Full name | Blackburn Law Football Club |
---|---|
Nickname(s) | Law |
Founded | 1876 |
Dissolved | 1883 |
Ground | Lane Ends [1] |
President | Mr T. Ainsworth |
Chairman | H. T. Platts |
Hon. Secretary | Arthur Constantine |
Blackburn Law, originally the Law Football and Cricket Club, was an English association football club based in Blackburn, Lancashire. The club was founded in 1876 and membership was restricted to solicitors, who had contributed 50 guineas through subscriptions by the time the club was entering its second year. [2]
The club optimistically entered the FA Cup in 1881-82 as one of four sides from the town (the others being Blackburn Rovers, Blackburn Olympic, and Blackburn Park Road) to do so, despite not having entered the Lancashire Senior Cup in the competition's two years of existence. [3] The club was drawn to play Bootle in the first round, and took the lead in the first half, but ultimately lost 2–1. [4] Both sides had Lancashire Cup ties on the same day; Bootle played theirs against Preston North End straight afterwards, while Law had to send a reserve team to Bolton Hornets, which also lost. [5] The same season saw the biggest win credited to Law, a 6–0 victory at home to Southport; [6] soon afterwards captain Rylance moved to Southport and essentially took over the town's club. [7]
The last reference to a game being played by the club was a 2–2 draw with Blackburn Zingari in December 1882. [8] For the 1882–83 season the club's opponents were much lower key sides than in previous seasons, and the club lost to teams such as Cherry Tree F.C. [9] and Darwen Hibernians. [10] The club had also gone out of the Lancashire Cup in the first round to Farnworth, [11] suggesting that, as some of the better players had moved to more high-profile clubs, there was no longer enough interest in a club with such a narrow constituency, and the club's Football Association membership lapsed at the end of the 1882–83 season, [12] and was listed as having been a "loss" before the start of the next season. [13]
Harry Fecitt, FA Cup winner with Blackburn Rovers, played for the club in 1882 [14]
Jimmy Brown, winner of 3 FA Cup winners' medals with Rovers and future England international [15]
Ralph Rylance, key figure in the history of Southport F.C. and inventor of the artificial football pitch [16]
Blackburn Olympic Football Club was an English football club based in Blackburn, Lancashire in the late 19th century. Although the club was only in existence for just over a decade, it is significant in the history of football in England as the first club from the north of the country and the first from a working-class background to win the country's leading competition, the Football Association Challenge Cup. The cup had previously been won only by teams of wealthy amateurs from the Home counties, and Olympic's victory marked a turning point in the sport's transition from a pastime for upper-class gentlemen to a professional sport.
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Alfred Matthews was a football player who won the FA Cup with Blackburn Olympic in 1883.