Francis and Walter liked their bowls. So much so that when news came that the neighbourhood was threatened, they decided to complete their game before joining the fray.
Francis won, 21 ends to 19, and went on to beat the Spanish Armada in the final. Dapper Francis Drake and wandering Walter Raleigh are emblems of Olde England. So is bowls. The gentle game has ever declining numbers of followers and fewer greens left to play on. The finger post in Crowcroft Park Longsight, points the way to the Bowls Pavilion, but the elevated Bowling Green itself is recently laid out and planted in a decorative walkway. The pavilion is boarded up and abandoned. Too few bowlers to warrant the upkeep.
Games and competitive sports come and go and disappear into the pages of the social histories on the shelves of local libraries. Not many boating lakes, pitch and putt and bowling greens left to tell tales of the long Edwardian summer. Nor, centuries earlier, the legendary green on Plymouth Hoe where Sir Francis Drake and Sir Walter Raleigh might have competed ends whilst waiting for the tide to turn before sailing into the Channel to defeat the Spanish Armada.