TheFA Amateur Cup was anEnglishfootball competition for amateur clubs. It commenced in 1893 and ended in 1974 whenthe Football Association abolished official amateur status.

Following the legalisation of professionalism within football, professional teams quickly came to dominate the sport's main nationalknock-out tournament, theFA Cup. In response to this, the committee of the country's oldest club,Sheffield F.C., suggested in 1892 the organisation of a separate national cup solely for amateur teams, and even offered to pay for the trophy itself.[1]The Football Association (the FA) declined the club's offer, but a year later decided to organise just such a competition.[1]N. L. Jackson ofCorinthian F.C. was appointed chairman of the Amateur Cup sub-committee and arranged for the purchase of a trophy valued at £30, and the first tournament took place during the1893–94 season.[1] The entrants included 12 clubs representing theold boys of leading public schools, andOld Carthusians, the team for former pupils ofCharterhouse School, won the first final, defeatingCasuals.[2] The old boy teams competed in the Amateur Cup until 1902, when disputes with the FA led to the formation of theArthur Dunn Cup, a dedicated competition for such teams.[2]
The1973–74 competition was the last, as the FA abolished the distinction between professional and amateur clubs. The strongest amateur teams instead entered theFA Trophy, which had been set up five years earlier to cater for those teams outsideThe Football League which were professional rather than amateur. A new competition, theFA Vase, was set up to cater for the remaining amateur clubs, and was generally regarded as a direct replacement for the old competition.[2]
The first tournament attracted 81 entrants, with three qualifying rounds used to reduce the number down to 32 for the first round proper.[3] For the following season, the previous season's semi-finalists joined at the first round proper along with other leading clubs chosen by the FA, with the numbers made up by teams progressing through the qualifying rounds.[4] This remained the standard format until 1907, when the number of entrants to the first round was doubled to 64 and the number of rounds prior to the semi-finals increased to four. The competition continued under this format until it was discontinued in 1974.

Matches in the Amateur Cup were played at the home ground of one of the two teams, as decided when the matches are drawn. Occasionally games were moved to other grounds. In the event of adraw, thereplay was played at the ground of the team who originally playedaway from home. The second replay, and any further replays, were usually played at neutral grounds.
The final was held at various grounds in the early years of the competition, with a venue located somewhere in between the home towns of the two participating clubs usually chosen. In 1949 the final moved toWembley Stadium, and was then played there every year until the competition ended. In the 1950s attendances for the final reached 100,000, comparable to the FA Cup final itself.[2]
Almost all of the winners over the years were from either theIsthmian League, based inLondon and theHome Counties, or theNorthern League, based inNorth East England, withBishop Auckland the most successful club with 10 wins. Amateur Cup winners who later turned professional and gained entry to theEnglish Football League includeMiddlesbrough,West Hartlepool (merged to formHartlepool United),Wimbledon,Wycombe Wanderers andBarnet.Ilford,Leytonstone andWalthamstow Avenue additionally merged to becomeDagenham & Redbridge, a professional club which has also competed in the EFL.
Thirty-six clubs won the cup. The following clubs won the tournament more than once: