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Strathmore F.C. (Dundee)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Former association football club in Scotland
For theArbroath club of the same name, seeStrathmore F.C. (Arbroath).

Football club
Strathmore
Full nameStrathmore Football Club
Nicknamesthe Strathie, the Stripes[1]
Founded1876
Dissolved1894
GroundRollo's Pier
1884–94 black and white hooped shirts, navy blue shorts
to 1881colours
1884–92 colours

Strathmore Football Club was aScottishassociation football club based in the city ofDundee.

History

[edit]
1887–88 Forfarshire Cup Semi-final, Forfar Athletic 3–4 Strathmore (Dundee), Dundee Courier, 31 October 1887

The club was founded in 1876,[2] although it later claimed an earlier foundation date, and the earliest recorded match for the club is a 5–0 defeat toDunmore on Magdalen Green in March 1877.[3] The club took its name from its patron, theEarl of Strathmore.[4]

Into the early 1880s, there were few clubs in Dundee, and in 1880–81 the Strathie only played 6 matches, winning 2 and losing 4.[5] By 1883 however there had been something of an explosion, with clubs such asBalgay,East End,Perseverance, andWest End having started up, and the Strathie, as one of the oldest and best established, was also one of the largest.

Scottish Cup record

[edit]

It was not however quite of the first tier locally. In the regionalizedScottish Cup, the club could never get past the third round, three times falling to the biggest Dundee club,Our Boys, at that stage; the closest the club came to the fourth round was in1883–84, twice taking the lead in front of a 2,000 crowd at Rollo's Pier thanks to a Taylor screw-shot from the by-line and Petrie finishing off a cross; Our Boys made the score 2–2 thanks to a freak goal as goalkeeper Jarvis accidentally carried the ball over the goal-line.[6] In the replay at West Craigie, the Strathie took the lead through a Wilkie shot, before losing 5–1 - the cause not helped by an injury to full-back Christie taking him out of the game.[7]

Forfarshire Cup

[edit]

It faced similar difficulties in the leading local tournament, theForfarshire Cup, almost always coming up short against the very top local sides; in 1887–88, the club reached the final after some considerable luck with the draw, but lost 10–2 toArbroath at East Dock Street, in front of a crowd of 10,000.[8] Its best season had come the season before, in 1886–87, when it surprised Arbroath with a 4–2 first round win,[9] and beat Arbroathian namesakesStrathmore (Arbroath) in the second - the Dundee side winning 5–4, after losing a three-goal lead, and ending the game having to shelter the referee from angry home fans.[10] In the final the club lost 4–2 to the reigning championsHarp of Dundee.[11]

Burns Charity Cup

[edit]

The club was similarly ill-starred in the local charity cups. Twice it reached the final of the Dundee Burns Club Charity Cup, in 1885–86 and 1889–90, but lost heavily both times - 5–1 to Harp in the first[12] and 9–1 to East End in the second, spectators being said to have lost count in the latter final,[13] but there was considerable mitigation for the Strathie, as it played much of the match with 10 men, inside-left Anderson retiring injured when the score was 2–0.[14] The one consolation to the club in the 1890–91 tournament was beating Our Boys for the only time in a competitive match in the semi-final, 3–0 at East Dock Street.[15]

Trying to join the Northern League

[edit]

The club's status was demonstrated by it not being accepted as a member of the newNorthern League on its foundation in 1891–92, with only three clubs from Dundee being allowed in, and the voting being in favour of East End, Our Boys, and Harp; the Strathie was not even on the initial short-list of 12.[16][17] The club applied to join in 1892–93, but only obtained 2 votes, five short of what was required; another Dundee also-ran club,Johnstone Wanderers, was elected.[18]

