After completing a full season with Sunderland reserves her brother Jimmy signed up for military service in April 1915, aged 20. Having completed his initial training with the Northern Cyclist Battalion in Gainsborough near Sheffield he was deployed to Belgium in August 1916 with the 8th Battalion West Yorkshire Regiment (the Leeds Rifles).
Back home the munitionette football phenomenon had begun when the newly recruited factory girls started having kickabouts during their lunchbreaks, to let off steam. Deemed to be good for the health and wellbeing of the girls these kickabouts were encouraged by management and gradually, as the girls improved their skills, works teams were formed and regular inter-company matches were organised. These evolved into the charity fundraising regional matches that really began to capture the imagination of the public.
Hedworth Terrace |
An elder sister, Jessie, had married in the same year, so would almost certainly have left home to set up a new one with her husband; meaning one less mouth for Jimmy's parents to feed and more space for those siblings left behind. So Jimmy would have been under the same roof as Minnie, as and when he returned home, and fully aware of her footballing progress.
Next up were appearances for Durham, Wearside Munitionettes and Blyth Spartans Munition Ladies, where Minnie teamed up again with Bella. Held at St James' Park, a ground that even Jimmy hadn't yet played at, the match raised funds for the Alnwick branch of the National Federation of Discharged and Demobilised Soldiers and Sailors.
June saw Minnie turning out for 'Walker Naval Yard', and in her next few regional matches, including three for 'North of England' she was listed as Minnie Seed (Armstrong's Naval Yard) or (Naval Yard). Whether Minnie was now working in the shipbuilding industry, or was merely poached by their football team, isn't clear, but both Walker Naval Yard and Gosforth Aviation were Armstrong owned, so either is possible. The practice of poaching players was quite common amongst the more ambitious clubs, with Palmers and Dick, Kerr Ladies in particular taking advantage of the practice.
Bella Reay featured in several of these games, sometimes as a teammate but quite often as an opponent, scoring all three goals for Blyth Spartans in a 3-0 defeat of Walker Naval Yard, followed by both goals in a 2-0 win against Minnie's North of England. A local newspaper covered the match:
'The game got off to a sensational start, Bella Reay charging through on her own and scoring within the first few seconds with a well-hit drive. The stunned North of England team rallied and worked hard through the remainder of the first half to get an equaliser, but several promising runs by Minnie Seed, the Sunderland international, failed due to her holding on to the ball too long.' (More about Minnie's status as an 'international' later.)Out of the 31 matches that Minnie is known to have played in, Bella Reay featured in 20, thirteen of those as a teammate. [Read more about Bella Reay here.]
Many, if not all of these representative matches were charity fundraisers and they proved extremely popular both with spectators and with a press searching for good news stories to lighten the Great War gloom. The higher profile regional fixtures were played at some of the biggest football league grounds in the country and large sums of money were raised for various disabled servicemen charities.
But it is clear that much of the initial public interest was based on novelty value and perhaps, for some, the prurient value of watching relatively scantily clad young ladies charging around a muddy football pitch. And yes, some may have turned up to mock their efforts, but unquestionably the standard of football on display though initially poor, improved exponentially with time, as reflected in press articles of the era. Rather than drifting away, as they might have done had this been merely a curiosity, the crowds actually grew as the product on show improved and new stars were created. Yes, men had the advantage of physical strength and speed, but they also benefitted from the fact that many had played football from a very early age in school, and those that were keen would have kickabouts in the streets or in parks and might also play for the local village, as Jimmy did, when old enough. Girls certainly weren't encouraged to get involved, and to some extent, still aren't today.
So the majority of those munitionette footballers would have been learning the game from scratch, and it's no wonder their skills may have been a little lacking early on, the game being described as 'kick and rush' in early reports. It's notable that those who had learned the game at an early age, often by kicking a ball around with their brothers had a distinct advantage over those that hadn't. This, according to Gail Newsham, was the case with a fair few of the Kerr Ladies team. Minnie, having two brothers who went on to play the game professionally, may well have benefitted herself from some sort of filial support.
In olden days, a glimpse of stocking was looked on a something shocking.
The war was now over, and Sunderland were playing in the Victory League. I had already called at Roker Park before going on convalescence, and then by coincidence I met the team en route for a match against Durham City. They were a man short and manager Bob Kyle asked me to help them out -at centre forward!'
The RokerPark.com website: 'In recognition of The Armistice, 11 November 1918, the Victory League was formed. This basically involved friendly fixtures against local teams such as South Shields, Middlesbrough, Durham City and Scotswood. It commenced in January 1919 and expired April 1919.
Sunderland's first game was at the University Ground against Durham City on 11 January, and ended in defeat.'
As Jimmy describes in a newspaper interview in the nineteen sixties: "I had a shocker."
Of course, he shouldn't have been anywhere near a football pitch at that time.
The article continues:
"Major Prior, one of the directors, who was also the club doctor called me in to see them later, and the major said: 'No man who has been through two gassings is good for top-class football. Forget the game, sonny. Have a rest, and then start back in the pits. That way you will stay fairly healthy and not strain your body.'
