Scratching Shed
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Why was it so named? I can't find a definitive answer having goggled round a bit. Kop's easy - various stadia have them, named for their resemblance to a steep hill named Spion Kop, scene of a Boer War battle. The only other vague reference is to chicken houses... Perhaps it was just that it *looked* like a chicken house.
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Geordie-exile wrote: Why was it so named? I can't find a definitive answer having goggled round a bit. Kop's easy - various stadia have them, named for their resemblance to a steep hill named Spion Kop, scene of a Boer War battle. The only other vague reference is to chicken houses... Perhaps it was just that it *looked* like a chicken house. Maybe because you were all packed in tight, if one person itched, everybody itched ... just a guess.
- blackprince
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Geordie-exile wrote: Why was it so named? I can't find a definitive answer having goggled round a bit. Kop's easy - various stadia have them, named for their resemblance to a steep hill named Spion Kop, scene of a Boer War battle. The only other vague reference is to chicken houses... Perhaps it was just that it *looked* like a chicken house. I think you have answered your own question it resembled a large chicken house - described as follows"Around the turn of the century it was common to have a "scratching shed" attached to the henhouse, which was a substitute for range during the winter. The scratching shed was usually open-fronted (that is, walled on three sides only, with chicken wire on the fourth side), with a thick layer of loose straw on the floor. Grain is fed in the scratching shed, which is where the birds get their fresh air, exercise, and sunshine."
It used to be said that the statue of the Black Prince had been placed in City Square , near the station, pointing South to tell all the southerners who've just got off the train to b****r off back down south!
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Leeds Road, Huddersfield and Valley Parade in Bradford both had similar structures - both long gone now of course. The one at Huddersfield was always known as the 'Cowshed'. Originally, and until the 1960's, the 'shed' was where most Leeds supporters gathered - being cheap and under cover - away fans would usually be in the open 'Kop' opposite(no segragation then of course). When a new roofed stand replaced the old earth -banked open Kop in 1969 the situation reversed and it was the 'Kop'(or Gelderd End to use a name fom the past!) that Leeds fans always occupied - as is still the case.
there are 10 types of people in the world. Those that understand ternary, those that don't and those that think this a joke about the binary system.
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Trojan wrote: I think most grounds had a "shed" Gloucester Ru ground still does. I tremble to mention it on here, but I'm a Featherstone Rovers fan (no I'm not Fevlad) and PO Road used to have the Bullock Shed (named after Bullock of B&S buses fame) I wouldn't say 'most' but they were by no means unusual.
there are 10 types of people in the world. Those that understand ternary, those that don't and those that think this a joke about the binary system.