Maxwelltown Volunteers F.C. Explained

Fullname:Maxwelltown Volunteers Football Club
Clubname:Maxwelltown Volunteers Football Club
Nickname:the Volunteers
Founded:1897
Dissolved:1908
Ground:Palmerston Park, Dumfries
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The Maxwelltown Volunteers Football Club was a football team based in Dumfries, Scotland.

History

The club emerged from volunteer regiments (i.e. part-time soldiers) being raised in response to increasing unrest within Continental Europe and the British Empire, the Maxwelltown Volunteers being founded by 1860.[1] Ultimately eleven Companies were raised throughout Galloway and their services accepted by Queen Victoria. Maxwelltown in Dumfries was the home of the 5th Kirkcudbrightshire Rifle Volunteers, until in 1896 reforms saw the 5th KRV abolished, its members joining the Maxwelltown Volunteers regiment and the members of the former regiment's football club founding a new club in 1897.

The Volunteers entered the Scottish Cup from 1901 to 1908. The club won its way through the qualifying rounds to the competition proper four times, but never reached the second round proper. Its best performance was in 1903–04, twice holding Abercorn F.C. to draws before losing in the second replay.

The club had considerable success on a local level. The club won the Southern Counties Cup, for teams in the south-west of Scotland, in 1905 and 1908, and every other year from 1904 to 1907 won the Consolation Cup for clubs knocked out before the final.[2] The club also won the less prestigious Dumfries & Galloway Cup three times.[3]

The club's sole league season was a mid-table finish in the Scottish Combination in 1907–08.[4] A re-organisation of private militias in 1908 saw all volunteer forces in Galloway absorbed into the 5th King's Own Scottish Borderers Regiment, which saw the Volunteers re-form as a new club,[5] the 5th King's Own Scottish Borderers. After the troops returned from the First World War, the 5th KOSB joined forces with other local teams in the Dumfries area to form the current Scottish Football League side Queen of the South in 1919.

Colours

The club played in blue.[6]

Ground

The club played at Palmerston Park.[6]

Honours

Southern Counties Cup

Dumfries & Galloway Cup

Notable players

Notes and References

  1. Grand Musical Diapolologue . Dumfries & Galloway Standard . 10 October 1860 . 1.
  2. Web site: Southern Counties Cup . Scottish Football Historical Archive . 18 December 2022.
  3. Web site: Dumfries & Galloway Cup . Scottish Football Historical Archive.
  4. Web site: Scottish Combination . Scottish Football Historical Archive . 18 December 2022.
  5. http://www.sonsofgalloway.org.uk/kosb/grv.shtml Sons of Galloway :: Galloway Rifle Volunteers
  6. http://scottish-football-historical-archive.com Scottish Football Historical Archive :: Home Page
  7. Web site: Robert Colvin . Play Up Liverpool . 18 December 2022.
  8. Web site: David Calderhead . Motherwellnet . 18 December 2022.
  9. Sporting notes . Manchester Courier . 24 June 1907 . 2.