"For a brief while before going into the Army I had sampled the life of a professional footballer," he told me. "I liked it much better than the pits. Those words of the Sunderland directors seemed almost savage at the time."
'Now I felt bitter for the first time in my life. I was twenty-three, suspect in health and, worst of all, unwanted at Sunderland.' [-JSS]
So Jimmy's life had been turned upside down and his lifetime dream of playing for the club he supported as a boy appeared shattered. The newspaper article continues:
'For a while Seed pottered about in Whitburn doing a bit of labouring and playing with the kids among the slag heaps to get himself fit.'
Meanwhile Minnie continued to play some quite high profile matches in front of big crowds. On 2 November, just days after Jimmy's return from France she turned out in the first of three consecutive matches for the Tyneside Munitionettes, on this occasion against their local rivals, the Teesside Munitionettes.
Played at St James' Park before 18,000 spectators Tyneside fielded a strong line-up including Minnie alongside Bella Reay and Mary Lyons up front.
This was the first defeat for the Whitehaven team whose previous record was played 25, won 23, drawn 2.
Scorers: Dorrian, McKenna, Lyons
Tyneside: Sarah Atkinson (N.U.T., South Benwell), Grace Battista (A. W. & Co.), Lizzie Gibson (Palmers), Bella Willis (A. W. & Co. and Prudhoe), Cissie Short (A. W. & Co.), Lizzie Form (Palmers), Mary Dorrian (Brown's West Hartlepool), Winnie McKenna (South Bank), Bella Reay (Blyth Spartans), Mary Lyons (Palmers), Minnie Seed (Sunderland).
In March 1919, while Jimmy was convalescing, Minnie pulled off one of her most notable achievements in winning the Munitionettes Cup. She had been poached by Palmer's who built a very strong team that again featured Minnie alongside Bella Reay and Mary Lyons in the forward line. Minnie scored a goal in the semi-final 3-2 victory over 'Foster, Blackett and Wilson's' which set up their place in the final at St James' Park.
The match was previewed in the Northern Daily Mail on Friday, March 21 1919
‘PALMER'S v. WEST HARTLEPOOL (BROWN'S).
The above teams will meet in the final tie for the Munitionettes Cup on Saturday first at St. James's Park, Newcastle.
Palmer's team includes Miss Bella Reay, Blyth Spartans' famous centre forward, who performed the "hat trick” in last season’s Cup final: Miss Bella Willis, of Armstrong-Whitworth's and Prudhoe. captain of Tyneside Ladies' team, and perhaps the best right half playing in this class of football: Miss Mary Lyons, a tricky 16-year-old player: and Miss Minnie Seed, of Gosforth Aviation and Naval Yard, a tricky left-winger.
Brown's eleven includes Miss Minnie McKenna (South Bank), Bolckow's prolific goal-scoring centre forward. and reputed to be the cleverest all-round lady footballer of the day: and Misses Nellie Kirk and Mary Derrian, the international right-wingers. All Brown's players keep their correct positions right through the game, and part with the ball to advantage every time.
This is the only Ladies' Cup in existence. As in men's cup-ties, the new ball that the match is played with will become the property of the player who captures it after the final whistle blows.
The cap and gold medals will be presented to the winning team after the match. Birtley St. Joseph's Silver Prize Band will render selections half-an-hour before the game commences, and also during the interval.
Judging by the reputation of the players and the interest taken in the game, last season’s record, when £651 was taken at the gates from 30,000 spectators, promises to be exceeded.’
Unfortunately the 'Spanish' Flu outbreak meant that a reduced crowd of 10,000 spectators witnessed the Palmers side securing the Cup in a tense 1-0 win over 'Browns'. The whereabouts of Minnie's gold medal is unknown.
Donmouth has more:
'The Munitionettes' Cup managed to run to completion, although in the latter stages guest players from other teams were drafted in to create more interest and attract larger crowds. The winners were a combined team from Palmers Jarrow and Hebburn Works, who included three top-class guest players - Bella Reay from Blyth Spartans, Bella Willis from Armstrong-Whitworths and Minnie Seed from Gosforth Aviation. They disposed of Hood Haggies Girls 4-0 on 23rd November, and Armstrong-Whitworths 4-1 on 8th February. This latter match was played at St James's Park, and Palmers' star player was Bella Reay, who scored a hat-trick. In the semi-final on 2nd March Palmers met another local team, Foster, Blackett and Wilson's, led by Palmers' former goalkeeper, Maggie Scott. In a keenly contested game Palmers emerged the winners by the odd goal in five.
The final, in which Palmer's met Brown's of West Hartlepool, was contested on a snow-covered St. James's Park on 22nd March 1919, in front of 10,000 spectators. Brown's also had a guest player in their line-up - the redoubtable Winnie McKenna of Bolckow, Vaughans. She was unable to prevent Palmers winning 1-0, the goal being scored by Bella Reay, who together with Mary Lyons achieved the distinction of being the only double winners of the Munitionettes' Cup in its short history. (At the same time Winnie McKenna became the only double winner of a runners-up medal)'
Another highlight for Minnie was turning out for 'Newcastle Girls' (actually a team made up of girls from the North and the North East) in two matches against the previously undefeated Dick, Kerr Ladies. The first, on 8 March in front of 5,000 fans at Deepdale produced a 1-0 win for Dick, Kerr Ladies and raised £179 for charity.
