Whitehill F.C.
Whitehill Football Club was a Scottish association football club based in Dennistoun, in Glasgow.
Full name | Whitehill Football Club | ||
---|---|---|---|
Founded | 1882 | ||
Dissolved | 1886 | ||
Ground | Haghill Park | ||
Match Secretary | George Gilmour | ||
|
History
The club was founded in 1882 by the Stewart brothers, former pupils of Glasgow High School,[1] with its first reported match coming at the start of 1883 against a Partick reserve side.[2]
Whitehill entered the Scottish Cup for the first time in 1883–84. In the first round, the club beat neighbours Alexandra Athletic 3–1, Whitehill's two second-half goals coming against the wind. The Whitehill side lined up as:
J. Strathearn, R. Stewart, J. Clark, J. Goodall, A. Macrae, A. Stewart, J. M'Menemy, P. White, J. Rankin, R. Gill, J. Cummings[3]
In the second round, the club was drawn to play Rangers away. Rangers had the disadvantage of losing goalkeeper Chalmers after 15 minutes through a hand injury; however, and despite Whitehill's "young players show[ing] good play at times", the home side won by 14 goals to 2, with two further goals disputed.[4] This remains Rangers' (joint) highest score.
The following season the club had the misfortune to be drawn against Rangers again in the first round, losing this time 11–0.[5]
In 1885, the club changed its name to Dennistoun Athletic.[6] It entered the Scottish Cup one last time in 1885–86 but lost 3–1 at Whitefield.[7]
The club's lack of success on the national stage was mirrored in more local football. It entered the Glasgow North-Eastern Cup from 1882–83 to 1885–86 but lost in the first round each time,[8] the final match being an 8–0 defeat at Clyde in 1886.[9] The last recorded game for the club is a 5–4 defeat at Port Glasgow Athletic in May 1886[10] and the club was struck from the Scottish Football Association register before the 1886–87 season.[11]
Colours
The club originally wore all white, the inspiration possibly coming from the club name. With its change of name, the club changed its colours to black and white one-inch hoops and blue knickers.[12]
Ground
The club originally played at Onslow Park, two minutes' walk from the Dennistoun car stop, taken over from the recently-defunct Harmonic Good Templars.[13]
By the 1883–84 season the club had moved to Haghill Park[14] and as Dennistoun Athletic played at Kennyhill Park.
References
- "Scotch Football Notes". Athletic News: 5. 3 October 1883.
- "Partick F.C. (Inchview Eleven) v Whitehill". Glasgow Herald: 8. 15 January 1883.
- "Whitehill v Alexandra Athletic". Glasgow Herald: 9. 10 September 1883.
- "Rangers v Whitehill". North British Daily Mail: 7. 1 October 1883.
- "Scottish Challenge Cup - First Round". North British Daily Mail: 7. 15 September 1884.
- McDowall, John (1885). Scottish Association Annual 1885–86. Glasgow: H. Nisbet. p. 56.
- "Scottish Association Cup Ties". Glasgow Herald: 10. 14 September 1885.
- "North-Eastern Cup". Scottish Football Historical Archive. Retrieved 28 March 2023.
- "Clyde v Dennistoun Athletics (N.E. Cup tie)". Dundee Courier: 4. 25 January 1886.
- "Port Glasgow Athletic 1885 to 1890". Plenty of nothing. Retrieved 28 March 2023.
- "Scottish Football Association". Lennox Herald: 6. 28 August 1886.
- McDowall, John (1885). Scottish Association Annual 1885–86. Glasgow: H. Nisbet. p. 56.
- "Matches held on Saturday". Glasgow Herald: 7. 17 November 1879.
- "Whitehill v Alexandra Athletic". Glasgow Herald: 9. 10 September 1883.