| Full name | Newmilns Football Club | |
|---|---|---|
| Nickname | the Lacemakers[1] | |
| Founded | 1887 | |
| Dissolved | 1895 | |
| Ground | West End Park | |
| Match Secretary | Allan Jackson, R. Y. Cunningham | |
| Hon. Secretary | James F. Shields | |
Newmilns Football Club was afootball club from the village ofNewmilns,Ayrshire, Scotland.
The club was originally the footballing branch of the2nd Ayrshire Rifle Volunteers, acompany in theVolunteer movement of theBritish Army, and played under the 2nd A.R.V. name. The club was admitted as member of theScottish Football Association in 1887[2] and entered both theScottish Cup and theAyrshire Cup for the first time in 1887–88. The club lost in the first round of the Cup in both1887–88 and1888–89 toMaybole, both times in replays, the Maybole side being rewarded for the second win with a case of brandy.[3]
In 1889 the club changed its name toNewmilns,[4] possibly to widen its constituency, and seemingly also absorbing two other clubs from the village (Newmilns Rangers and Newmilns Star) which vanish from the records afterwards. The move paid immediate dividends in the national competition, as the club won a tie for the first time in the1889–90 competition, coming from behind to win 4–1 atMauchline in a "rather rough game",[5] but losing in the second round 5–0 atKilbirnie.[6]
The club's biggest competitive Cup win came in the first round of the1890–91 Scottish Cup, with a 13–0 win away atGreenock Abstainers;[7] however the club lost in a second round replay toUddingston, the half-time period being enlivened by spectators chasing and killing a hare which had darted onto the empty pitch.[8] The results mirrored the club's performance in the Ayrshire Cup, as it never won more than one tie in any season in the local competition either.
The replay defeat was the club's final match in the competition proper. With the rise of league football, the Scottish FA introduced a qualifying stage, and Newmilns did not win through to the first round again. Newmilns did join a league - theAyrshire Football League - on its foundation in 1891, but only lasted three seasons in it, finishing bottom and bottom-but-one in its latter two. A highlight was a 14–1 win overIrvine in October 1891,[9] which was the second-biggest win in the competition's history; unfortunately for the club, the biggest win was against the club, when it lost 16–2 atAnnbank in January 1893.[10] At the end of the 1893–94 season the club ceased playing competitive football, and in April 1895 the club's assets were auctioned off.[11]
The club however had an influence beyond its on-field achievements; the football division of theÖrgryte sports club was set up by lacemakers from Newmilns in 1891 and members played in thefirst football match in Sweden the following year.[12]
The club's colours were blue and white hooped jerseys and black knickers.[13]
The club originally played at Hillhead Park.[14] In 1889 it moved to West End Park.[15]