O's Through The Ages - A Brief History Of Leyton Orient F.C. cover art

O's Through The Ages - A Brief History Of Leyton Orient F.C.

O's Through The Ages - A Brief History Of Leyton Orient F.C.

Written by: Trevor Daivid Delves
Listen for free

About this listen

Leyton Orient were founded in 1881 by a cricket club in East London. They named themselves after a shipping company. They have spent most of their existence in the lower reaches of the Football League, winning nothing that anybody outside of E10 would consider significant.


They have also survived two world wars, a string of financial disasters, an Italian owner who appointed eleven managers in three years, and relegation from the Football League after 112 consecutive years of membership.


Orient Through the Ages is a ten-episode series — roughly thirty minutes each — covering the full history of the club from Victorian East London to the present day. Players who went to the Somme and didn't come back. Tommy Johnston, who scored 121 league goals and asked for his ashes to be interred at Brisbane Road.

Laurie Cunningham, who arrived from Archway and was at Real Madrid within five years. The 1978 FA Cup semi-final. A Channel 4 documentary Forbes named one of the five greatest sports films ever made. Justin Edinburgh, who won the National League title and was dead nine days later.


Not the story of a glamour club. The story of a club that has endured — and why that turns out to matter more.

© 2026 O's Through The Ages - A Brief History Of Leyton Orient F.C.
Episodes
  • Episode 4: A Season in the Sun - The Golden Age, Johnny Carey, and the One Year at the Top (1955–1966)
    Apr 29 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    On the afternoon of 24 August 1962, Leyton Orient beat Middlesbrough 3-1 in Division One. It was their first ever top-flight match. In the crowd were two schoolboys who would grow up to write Cats and Requiem. On the pitch was a centre-forward who had once worked in the mines and scored goals as if he was born to do nothing else.

    This is the golden episode — the one that every Orient supporter carries with them. We tell the story of Tommy Johnston, the most prolific goalscorer in the club's history; Johnny Carey, the genial Irishman who steered Orient to the First Division; the one extraordinary season in the top flight; and the slow descent that followed. Between 1955 and 1966, Leyton Orient came closer to being a major English football club than at any point before or since. This episode asks: what was it like? And why did it end?

    Player of the Era: Tommy Johnston.


    Research Sources

    Tony McDonald, 'Leyton Orient: The Untold Story of the O's Best-Ever Team' (FootballWorld, 2006) — the definitive account of the 1961-62 promotion and 1962-63 First Division season. Contains player interviews and supporter memories. Essential primary source for this episode.

    Kevin Palmer, 'Leyton Orient: A Season in the Sun 1962-63' (Desert Island Books) — companion volume focusing specifically on the First Division year. Useful for match-by-match detail.

    1962-63 Football League First Division Wikipedia entry — confirms Orient's relegation on 4 May after 3-1 defeat at Sheffield Wednesday; Everton champions; Manchester City also relegated; the Big Freeze's impact on the fixture programme.

    Tommy Johnston Wikipedia and Leyton Orient Programmes database — career statistics, the withered arm detail, Newport County signing fee (£4,500), the 1999 supporters' poll, and the ashes interment at Brisbane Road.

    Football Club History Database (fchd.info) — complete season records 1955-1966, including Johnston's 35-goal 1956-57 season and the 1961-62 Second Division finish (2nd, 54 points).

    Brisbane Road Wikipedia — confirms the 34,345 record attendance for the FA Cup vs West Ham, 25 January 1964.

    Leyton Orient Wikipedia — confirms the Andrew Lloyd Webber / Julian Lloyd Webber anecdote about "Variations" and the

    The following is a collated record of all research sources used across the ten episodes of Orient Through the Ages. Sources are listed by episode and organised into books and primary sources, digital archives and databases, journalism and fan media, and Wikipedia entries. All facts, dates, scorelines, and biographical details were verified against at least one source before inclusion in the scripts. Where sources conflicted, the most reliable or corroborated account was used, and the discrepancy is noted in the relevant episode’s production notes.

    Episodes

    01The Cricketers’ Club, 1881–1905

    02They Took the Lead, 1905–1929

    03Coming Home, 1929–1955

    04A Season in the Sun, 1955–1966

    05The Boy from Archway, 1966–1977

    06...

    Show More Show Less
    21 mins
  • Episode 3: Coming Home - The Long Lower Leagues, a New Name, and a Ground Called Brisbane Road (1929–1955)
    Mar 31 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    For twenty-six years between the wars and after them, Orient were a club in transition — and occasionally in crisis. Relegated from Division Two in 1929. Evicted from their ground in 1930. Forced to play at a speedway stadium with a cinder track around the pitch. Temporarily renamed Clapton Orient again, then back again, as if the club couldn't quite decide who it was.

    This episode covers the middle decades of the twentieth century: the nomadic Lea Bridge years, the move to Brisbane Road in 1937, the disruption of the Second World War, and the slow, unglamorous work of rebuilding that fills the late 1940s and early 1950s. It is not a period of glory. But it is a period in which the club proves, quietly and stubbornly, that it intends to survive. And that stubbornness, it turns out, is the most important thing about Leyton Orient.

    Player of the Era: Vic Groves.

    The following is a collated record of all research sources used across the ten episodes of Orient Through the Ages. Sources are listed by episode and organised into books and primary sources, digital archives and databases, journalism and fan media, and Wikipedia entries. All facts, dates, scorelines, and biographical details were verified against at least one source before inclusion in the scripts. Where sources conflicted, the most reliable or corroborated account was used, and the discrepancy is noted in the relevant episode’s production notes.

    Episodes

    01The Cricketers’ Club, 1881–1905

    02They Took the Lead, 1905–1929

    03Coming Home, 1929–1955

    04A Season in the Sun, 1955–1966

    05The Boy from Archway, 1966–1977

    06...

    Show More Show Less
    24 mins
  • Episode 2: They Took the Lead - Clapton Orient, the Footballers' Battalion, and the Cost of War ( 1905–1929)
    Mar 6 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    In December 1914, with the First World War four months old, ten Clapton Orient players attended a recruiting meeting at Fulham Town Hall and enlisted together. They were the first Football League club to enlist en masse. Within two years, three of them were dead on the Somme.

    This episode covers the first quarter-century of Orient's life in the Football League — early respectability in Division Two, the royal visit of 1921, a record crowd of 38,000 at Millfields Road — but its heart is the First World War, and the extraordinary sacrifice of the men who wore the club's colours on Saturday afternoons and then wore army uniform on the battlefields of France. We tell the story of Richard McFadden, who died near Serre in October 1916, and of what it means for a football club to carry the weight of that history.

    Player of the Era: Richard McFadden.

    The following is a collated record of all research sources used across the ten episodes of Orient Through the Ages. Sources are listed by episode and organised into books and primary sources, digital archives and databases, journalism and fan media, and Wikipedia entries. All facts, dates, scorelines, and biographical details were verified against at least one source before inclusion in the scripts. Where sources conflicted, the most reliable or corroborated account was used, and the discrepancy is noted in the relevant episode’s production notes.

    Episodes

    01The Cricketers’ Club, 1881–1905

    02They Took the Lead, 1905–1929

    03Coming Home, 1929–1955

    04A Season in the Sun, 1955–1966

    05The Boy from Archway, 1966–1977

    06...

    Show More Show Less
    29 mins
No reviews yet