Hulme Athenaeum F.C. Explained

Clubname:Hulme Athenaeum
Fullname:Hulme Athenaeum Football Club
Founded:1863
Dissolved:1873?
Ground:Hullard Hall, Trafford
Mgrtitle:Hon. Secretary
Manager:John Nall, Charles Barton
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Hulme Athenaeum F.C. was an English association football club from Manchester.

History

The club was based at the Hulme Athenaeum, a clubhouse founded in 1860 by William Thackeray Marriott in order to improve the health of the working classes in the district. Members of the institution started the football club in November 1863 and bookkeeper John Nall became the club secretary, a post he held until 1870, by which time the club had 45 members.[1] Within two years of its founding, the club was attracting members from Sale and Bowdon.[2]

Unusually, the club did not charge members a joining fee, and had a 1 shilling nominal annual membership fee, which could be reduced in certain circumstances.[3] The club was the first association football club in Manchester, and sometimes played under Sheffield rules.[4] The club was associated with other sporting activities, and an early club captain, James Warrington, claimed tohave joined "for the sake of the gymnasium".[5] Warrington was a gas rental collector, demonstrating that the club membership was working-class, whereas other clubs were based on public school backgrounds; in Manchester, ex-public school pupils played rugby football.[6]

The club played every Saturday for its first five seasons, mostly games within the membership because of the lack of external opposition.[7] The first match against external opposition was a 2–0 win over Longsight in November 1865, played in Belle Vue, and with 15 per side.[8] January 1872.[9]

The club folded in around 1873–4, perhaps because of a lack of external opposition; other than Sale, which only briefly played association football, and which the club only played twice (in 1866 and 1867), the only other association club in Lancashire by then was Turton F.C.,founded in 1871. Many members joined Manchester Association F.C. on the latter's establishment in 1875.[10]

Colours

The club played in white, with blue trimmings.[11]

Ground

The club originally played at Hullard Hall, a quarter of a mile from Old Trafford railway station.[12] Its final ground was on Moss Side.[13]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Alcock . Charles . Football Annual . 1870 . 57.
  2. Warrington . James . Letter . Manchester City News . 14 February 1914 . 6.
  3. Book: Lillywhite . John . Football Annual . 1868 . John Lillywhite . London . 82.
  4. Manchester Athenaeum v Sheffield Garrick . Sheffield Daily Telegraph . 20 February 1871.
  5. Warrington . James . Letter . Manchester City News . 14 February 1914 . 6.
  6. Book: Collins . Rugby's Great Split . 2006 . Routledge . 9.
  7. letter . Athletic News . 23 October 1875.
  8. match report . Sporting Life . 15 November 1865.
  9. Football - Garrick v Hulme Athenaeum . Sheffield Daily Telegraph . 4 January 1872 . 3.
  10. Manchester Association Football Club . Bell's Life . 20 November 1875 . 8.
  11. Book: Lillywhite . John . Football Annual . 1868 . John Lillywhite . London . 82.
  12. Book: Lillywhite . John . Football Annual . 1868 . John Lillywhite . London . 82.
  13. Book: Alcock . Charles . Football Annual . 1872 . Virtue & Co . London . 64.