| Full name | Johnstone Harp Football Club | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Nickname | the Harp[1] | ||
| Founded | 1886 | ||
| Dissolved | 1890 | ||
| Ground | Castle Park | ||
| Match Secretary | Henry M'Glynn | ||
| |||
Johnstone Harp Football Club was afootball club based inJohnstone,Renfrewshire, inScotland.

During the 1884–85 season, the two senior clubs in Johnstone,Johnstone F.C. andJohnstone Rovers, agreed to merge.[2] Rovers had a number of players with Irish roots, and, given the merged club had taken on Johnstone's colours and ground, there may have been some dissatisfaction, as for the 1886–87 the Irish community in Johnstone formed a new club, the Harp. Whereas the merged Johnstone club only had 82 to 86 members in 1886, the Harp started out with 100.[3]
Despite this size advantage, the development of football had already passed the town by, with the merger of clubs happening too late for sustained success, and the split between Johnstone and Harp further diluting the available resources. On top of this, the rise ofCeltic F.C. in nearbyGlasgow further attracted attention away from the side.
As a consequence, the club was entirely unsuccessful. It entered theScottish Cup andRenfrewshire Cup three times, and never won through to the second round in either. In the first round of the1886–87 Scottish Cup, the club's first reported match, the Harp took the lead atPort Glasgow Athletic, but then conceded 10 goals without further reply.[4] The club lost in the first round of the Renfrewshire Cup in the same season, by the same score, but this time at home to the mediocreRenfrew side.[5]
The 1887–88 season was nearly as bad; once more the club was eliminated from the national competition by a 9-goal margin, this time byAbercorn; the Harp kept the score down to 2 in the first half, but only drew two saves out of the Abercorn goalkeeper Clark.[6] In the Renfrewshire the club lost 5–0 atSt Mirren.[7]
The club did pick up towards the end of the season, which saw the club win seven matches in a row, including a 10–1 win over the small Howwood club in the Johnstone & District Cup.[8] Indeed, the Harp reached the final of the competition for the only time, but was out-passed byLochwinnoch in the final and lost 1–0.[9]
The Harp's final season in competitive football, 1888–89, saw it lose much more narrowly in theScottish Cup, 5–4 at home toWoodvale, but it suffered another humiliating defeat in the first round of the Renfrewshire, 8–0 at the1st Renfrewshire Rifle Volunteers ofGreenock.[10]
The final record for the club is in relation to its tie againstThornliebank in the1889–90 Scottish Cup.[11] The Harp scratched from the tie, expecting to play the match as a friendly, but, as Thornliebank did not turn up, the Harp protested to theScottish Football Association, and got an order against Thornliebank for it to pay the 10s 10½d which the Harp had spent on bills and posting.[12] There is however no record of the club playing any senior club again and in August 1890 the club was struck from the SFA membership roll.[13]
The club originally played in green jerseys and white knickers.[14] In 1888 it changed to black and white jerseys with white knickers.[15]
The club started playing at Castle Park,[16] 200 yards fromElderslie railway station, and the former ground ofGlenpatrick.[17] In 1888 it moved toNewfield Park.[18]