'True
Blue'

William “Daddy”
Dunlop
William “Daddy” Dunlop gave great
service to the Rangers, both on the field and off. He scored
two goals in the first replay of the 1877 Scottish Cup Final
against Vale of Leven. That second goal was, of course, not
given. The reason for that is covered in the report of the 1877
Scottish Cup Final.* He served on committee, rising to become
president of the club. He was a regular in the “Ancients” team
which played many matches throughout the 1880’s. He was clearly
an accomplished player but it was suggested that but for poor
eyesight, he would have been even
better!
It was with the pen, though,
Daddy made his greatest contribution. Willie wrote the most
important history of Rangers Football Club. Although a
relatively short article, his record of the early days of the
Club provides us with the first hand evidence of his friends,
the McNeils, Vallance, etc of the games at Flesher’s Haugh, the
wearing of the light blue for the first time, etc. Under
the sobriquet "Old Blue", this vital record of the founding of
the Club appeared in the SFA Annual of
1881/82.
Willie married Annie Cardwell in
Manchester on 17 September, 1891. Two years later, “Daddy”
became a daddy with the birth of his son, Colin Buchanan
Dunlop. Sadly, Colin was only eighteen months old when his
father died at the family home at Kelvinside Terrace South,
just off Queen Margaret Drive. Willie succumbed to influenza
after battling spinal meningitis. The obituaries that appeared
in the newspapers were united in acknowledging the sad loss of
a man who was popular and highly respected throughout his life.
His contemporaries owed a lot to “Daddy” Dunlop. Present day
historians of the Club owe a great debt to him,
too.
*Report of rangers
first scottish cup final 1877
"True
Blue" - Page 1
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