Northern Football Club was a football club based at Hyde Park in the Springburn area of Glasgow, Scotland.[2] The club was a founder member of Scottish Football League Division Two, but left after a single season.
Full name | Northern Football Club | |
---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | the Hyde Men[1] | |
Founded | 17 September 1874 | |
Dissolved | 1897 | |
Ground | Hyde Park, Glasgow | |
|
History
editThe club was formed in 1874, as a football playing branch of the Northern Cricket Club,[3] although details of their early years are largely unknown; in its second season, the club won 9 of its 14 matches.[4] In 1883 they merged with another local team Petershill (a different club from the surviving Junior club of that name)[5] and were founder members of the Glasgow Football Association in the same year.[6]
The club was never particularly successful. Despite entering the Scottish Cup every season from 1875–76 to 1892–93, it only reached the fourth round on one occasion; in its second entry, in 1876–77. That run saw the club gain its biggest Cup win, 12–0 over Telegraphists, Cunningham scoring five times.[7] The club also only reached the quarter-final of the Glasgow Cup once, in 1888–89;[8] Northern held Queen's Park to a remarkable 5–5 draw, coming from 2–0 down to lead 5–2 at the break, and conceding a late equalizer, with loud Northern protests that the goal was offside.[9] However Northern lost the "rough and tumble sort" of replay at Hampden Park by six goals to nil;[10] Queen's went on to win the trophy.
Its only triumphs of note came in the Glasgow North-Eastern Cup, which was largely dominated by the club's neighbour Cowlairs, which won the trophy every season bar one from 1882–83 to 1887–88; the one exception was 1884–85, in which Northern beat Cowlairs in the semi-final and then beat Thistle 5–1 in the final at Inchview.[11] However the formation and instant success of Celtic - which beat Northern in the North-East Glasgow semi-final in 1888–89,[12] Celtic taking its first trophy by beating Cowlairs in the final - resulted in support draining away from the much less endowed Northern. Indeed, Celtic beat Northern in the 1890–91 final,[13] Northern only regaining the trophy after Celtic gave up entering.
Despite this lack of success, Northern was one of the five clubs which agreed to set up the Scottish Football Alliance in 1891,[14] to provide regular league competition. After two mediocre seasons, Northern (and a number of other Alliance members) accepted an invitation to form the new Division Two of the Scottish League. 1893–94 proved to be their sole season in the league, with the club finishing ninth out of ten, and failing re-election, losing on a fourth ballot by 1 vote to Airdrieonians.[15] It returned to the Scottish Alliance but during the course of the 1896–97 season was wound up, the final straw being an 8–1 home defeat to Royal Albert at Christmas.[16]
Petershill Juniors were formed in summer 1897, just after Northern folded and a year after Cowlairs; due to the circumstances they could be seen as a successor representing the Springburn area, albeit their club history does not mention those clubs, only linking their formation to the demise of St Mungo's Juniors in the area.[17]
Colours
editThe club's original colours, as agreed at the initial meeting, were royal blue and scarlet hoops.[3] By 1877 the club had changed to light and dark blue halved[18] shirts with white knickers.[19]
Ground
editThe club originally played at Lodge Park,[20] but opened its new ground at Hyde Park on 13 February 1875, with a game between the club's first and second elevens.[21]
Honours and records
edit- Glasgow North-Eastern Cup:
- Winner: 1884–85, 1891–92
- Runner-up: 1883–84, 1887–88, 1888–89, 1889–90, 1890–91
External links
edit- Northern Historical Kits
- Alliance fixtures and tables
- Scottish Cup results (NB: the tie with Carfin Shamrock in the 1889–90 Scottish Cuprecorded as 22–1 was abandoned when the score was 2–1 in favour to Northern.[23] Shamrock won the replay.).[24]
- Glasgow North-Eastern Cup
References
edit- ^ "Glasgow Cup Third Round". Aberdeen Journal: 7. 5 November 1888.
- ^ "Ordnance Survey 25 inch, 1892-1914". Explore georeferenced maps. National Library of Scotland. Retrieved 13 October 2018.
- ^ a b "Football". North British Daily Mail: 6. 22 September 1874.
- ^ Alcock, Charles (1876). Football Annual. p. 117.
- ^ "Scottish Club Directory". Scottish Football Historical Archive. Retrieved 13 October 2018.
- ^ Chapter XXV—Glasgow Association, History of the Queen's Park Football Club 1867 - 1917 (via Electric Scotland)
- ^ "Northern v Telegraphers". North British Daily Mail: 6. 2 October 1876.
- ^ "Glasgow Cup". Scottish Football Historical Archive. Retrieved 27 November 2024.
- ^ "Glasgow Cup Third Round". Aberdeen Journal: 7. 5 November 1888.
- ^ "Queen's Park v Northern". Aberdeen Journal: 7. 12 November 1888.
- ^ "Football". Glasgow Evening Post: 3. 8 May 1885.
- ^ "1889-03-16: Celtic 4-1 Northern, Glasgow North-Eastern Cup". Celtic Wiki. Retrieved 27 November 2024.
- ^ "Celtic v Northern". The Scotsman: 5. 17 March 1890.
- ^ "Sport and pastime". The Reformer: 6. 27 February 1891.
- ^ "Football jottings". Motherwell Times: 3. 16 June 1894.
- ^ "Football notes". Coatbridge Advertiser: 6. 28 December 1895.
- ^ "History". Petershill F.C. Retrieved 13 October 2018.
- ^ McDowall, John (1885). Scottish Association Annual 1885–86. Glasgow: H. Nisbet. p. 57.
- ^ Alcock, Charles (1877). Football Annual. p. 129.
- ^ "Club Directory". Scottish Football Historical Results Archive. Retrieved 27 October 2022.
- ^ "Northern Club". North British Daily Mail: 3. 15 February 1875.
- ^ a b J. Rollin, The Guinness Football Factbook, Enfield: Guinness Publishing, 1993, p. 131
- ^ "Northern v Carfin Shamrock". Rutherglen Reformer: 6. 25 October 1889.
- ^ "Northern v Carfin Shamrock". Rutherglen Reformer: 7. 8 November 1889.