Temple Meadows 1892–1894
[[Hermit Road]] 1894–1895"},"capacity":{"wt":"1,000"},"chairman":{"wt":"[[Donald Currie]]"},"mgrtitle":{"wt":""},"manager":{"wt":""},"league":{"wt":""},"season":{"wt":""},"position":{"wt":""},"pattern_la1":{"wt":""},"pattern_b1":{"wt":""},"pattern_ra1":{"wt":""},"leftarm1":{"wt":"87CEFA"},"body1":{"wt":"87CEFA"},"rightarm1":{"wt":"87CEFA"},"shorts1":{"wt":"FFFFFF"},"socks1":{"wt":"ff2400"},"1":{"wt":"\n"}},"i":0}}]}" id="mwCQ">Football club
Full name | Old Castle Swifts Football Club | |
---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | The Swifts [1] | |
Founded | 1892 as Castle Swifts F.C. | |
Dissolved | 1895 | |
Ground | Dunottar Park 1892 Temple Meadows 1892–1894 Hermit Road 1894–1895 | |
Capacity | 1,000 | |
Chairman | Donald Currie | |
Old Castle Swifts Football Club, the first professional football club in Essex, [2] was formed by Scottish shipowner Donald Currie in September 1892 as Castle Swifts Football Club. The club's first home ground, located in West Ham, was named Dunottar Park, after the Castle Line company's ship Dunottar Castle. In 1894, Old Castle Swifts merged with Old St Luke's and was renamed. The club was wound up the following season. Its demise saw several players join the newly founded Thames Ironworks, the club that was later reformed as West Ham United.
Old Castle Swifts Football Club was formed by Scottish shipowner Donald Currie in September 1892 as Castle Swifts Football Club. They were the works team of the ship repair yard of The Castle Shipping Line and initially the majority of the team were drawn from the mainly Scottish workforce, paid for the games they played. [3]
Castles Swifts' first home ground, a field located opposite the West Ham Police Station in West Ham Lane, was called Dunottar Park, after the Castle Line's ship Dunottar Castle. The ground had perimeter fencing and admission was charged at 3d. [3]
Castle Swifts did not remain long at Dunottar Park, having to find a new ground after a dispute with the landlord. One was soon located in fields beside Wakefield Street in East Ham, known as Temple Meadows, which lay in the grounds of Temple House, not far from East Ham railway station. The team would change into their kit in the nearby Denmark Inn (now the Denmark Arms), located on the Barking Road. The Denmark Arms would later be used by many West Ham United fans before matches at the Boleyn Ground. [3]
In March 1893 they faced Barking Woodville in the final of the West Ham Charity Cup, held at Clapton's Spotted Dog ground. The Swifts were two goals down before coming back to win the tie 4–2, with the goals coming from outside-right Grundy, inside forwards Mitchell and Taylor and an own goal. A local newspaper made the following account of the final:
At the end of the 1893–94 season, the team merged with Old St Luke's, and the newly formed team was renamed as Old Castle Swifts, and used Old St Luke's ground in Hermit Road, Canning Town. Hermit Road had been described as a 'cinder heap' and 'barren waste'. It was surrounded by a moat and had canvas sheeting for fencing. [2]
The Swifts officially became a professional outfit in November 1894, a move made after one of their players, Cunningham, was denied a return to amateur status. [4] The club resigned from the London FA as a result. [5]
Their demise came at the end of March 1895 when the club became bankrupt. Following this, the club played one further game, a pre-arranged fixture against St Luke's on 16 April, under the name of Old St Luke's. [3]
Arnold Hills, the Chairman of Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Co. Ltd, saw the opportunity to fund a works side, so provided the money, in order that he may take over the tenancy of the Hermit Road ground, and Thames Ironworks was born. For the Ironworks' initial season of 1895–96, a number of Old Castle Swifts players were absorbed into the newly formed team. Among them were half-backs William Morton, Walter Parks and John Woods, forwards Jamie Lindsay and George Sage, and full-back Robert Stevenson, who became the Ironworks' first ever captain. Goalkeeper David Furnell would also eventually join Thames Ironworks in 1897. The club later became West Ham United. [2] [3] The light blue shirts, white shorts and scarlet socks that were worn by Thames Ironworks from the 1897–98 season, and also by the early West Ham United team, are thought to have originated with Old Castle Swifts. [6] [7]
Player | Position | Apps | Gls | Date Signed | Previous Club | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Castle Swifts' 1892–93 West Ham Charity Cup-winning team | ||||||
Lewis | GK | 1+ | 1892 | |||
A. McFarlane | RB | 1+ | 1892 | Upton Park | ||
Benbow | LB | 1+ | 1892 | |||
Leith | RH | 1+ | 1892 | |||
W. McFarlane | CH | 1+ | 1892 | Upton Park | ||
Baird | LH | 1+ | 1892 | |||
Murray | RW | 1+ | 1892 | |||
Mitchell | IR | 1+ | 1 | 1892 | ||
Fraser | CF | 1+ | 1892 | |||
Taylor | IL | 1+ | 1 | 1892 | ||
Grundy | LW | 1+ | 1 | 1892 | ||
Other known players | ||||||
H. Butterworth | CF | 0+ | 1894 | Old St. Luke's F.C. | ||
Cooper | 0+ | 1894 | ||||
Craig [9] | HB | 0+ | ? | |||
Cunningham | 0+ | 1894 | Millwall Athletic | |||
David Furnell | GK | 0+ | 1894 | Old St. Luke's F.C. | ||
