American History Tellers - History Daily: The Hillsborough Stadium Disaster
Episode Date: April 15, 2024April 15, 1989: A crowd crush at a soccer game at Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield, England leads to the deaths of 97 Liverpool fans.You can listen ad-free in the Wondery or Amazon Music app.... Or for all that and more, go to IntoHistory.com.History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's May 20th, 1989 at Wembley Stadium in London, England.
28-year-old soccer player Ian Rush jogs up the pitch while his red-shirted Liverpool teammates pass the ball among themselves.
Ian is one of the best forwards in Liverpool history.
He's scored more than 200 goals for the club, but today he's late to the action.
He's been brought onto the field as a substitute in the final of the FA Cup,
the premier tournament in English soccer. Right now, Liverpool's opponents, Everton,
are holding the score even at 2-2, and the game has gone to extra time.
Liverpool's patient passing has their opponents chasing the ball and getting frustrated,
and one Everton player fouls in an attempt to gain possession.
Liverpool takes the free kick, and an attacking player dribbles the ball down the left-hand side of the field,
but Ian notices that the Everton defenders nearby are breathing heavily.
As a substitute, he has fresh legs and takes advantage by sprinting into the free space near the Everton goal.
His teammate crosses the ball toward him.
Ian stoops as he follows the ball's flight through the air
and then heads the ball low toward the goal,
underneath the desperate dive of the Everton goalkeeper
and into the net.
With just minutes to go in the FA Cup final,
Liverpool is ahead.
Ian Rush's goal wins the match, and shortly after the final whistle, his team captain lifts up the
FA Cup. Winning trophies is nothing unusual for Liverpool. For the last 15 years, they've been
the dominant team in English soccer. But this victory is an emotional one,
because five weeks earlier, 95 Liverpool fans were crushed to death while watching their team play.
Although this cathartic victory finally gives the city of Liverpool something to celebrate,
winning the FA Cup will not end the grief of the bereaved families, nor the suffering of the
survivors. Instead, they'll be haunted by a tragedy for almost three decades as they fight to prove the innocence of the Liverpool fans who were
wrongly blamed for the deadly disaster that occurred at Hillsborough on April 15th, 1989.
You're listening ad-free on Wondery Plus.
Have you ever wondered who created that bottle of sriracha that's living in your fridge?
Or why nearly every house in America has at least one game of Monopoly?
Introducing The Best Idea Yet, a brand new podcast about the surprising origin stories of the products you're obsessed with.
Listen to The Best Idea Yet on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
From Noiser and Airship, I'm Lindsey Graham, and this is History Daily. History is made every day.
On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world.
Today is April 15th, 1989, the Hillsborough Stadium disaster.
It's 3 p.m. on April 15th, 1989, at Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield, England, a month before Liverpool wins the FA Cup.
38-year-old Liverpool manager Kenny Dalgleish takes his dugout seat alongside the rest of his coaching staff as the referee blows his whistle to get the FA Cup semi-final underway.
Liverpool is facing off against Nottingham Forest to see who will advance to the final in a few weeks' time.
And as usual, the semi-final is being played at a neutral venue.
The site selected for this game is Sheffield's Hillsborough Stadium.
Officially, Kenny is Liverpool's player-manager, although he's 38 years old now and hardly
ever picks himself to play anymore.
Instead, Kenny trusts younger men for the job and concentrates on running his team from
the sidelines.
But since this game has only just begun, it's a little early for tactical tweaks.
Kenny is still watching and analyzing Liverpool's opponents.
But only four minutes after kickoff, Liverpool has its first chance of the game.
A Liverpool forward shoots from distance and the ball cannons off the crossbar.
The crowd shouts in excitement and the fans at
Liverpool's end of the stadium surge forward, but the wave of people causes a section of metal
fencing surrounding the pitch to give way, causing fans to spill out onto the grass.
More than 10 years earlier, professional soccer clubs in Britain began to install
cage fences at their stadiums. These high metal barriers were introduced after a spate of pitch
invasions and disorder at soccer matches. Most top-flight teams had to find a way to deal with
soccer hooligans, the minority of fans who travel to games not to just watch action on the pitch,
but to get into fights with fans of the opposing team. Now, Hillsborough Stadium stewards hurry
over to contain the fans, where the fence is broken down, worrying that mischief is about to break out. But the stewards can't stem the flow, and more fans make their way
onto the pitch. With no prospect of the field being quickly cleared, the game is halted by a
referee. The players return to the changing rooms while order is restored, but as Kenny leaves the
pitch with his players, he's stopped by Liverpool's goalkeeper, Bruce Grobbelaar.
