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Upton Park F.C.

Amateur football club in Essex, England

Upton Park F.C.

Summary

Amateur football club in Essex, England

FieldValue
clubnameUpton Park
fullnameUpton Park Football Club
nicknameThe "Scarlet & Black"
founded1866
1891 (reformed)
2016 (reformed)
dissolved1887 (first time)
c. 1911 (second time)
groundWest Ham Park
capacity1,000
pattern_la1_thin_blackhoops
pattern_b1_thin_blackhoops
pattern_ra1_thin_blackhoops
pattern_so1_hoops_black
leftarm1FF0000
body1FF0000
rightarm1FF0000
shorts1FFFFFF
socks1FF0000
websitehttps://www.facebook.com/Uptonparkfootballclub

1891 (reformed) 2016 (reformed) c. 1911 (second time)

Upton Park Football Club is an amateur football club from Upton Park, then in Essex but now part of the London Borough of Newham, in the late 19th and early 20th century, now defunct. As well as being one of the fifteen teams that played in the inaugural FA Cup in 1871, they also represented Great Britain at the first Olympic football tournament in 1900, which they won.

History

Founded in 1866, the club were one of the 15 teams to play in the very first edition of the FA Cup in 1871–72;{{cite web | url=http://www.thefa.com/TheFACup/TheFACup/NewsAndFeatures/Postings/2006/01/FACup_Firstmatches.htm | archive-url=https://archive.today/20060326180147/http://www.thefa.com/TheFACup/TheFACup/NewsAndFeatures/Postings/2006/01/FACup_Firstmatches.htm | url-status=dead | archive-date=26 March 2006 | title=The first ever matches | work=TheFA.com | access-date=7 April 2007 title=Upton Park | work= Football Club History Database | access-date=28 November 2006

The club were wound up in 1887 but were resurrected four years later in 1891. In 1892 they were founder members of the Southern Alliance, an early league competition amongst teams from southern England, but were bottom of the league with only one win to their name when the competition folded before the 1892–93 season ended.

Despite the obvious similarity of name to Upton Park stadium (officially known as the Boleyn Ground), the club had no connection with the ground and never played there; however there were formal links between Upton Park and West Ham United (then known as Thames Ironworks) and many players did play for both. In addition, Upton Park's home games in West Ham Park attracted large crowds to their games, which may have influenced Thames Ironworks' decision to move to the area from Canning Town, where football was not as popular.

1900 Olympic Games

An Upton Park team of 1900. That year the team won the Gold medal representing Great Britain at the Olympics

The Amateur Status Committee of the Football Association offered the club the opportunity to play in Paris at the inaugural Olympic Games. Records show that Upton Park were the first club to agree to play, but were unlikely to be the first to be asked. Upton Park were not participating in a league at the time playing only cup games and friendlies. They had never reached the semi-final stage of the FA Amateur Cup and the competition was now in its seventh year.

The club secretary and goalkeeper James Jones selected the team and brought in players from other amateur teams; Richard Turner joined from Crouch End Vampires, William Gosling, a soldier on leave, joined from Chelmsford, Alfred Chalk joined from Ilford and Jack Zealley joined from Bridport FC. Gosling's Chelmsford side had beaten Upton Park 7–1 in January 1900.

Upton Park won the competition in Paris, beating a USFSA XI representing France, 4–0.{{cite web | url=https://www.rsssf.org/tableso/ol1900f.html | title=Games of the II. Olympiad : Football Tournament (Demonstration matches) | work=RSSSF | access-date=8 April 2007

:James Jones; Claude Buckenham, William Gosling; Alfred Chalk, T. E. Burridge, William Quash; Richard Turner, F. G. Spackman, John Nicholas, Jack Zealley, Henry Haslam (captain){{cite web | url=http://www.olympic.org/uk/athletes/results/team_uk.asp?PAR_I_ID=98006 | title=Team members GREAT BRITAIN | work=Olympics.org }} Note that the spellings of names differs slightly from names listed by RSSSF.

The scorers were Nicholas (with two), Turner and Zealley.

Honours

Domestic

  • London Senior Cup
    • Winners (2): 1882–83, 1883–84
    • Runners-Up (1): 1884–85

International

  • Olympic Games
    • [[Image:Gold_medal_olympic.svg|16px|Gold]] Gold medalists (1): 1900

Famous players

Famous players for the side included Charles Alcock, later president of the Football Association, FA Cup Final referees Alfred Stair and Segar Bastard (who was also an England international), and Charlie Dove, one of the early leading players for Thames Ironworks.{{cite web |access-date=8 April 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070703022314/http://www.eolfhs.org.uk/membdata/upfca.htm |archive-date=3 July 2007 |url-status=dead url=http://www.englandfootballonline.com/TeamClubs/Clubs/UptonPark.html | title=England Players' Club Affiliations: Upton Park | work=England Football Online | access-date=28 November 2006

Legacy

Upton Park continued to play until at least 1911, according to modern-day records. The Upton Park Trophy, the annual playoff between the league champions of Guernsey and Jersey, is named for the Upton Park side, to commemorate their tenth annual tour of the islands, which they made in 1906. In 2016, coinciding with West Ham United's move to the London Stadium, Upton Park were 'reformed' as an amateur club and staged the final game at the Boleyn Ground, against Royal Engineers.

Upton Park FC was responsible for proposing two of the most important rule changes in the history of association football: in 1870, the club proposed abolishing all handling of the ball (previously, any player was allowed to catch the ball). In 1871, the club introduced a proposal to create the special position of goalkeeper, who alone would be allowed to handle the ball.

Refoundation

The team was refounded in 2016, it is an amateur team and competes only in friendlies, usually for charity.

References

References

  1. Powles, John. (May 2005). "Iron in the Blood". Tony Brown.
  2. "Arnold Hills". Oxford University AFC.
  3. Menary, Steve. (2010). "GB United? : British olympic football and the end of the amateur dream". Pitch.
  4. The [http://www.olympic.org/uk/athletes/results/search_r_uk.asp Official Olympics website] lists Great Britain as being 1900 gold medal-winners in the football tournament.
  5. "Channel Islands – List of Champions". RSSSF.
  6. "An East End Legacy". David Bauckham.
  7. (30 May 2016). "Welcome".
  8. (2 February 1870). "Football Association". The Sportsman.
  9. (26 February 1870). "Meeting of the Football Association". The Sporting Life.
  10. (1 March 1871). "Football Association". The Sportsman.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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