1900 - 1915: The Ancient Ajax
"An entirely new Football Club"
Walking along Kalverstraat you can
hardly imagine what the street looked like in 1900. The
original 17th century gable-roofs are hidden from view
by the neon signs and sign-boards of what is now
Amsterdam's busiest shopping street. Just off Dam Square, at
#2, is Fame Music Megastore. Most of the
people purchasing a CD, Playstation game or DVD over there
are totally unaware that football history was created on
that very spot just over a century ago.

The man who
founded Ajax: Floris Stempel.
On 14 March 1900 a
young student named Floris Stempel sent a letter to a
group of his friends, saying: "Hereby the undersigned invites
you politely to grace us with your presence in one of the upper
rooms of Café-Bar 'Oost-Indië', at number 2,
Kalverstraat, on Sunday morning at 9 hours and 3 quarters, to
discuss the establishment of an entirely new Football
Club."
What Stempel wrote was, in fact, not
completely true: the football club he wanted
to establish was not "entirely new". Stempel had
been chairman of a low-key football club some six
years earlier, in early 1894, or possibly late 1893.
The players at the time referred to themselves as a 'club'
because one of them, Han Dade, possessed his own
leather football. Moreover, they officially rented a
lawn in Willemspark, Amsterdam-South, to play their games. The
name of the club: Ajax, after the ancient Greek warrior.

Co-founders and brothers Han and
Johan Dade
wearing the jersey of the 'prehistoric Ajax'.
The oldest proof of Ajax's
existence is a letter by Floris Stempel, sent to his
friend Carel Reeser on 15 May 1894, in which the chairman
dictates the official club colours: red and white. The oldest
exisiting membership card of the 'Footh Ball Club "Ajax"'
(including the beautiful English spelling error) is dated 3
June 1894.
In the 1890s one football club after
the other was founded in The Netherlands in
general, and in Amsterdam in particular. The proliferation
of clubs forced the newly founded Amsterdam Football
Association (AVB) to put a list of strict
requirements for football clubs together, in order to create a
league structure and avoid chaos in the city's football
landscape. The requirements were too strict
for the Ajax of Stempel and his friends: the
'prhistoric' Ajax died on the verge and had silently
vanished by 1896.
Four years later, however, Stempel
decided to give it another try. On 18 March 1900 he became the
first official chairman of the re-born 'Football-Club
Ajax' (now spelled correctly, although he still possedded
a stash of old, unused membership cards with the
spelling error, which the club continued to use for a few
years). His friends and fellow founders Han Dade and Carel
Reeser joined him in the club's first board. How would
they have reacted if someone had told them that their club
would celebrate its centenary in a futuristic stadium with a
capacity of 51,500, built at the bottom of Bijlmermeer (a lake,
miles away from the city in 1900; a reclaimed suburb in 2000)?
And that their Ajax would be voted the world's fifth greatest
football club of the 20th century?
A lucrative first season...
Ajax did not return to the lawn in
Willemspark. The first home ground of the new Ajax
was 'across het IJ', the water that
separates Amsterdam from the rest of the Noord-Holland
province. In the undeveloped Buiksloterham polder to be
precise, now a suburb of Amsterdam-North. New members
paid a registration fee of 50 cents, followed by a member's fee
of 25 cents a year. These fees were remarkably high, so that
Ajax was one of the more exclusive football clubs in Amsterdam.
Most of the playing members, like the founders, were students
and boys from middle and upper class families.
The board took the club seriously
from the outset, which is illustrated by the fact that the
membership's presence for matches was
compulsory: the penalty for not showing up was a fine
of 10 cents, and this wasn't the only fine defined in the
club's official regulations. Some of other fines: 25 cents for
walking away during a game, 5 cents for refusing to carry
club equipment, 10 cents for swearing or fighting during a
game and 5 cents for not paying attention during a
game.
The oldest ever Ajax
team photograph from 1900 shows the team lined
up in formation. Goalkeeper Cor Kist wears a
woollen hat and holds the ball. The oldest Ajax line-up we
know today is completed by defenders Harbord and Dijkstra,
midfielders Brockman, Holst and Hertel
and forwards Pasteuning, Stallmann, Geissler,
Martaré and Van der Laan.
The photograph also shows that the
Ajax of 1900 abandoned red and white as its club colours. The
team wore the colours of the Amsterdam crest -- black and
red -- presumably to underscore Ajax's metropolitan origins. An
extra advantage of those colours was the fact that most
men wore black clothing and black
trousers anyway, so that a special club jersey wasn't
required. The first, simple Ajax uniform
was all-black, with a red sash tied around the waists of
the players. This uniform lasted less than a
year. The '1st Anniversary' team photograph from
March 1901 shows that it was soon replaced by the the
first official Ajax kit: a jersey with vertical red
and white stripes and 'dark' shorts (black, brown,
grey - whatever the men had in their wardrobe). This kit was
also used by the 'prehistoric' Ajax of the mid-1890s.
Soon after the foundation of the
club, Ajax signed up for its first official AVB league
participation. The club started at the lowest level: the
AVB Second Class. The times of unofficial kickabouts
were over. Ajax played its first official AVB league game
on 29 September 1900, away at DOSB, and won by the score
of 1-2. Ajax finished second in its four-team league. The
first season also yielded commercial success: Ajax's first
ever treasurers (and players of the team), Hertel and
Geissler, proudly announced a profit of no less than four
guilders and 31½ cents at season's end. Which was enough
to pay for the team's first ever 'road trip': on 8 April
1901 Ajax played its first game outside of Amsterdam: in
Haarlem. It was the first time for many of the
players to travel by train. The opponent was a club named
Oranje. Ajax won: 2-4.
The first silverware
Ajax soon became known as a
well-organized club and attracted increasing numbers of
spectators. The club impressed its opposition with its
excellent facilities: Ajax had its own, wooden dressing room
with coat-hangers and cans of fresh water. Unfortunately it was
quite a journey to get to the Ajax ground from the city: after
having crossed the IJ using the Central Station ferry, it was a
pretty long walk to the Buiksloterham polder. Ajax's first move
to a new ground took place as early as in 1901: it was situated
on Laanweg. Still 'over the IJ', but considerably closer to the
ferry's landing stage.
In 1902 Ajax first entered a western
division of the Third Class of the national Dutch football
league, supervised by the Dutch Football Association (NVB). The
club decided not to leave the AVB league, so that Ajax briefly
played in two leagues at the same time. The step from the Third
to the Second Class was made after only one season. The most
prestigious piece if silverware in those years, however, was
the Gouden Kruis ('Golden Cross') of the city of
Amsterdam, a 'knock out' competition structured like modern cup
competitions. After having lost the finals of 1903 and 1904 the
edition of 1906 was won, beating AFC in the final (4-3).
Ajax had received its first medal in 1902 (for best
goal-difference in its league...), yet the Golden Cross of 1906
can be regarded as the first prestigious prize Ajax ever
won.