Bruce reports that the problem isn't hooligans, it's a crush of bodies.
While Bruce was tending the Liverpool goal,
he could hear fans in the stand behind him shouting for help.
Kenny's stomach lurches as he realizes that his 11-year-old son is supposed to be watching the game from that end of the stadium.
So he rushes toward the goal, and even from where he is, Kenny can see that far too many people are packed into the stand at that
end of the pitch. Fans are climbing over the fence to escape, and the stadium stewards are helping
them over. The lucky fans who get out are in shock. Some sink to the ground, gasping for breath.
Others stumble around, disoriented and confused. And after a few
moments of terrifying panic, Kenny is reunited with his son. But as he hurries him away,
Kenny sees other fans ripping up advertising boards from the side of the pitch and using
them as makeshift stretchers to carry injured people to safety. It's obvious that something
terrible is happening, and soon emergency services confirm that fans have been killed in the crush.
The FA Cup semi-final is abandoned, and Kenny and his team prepare to return home.
The mood among Liverpool's players and coaching staff is somber.
Radio and television reports soon reveal that 94 people have been killed,
and a 95th will die in the hospital a few days later.
Many of the dead are children.
As Liverpool's manager, Kenny is the public face of the club,
and reporters clamor to ask him questions.
And the demand for his opinion intensifies four days after the disaster,
when the tabloid newspaper The Sun publishes a shocking front-page story
alleging that Liverpool fans picked the pockets
of victims who lay dying, that drunk fans urinated on police officers trying to help them,
and that one police officer was assaulted as he tried to resuscitate a fan.
Kenny and everyone else associated with Liverpool are enraged by these unfounded allegations.
Kenny was there. He saw nothing of what the newspaper claims. Instead, he only saw
Liverpool fans helping each other and emergency services saving lives amid the chaos. The false
accusations further traumatized the people of Liverpool. In the days that follow, Kenny and
his players will attend as many funerals as they can. And in their shared grief, the bond between
the team and its supporters will grow stronger. When the soccer season resumes, Liverpool will win the rearranged semi-final against
Nottingham Forest, then triumph in the FA Cup final.
But lifting the trophy will not mark a fairytale end to the Hillsborough disaster.
Instead, allegations, recriminations, and legal wrangling will drag on for more than
two decades as survivors battle to find out exactly how and why the tragedy took place
and who was really to blame.
Are you in trouble with the law?
Need a lawyer who will fight like hell to keep you out of jail?
We defend and we fight just like you'd want your own children defended.
Whether you're facing a drug charge, caught up on a murder rap,
accused of committing war crimes, look no further than Paul Bergrin.
All the big guys go to Bergrin because he gets everybody off.
You name it, Paul can do it.
Need to launder some money? Broker a deal with a drug cartel? Take out a witness?
From Wondery, the makers of Dr. Death and Over My Dead Body, comes a new series about a lawyer who broke all the rules. Isn't it
funny how witnesses disappear or how evidence doesn't show up or somebody doesn't testify
correctly? In order to win at all costs. If Paul asked you to do something, it wasn't a request.
It was an order. I'm your host, Brandon James Jenkins. Follow Criminal Attorney on the Wondery
app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to Criminal Attorney early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the
Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts. This is the emergency broadcast system. A ballistic missile
threat has been detected inbound to your area. Your phone buzzes and you look down to find this
alert. What do you do next? Maybe you're at the grocery store, or maybe you're with your secret
lover, or maybe you're robbing a bank. Or maybe you're with your secret lover.
Or maybe you're robbing a bank.
Based on the real-life false alarm that terrified Hawaii in 2018,
Incoming, a brand-new fiction podcast exclusively on Wondery Plus,
follows the journey of a variety of characters as they confront the unimaginable.
The missiles are coming.
What am I supposed to do?
Featuring incredible performances from Tracy Letts, Mary Lou Henner,
Mary Elizabeth Ellis, Paul Edelstein, and many, many more,
Incoming is a hilariously thrilling podcast that will leave you wondering,
how would you spend your last few minutes on Earth?
