Renfrew Ramblers F.C.
Renfrew Ramblers Football Club was a Scottish football team located in the town of Renfrew.
Full name | Renfrew Ramblers F.C. | |
---|---|---|
Founded | 1875 | |
Dissolved | 1880 | |
Ground | Longcroft Park | |
Chairman | A. Thomson[1] | |
Secretary | Alex Fraser, John Elder | |
|
History
The club was founded in 1875, the same year as Renfrew F.C.; indeed the first recorded match for the Ramblers was against Renfrew in March 1876.[2] Its first full season was successful, with 12 wins and only 3 defeats in 24 matches.[3]
The club had a disadvantage to the Renfrew club as it did not have its own ground, playing instead at a public park. As a result, the Scottish Football Association rejected the Ramblers' application for membership in 1877 because of its lack of private facilities.[4] The club therefore joined the West of Scotland Football Association, set up with other similarly rejected clubs,[5] and entered the West of Scotland Cup for 1877–78. However the Ramblers scratched before playing a tie.[6]
The Ramblers finally joined the Scottish FA in 1879, after a season in which it won 10 of its 14 games,[7] as it had obtained use of a private ground. It only enjoyed the 1879–80 season as a senior club, in which its record was, on the face of it, similar to Renfrew's, with 7 wins and 7 defeats in 17 matches. However Renfrew had signed up 65 members, while the Ramblers were behind on 40, and the gap was already too big to make up.[8] The club did not even join the Renfrewshire Association, so could not play in the Renfrewshire Cup.
In its one senior season, the Ramblers played in the Scottish Cup for the only time. It had a walkover in the first round as opponents 23rd R.R.V. had disbanded before the tie was played.[9] In the second it lost 2–1 at home to Barrhead Rangers.[10]
The Ramblers entered the Cup in 1880–81, and was drawn at home to Yoker, [11] but scratched from the tie,[12] and there is no further record of the club; the last regular XI match it is known to have played was a 1–1 draw with Partick Thistle in March 1880.[13] The name was revived in 1886 for a short-lived Junior club.[14]
Colours
The club wore the same dark blue shirts, white knickers, and blue and white hose as did Renfrew F.C.[15]
Ground
The club originally played at a public park in Renfrew[16] before securing its own private ground at Longcroft Park on Inchinnan Road in 1879.[17] The club's first home match on its own private turf was a charity match, to raise funds for the Renfrew unemployed, against the Springfield side from Partick, in March that year.[18]
References
- "Football soiree". Paisley Daily Express: 2. 30 April 1877.
- "Local football fixtures". North British Daily Mail: 7. 23 March 1876.
- "Football soiree". Paisley Daily Express: 2. 30 April 1877.
- "Scottish Football Association". North British Daily Mail: 4. 12 March 1877.
- "A West of Scotland Football Association". North British Daily Mail: 6. 1 November 1877.
- "West of Scotland Cup". Scottish Football Historical Archive. Retrieved 7 May 2023.
- Dick, William (1879). Scottish Football Annual 1879–80. Glasgow: Dunlop & Foote. p. 75.
- Fleming, J. S. (1880). Scottish Association Football Annual 1880–81. Gillespie Brothers. p. 45.
- Fleming, J. S. (1880). Scottish Association Football Annual 1880–81. Gillespie Brothers. p. 58.
- "Association Cup ties". North British Daily Mail: 7. 13 October 1879.
- "Scottish Football Challenge Cup". Glasgow Herald: 2. 26 August 1880.
- Fleming, J. S. (1880). Scottish Association Football Annual 1880–81. Gillespie Brothers. p. 116.
- "Football - Saturday". North British Daily Mail: 2. 22 March 1880.
- "Renfrewshire Junior Association". Paisley Daily Express: 2. 1 December 1886.
- Dick, William (1879). Scottish Football Annual 1879–80. Glasgow: Dunlop & Foote. p. 75.
- Dick, William (1879). Scottish Football Annual 1879–80. Glasgow: Dunlop & Foote. p. 75.
- Fleming, J. S. (1880). Scottish Association Football Annual 1880–81. Gillespie Brothers. p. 45.
- "Renfrew Ramblers v Springfield". North British Daily Mail: 7. 24 March 1879.