Earlestown F.C. (1880) Explained

Earlestown F.C. (1880) should not be confused with Earlestown F.C. (1945).

Clubname:Earlestown
Fullname:Earlestown Football Club
Founded:1880
Dissolved:1911
Ground:The Mesnes
Chrtitle:Hon. President
Mgrtitle:Secretary
Pattern Name1:1886–c. 1903
Leftarm1:FFFFFF
Body1:FFFFFF
Rightarm1:FFFFFF
Shorts1:ffffff
Socks1:000000

Earlestown Football Club was an association football club from St Helens in Lancashire.

History

The club was founded in 1880[1] and it made its senior football bow in the Lancashire Senior Cup in 1881.[2]

The club's greatest successes came in the era before the game turned professional. It was a strong power in the west Lancashire area, and reached the Liverpool Senior Cup final in 1883–84, 1884–85, and 1888–89. Its first two finals were both against Everton, and a 1–0 win at Hawthorne Road in 1885 in front of over 4,000 (with 700 fans travelling on a special train), the goal coming from a scrimmage which bundled goalkeeper Lindsay over the line, saw the Cup go to Earlestown for the only time.[3] The power of the resources available to clubs in the new Football League however was quickly demonstrated - in 1889–90, Earlestown met Everton in the semi-final, and was hammered 13–2.[4]

Earlestown was one of the founder members of the Lancashire League in 1889, having turned professional in 1888, and having its expenditure increase to £200.[5] The club lost its first four matches, before picking up a win by beating the similarly pointless Rossendale 5–3 at home in October.[6] Earlestown won four matches - the others being a double over West Manchester, which was top of the table when Earlestown won the home fixture,[7] and a breathless 6–5 win in the return at Rossendale[8] - and one more win, against Hyde, was stricken from the record because of crowd violence.[9] The match was never re-played; Earlestown was expelled before season end for not fulfilling its fixtures,[10] with the club only ahead of Rossendale at the time.[11]

The club did re-join the competition in 1899, staying in mid-table[12] until the competition was absorbed into the Lancashire Combination in 1903. Earlestown started off in the second division, and was promoted in its first season. It yo-yoed between the two divisions over the next decade, its best finish being 14th (out of 18) in the first division in 1904–05.

Despite its early prominence, Earlestown did not enter the FA Cup until 1900–01, and in its first entry it reached the fourth qualifying round, the penultimate stage; the match at home to Nantwich was considered to be a foregone conclusion, but the visitors won 3–2.[13] That run proved to be Earlestown's best, which it matched in 1905–06, when it lost 2–0 at Barnsley.[14]

Before the start of the 1911–12 season, the reserve sides of Football League clubs, which had been the backbone of the Combination, withdrew for a new competition.[15] Denuded of clubs, the Combination "promoted" 11 of its division two sides - including Earlestown - into the first division. However the costs and standard proved too much for the club, and Earlestown disbanded in October[16] due to lack of support, with a debt of £200, albeit that was eventually cleared.[17] Earlestown's record of 1 win in its 5 fixtures (in which it had conceded 21 goals)[18] was taken over by second division side Heywood United,[19] and Barnoldswick was elected to the second to fill the second division vacancy.[20]

Colours

The club's original colours were blue and white,[21] changing in 1886 to white jerseys with what was described as a red Maltese cross on the right breast,[22] although photographic evidence shows it to have been a cross pattée.

The club retained the design until at least 1902,[23] and by 1905 had changed to light blue shirts.[24]

Ground

The club played at The Mesnes, originally using the Sunbeam Inn for facilities.[25]

Notable players

Honours

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Alcock . Charles . Football Annual . 1882 . Cricket Press . London . 209.
  2. Lancashire Football Association Challenge Cup . Athletic News . 14 September 1881 . 6.
  3. Liverpool and District Challenge Cup . Runcorn Examiner . 7 March 1885 . 6.
  4. Everton v Earlestown . St Helens Examiner . 22 March 1890 . 6.
  5. Earlestown Football Club: Annual Meeting . Warrington Examiner . 6 July 1889 . 8.
  6. Football - Association . Runcorn Examiner . 2 November 1889 . 6.
  7. Oh! What a surprise . Athletic News . 6 January 1880 . 2.
  8. Rossendale v Earlestown . Preston Herald . 5 February 1890 . 7.
  9. En passant . Athletic News . 17 March 1890 . 1.
  10. Sporting fancies . Umpire . 20 April 1890 . 4.
  11. Football notes . Burnley Gazette . 19 March 1890 . 4.
  12. Web site: England - Lancashire League . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. . 12 May 2024.
  13. English Cup . Runcorn Examiner . 23 November 1900 . 6.
  14. Association Cup . Barnsley Chronicle . 16 December 1905 . 3.
  15. Lancashire League troubles . Southport Visiter . 18 July 1911 . 3.
  16. Combination troubles . Lancashire Evening Post . 5 October 1911 . 6.
  17. Boys of the old brigade . Liverpool Football Echo . 12 October 1912 . 2.
  18. Lancashire Combination - Division 1 . Barrow Herald . 30 September 1911 . 15.
  19. Heywood United promoted . Rochdale Times . 7 October 1911 . 3.
  20. Sequel to Earlestown's secession . Lancashire Evening Post . 6 October 1911 . 5.
  21. Book: Alcock . Charles . Football Annual . 1885 . Wright & Co . London . 246.
  22. Book: Alcock . Charles . Football Annual . 1885 . Wright & Co . London . 192.
  23. Answers to correspondents . Athletic News . 31 March 1902 . 4.
  24. Answers to correspondents . Athletic News . 27 November 1905 . 8.
  25. Book: Alcock . Charles . Football Annual . 1885 . Wright & Co . London . 246.