You can binge Incoming exclusively and ad-free on Wondery+.
Join Wondery+, and the Wondery app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.
It's November 19th, 1990 at Sheffield Town Hall, 17 months after the Hillsborough disaster.
39-year-old Ann Williams enters a packed meeting room and finds a seat that's been set aside for her.
It's the first day of the coroner's inquest, and Ann is here because one of the 95 fatalities was her 15-year-old son, Kevin.
Within only days of the disaster, the British government commissioned Richard Taylor, a high-ranking judge, to investigate what happened.
Judge Taylor examined nearly 4,000 witness statements and watched more than 70 hours of video footage. In doing so, Taylor saw through the sensationalist headlines that blamed Liverpool
supporters for the disaster, and his report concluded that the crush was not the result
of fan behavior but was instead caused by poor crowd control. According to Judge Taylor, the
game's kickoff should have been delayed when
thousands of Liverpool fans were left stuck outside the turnstiles. Instead, the police
opened the stadium's gates and allowed a mass influx of fans into the stands without proper
direction. Those fans unknowingly crowded into already full sections of the stadium,
resulting in the deadly crush. In his report, Judge Taylor was highly
critical of the police response and recommended a series of changes to make soccer stadiums all
over Britain safer. But the judge did not comment on individual deaths. That responsibility belonged
to the local coroner in Sheffield. So now, almost a year and a half after the disaster, the inquest
is finally getting underway, and Ann Williams has traveled to the city where her son died to attend the hearing.
The coroner opens proceedings by defining the scope of his investigation.
He announces that he won't consider anything that occurred beyond 3.15 p.m. on the day of
the disaster, arguing that all the victims were already dead by then. This makes Ann furious.
She knows there are
eyewitness statements that show her son was still alive at 4 p.m., and Anne believes more could have
been done to save him. As the disaster unfolded, too little was done to help the fans escape the
crush, and police also delayed some ambulance crews from accessing the stadium. Despite this
evidence, the coroner won't budge. By imposing this arbitrary
time limit, he does not even consider the response of police or emergency services might have
prevented some of the victims being saved. So it's little surprise when the coroner eventually
concludes that the Hillsborough fatalities were accidental deaths and that police actions were
not to blame. That's not good enough for Ann and many other families of the victims.
Ann is convinced that the Hillsborough disaster was not a tragic, unforeseeable accident,
but the direct result of police negligence, and she's determined to prove it.
Despite having no legal training and little money,
Ann begins a campaign to demand her son's case be reexamined.
Other families launch their own campaigns with the same goal,
to pressure the government to reopen the inquests.
But initially, these campaigns have little success,
and as the years pass, the tragedy only grows larger.
In 1993, four years after the crush,
a 96th victim dies in hospital, having never regained consciousness.
No matter how much the traumatized survivors and bereaved
families demand action, the British authorities stand by the coroner's verdict. But the more these
campaigns dig into the events of the day, the more evidence they discover that the police
mishandled the situation and demand for the case to be reopened grows. The campaigning families
are supported by the soccer club and other fans. A memorial service is held at Liverpool's Anfield Stadium every April,
and barely a match goes by in which Liverpool fans don't chant as one,
Justice for the 96!
That support keeps the Hillsborough campaign going even more than 18 years after the disaster.
And in 2007, Anne Williams is among the crowd of 4,000 people who marched to the Prime Minister's
residence in London to hand over a petition calling for a new investigation. Finally,
as public pressure mounts, the government will order a new and independent inquiry into the
Hillsborough disaster. The nine-person Hillsborough Independent Panel
will take two years to re-examine the evidence,
but when it finally reports back,
their findings will stun not just the city of Liverpool,
but the entire country.
In the Pacific Ocean, halfway between Peru and New Zealand,
lies a tiny volcanic island.
It's a little-known British territory called Pitcairn, and it harboured a deep, dark scandal.
There wouldn't be a girl on Pitcairn once they reached the age of 10 that was still a virgin.
It just happens to all of them.
I'm journalist Luke Jones, and for almost two years I've been
investigating a shocking story that has left deep scars on generations of women and girls from Pitcairn.
