Horwich F.C.

Football club From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Horwich F.C. was an association football club from Horwich, Lancashire, active in the 1890s.

Full nameHorwich Football Club
Nicknamethe Railwaymen[1]
Founded1881
Dissolved1900
Quick facts Full name, Nickname ...
Horwich F.C.
Full nameHorwich Football Club
Nicknamethe Railwaymen[1]
Founded1881
Dissolved1900
GroundOld Racecourse Ground
SecretaryW. J. Whiteley[2]
Original club colours
Merged club colours
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History

Original Horwich

The original Horwich F.C. club is first noted from the 1881–82 season.[3] It played one tie in the Lancashire Senior Cup, in 1884–85, which ended in a 3–1 loss at Southport;[4] afterwards the Lancashire Junior Cup was created for the non-professional sides such as Horwich.

Horwich L&Y

In 1887, the cricket side of the Horwich railway works formed its own football club,[5] known as Horwich L&Y or Horwich L&YR F.C. (standing for Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway). Horwich L&Y was the more prominent of the two sides, and in 1891 it joined the Lancashire Alliance,[6] although it finished the 1891–92 season in next to last place.[7]

Merger

In April 1892 the Horwich and L&Y cricket and football clubs merged, "to secure for the township a really first-class club".[8][9] The combine retained the name Horwich, but kept the L&Y's Alliance place, and moved to a ground provided by the railway company.[10]

Horwich remained an Alliance member until the 1896–97 season, generally finishing in mid-table. It did however score some remarkable victories, including a then record-setting 17–0 win over Leigh Association (for which only four Leigh regulars turned up)[11] and a 14–0 win over Golborne in 1893–94.[12]

In 1897 the club was one of the five clubs elected to the Lancashire League, out of 14 applicants,[13] but it did not find the going easier - it was bottom of the table in 1897–98 (albeit after three other clubs left), was two off the bottom in 1898–99, and one off the bottom in 1899–1900.[14]

It was however now able to enter the FA Cup, and reached the third qualifying round in 1897–98, edged 3–2 by Chorley at that stage; Chorley were three goals to the good after half-an-hour but Horwich nearly pulled it back.[15] Horwich also re-entered the Lancashire Senior Cup in 1897–98 and 1898–99, but lost in the qualifying round both times.[16]

The club converted into a limited liability company in 1898, but the club's financial situation deteriorated - in 1898–99 the club lost over £50 over the season,[17] not helped by the club's pavilion being wrecked in a storm in January,[18] and in June 1900 the shareholders resolved to wind up the club; the blame was put on "the exodus of footballers to other towns".[19] The club's effects were sold in November 1900, raising just short of the £52 the club owed for rent, goalposts and nets fetching £25 (as against a purchase cost of £100 higher) and the grandstand a mere £7 as timber.[20] The company was formally removed from the register in 1902.[21]

Colours

The original club wore red and white halved shirts.[22] Horwich L&Y probably shared the same colours as Newton Heath L&Y F.C., namely amber and green halves (being the railway company's livery colours),[23], as the merged merged club wore green, amber, and red shirts,[24] mixing the Horwich red with the railway colours.

Ground

The Horwich club had a nomadic existence in its first seasons, repeatedly having to move ground because of building works,[25] before settling at the Chorley New Road ground in 1889,[26] which was also used by the L&Y side.[27] In 1892 the club moved to a new ground marked out at the Recreation Ground, and in 1894 to the Old Racecourse Ground.[28][29] The highest recorded crowd was 6,000 for the home FA Cup tie with Chorley in 1897.[30]

Notable players

References

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