History of White Hart Lane
The Club said a fond and emotional farewell to White Hart Lane at the end of the 2016-17 season, 118 years after the doors first opened to what would become one of the most famous sporting venues in the world.
Our Premier League game against Manchester United on May 13, 2017, was the last-ever match to be staged at the Lane and we ensured the stadium received the finale it so richly deserved as we won 2-1 to remain unbeaten in N17 throughout the entire campaign.
The history of White Hart Lane began in 1899, when we moved to the site which was then a disused nursery owned by the brewers Charrington.
The local land was well known for its superb growing conditions and George Beckwith - landlord of the White Hart public house from 1859 to 1898 and also a nurseryman - had set up the Tottenham Nursery on the site behind his pub at 750 High Road.
The land was rented from the brewery and a pitch prepared by groundsman John Over. Mobile stands which had been used at the previous ground - situated between numbers 69 and 75 Northumberland Park - were set up on the new site giving cover to 2,500 spectators. The Club offices, previously at 808 High Road, were also housed at the new enclosure.
The first event staged at the ground was our third annual military tournament on August 7, 1899, when 5,000 people turned up to view the new surroundings and watch the players take part in various athletic pursuits. The first match was a trial game between the Whites and Stripes on August 22 and three more similar fixtures were played prior to the Notts County game which marked the official opening on Monday, September 4. A 5,000 crowd saw County, then in Division One, beaten 4-1.
The receipts amounted to £115.18s.3d. of which £57.17s.9d. was paid to the visitors. The following Saturday 11,000 turned up to see the first competitive fixture, a 1-0 win over Queens Park Rangers in the Southern League. The receipts for this match were £329.4s.3d. A season ticket to the main stand cost 15s. for all home matches at the new ground.
Within five years the ground had a main stand seating 500, covered accommodation for some 12,000 and an overall capacity of 32,000. However, the terms of the lease restricted the Club's ambitions and in 1905 an offer of 5,000 £1 shares was made through the Club handbook to contribute towards the £8,900 needed to acquire the freehold plus a further £2,600 for the land at the Edmonton end. A total of 2,000 shares were taken up and a huge bank built at the Paxton Road end, mirroring the Park Lane end developed a year earlier. This brought the capacity up to 40,000.
Having secured Football League status, plans were drawn up by football ground architect Archibald Leitch for a new main stand. Seating 5,300 with a paddock for over 6,000 in front it was opened for the visit of Manchester United on September 11, 1909, our first home fixture in Division One. By the end of that season a copper cockerel and ball adorned the apex of the mock-Tudor gable. The whole of the East Stand was also covered in 1909 and enlarged two years later when the wooden terracing made way for concrete, increasing the ground holding to 50,000. By this time the ground was frequently being referred to as White Hart Lane, previously it was recorded as the High Road ground or White Hart grounds.
The profits of our 1921 cup win were used to build a split level covered terrace at the Paxton Road end and two years later the Park Lane end was similarly developed at a cost of over £3,000. Leitch was again involved in their design which increased the capacity to around 58,000 with room for 40,000 under cover.