William Hickman | LH | 0+ | 1893 | Old St. Luke's F.C. | ||
Jamie Lindsay | FB/FW | 0+ | 1894 | Millwall Athletic | ||
McLachlan [nb 1] | GK | 0+ | ? | |||
Frank McCulloch | FW | 0+ | 1894 | Millwall Athletic | ||
John Morrison | I/OL | 0+ | 1894 | Old St. Luke's F.C. | ||
William Morton | RH | 0+ | 1894 | |||
Walter Parks | LH | 0+ | 1893 | Old St. Luke's F.C. | ||
George Sage | IR | 0+ | 1894 | Old St. Luke's F.C. | ||
Robert Stevenson | RB | 0+ | 1895 | Woolwich Arsenal | ||
Johnny Stewart | HB/FW | 0+ | 1894 | Old St. Luke's F.C. | ||
Thompson [nb 1] | 0+ | ? | ||||
Tyler [nb 1] | 0+ | ? | ||||
Willing | 0+ | 1894 | Millwall Athletic | |||
John Thomas Archer Woods | WH/OR | 0+ | 1893 | Old St. Luke's F.C. | ||
West Ham United Football Club is an English professional football club that plays its home matches in Stratford, East London. The club competes in the Premier League, the top tier of English football. The club plays at the London Stadium, having moved from their former home, the Boleyn Ground, in 2016.
Clapton Football Club is a football club based in Plaistow, East London. The club are currently members of the Essex Senior League and play at the Terence McMillan Stadium in Plaistow following their 2019 eviction from their long-term home, the Old Spotted Dog Ground in Forest Gate.
The West Ham Charity Cup was an annual amateur football tournament which was contested by teams from West Ham and the surrounding area, an area of Essex that is now part of London. Only players that lived locally were eligible to compete. The competition was founded as the West Ham Hospital Cup in 1885 by George Hay, Mayor of the County Borough of West Ham, to raise funds for the local hospital, and ran until 1931.
The 1895–96 season was the inaugural season of Thames Ironworks, the club that would later become West Ham United. The club was founded by Dave Taylor and Arnold Hills in 1895 as the works team of the Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company. Taylor was a foreman at the Ironworks and a local football referee. Thanks to Ironworks owner Arnold Hills' financial backing, he was able to announce on 29 June 1895 the following in the company's weekly journal:
Robert Stevenson was a Scottish footballer, a versatile full and half back who could also play at centre forward. He was the first captain of Thames Ironworks, who were later reformed as West Ham United.
George Sage was an English footballer who played as an outside or inside forward. He was amongst the first players of Thames Ironworks, the club that would later be reformed as West Ham United.
James Lindsay was a footballer who played at inside-forward or centre-forward.
David Furnell was an English footballer who played as a goalkeeper.
Charles Dove (1879–?) was an English footballer.
The 1896–97 season was Thames Ironworks' second season after the club's formation in 1895.
Thames Ironworks Football Club, the club that later became West Ham United, was founded by Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Co. Ltd owner Arnold Hills and foreman Dave Taylor in 1895. Thames Ironworks took over the tenancy of The Old Castle Swifts' Hermit Road ground in Canning Town until their eventual eviction in October 1896. They would briefly play at Browning Road in East Ham, before moving to the Memorial Grounds, a stadium which was situated close to where West Ham station now stands. The ground was built at Arnold Hills's own expense, costing £20,000.
Royal Ordnance Factories Football Club were a football club from south east London, England, that existed in the late 19th century.
West Ham United Football Club are based in Stratford, Newham, east London. They played home matches at the Boleyn Ground in Upton Park between 1904 and 2016, and moved to the London Stadium for the start of the 2016–17 season.
Hermit Road was a stadium located in Canning Town in London, England. It was the first home ground of football club Thames Ironworks, the works team of the Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company. The club would later be reformed as West Ham United.
Billy Barnes was a professional footballer from West Ham, Essex. Originally debuting for Thames Ironworks, he moved to Sheffield United and scored the winning goal in the 1902 FA Cup final replay. Later on in his career he won two Southern Football League titles and took part in two Charity Shield matches including the first time it was held. Once his playing career was over, he went on to manage Athletic Bilbao in Spain.
Johnny Stewart was an English association footballer who played as a half back.
The 1900–01 season was English football club West Ham United’s inaugural season. The club had been founded in 1895 under the name of Thames Ironworks, before being wound up in June 1900 and resigning from the Southern League. On 5 July, West Ham United Football Club Company Limited was registered and the club took the Southern League place vacated by Thames Ironworks. They finished the season sixth in the Southern League Division One. The club also entered the FA Cup, reaching the intermediate round.
St Luke's Football Club was a football club based in Canning Town, England.
West Ham Garfield Football Club was a football club based in West Ham, England.