Football Clubs To Remember Disaster
May 11th 1985
It started with a spark in the corner of the Main Stand at Valley Parade, catching alight the rubbish under the wooden seats of a wooden stand. Within four minutes, the stand had been reduced to a burnt-out shell.
Fifty-six people arrived for a game of football that day, and did not go home. Two of the fatal casualties were supporters of Lincoln City, Bradford City’s opponents on its last game of the season, and eleven were children.
Hundreds more spectators were injured, and thousands witnessed an event that many have described as ‘the worst day of their lives’.
If you think of the families and friends of all these people, and all the consequences in their lives over the years, you will have some idea of the impact on Bradford.
The Lord Mayor spoke recently of the Fire ‘tearing the heart out of the city’. The emotions are still raw. And the memories are always there; they may be less prominent at times, and at other times more present in thought.
But they never go away.
Bradford Remembers … and the Football Community too
Bradford remembers the Disaster in different ways, many of them private and quietly stated. The public memorials have come to focus on two main events:
The minute’s silence at the start of the last home game of the regular season at Valley Parade, which occurs this year at 3.00 pm on Saturday April 25th 2015, at the match vs. Barnsley;
The Annual Memorial Service held in Centenary Square in the town centre of Bradford at 11.00 am on the exact Anniversary of the Disaster, which falls this year on Monday, May 11th 2015.
On this 30th Anniversary of the Fire Disaster, and for the first time, there is a national dimension to the Commemoration.
The FA has invited all clubs within the Premier League, the Football League, the Women’s Super League, and at County FA level to observe a minute’s silence in memory of all those who suffered on May 11th 1985, at all matches played in England on the weekend of April 25th/April 26th *
As well as support from the English FA, the Premier League, the Football League, and the Women’s Super League, the 30th Anniversary Commemoration is backed by the Scottish FA, the Professional Footballers Association, Supporters Direct and the football supporters federation.
Bradford City club and fans appreciate deeply this response of the national football community to the Commemoration, which has transcended all the usual rivalries within the game.
The Legacy of the Disaster
There are two particular legacies of the Disaster that show how healing and renewal can come even from the worst of circumstances.
The Disaster led to improvements in the construction and safety of football grounds that ensure, hopefully, that nothing like Bradford 1985 can happen ever again, anywhere.
But it is worth reflecting that our safety as football supporters today rests to some degree on the sufferings of those caught up in the events of May 11th 1985.
The number and severity of casualties on that day had threatened to overwhelm the health services. Special emergency wards were set up.
Surgeons and nurses were called in from far afield to cope with the injured. And many local people – whether City fans or not – came to sit with patients, or to bring them food, or to offer support.
Much of this activity was coordinated by a young doctor, David Sharpe, who began to develop innovative techniques for treating the burns' victims.
As a result of this experience, he went on to found and to lead the Plastic Surgery and Burns Research Unit (PSBRU) at the University of Bradford. Professor Sharpe OBE remained active in the field until his retirement last year.
The existence of the PSBRU – known also as ‘the Bradford Burns Unit’ – stands as a lasting memorial, and a living legacy, of the Fire Disaster.
It depends entirely on public donations for its continued survival. Memorial activity in Bradford and elsewhere often takes the form of fundraising for the Burns Unit.
This year, for example, there is a 56-mile sponsored run taking in the grounds of Blackpool FC, Preston NE and Fleetwood Town FC; Barnsley fans are walking all the way to Bradford to arrive for the match on April 25th; The Bradford City kit-man John Duckworth is making a similar walk to Bradford from Lincoln, and fans from one of Bradford’s fiercest local rivals, Huddersfield Town, have raised thousands of pounds for the Burns Unit.
There is a huge range of memorial activity, bearing in mind always that its primary purpose is commemorative, and that the established tone for all this activity is dignified and restrained.
A target of £300,000 has been set for the Commemoration, which would ensure the survival of the Burns Unit for a number of years to come.
Bradford City Football Club
If you would like to participate in the Commemoration …
You are invited to take a moment to think of the tragic events of May 11th 1985, and of the sufferings of all those affected by the Disaster, during the one minute’s silence to be held before Saturday’s game
or
At 11.00 am on Monday May 11th 2015, at the start of the Memorial Service to be held in Centenary Square, Bradford.
