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25 May 2007 - 19:49
Tarra I remember him, least I think it was him. I was a junior Doctor in Park Hospital, Manchester in 1955, he was one of our patients. 'When can I go home?', he would often ask. Anyway he was very patient, didn't mind the food, or the fact that my stethoscope was freezing. R.I.P YOU HUMBLE ONE.
Baz
25 May 2007 - 19:27
Next time I visit the grave in Dudley Cemetry, I will take a little teddy bear for the baby burried with him.
Alistair Seel
15 May 2007 - 21:23
Like the person before me who signed the book i am not old enough to have seen you play. But coming from a big United family i have been told over and over of your immense prescence on the football field in particular from my grandfather who watched you many times. Standing outside OT earlier this year to comemerate the Munich air disaster I thought to myself that i can only hope that the present team performs to a fitting level next year to commemorate the 50 yr anniversary. You were a credit to the club and the country- I only wish i coulod of seen you play- A TRUE LEGEND.
14 May 2007 - 11:16
Sir Issac Newton, Dr William Harvey(born in my home town), and a few other bods of the same ilk, are all crammed into one stained glass window, where as you dear boy get two to yourself. Brilliant
Danny McGregor
09 May 2007 - 12:31
Although too young to have seen you play, I am a fanatical United fan, and every time I look up at the Munich clock and the Munich memorial plaque, I think of you and the other seven players who lost their lives. By all accounts, you were a magician with a football, and it is a tragedy that we didn't have the chance to watch you play for longer. R.I.P. Duncan Edwards, you shall never be forgotten.
Paul Gowdy
04 May 2007 - 19:54
I was 11 years old living in Belfast N.I., when I first watched Duncan Edwards and Man Utd on BBC television qualify for and play against Aston Villa in the 1957 F.A. Cup Final at Wembley. He became my boyhood idol and I always tried to play soccer as he did. I will always admire and remember him for his great talent on the field and humility off the field. He will not be forgotten.
Jaideep Bhandarkar
29 April 2007 - 12:32
They shall not grow old as we that are left grow old, Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn, At the going down of the sun, and in the morning We will remember them we will remember them
Dougie Davidson
24 April 2007 - 12:52
Although he died before I was born, my father told me many stories of Duncan Edwards and the Busby Babes. I have only been lucky enough to have seen the little tv footage there is of Duncan, but having read and listened to what great footballers have written and said, it is obvious that the world was robbed of one of the greatest football players ever to have kicked a ball.
David France
23 April 2007 - 11:23
I went to my first fotball match on Wednesday, September 4, 1957. It was Everton versus Manchester United at Goodison Park. I remember that the final score was 3-3,nthat the grass resembled an emerald carpet and that I touched Duncan Edwards' shirt as he retrieved the ball for a throw-in. My good friend Alex Young (The Golden Vision) who played against Duncan Edwards for Scotland Under 23 versus England Under 23 claims that he was the greatest British footballer of all time. And gods don't lie, do they?
Steve M
10 April 2007 - 02:23
Greetings from a Manchester United fan in Cleveland OH. Thank you to those who maintain this website, you do soccer fans everywhere a greqt service. God bless you Mr. Edwards and may you and yours rest in peace.