Monkcastle F.C.

Last updated

Monkcastle
Full nameMonkcastle Football Club
Nickname(s)the Monks [1] [2]
Founded1883
Dissolved1900
GroundClaremont Park
SecretaryJames S. Morgan, J. Andrews
Kit left arm thin black hoops.png
Kit left arm.svg
Kit body inch blackhoops.png
Kit body.svg
Kit right arm thin black hoops.png
Kit right arm.svg
Kit shorts.svg
Kit socks hoops black.png
Kit socks long.svg
Original colours
Kit left arm thin blackhoops.png
Kit left arm.svg
Kit body thin blackhoops.png
Kit body.svg
Kit right arm thin blackhoops.png
Kit right arm.svg
Kit shorts.svg
Kit socks hoops black.png
Kit socks long.svg
Final colours

Monkcastle Football Club was a football club which existed from 1883 to 1900, in the town of Kilwinning, Ayrshire, Scotland.

Contents

History

The club's last first round tie: a 6-1 defeat to King's Park in 1892-93, Glasgow Herald, 28 November 1892 1892-93 Scottish Cup First Round, King's Park 6-1 Monkcastle, Glasgow Herald 28 November 1892.jpg
The club's last first round tie: a 6–1 defeat to King's Park in 1892–93, Glasgow Herald, 28 November 1892

The club was formed in 1883 [3] and was named after a district in Kilwinning which contained an old abbey. It was founded by employees of Howie's Iron Foundry in Kilwinning [4] and occasionally referred to as Kilwinning Monkcastle. [5] The Monks joined the Ayrshire Association soon after foundation and played in the Ayrshire Cup for the first time in 1883–84, [6] losing in the second round.

National competitions

In 1885, the club joined the Scottish Football Association, [7] and entered the 1885–86 Scottish Cup. In the first round, the club lost 3–0 at Lanemark in a match spoilt by a high wind, [8] but Monkcastle protested on the basis that Lanemark had not registered one D. Brown in time. [9] The Scottish FA ordered a replay at Claremont, which the Monks won 2–0, thanks to second half goals from the Morgan brothers. [10] In the second round, Ayr went 4–0 up at Claremont before the Monks scored two late consolations due to their "fine passing". [11] Lanemark gained a revenge in the 1886–87 Scottish Cup with an undisputed first round win. [12]

The club did not play at a senior level from 1887 to 1890, only entering local competitions; it scratched from its 1887–88 Scottish Cup first round tie and was thrown off the senior roll for non-payment of subscriptions in August 1888. [13] However the club was re-admitted in 1890 [14] and on its return to senior football had its best Scottish Cup run in its first season back. Wins at Port Glasgow Athletic [15] and Dalry [16] meant the club made the third round for the only time in its history - Dalry's protest about Monkcastle not hosting the match at its registered ground was unanimously dismissed. [17] At that stage it lost heavily at home to Burnbank Swifts, despite taking the lead. [18]

In 1891–92 the Scottish Football Association introduced qualifying rounds, with the bigger clubs exempted until the first round proper. Monkcastle won its way through to that stage in both 1891–92 and 1892–93, losing in the first round both times; the club's most notable victim in the preliminary rounds was Morton in the third round in 1891, whom the club unexpectedly beat 4–2, scoring four in the first half, the first of J. Morgan's two goals being described as "a beauty". [19] The club continued to enter the Cup, and then the Scottish Qualifying Cup after its introduction in 1895, but did not play in the first round proper again.

Local competitions

The club's finest achievement: winning the North Ayrshire Cup, Glasgow Herald, 17 May 1897 1896-97 North Ayrshire Cup Final, Monkcastle 2-0 Stevenston Thistle, Glasgow Herald, 17 May 1897.jpg
The club's finest achievement: winning the North Ayrshire Cup, Glasgow Herald, 17 May 1897

Monkcastle struggled because of the strength of football in Ayrshire. In the Ayrshire Cup, the club did not get past the second round until 1891–92. That season, it reached the quarter-final, and beat Stevenston Thistle ostensibly to reach the semi-final, but a protest overturned the result and Thistle won the replay. [20] It was the only time the club reached that stage.

The rise of the Scottish League and alternative competitions was also a blow to the club, especially after the larger sides Kilmarnock and Ayr were recruited to membership, further reducing opportunities to play lucrative friendlies or Cup ties. The Ayrshire League was set up in 1891 to help in this regard, and the Monks played in its first three seasons, but struggled, and finished dead last in 1893–94. The club then took the decision to join the Ayrshire Combination, which was ostensibly for the stronger clubs in the county, and in its first season (1894–95) the Monks registered 1 point in 16 games. Paradoxically, this launched the club's most successful seasons. In 1895–96, Monkcastle rose to second in the table, ahead of future League club Ayr Parkhouse, and in 1896–97 it won the North Ayrshire Cup, played for the first time on a group plus final basis. The Monks had come out top of the table ahead of Steventon Thistle, and beat the Thistle in the title play-off.

The Ayrshire Combination only lasted one more season and Monkcastle did not come close to winning the North Ayrshire again. It disbanded in 1900, because of mounting debts, and the loss of the club president, who had defected to Kilwinning Eglinton. [21] The last record of the club on the national stage was its being drawn at home to Galston in the Qualifying Cup in 1900–01. [22] The same season the club drew a bye in the first round of the county cup, but withdraw rather than face Eglinton in the second.

