BOLTON 2-0 WEST HAM 1923
When Wembley Stadium was first built, it was only due to remain open for a year.
Officially known as the Empire Stadium, it was constructed amid the fields of Wembley Park for the 1924 British Empire Exhibition but was ready ahead of schedule, and so it opened for the FA Cup final on April 28, 1923. The showpiece fixture had previously been held at various venues including The Oval, Crystal Palace and Old Trafford, and Stamford Bridge for the previous three seasons.
Around 53,000 people had turned up to Chelsea’s ground to watch Huddersfield beat Preston in the 1922 final. This time, an estimated 250,000 wannabe spectators flooded to the new stadium in north-west London – far more than the official capacity attendance of 126,047, which is still a record at Wembley. King George V’s motorcade just about found its way through the hordes; no such luck for the Bolton team, who had to walk the last mile of their journey.
Thousands of ticketless fans climbed over walls to get in and 10,000 had spilled onto the pitch come 3pm, the scheduled kick-off time. Crowds were pushed back by mounted police, one of them riding a light grey horse called Billie, which looked white on Pathé’s monochrome footage – hence the White Horse Final, as the match became known.
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