The Golden Cross, first won in
1906. [Photo: Ajax.nl]
1907-1911: years of ambition
The winning of the Golden Cross
stirred up the club's ambition and marks the end of Ajax's
'freewheeling years'. A goal was set: promotion to the
First Class of the NVB, sooner rather than later. Ajax started
promoting its home games in the city, in order to attract
larger crowds - and soon decided that a second move, to the
'city side' of the IJ, was a must. Ajax crossed the water in
1907 to its third ground, situated at #86 Middenweg in the
newly built eastern suburb of Watergraafsmeer. From now on it
was a piece of cake to travel to the Ajax ground from the city
- by steam tram.
July 1908 saw a merger with a club
named Holland, a club that (like Ajax) was getting increasingly
frustrated by its own inability to jump to the First Class.
Holland was effectively 'swallowed' by Ajax and ceased to
exist, while Ajax only slightly changed its name: from
'Football-Club Ajax' into 'Amsterdamsche Football Club Ajax',
usually abbreviated as 'AFC Ajax' - the name that has remained
unchanged ever since.
A modest milestone was reached on 26
December 1908, as Ajax played foreign opposition for the first
time. The guests: Daring Brussels, a club that (after a string
of mergers) is now part of Belgium's RWD Molenbeek. The
Amsterdammers beat their first international opposition in
convincing style: 3-0.
A second Golden Cross was won in May
1909 (beating Blauw Wit in the final), but by that time the
medal felt like a consolation prize. Ajax wanted only one
thing: the First Class! In order to achieve promotion the club
decided to hire what some of Holland's best clubs (Sparta, HVV,
DFC) already had: a coach! The first ever man to train was
recruited from the country where football was of almost
superhuman quality for Dutch standards: England! The Ajax board
received several recommendations and ended up hiring a man who
had played for Tottenham Hotspur, Chelsea, Clyde and the Irish
national team: John Kirwan. He became the first ever coach of
Ajax in the summer of 1910.
A coach, a stadium and...
promotion!
Meanwhile, the Ajax home ground at
86, Middenweg was turned into a real football stadium. By 1911
wooden stands and dressing rooms had sprung up. The ground was
known as The Stadium in Amsterdam and is now usually referred
to as the 'wooden stadium'. It held some 10,000 spectators.
There is a not-so-beautiful shopping mall on its location
today. With a real coach and a real stadium Ajax finally
finished tops in its Second Class division. Noteworthy detail:
Ajax had to miss out on one of its best players, Gé
Fortgens, in the last game. He was invited to become the first
Ajacied to play for the Dutch national team. He made his
Holland début on 19 March 1911 in the away game against
Belgium in Antwerp - and, for the record, received a 5-1
hammering.