Newcastle Girls. Minnie is front row, on the right. |
On 22 April 1919 a crowd of around 30,000 (the deadly Spanish flu was beginning to peter out by then) packed into St James' Park for the return match. The Northern Girls, again including Bella Reay and Mary Lyons, held out for a creditable nil-nil draw. Fortunately for the Newcastle Girls side the great Lily Parr hadn't yet joined the Dick, Kerr Ladies, being only 13 or 14 at the time.
May 1919 saw Minnie playing for Tyneside Ladies at Ayresome Park in a 1-1 draw with Teesside Ladies, and this was followed by a derby double in which Minnie captained Sunderland against Newcastle. The first, played at Roker Park, resulted in a 4-1 win for the Geordies in front of a crowd of 10,000, raising £436 for the Haverfield Serbian Distress Fund. The return fixture was held on 31 May in front of 9,000 at St James' Park and didn't go any better for Minnie and the Mackems, the Newcastle girls triumphing 4-0. On this occasion the beneficiary was the Newcastle (Central) Division of the St John Ambulance Brigade.
League Division Two and Welsh League titles, as well as the South Wales Cup. His performances and goal scoring feats inevitably attracted interest from the English football scouts, and in January 1920 he was signed by Spurs who were currently in Division Two. Despite the step up in the standard of the football, Jimmy was able to fight his way into the first team, contributing five goals as Spurs ran away with the Division Two title.
However, many of the war effort related ladies teams folded in the post war period as the companies involved would no longer be manufacturing munitions, ships and planes to same extent, and those engineering companies that were still involved would have been pressured into allowing men returning from the theatre of war to fill those roles again.
Even so, some women's football did continue, but it wouldn't surprise me if there was less coverage in the papers as men's football had returned, and perhaps newspapers were less inclined to give publicity to women occupying what were previously considered men's roles, both off and on the pitch, now the war was over.
However, the Easter match in Belfast received a high profile in Northern Irish newspapers.
In the build up to the contest the Northern Whig described Minnie Seed as follows: ‘the inside right is the fastest lady footballer in England. She is a real dandy player, and is a sister of Seed, who plays for the FA Cup finalists, Tottenham Hotspur.’
The English Girls won 3-2, Mary Lyons scoring two of the English side's goals.
(The National Football Museum's Dr Alex Jackson tells the full story on the Playing Pasts website.)
Minnie and Thomas had one son, Thomas Anthony Quayle, born 30 December 1924 at the Quayle family home in Miles St, Eston, Middlesbrough.
Minnie's husband Thomas died in 1939 and she moved to Aldershot to live with her older sister Frances in York Road, on the military base. In an echo of her time in aircraft manufacturing during World War One records list Minnie as 'Aircraft Worker (balloon)'. It's likely Frances had also moved south when she was widowed to be closer to her brother Angus, who was manager Aldershot FC at the time.
Very sadly, the death of Minnie MJ Quayle, aged just 51, was registered in the December quarter of 1948 in Barnsley.
Her son Thomas had married a Mary Crofts there in March of the same year. To add to the Barnsley/Seed connection, Angus Seed was at that time the manager of Barnsley FC, and he also died in Barnsley, in 1953.
At the time of her death Minnie was listed as being a resident of the White Hart Hotel, Barnsley and she passed away at Barnsley's Beckett Hospital, leaving an estate of £150 to
Minnie Seed was just one of the many women who blazed a trail in women's football whose adventures were largely forgotten for many years. Many of her generation, both male and female, drew a line after the war, and just wanted to put it all behind them, but in recent years there has been a real surge in interest in munitionette football which has shed much more light on the topic; some excellent books have been written and a feature film was planned, although the current pandemic seems to have put production on hold.
But nonetheless, it does seem odd that Jimmy Seed's grandchildren knew nothing of Minnie's time as a footballer, until recently. She wasn't mentioned in Jimmy's autobiography, and in a suitcase full of his memorabilia, including photo albums, scrapbooks and hundreds of newspaper articles, there's not a trace or mention of Minnie at all, other than that one family photo from 1900. It would be easy to speculate that her exploits may not have met with her family’s approval, or that perhaps Jimmy didn’t take women’s football very seriously, but we don’t have any real evidence to support that.
However, no one could blame Jimmy if his traumatic wartime experiences, and his near forced exit from the game because of the effects of the gassings, meant that he looked upon Minnie’s successes with a wry smile.
[To stay in touch with the latest on the Minnie story you can follow @MinnieSeed on Twitter]
Is it my imagination or does she look a little like the girl turning out for Newcastle Girls six years earlier?
Minnie herself had a baby the year before, so would she have been able to find her way down from Middlesbrough to north London at that time? It does seem just about possible, but it's impossible to know for sure.
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