromley and Stockport they met Torquay United in the final at Ashton Gate. 'Pools led until the 95th minute when Torquay's goalkeeper headed a dramatic equaliser. There was no score in extra-time but Hartlepool held their nerve to win 5-4 on penalties and return to the Football League after an absence of four seasons.

You are welcome to Contact Me with corrections and additions.

Sources

  • (a) Hartlepool United Official Website
  • (b) Club Colours (Bob Bickerton 1998)
  • (c) Football Focus
  • (d) Workington AFC - Images of Sport (Paul Eade 2003)
  • (e) empics
  • (f) Kit Classics
  • (g) Football Cards
  • (h) York City FC - Images of Sport (David Batters)
  • (i) Premier Shirts
  • (j) Ralph Pomeroy
  • (k) Hartlepool United (Ed Law 1989) - information provided by Greger Lindberg
  • (l) Greger Lindberg
  • (m) Pete's Picture Palace
  • (n) Stephen Hall
  • (o) Steve Arrundale
  • (p) Paul Bell
  • (q) Paul Bell also runs a site with a history of Hartlepool shirts at poolstats
  • (r) David King
  • (s) Alick Milne
  • (t) Scunthorpe United - A Pictorial History (John Staff 2007)
  • (u) My photo library
  • (v) Keith Ellis
  • (w) The Official History of Hartlepool United FC 1908-2008
  • (x) William Gittons
  • (y) José Baptista
  • (z) Athletic News (19 February 1923) submitted by Kingsley (Wrexham FC)
  • (A) Simon Monks

Crests are the property of Hartlepool United FC.