If you would like to donate to the Bradford Burns Unit Memorial Appeal, this can be done through the official Commemoration website:
www.fire-anniversary.brad.ac.uk
or through any of the following dedicated fundraising sites:
Bradford City Community Foundation Appeal justgiving/bcfcburnsunitappeal
Pulse Radio Appeal justgiving/rememberthe56
Huddersfield Town Appeal justgiving/Huddersfield-Town-Supporters
Dave Bowers’ Australian Appeal justgiving/millionlikesdave
John Duckworth’s Appeal for his 73-mile hike from Lincoln to Bradford justgiving/Bantamstrek2015
Barnsley Supporters Appeal justgiving.com/teams/BarnsleyToBradfordCharityWalk
James Wood’s Lancashire Super-marathon justgiving.com/bradfordcity56miledonnasdream (donations shared between PSBRU and local charity Donna’s Dream)
Cheques should be made payable to ‘The University of Bradford – Burns Unit’
and sent to:
The Bradford Burns Unit
University of Bradford
Richmond Road
Bradford
West Yorkshire
BD7 1DP
If you wished to make a text-to-donate contribution from a mobile device, this can be done by calling 70070 with the code VPFA56. The text message
VPFA56 5 sent to 70070 will, for example, transmit a £5 donation to the Burns Unit.
Every contribution you make will help to keep the Burns Unit going as a lasting memorial to the victims of the Fire Disaster, and is massively appreciated by Bradford City club and fans, and by people in Bradford as a whole.
More information on Commemorative activities and events, including merchandise sold on behalf of the Burns Unit, can be found on the official website at fire-anniversary.brad.ac.uk
If you would like further information, including advice if you wished to organise a fundraising project for the Burns Unit among family, friends or fellow supporters of your club, please do not hesitate to contact Bradford City by email to info@bcfcsupportersboard.co.uk or in writing to:
The Remembrance Panel,
Bradford City FC Supporters Board,
Coral Windows Stadium,
Valley Parade,
Bradford,
West Yorkshire
BD8 7DY
It started with a spark in the corner of the Main Stand at Valley Parade, catching alight the rubbish under the wooden seats of a wooden stand. Within four minutes, the stand had been reduced to a burnt-out shell.
Fifty-six people arrived for a game of football that day, and did not go home. Two of the fatal casualties were supporters of Lincoln City, Bradford City’s opponents on its last game of the season, and eleven were children.
Hundreds more spectators were injured, and thousands witnessed an event that many have described as ‘the worst day of their lives’.
If you think of the families and friends of all these people, and all the consequences in their lives over the years, you will have some idea of the impact on Bradford.
The Lord Mayor spoke recently of the Fire ‘tearing the heart out of the city’. The emotions are still raw. And the memories are always there; they may be less prominent at times, and at other times more present in thought.
But they never go away.
Bradford Remembers … and the Football Community too
Bradford remembers the Disaster in different ways, many of them private and quietly stated. The public memorials have come to focus on two main events:
The minute’s silence at the start of the last home game of the regular season at Valley Parade, which occurs this year at 3.00 pm on Saturday April 25th 2015, at the match vs. Barnsley;
The Annual Memorial Service held in Centenary Square in the town centre of Bradford at 11.00 am on the exact Anniversary of the Disaster, which falls this year on Monday, May 11th 2015.
On this 30th Anniversary of the Fire Disaster, and for the first time, there is a national dimension to the Commemoration.
The FA has invited all clubs within the Premier League, the Football League, the Women’s Super League, and at County FA level to observe a minute’s silence in memory of all those who suffered on May 11th 1985, at all matches played in England on the weekend of April 25th/April 26th *
As well as support from the English FA, the Premier League, the Football League, and the Women’s Super League, the 30th Anniversary Commemoration is backed by the Scottish FA, the Professional Footballers Association, Supporters Direct and the football supporters federation.
Bradford City club and fans appreciate deeply this response of the national football community to the Commemoration, which has transcended all the usual rivalries within the game.
The Legacy of the Disaster
There are two particular legacies of the Disaster that show how healing and renewal can come even from the worst of circumstances.
