| Sport | Rugby union |
|---|---|
| Jurisdiction | |
| Membership | RFU |
| Abbreviation | Lancashire RFU |
| Founded | 1881; 144 years ago (1881) |
| President | Brian Hurst |
| Coach | Mark Nelson |
| Official website | |
| lancashirerugby | |
TheLancashire County Rugby Football Union is the society responsible forrugby union in the county ofLancashire,England, and is one of the constituent bodies of the nationalRugby Football Union having been formed in 1881. In addition it is the county that has won theCounty Championship on most occasions

The first match arranged for the county of Lancashire took place in 1870, at Leeds against Yorkshire. This match was immediately known as the "Battle of the Roses" and was considered the "blue riband" of Northern rugby football.[citation needed] To be selected to represent the county was an honour bestowed long before the foundation of the Lancashire RFU and it was seen as "the high road to International honours".[1]
From 1870 to 1881 the government and arrangement of county matches in Lancashire vested inManchester Football Club. Though self-appointed, Manchester FC was recognised as the authority by the other great Lancashire club,Liverpool St. Helens.[1] A movement of emerging new clubs, headed by W. Bell, the honorary secretary of theBroughton FC, had an objective to secure a voice in the selection of county teams. Bell was supported by an informal committee consisting of: G. C. Lindsay (Manchester Rangers), A. M. Crook (Free Wanderers), F. C. Hignett (Swinton), Hunter (Birch).

Initial approaches to the Manchester Club were declined and in 1881 a general meeting of Lancashire clubs was called at which the following clubs were represented: Manchester Rangers; Free Wanderers; Broughton; Swinton; Walton; Rossendale;Oldham; Manchester Athletic;Rochdale Hornets; Chorley Birch; and Cheetham. Notably, the Manchester Club did not take part, but a resolution to form the Lancashire Football Union was agreed. The initial committee had W. Bell as its honorary secretary and G. C. Lindsay as the honorary treasurer.[1]
Two county matches were arranged altogether versus the Midland Counties and Lanarkshire (Scotland). Manchester then decided to wrest control of the county back and on 22 December 1881 met with the new Union and a duly constituted and representative governing body, its club to be called The Lancashire County Football Club, was formed. It was agreed the president, a vice-president, the hon. secretary and treasurer should be elected from the Manchester Football Club, a vice-president and a member of committee from theLiverpool Club, and the remaining eight names to be elected from clubs other than the Manchester and Liverpool clubs. Also, all Home County matches would be played on the ground of theManchester Football Club.[1] The first officers and clubs elected to represent the newly formed Lancashire County Football Club were:

The first match was versus the Midland Counties (the Lanarkshire match having been cancelled), played at Coventry on 26 March 1882.Albert Neilson Hornby became president after James MacLaren resigned the office on 1 October 1884. Lancashire was part of the Queen's Jubilee celebrations in 1887 when they were asked to play Middlesex atKennington Oval on 12 March as a representation of Rugby Football, whilstCorinthians playedPreston North End as an exposition of Association rules. Lancashire, led byEdward Temple Gurdon, won by a try, gained byVincent Slater (Salford).[1]
In February 1889 it was proposed that the county shall be divided out into five districts (Manchester, Liverpool, South-East Lancashire, West Lancashire, and North Lancashire) each with three representatives, removing club based representation on the committee.[1]
Lancashire won the 1890-91 season of the County Championship, despite thecounty championship having been organised by arch-rivals,Yorkshire. Lancashire won all their games with "not a goal being scored against them in any of the county matches they played".[1] They then played "the Rest of England", on 18 April 1891. In 1891-92 Lancashire were defeated by Yorkshire who therefore wrested the championship of England from Lancashire.
At this time, Lancashire County Football Club was made up of a number of clubs, and two sub-unions, West Lancashire Union (formed in 1884) and South-East Lancashire Union (predating the county Rugby Union having been formed in 1877):[1]
It was postulated that the comparatively small membership compared toYorkshire had its roots in the fact that Yorkshire had aChallenge Cup, the eligibility for which was based on membership of the county union, whereas in Lancashire there was no equivalent.[1]
There are currently 83 clubs affiliated with the Lancashire RFU, most of which have teams at both senior and junior level. The majority of teams are based inLancashire, parts ofGreater Manchester andMerseyside, but there are also occasionally sides fromCheshire and evenCumbria that are members.
The Lancashire RFU currently helps run the following competitions for club sides based inLancashire:
All leagues are by both the Lancashire RFU andCheshire RFU and feature clubs based inCheshire,Merseyside,Lancashire,Greater Manchester and theIsle of Man.
In 2018 several Lancashire Clubs lobbied the County to form a county based league system after repeated requests to change the RFU League structure in the North West had failed. The start of the 2018/19 season saw the founding of two Leagues in theADM Lancashire County Leagues consisting of ten teams each. In the 2019/20 this was expanded to two 12 team leagues and by the 2020-21 season it had expanded to three senior 1st XV leagues consisting of three leagues and 35 clubs. In addition, two new "combination" leagues where formed consisting of two 10 team leagues.
ADM Premier DivisionADM Championship DivisionADM 1st Division

The county side has reached theCounty Championship Final 38 times, winning the title on a record 25 occasions. Lancashire have played in twelve of the past fourteen finals (from 2003 to 2018) and has won nine of those twelve finals.
Notes: ★ RFU President