When there's nobody watching, nobody going to report it, people will get away with what they
can get away with. In the Pitcairn trials I'll be uncovering a story of abuse and the fight for
justice that has brought a unique, lonely, Pacific island to the brink of extinction.
Listen to the Pitcairn Trials exclusively on Wondery Plus.
Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app, Apple Podcasts or Spotify.
How did Birkenstocks go from a German cobbler's passion project 250 years ago to the Barbie movie today. Who created that
bottle of red Sriracha with a green top that's permanently living in your fridge? Did you know
that the Air Jordans were initially banned by the NBA? We'll explore all that and more in The Best
Idea Yet, a brand new podcast from Wondery and T-Boy. This is Nick. This is Jack. And we've
covered over a thousand episodes of pop business news stories on our daily podcast.
We've identified the most viral products of all time.
And their wild origin stories that you had no idea about.
From the Levi's 501 jeans to Legos.
Come for the products you're obsessed with.
Stay for the business insights that are going to blow up your group chat.
Jack, Nintendo, Super Mario Brothers, best-selling video game of all time.
How'd they do it?
Nintendo never fires anyone.
Ever.
Follow The Best Idea Yet
on the Wondery app
or wherever you get
your podcasts.
You can listen to
The Best Idea Yet
early and ad-free
right now
by joining Wondery Plus. It's October 22, 2012, at the House of Parliament in London, 23 years after the Hillsborough disaster.
Member of Parliament Maria Eagle rises from her seat and clears her throat.
She knows the speech she has planned is highly contentious,
but thanks to parliamentary privilege,
she can't be sued for defamation or libel for anything said in the chamber,
and she's determined to have her say.
One month ago, the Hillsborough Independent panel published its long-awaited report, and its contents caused public outrage.
The report backed up earlier verdicts that Liverpool fans were not to blame for the crush of 1989,
and that it was police mismanagement that led to the disaster.
But the independent report went further than any previous inquiry.
It concluded that almost half of the victims could have been saved had the emergency services responded properly,
and that the police then deliberately covered up their failings.
It was senior officers who fed the false allegations about Liverpool fans
to newspapers. 164 witness statements were tampered with. Officers ran blood alcohol checks
on the dead bodies of fans, even the children. And they searched police databases for criminal
convictions to try to find material that could be used to smear the victims. If that wasn't
shocking enough, now Maria wants the full truth to
be known. Silence falls over the chamber as Maria accuses a police officer involved in the Hillsborough
disaster response of boasting about his role in the cover-up. Maria's words are shocking because
the same man has risen in the years since to become one of the most senior police officers
in Britain. The accusations are incendiary and denied by the officer,
but he still resigns the day after Maria's speech.
That's far from the only impact of the independent panel's report, though.
With public opinion now firmly on the side of the Hillsborough victims,
the British government finally orders a new coroner's inquest.
This time, there are no arbitrary time limits
imposed. This second inquest concludes that the victims of the Hillsborough disaster did not die
in an accident. They were unlawfully killed. It's a verdict that leaves a complicated legacy.
The relatives of the victims welcome official confirmation that police inaction and not-fan
behavior was at the root of the tragedy. But only one person is
successfully prosecuted for their part in the disaster, and that's for relatively minor health
and safety violations. And for most, even that small comfort comes too late for survivors and
campaigners. Among them is Ann Williams, who passed away from cancer before the second inquest even
began. And in 2021, a 97th victim finally succumbs to the
life-changing injuries he suffered in the Hillsborough disaster. Today, Liverpool remains
one of the most successful and popular soccer teams in the world. Most of its players weren't
even born when the Hillsborough disaster took place, but they are reminded every day of what
happened in the long fight for justice that followed by the Liverpool Club Crest, which now features two eternal flames
in remembrance of the fans who went to a soccer match and never returned on April 15th, 1989.
Next on History Daily, April 16th, 73 CE.
The fall of the fortress of Masada brings an end to the first Jewish-Roman war.
From Noiser and Airship, this is History Daily.
Hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsey Graham.
Audio editing by Mohamed Shazi.
Sound design by Matthew Filler.
Music by Thrun.
This episode is written and researched by Scott Reeves.
Edited by Dorian Marina.
Managing producer, Emily Burke.
Executive producers are William Simpson for Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser. Thank you.