The Disaster led to improvements in the construction and safety of football grounds that ensure, hopefully, that nothing like Bradford 1985 can happen ever again, anywhere.
But it is worth reflecting that our safety as football supporters today rests to some degree on the sufferings of those caught up in the events of May 11th 1985.
The number and severity of casualties on that day had threatened to overwhelm the health services. Special emergency wards were set up.
Surgeons and nurses were called in from far afield to cope with the injured. And many local people – whether City fans or not – came to sit with patients, or to bring them food, or to offer support.
Much of this activity was coordinated by a young doctor, David Sharpe, who began to develop innovative techniques for treating the burns' victims.
As a result of this experience, he went on to found and to lead the Plastic Surgery and Burns Research Unit (PSBRU) at the University of Bradford. Professor Sharpe OBE remained active in the field until his retirement last year.
The existence of the PSBRU – known also as ‘the Bradford Burns Unit’ – stands as a lasting memorial, and a living legacy, of the Fire Disaster.
It depends entirely on public donations for its continued survival. Memorial activity in Bradford and elsewhere often takes the form of fundraising for the Burns Unit.
This year, for example, there is a 56-mile sponsored run taking in the grounds of Blackpool FC, Preston NE and Fleetwood Town FC; Barnsley fans are walking all the way to Bradford to arrive for the match on April 25th; The Bradford City kit-man John Duckworth is making a similar walk to Bradford from Lincoln, and fans from one of Bradford’s fiercest local rivals, Huddersfield Town, have raised thousands of pounds for the Burns Unit.
There is a huge range of memorial activity, bearing in mind always that its primary purpose is commemorative, and that the established tone for all this activity is dignified and restrained.
A target of £300,000 has been set for the Commemoration, which would ensure the survival of the Burns Unit for a number of years to come.
Bradford City Football Club
If you would like to participate in the Commemoration …
You are invited to take a moment to think of the tragic events of May 11th 1985, and of the sufferings of all those affected by the Disaster, during the one minute’s silence to be held before Saturday’s game
or
At 11.00 am on Monday May 11th 2015, at the start of the Memorial Service to be held in Centenary Square, Bradford.
If you would like to donate to the Bradford Burns Unit Memorial Appeal, this can be done through the official Commemoration website:
www.fire-anniversary.brad.ac.uk
or through any of the following dedicated fundraising sites:
Bradford City Community Foundation Appeal justgiving/bcfcburnsunitappeal
Pulse Radio Appeal justgiving/rememberthe56
Huddersfield Town Appeal justgiving/Huddersfield-Town-Supporters
Dave Bowers’ Australian Appeal justgiving/millionlikesdave
John Duckworth’s Appeal for his 73-mile hike from Lincoln to Bradford justgiving/Bantamstrek2015
Barnsley Supporters Appeal justgiving.com/teams/BarnsleyToBradfordCharityWalk
James Wood’s Lancashire Super-marathon justgiving.com/bradfordcity56miledonnasdream (donations shared between PSBRU and local charity Donna’s Dream)
Cheques should be made payable to ‘The University of Bradford – Burns Unit’
and sent to:
The Bradford Burns Unit
University of Bradford
Richmond Road
Bradford
West Yorkshire
BD7 1DP
If you wished to make a text-to-donate contribution from a mobile device, this can be done by calling 70070 with the code VPFA56. The text message
VPFA56 5 sent to 70070 will, for example, transmit a £5 donation to the Burns Unit.
Every contribution you make will help to keep the Burns Unit going as a lasting memorial to the victims of the Fire Disaster, and is massively appreciated by Bradford City club and fans, and by people in Bradford as a whole.
More information on Commemorative activities and events, including merchandise sold on behalf of the Burns Unit, can be found on the official website at fire-anniversary.brad.ac.uk
If you would like further information, including advice if you wished to organise a fundraising project for the Burns Unit among family, friends or fellow supporters of your club, please do not hesitate to contact Bradford City by email to info@bcfcsupportersboard.co.uk or in writing to:
The Remembrance Panel,
Bradford City FC Supporters Board,
Coral Windows Stadium,
Valley Parade,
Bradford,
West Yorkshire
BD8 7DY