New Stirling-led project to reflect on Billy Bremner’s career
The life and career of Scottish football legend Billy Bremner will be the focus of a new sports heritage project, led by the University of Stirling.
The life and career of Scottish football legend Billy Bremner will be the focus of a new sports heritage project, led by the University of Stirling.
Bremner was born in the Raploch area of Stirling and the six-month project will bring together his hometown and Leeds, where he spent the majority of his playing career.
Richard Haynes, Professor of Media Sport at Stirling, will lead the work, which is funded through a grant from the National Lottery Heritage Fund.
Professor of Media Sport, University of Stirling
Bremner’s oft-repeated saying, 'side before self every time', will be echoed in this collaborative project between two communities in Raploch and Leeds, bringing generations together to explore the value of sporting heritage for community resilience inspired by one of Stirling and Scotland’s sporting legends.
Professor Haynes said: “We are delighted to receive support from the National Lottery for our project to remember the life of Billy Bremner. He was an inspirational player for Don Revie’s Leeds United and the Scottish national side of the 1960s and 70s. He is often voted the greatest captain for club and country by supporters.
“Bremner’s oft-repeated saying, 'side before self every time', will be echoed in this collaborative project between two communities in Raploch and Leeds, bringing generations together to explore the value of sporting heritage for community resilience inspired by one of Stirling and Scotland’s sporting legends.”
Community
Bremner (1942 – 1997) is widely regarded as one of the greatest players Scotland ever produced and the project will research, curate and connect a range of heritage initiatives focused on remembering his contribution to football. It will connect young people in the Raploch community with older people who knew, played with, or remember Bremner as a football player.
People – young and old – from a variety of different backgrounds in the Raploch community will also have an opportunity to connect with wider communities in Leeds and supporter networks, resulting in a wider range of people involved in heritage.
Young people will be given training in conducting oral history interviews and will develop investigative and interpretation skills. Oral history, terrace songs and inspirational quotes on Bremner will be used to generate new intangible heritage, inspiring creative artworks based on the memories and songs captured by the communities.
The focus on using the name and memories of Billy Bremner as a catalyst for making connections, creating new opportunities and creative heritage, will contribute to improved wellbeing of residents by bringing people together.
A new community-led online exhibition – hosted by the University – will use artworks to create a community-led collection of storytelling and heritage artefacts to explore the meaning of ‘Fae Raploch to Elland Road’ as a story of migration, resilience and connected identities. The project will also curate a wider public digital collection of artefacts and images related to Bremner from existing museum and private collections. It will also create a digital heritage trail linked to the online exhibition using QR codes in Stirling connected to Bremner's life in the city.
Many community, supporters, and sporting groups – in both Stirling and Leeds – will be connected, including the Scottish Football Supporters Association and Leeds United Supporters Network.
A Project Officer will help catalogue the creation of a new digital archive on Billy Bremner ephemera and creative works. The two communities involved will be connected through video conferencing, enabling the sharing of creative ideas, memories and heritage.
Generations
Caroline Clark, Director for Scotland at the National Lottery Heritage Fund, said: “This a fantastic project which brings together heritage, the wider football family, different generations and different communities in different countries. It provides training and creates an archive and heritage trail, all because of the memory and life of one hugely respected footballer.
“It is exciting to be able to help projects such as this with funds raised through the generosity of National Lottery players. Preserving local social and sporting history is important, but it is wonderful when it can be a catalyst for bringing together people from different communities and providing wellbeing and skills. Fae Raploch to Elland Road is a wonderful example of heritage being utilised to bring added benefits and skills to a community.”