Alan Hydes – A Table Tennis Champion

In celebration of World Table Tennis Day, Tracey Hebron (Collections Clerk) celebrates a Barnsley born, four times Commonwealth & English table tennis player Alan Hydes


Here at Barnsley Museums we are always uncovering new stories about remarkable local people. One of them, Alan Hydes, was born in 1949 in a working-class household in New Lodge, Barnsley, the son of Lilly and Fred Hydes and brother to twins John and Glyn.

The boys are said to have spent hours throwing a ball against the coal shed at the back of their house and Alan soon developed a great hand eye and spatial co-ordination.

He first played table tennis at Barnsley Boys Club (now the Lamproom Theatre) paying 4 pence a week subs. But with support from his family he soon began to scrape together money for tournaments playing at places locally like the Ring O’ Bells pub, Royston, The Corner Pin in Barnsley Town centre and the Lundwood Hotel. He quickly became so dedicated that he was playing table tennis seven days a week.

In 1961 his mother had bought him a racket covered with rubber from the local Co-op for 50 shillings and by February 1963, when he was just 13 years old, his grandad gave him the money to compete in the South Yorkshire Open in Sheffield. In 1963 he received the “Most promising junior in England” award after making his debut against West Germany as youngest player to represent England junior team aged just 14 .

black and white photo of a man in a suit and a 1970s haircut meeting a young Prince Charles
Alan Hydes meets Prince Charles, now King Charles III

In all he won five English National Table Tennis Championships titles and in 1968 was selected to play at the European Championships in Lyon. In 1969 he beat the Russian number one ranked player in Munich, before beating the world champion in Hungary soon becoming the ranked 6th player in the world.

Alan saw the world playing table tennis, competing in Moscow 1970, Nygoya 1971, Rotterdam 1972, Novi Sad 1973 to name just a few. One particular highlight of his career was his role in ‘Ping Pong Diplomacy’ between East and West at the height of the Vietnam War.

He was competing in Japan when the Chinese government invited the UK and USA teams to China to play table tennis. China was very much closed to the West at this time and Alan can remember being escorted by UK soldiers across the ‘no man’s land’ bridge that linked Hong Kong to China.

The taxi driver who picked Alan up from Doncaster Train Station on his return asked: “Where’s tha’ bin lad?” and Alan replied “China”. The taxi driver replied “Has tha’ been drinking?” and Alan said “no” and that he was also on Panorama on TV that evening. The taxi driver remarked “now I know tha’s been drinking.”

black and white photograph of a young man with long hair wearing a suit signing something at a desk flanked by two smiling men
Alan Hydes signs up with Dunlop.

Alan went on the coach the New Zealand table tennis team and became vice president of the Table Tennis Federation chosen by the then President Roy Evans OBE. He also saw commercial success with Dunlop as he designed lighter bats and modernised the equipment of the game drawing on his own experience.

In January 1976 the company produced its first range of bats with reversed sponge rubber called the Alan Hydes range before Alan set up his own company Lion Sport in 1988.

Photographs of Alan Hydes alongside a blue England top, a pong pong ball and bat
Objects from Alan’s table tennis career which he has kindly donated to Barnsley Museums

Alan’s Achievements Are Celebrated

A blue plaque which reads, Alan Hydes played table tennis here in the 1960s. He went on to lead the ping pong diplomacy tour to China in the 1970s.
A temporary blue plaque celebrating Alan’s career

As part of the Eldon Street High Street Heritage Action Zone, Alan was given his own temporary blue plaque in 2022 on the former Y.M.C.A building on Eldon Street where he once played. The series of temporary plaques were created with Year 8 students from Horizon Community College.

Alan with two other men at the Chinese Embassy
Alan Hydes at the Chinese Embassy in 2023

Alan was invited to the Chinese Embassy to celebrate the 50th anniversary ping pong diplomacy to celebrate the the 74th anniversary of the People’s Republic of China. For his Fellowship Alan travelled to Japan and China to explore the playing of table tennis and improve his personal performance. Alan also speaks about his memories of ‘ping pong diplomacy’ in this video

While we were on YouTube we also found this short British Pathe clip from 1969.

As you can see in the image below, Alan’s blue England top is now in the sporting section at Experience Barnsley Museum alongside lots of other memorabilia including Frieda Stoner’s football shirt which you can read about in this blog

Have you read our recent blogs?

  • Volunteers lifting the lid on Barnsley Museums’ textile collections

    Volunteers lifting the lid on Barnsley Museums’ textile collections

    One of our regular volunteers, Liz Whitehouse has written a blog about her time volunteering at Experience Barnsley Museum along with her sister and over the last twelve months or so have been researching various garments in our textile collections. My sister, Susan, and I got to know Louise Wright, who looks after the museum…

  • Stanley Race CBE & The World’s First Glass Recycling Bank

    Stanley Race CBE & The World’s First Glass Recycling Bank

    To mark Recycling Week in 2023 Tracey Hebron (Collections Clerk) and Michael Hardy (Digital Curator) have teamed up to share the story of Stanley Race who made history on 6th June, 1977 when he dropped an empty jar into the very first glass recycling bank in the country. This blog also explores the history of…

  • Barnsley Parkway Palace of Varieties

    Barnsley Parkway Palace of Varieties

    As part of a series of blogs on the history of buildings on Eldon Street in Barnsley Town Centre, Dr Tegwen Roberts (HSHAZ project officer) and David Blunden (Community Sector Specialist) take a look at the history of 62 Eldon Street, currently home to the Parkway Cinema. Now a popular independent cinema, 62 Eldon Street…

  • Ernest Harold Jones honoured in his Barnsley birth place

    Ernest Harold Jones honoured in his Barnsley birth place

    by Professor Joann Fletcher, patron of Barnsley Museums & Heritage Trust A few days ago I was standing in the September sunshine on Sackville Street in the heart of Barnsley as part of Barnsley Heritage Month. And beside me stood Barnsley’s Mayor and Mayoress, the Deputy Lieutenant of South Yorkshire, members of Barnsley Civic Trust…

  • Artist Spotlight: Jean‐François Millet

    Artist Spotlight: Jean‐François Millet

    Natalie Murray (Collections and Exhibitions Manager) takes a look at one of the French painters who featured in the Light & Soul: Early Impressions of The French Landscape exhibition at The Cooper Gallery Light & Soul is the culmination of a research project into the French drawings and paintings at the Cooper Gallery, funded by…

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.