The famous Ajax jersey as we know
it was first introduced in 1911.
Apparently, not all of the players were aware of this at
first...
21 May 1911 was the most glorious day
in Ajax history: the day that Ajax grabbed its fifth and
decisive point in the promotion/relegation play-offs. Promotion
to the First Class, the highest level of Dutch football, was a
fact!
Sadly it wasn't given to the club's
founder, the honourable Floris Stempel, to witness the triumph.
He resigned as Ajax's first chairman in January 1910, after
having accepted a job in the West Indies. Many members of
the Ajax family waved him goodbye, but tragic news followed two
days later. His ship had gone down with all hands.
Stempel never made it to the West Indies. He didn't
get any further than the coast of France.
The real Ajax jersey
The most important effect of that
promotion was (understandably) not rated at its true value
at the time: Ajax had to change its uniform, for the simple
reason that another First Class side (Sparta from Rotterdam)
had exactly the same strip. According to NVB regulations the
newcomer to the league had to design a new kit. In
the summer of 1911 Ajax chose for a white jersey with a red
vertical bar running over chest and back - and white
shorts. Indeed: the Ajax shirt that is now one of the
most recognized football jerseys in the world.
1911-1914: First Class
Ajax's début season on
the highest level of Dutch football isn't the only thing
noteworthy about the 1911-1912 season. As a reward for
'staying in' (Ajax finished 8th out of 10 and only the bottom
team got relegated) the board offered the
team a surprise that was no less than magical: a
trip to the Austrian-Hungarian 'twin monarchy'! Most of
the Ajax players had never set foot across the border as
they departed from Amsterdam Central Station on 23 May
1912. Ajax played its first ever game on foreign
soil in Budapest, against the mighty MTK Budapest, twofold
national champions and playing with internationals. MTK
proved far too strong for the Amsterdammers (5-1) - but
who cared? The players surely didn't. They'd seen Budapest
- and Vienna, too (where they lost again, this time
to Wiener SC: 2-0). Very, very few Dutchmen could say
that in 1912.
At home Ajax continued to have a hard
time remaining upright in the First Class. While
Sparta (Rotterdam) and DFC (Dordrecht) were the dominant
factors at the top of the table, Ajax
finished last-but-one in 1913 and (finally and
inevitably) bottom in 1914. The happiest day in
club history (the 1911 promotion) was, sooner than
planned, followed by the saddest: 17 May 1914 was the day
of Ajax's first ever relegation - and it still is the
club's only relegation today. Back to the Second Class. The
ambitious AFC Ajax had to start all over again.

January 1913: playing the
reigning Dutch champions, Sparta Rotterdam.
The relegation marked the birth of a
tradition that still typifies Ajax today: Ajacieden expect
their club to win and whenever the results are
bad the atmosphere within the club turns grim. The emotions
during the General Members' Meeting of 18 June 1914 ran so
high that the first club crisis soon was a fact: the
entire board, except chairman Egeman, resigned on 20
June.
In 1914,
too, football sometimes seemed larger than life
itself for those who loved the game. Eight days later,
however, it became clear that there are more important
things in life. On 28 June, during a visit to the
city of Sarajevo, archduke Franz Ferdinand of
Austria-Hungary was shot dead by a Serbian nationalist
named Gabrilo Prinzip. A chain reaction of war
declarations followed and a
historic carnage commenced in the trenches of
Flanders and northern France. German troops briefly marched
over Dutch soil and the Dutch army remained mobilized for
a considerable time, but The Netherlands ultimately
managed to stay out of The Great War, the
bloodiest war the world had ever seen.
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