Colours

The club's colours were originally ¾" black and white hooped jerseys and dark shorts. [23]

In 1890 the club changed to blue and white vertical stripes [24] and in 1893 the club changed again to black and gold. [25]

Grounds

The club played at Claremont Park, off Union Road. [26]

Honours

Notable players

Related Research Articles

Ayrshire Football League is a defunct soccer league in Scotland.

The Ayrshire Cup was an annual association football regional competition in Scotland. The cup competition was a knockout tournament between football clubs in the historic county of Ayrshire. The Ayrshire Cup was first held in 1877–78, the trophy being a solid silver vase, 30 inches high, and valued at £100, designed by Messrs John Cameron & Son. The first winners were Mauchline.

Campsie Football Club was a Scottish association football club based in the village of Lennoxtown, Stirlingshire.

Bute Rangers Football Club was a Scottish association football club based in the town of Rothesay on the Isle of Bute.

Kelvinside Athletic Football Club was a 19th-century athletics club from Kelvinside in Glasgow, originally the footballing branch of the Glasgow United YMCA Athletic Club.

Dalry Football Club was an association football club from Dalry, Ayrshire, Scotland.

Woodvale Football Club was a football club based in Thornliebank, Renfrewshire, in Scotland.

Clippens Football Club was a Scottish football team from the town of Linwood, Renfrewshire.

The Churchill Cup was an association football cup competition for clubs in the historic counties of Dumfriesshire, Wigtownshire, and Kirkcudbrightshire, Scotland. The competition was founded in 1881 and was last competed for in the 1894–95 season. Before the emergence of the Southern Counties Cup, it was the most prestigious local tournament for clubs in the south of Scotland.

Dykebar Football Club was a Scottish football team located in the town of Paisley, Renfrewshire.

Granton Football Club was a Scottish football team, based in Pollokshaws, now part of Glasgow.

Ayr Athletic Football Club was an association football club from Ayr, Ayrshire, Scotland.

Ayr Rovers Football Club was an association football club from Ayr, Ayrshire, Scotland.

Ayr Thistle Football Club was an association football club from Ayr, Ayrshire, Scotland.

Beith Thistle F.C. was an association football club from the town of Beith in Ayrshire.

Rankinston Football Club was an association football club from the village of Rankinston, Ayrshire.

Darnconner Britannia F.C. was an association football club from the lost village of Darnconner, near Auchinleck in Ayrshire.

The 21st Royal Scots Fusiliers F.C. was an association football club from Glasgow, which caused a surprise in the 1891–92 Scottish Cup qualifying round.

References

  1. "Football". Irvine Express: 8. 25 September 1885.
  2. "Ayrshire League Championship". Irvine Herald: 7. 29 April 1892.
  3. M'Dowall, John (1883). Scottish Football Association Annual 1883-84. Glasgow: W. Weatherston. p. 61.
  4. McDowell, Matthew (2010). "The origins, patronage and culture of association football in the west of Scotland". University of Glasgow PhD Thesis: 85.
  5. "Ardrossan Ensign v Kilwinning Monkcastle". Ardrossan & Saltcoats Herald. 30 December 1887.
  6. "Ayrshire Football Association". Ayrshire Post: 4. 7 September 1883.
  7. Scottish FA Minutes 1884–7. Glasgow: Scottish Football Association. 25 August 1885. p. 109.
  8. "Cumnock & District News". Ayr Observer: 7. 18 September 1885.
  9. Scottish FA Minutes 1884–7. Glasgow: Scottish Football Association. 20 September 1885. p. 118.
  10. "Monkcastle v Lanemark (Scottish Cup)". Irvine Herald: 3. 3 October 1885.
  11. "Monkcastle v Ayr". Irvine Herald: 2. 10 October 1885.
  12. "Lanemark (Cumnock) v Monkcastle". Glasgow Herald: 10. 13 September 1886.
  13. Scottish FA Minutes 1887–90. Glasgow: Scottish Football Association. 21 August 1888. p. 55.
  14. Scottish FA Minutes 1887–90. Glasgow: Scottish Football Association. 19 August 1890. p. 273.
  15. "Port-Glasgow Athletic v Monkcastle (Kilwinning)". Glasgow Herald: 10. 8 September 1890.
  16. "Scottish Association Challenge Cup". North British Daily Mail: 3. 29 September 1890.
  17. "Scottish Football Association". Lothian Courier: 6. 11 October 1890.
  18. "Football notes". Rutherglen Reformer: 6–7. 24 October 1890.
  19. "Monkcastle v Morton". Irvine Herald: 6. 23 October 1891.
  20. "Stevenston Thistle v Kilwinning Monkcastle". Irvine Herald: 6. 1 January 1892.
  21. Dickson, Neil (Spring 2003). "A few notes on old Kilwinning Town and the biography of Robert Morrison, Crosshouse". Ayrshire Notes (24): 15.
  22. "Scottish Football Association". Dundee Courier: 3. 15 August 1900.
  23. M'Dowall, John (1883). Scottish Football Association Annual 1883-84. Glasgow: W. Weatherston. p. 61.
  24. McDowall, John (1890). Scottish Football Annual 1890–91. Hay Nisbet. p. 93.
  25. M'Dowall, John (1893). Scottish Football Annual 1893–94. Glasgow: Hay Nisbet. p. 86.
  26. M'Dowall, John (1883). Scottish Football Association Annual 1883-84. Glasgow: W. Weatherston. p. 61.
  27. Dickson, Neil (Spring 2003). "A few notes on old Kilwinning Town and the biography of Robert Morrison, Crosshouse". Ayrshire Notes (24): 15.
  28. Scottish Athletics 1883-1983, John W. Keddie (1982)