Cover image of show QPR Through The Ages - A Brief History Of Queens Park Rangers

QPR Through The Ages - A Brief History Of Queens Park Rangers

Podcast by Through The Ages Podcast

English

Sports

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About QPR Through The Ages - A Brief History Of Queens Park Rangers

There is a ground in Shepherd's Bush, pressed so tightly against the surrounding terraced houses that on matchdays the roar from inside it reverberates off bedroom windows. It seats just over seventeen thousand people. It is called Loftus Road. And the club that plays there — Queens Park Rangers — has one of the most extraordinary, improbable, and quietly heroic histories in English football.QPR Through the Ages is a ten-episode series covering the full arc of that history, from the club's peculiar founding in 1882 — the product not of one moment but of twelve separate clubs merging over two decades — to the present day. It is a history of patience and occasional brilliance, of near-misses that still hurt and triumphs that still glow, of a community in west London that decided, at some point in the nineteenth century, that this was their club and has never been persuaded otherwise.Along the way we meet Rodney Marsh, who arrived in the summer of 1966 and made QPR nationally famous almost by himself. We spend a full episode on the 1975–76 season, when Dave Sexton's side played the most beautiful football in the club's history and came within one point of the First Division title. We cover Terry Venables, a plastic pitch, an FA Cup Final, and European football in Shepherd's Bush. We cover the Premier League years, Les Ferdinand, financial crisis, billionaire owners, and a Wembley play-off final that broke a generation of supporters.Each episode runs to approximately thirty minutes, follows the same six-part structure — cold open, historical context, main narrative, player of the era, fan's eye view, and outro — and is designed to work equally well for QPR supporters who lived through these events and for anyone who has ever wondered what it means to follow a football club through thick and thin, across a hundred and forty years of west London Saturdays.Come on you R's.

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2 episodes

episode Episode 2 : Nomads, War and the Third Division - Survival as an Art Form (1920–1945) artwork

Episode 2 : Nomads, War and the Third Division - Survival as an Art Form (1920–1945)

1920 – 1945 Nomads, War and the Third Division Twenty-five years in the Third Division South, and still moving. QPR's interwar history is the story of a club learning how to survive — financially, physically, and institutionally — through the Great Depression and then the Second World War. Along the way they made one of the more absurd decisions in their long history of eccentric decisions: moving to White City Stadium in 1931, a ground built for eighty thousand, and rattling around in it so disastrously that they were back at Loftus Road within a year. This time, they stayed. Through the depression and the Blitz, through rationing and wartime regional football, QPR endured. Survival as an art form. Research Sources Gordon Macey, 'Queens Park Rangers: The Complete Record' (Breedon Books, 2004) — all season-by-season records, attendance figures, and league positions for this period are drawn from Macey's meticulous statistical record. Dave Thomas, 'Queen's Park Rangers: A Pictorial History' — photographic and contextual record of the interwar grounds, including the White City episode. West London Observer and Hammersmith Gazette archives (British Newspaper Archive) — interwar match reports and club news coverage 1920–1939. Football League historical records — Third Division South tables, attendance data, and re-election records for the interwar period. George Goddard's goalscoring record — confirmed via Football Club History Database (fchd.info) and multiple QPR historical sources. The 174-goal figure is the accepted club record. White City Stadium history — the 1931 QPR experiment at White City is well documented in QPR supporter histories and the general history of the stadium. Ross McKibbin, 'Classes and Cultures: England 1918–1951' (Oxford University Press, 1998) — essential background on working-class leisure, football attendance, and the social function of sport in interwar Britain. Andy Crofts, 'Football and the Great War' — contextual background on the impact of WW1 on football clubs and communities across England.

10 Jun 2026 - 22 min
episode Episode 1 : The Hoops Are Born - Twelve Clubs, Nineteen Grounds, One Identity (1882–1920) artwork

Episode 1 : The Hoops Are Born - Twelve Clubs, Nineteen Grounds, One Identity (1882–1920)

1882 – 1920 The Hoops Are Born Queens Park Rangers did not have a single founding moment — they had twelve. Born from a schoolboys' team at Christchurch School in Droop Street in 1882, the club spent twenty years absorbing neighbouring outfits, changing names, and searching for an identity. This episode tells the story of how those twelve clubs became one, how QPR earned the blue and white hoops that define them to this day, and how a club with no permanent home — nineteen grounds in fifty years — eventually found its way into the Football League in 1920. The nomad years, the hoop, and the beginning of something that refused to stop. Research Sources Gordon Macey, 'Queens Park Rangers: The Complete Record' (Breedon Books, 2004) — the definitive statistical history of the club. Essential for all dates, grounds, and season records throughout this series. Dave Thomas, 'Queen's Park Rangers: A Pictorial History' — useful for early photographic record and context of the Southern League and early Football League years. Hammersmith and Shepherd's Bush Gazette and West London Observer archives (British Newspaper Archive) — contemporary match reports 1899–1920. Invaluable for crowd atmosphere, ground descriptions, and how the club was perceived in its own community. Football Club History Database (fchd.info) — complete season-by-season records, grounds chronology, and league positions from 1896 onwards. QPR supporter research into the 'twelve clubs' origin — substantial primary research has been done by QPR fanzines and supporter historians. The figure of twelve merging clubs originates largely from this tradition rather than official club documentation. John Bale, 'Sport and Place: A Geography of Sport in England, Scotland and Wales' (1982) — essential background on the formation of football clubs in rapidly urbanising Victorian and Edwardian England. Charles Booth, 'Life and Labour of the People of London' (1889–1903) — the essential social geography of working-class London life in the period. Applicable to west as well as east London communities.

8 May 2026 - 25 min
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