| Founded | 1886 | |
|---|---|---|
| Dissolved | 1893 | |
| Ground | Dunglass Park | |
| Match Secretary | John Marshall, Charles M'Garry | |
| Hon. Secretary | Alex M'Donald Scott | |
Bowling F.C. was anassociation football club from the village ofBowling, West Dunbartonshire, active in the 19th century.

The first record for the club is its playing in the Dumbartonshire Junior Cup in 1886–87.[1] Its first appearance of note was entering theDumbartonshire Cup in 1887–88, but Bowling scratched when paired withDumbarton Athletic in the first round.
The club took the bold step of joining theScottish Football Association in August 1888,[2] despiteDumbartonshire being the home of some of the strongest teams in the world at the time. The futility of such a step was demonstrated by its appearance in the1888–89 Scottish Cup, losing 8–0 toRenton,[3] which had recently demonstrated a claim to be thevery strongest.
The two clubs were drawn together againthe following season, this time Bowling at home, but still conceding 8. Bowling did at least score a consolation goal. Two months later, Bowling played for the first time in the Dumbartonshire, atUnion, and getting off to the best possible start, by scoring within a minute; even with 20 minutes to go, the score was still 1–1, but Union scored three late unanswered goals.[4] The club put in arguably its best performance in a friendly at the start of the season, drawing 2–2 withDumbarton, albeit a scratch Dumbarton side.[5]
The Scottish FA introduced qualifying rounds from the 1891–92 season onwards, and Bowling withdrew from the association. It continued to enter the county cup until 1892–93, its best attempt at avoiding defeat coming in a farcical tie againstKirkintilloch Athletic. The first attempt at the match had to be played as a 70-minute friendly as the referee had not turned up at Kirkintilloch, ending with 1 goal to Bowling, and 1 disputed goal to the home side.[6] The second was postponed, and the third won by Kirkintilloch, but Bowling successfully protested that the match finished in darkness due to Athletic not turning up in time.[7] The fourth did not take place, as Bowling did not turn up, and Athletic was awarded the tie, amid local muttering that "the Bowling seem able to play best at the association meetings in Dumbarton".[8]
The final recorded match for the club was a 7–2 defeat at Dumbarton Rangers in February 1893.[9]
The club wore black and white hoops with white knickers.[10]
The club played at Dunglass Park,[11] a field behindDunglass Castle provided by Captain Buchanan,[12] notable for its "neat pavilion and beautiful pitch".[13]