Claret Blue and Green
Cheque winging its way. Will the headstone tell of the great man's achievement or are the details simply personal? It is not clear from the photo.
Thank you. I suppose a small inset panel or secondary inscription conveying the importance of WMcG historically would be inappropriate or out of the question.
Quote from: brian green on August 20, 2011, 08:07:09 PMThank you. I suppose a small inset panel or secondary inscription conveying the importance of WMcG historically would be inappropriate or out of the question.I may be wrong, but I love the fact that the grave of the most important figure in football history doesn't mention football.
Good cause. I've got Simon Inglis' centenary history of the Football League - the Men Who Made It (1988) and his opening chapter is appropriately devoted to McGregor and there are some good anecdotes in there, including when he once tracked a thief to London who had stolen a piano from Villa's meeting room.A couple of years ago, before inevitably dropping in at the Barton's Arms, I had a walk around the area to see how many of the old Villa haunts were still standing (not too many). Not many on the No 7 bus would think there's a bit of heritage not far away...McGregor's old house in the late 1880s, early 1890s in Witton Road:http://i1014.photobucket.com/albums/af264/DAFTS_photos/OldVilla10.jpgRoughly the site of his old draper's shop in Summer Lane, where according to Inglis, Andy Hunter worked as an assistant after he retired from playing:http://i1014.photobucket.com/albums/af264/DAFTS_photos/OldVilla4.jpgThis has been flattened now. It's the site of the old coffee house, where according to the story McGregor and his friend Joe Tillotson - both active Liberals and Villa enthusiasts - discussed the idea of a Football League. Apparently its use by the Villa players was also encouraged to keep them out of pubs:http://i1014.photobucket.com/albums/af264/DAFTS_photos/OldVilla5.jpg