3. CHEPSTOW: Wales鈥檚 First Black Footballer
History Hun (Anouska Lewis) visits the hometown of Eddie Parris, the first Black footballer to represent Wales in an international match back in 1931.
Lots of us dream of becoming professional footballers. Especially playing for our country. One person who lived that dream was Eddie Parris. In 1931, he became the first Black footballer to represent Wales internationally. But what was professional football like between two world wars?
Scouted as a 17-year-old at Chepstow Town FC, Eddie played as a winger for various English football clubs including Luton, Bournemouth and Gloucester City, before his career took an abrupt pause with the onset of World War 2. 100 years since he played there as a teenager, has his life left a legacy at the local club that launched his football career?
Eddie Parris鈥檚 hometown of Chepstow is best known for its Medieval castle, and the old bridge over the River Wye linking Wales and England. But what do residents know about Chepstow鈥檚 role in Black Welsh History? Is there a monument to his story?
Join History Hun (Anouska Lewis) on her trip to Chepstow as she visits the cottage where Eddie Parris was born, explores his life with a historian of Modern Wales, and practises her goalie skills with the next generation of Chepstow football stars.
History Hun is on a mission to prove that no hometown is boring. Because everywhere has a history and history鈥檚 never boring!!
She鈥檚 spotlighting hidden histories from misjudged places across the UK and supplying you with a few history-hun-facts along the way x
91热爆town Boring? is a Mags Creative production for 91热爆 Sounds Audio Lab
Written, produced and presented by Anouska Lewis
Senior Producer 鈥 Ryan Nile
Editors 鈥 Pulama Kaufman and Ryan Nile
Sound Design 鈥 Pulama Kaufman and Ryan Nile
Executive Producers 鈥 James Norman Fyfe and Kit Milsom
Theme Music 鈥 Kit Milsom
Artwork 鈥 Ellie Walmsley
Additional support 鈥 Amanda Birbara
Commissioning Editor 鈥 Khaliq Meer
More episodes
Podcast
-
91热爆town Boring?
Unearthing hidden histories around the UK in places misjudged as being 鈥渂oring鈥