William
McBeath

In May, 1872, at Fleshers Haugh, Glasgow
Green, Rangers fought out a 0-0 draw with Callander.
Their first game saw their first “Man of the Match”, William
McBeath. He would also become first president of the
Club, in 1874-75. In 1884, a successor in that office,
Tom Vallance, would present William with a “beautiful gold
badge” to acknowledge the role he had played in the foundation
of the Club. Such achievements but gained by a man we
know so little about. We do know he was born in Callander
on 7 May, 1856. It is likely he organised the opposition
for that match at Fleshers Haugh, Rangers’ opposition probably
being “expats” from William’s hometown. The Callander
side that played Alexandra in a Scottish Cup tie in October,
1873 included a “MacBeath”.
Match report
from Callander v Alexandra 1873
It was reported by William Dunlop in his
history of the Club which appeared in the 1881/82 SFA Annual,
that William McBeath had been so exhausted by his efforts that
day at Fleshers Haugh that he was “laid up for a
week”.* It is likely
William, unlike his friends, the McNeils, was by no means a
natural athlete. He did, though, play for the Club until
November, 1875. He was a by no means unsuccessful
forward. His record includes a hat-trick against Gramby,
at Hillhead, in January, 1874.
Match
report from rangers v Gramby
1874
William McBeath’s life reads like the script
of a very bad soap opera. William’s mother, Jane, was the
second wife of Peter, his first wife having died aged only
fifty-nine. Peter owned a general store on Callander’s
Main Street. The family home was above the store.
William had an older sister, Jane, and an older brother,
Peter. Another boy was born after William but he, like so
many other children of the time, died in infancy. William
also had four half-brothers and sisters from his father’s
previous relationships.
Tragically, Peter McBeath died in November,
1864. Shortly afterwards, his wife took William and his
sister Jane to Glasgow to start a new life. By the time
of the 1871 census, the McBeaths were living at 17 Cleveland
Street, the same address as five members of the McNeil family,
including brothers Peter and William.
William’s friendship with Peter extended to
Peter’s brother Moses and their friend Peter Campbell. It
was at the beginning of 1872 the four boys had the idea to form
a football club. At the same time, though, tragedy struck
William again with the death in March of his mother, Jane, aged
only fifty-three. How traumatic a period this must have
been for fifteen year-old William as he registered the death of
his parent. The pain for William was not over. In
June of the following year, his sister, Jane, married Daniel
Lang. Within six months, Daniel died from
consumption. Less than six years later, poor Jane was
dead herself, from tuberculosis. William, again, signed
the death certificate.
By 1878, William was a commercial
traveller. He had moved to the Crosshill area of the city
after marrying Jeannie Harris. Two years later, their
first-born arrived, a son. He was given his father’s
names, William Duncanson McBeath. Within a year,
the family moved to Bristol in what was almost certainly the
most settled and happiest period of William’s life. A
sister, Agnes, and brother, Norman, for William, Jnr were
born.
Sadly, the remaining period of William
McBeath’s life is clouded in mist. What happened to
cause a breakdown in the happy family life of the McBeaths, we
do not know. Norman was sent to Glasgow to live with his
grandmother. Agnes became a nursery governess in Torquay
but disappears after 1901. We have no trace of William,
Jnr after the 1891 census. (Norman died in Glasgow, aged
eighty-three, in 1973. He had not
married.)
William last years make unpleasant
reading. He moved from town to town, found himself in
court on charges of fraud (of which he was acquitted) and
married for a second time.
There is no record of him divorcing Jeannie
before his marriage to Sarah Ann Lambert in Bradford on Boxing
Day 1898. He recorded he was a
“widower”. It was probably only fair that
evidence suggests Jeannie appears as “widowed” in the 1901
census!
The deterioration in William McBeath’s life
continued until his death in the workhouse at Lincoln in
1917. He was “certified imbecile”. The evidence of
his state of health suggests he had suffered from
Alzheimer’s.
William was buried in an unmarked, pauper’s
grave in Lincoln Cemetery. There is some form of happy
ending to his story. During his research for his
wonderful work, “The Gallant Pioneers”, Gary Ralston found
William’s grave. The grave is now marked with a stone
paid for by a group of Rangers’ supporters.
*"True Blue" - Page
4
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