Strathie tried again in 1893–94, by which time Our Boys and East End had merged to play in theScottish League asDundee. Although the club lost in the vote toVictoria United,Aberdeen, and the re-electedSt Johnstone,[19] the club had a second chance as the cash-strapped Harp - faced with "rampant" professionalism and having to pay as much as £3 to secure players - withdrew in protest at the abandoning of minimum admission prices,[20] which left a vacancy.[21]

Merger with Johnstone Wanderers

[edit]

After six matches in the 1893–94 season, both Johnstone Wanderers and Strathmore announced their resignations from the Northern League, on the basis that the gate money for matches atMontrose andVictoria United ofAberdeen was not worth the candle; the Strathie was facing eviction as theDundee F.C. committee had bought out its ground, and had been looking to share Clepington Park[22] which led to an assumption that the Wanderers and Strathmore were effectively acting as one club.[23]

That suspicion was confirmed in January 1894 when a new club,Dundonians, was formed by merger between the Wanderers and Strathmore, and played its first match under that name againstHibernian that month.[24] As the media often referred to theDundee club as "the Dundonians", Dundee made a formal objection,[25] and the new club instead used the Wanderers name, usually referred to asDundee Wanderers.

Colours

[edit]

The club wore the following:

  • 1880–81: scarlet and blue 1" hoops[26]
  • 1881–82: scarlet and navy blue 1½" hoops[27]
  • 1882–84: light blue jerseys and hose, and white knickers[28]
  • 1884–92: 1" black and white hooped jerseys and hose, and navy knickers[29]
  • 1892–94: royal blue shirts, dark blue knickers[30]

Ground

[edit]

In common with many other clubs from the city, Strathmore originally played on the public area at Magdalen Green.[31] In 1882 the club moved to Rollo's Pier.[32] The club spent the 189192 and 1892–93 seasons at Logie Park,[33] only securing the ground one week before the club's1891–92 Scottish Cup tie withKirriemuir,[34] and in 1893 beat the newDundee F.C. to the punch by securingCarolina Port.[35]

External links

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Strathmore v Arbroath".Dundee Courier: 3. 14 November 1887.
  2. ^Fleming, J. S. (1880).Scottish Association Football Annual 1880–81. Gillespie Brothers. p. 56.
  3. ^"Dunmore v Strathmore".Dundee Courier: 3. 12 March 1877.
  4. ^"Football".Dundee Courier: 9. 3 September 1879.
  5. ^Livingstone, Robert (1881).Scottish Football Association Annual 1881–82. Gillespie Brothers. p. 114.
  6. ^"Our Boys v Strathmore".Dundee Advertiser: 11. 23 October 1883.
  7. ^"Our Boys v Strathmore (Dundee)".Dundee Courier: 6. 30 October 1883.
  8. ^"Strathmore v Arbroath".Dundee Courier: 3. 14 November 1887.
  9. ^"Forfarshire Challenge Cup".Dundee Advertiser: 3. 20 September 1886.
  10. ^"Forfarshire Cup - second round".Dundee Courier: 4. 18 October 1886.
  11. ^"Forfarshire Challenge Cup - Final Round".Dundee Advertiser: 7. 22 November 1886.
  12. ^"Dundee Burns Charity Cup - Final Tie".Dundee Courier: 4. 12 April 1886.
  13. ^"The Dundee charity final".Scottish Referee: 2. 12 May 1890.
  14. ^"Burns Club Charity Cup - Final Tie".Dundee Courier: 4. 12 May 1890.
  15. ^"Dundee Burns Club Charity Cup".Dundee Courier: 4. 1 May 1890.
  16. ^"Northern Football League".Glasgow Herald: 11. 16 March 1891.
  17. ^"The Northern League".Aberdeen Journal: 7. 6 April 1891.
  18. ^"Northern Football League".Glasgow Evening Post: 6. 13 June 1892.
  19. ^"Northern League".Dundee Courier: 4. 5 June 1893.
  20. ^4d for adults; 2d for juveniles
  21. ^"Northern League Committee".Dundee Courier: 4. 31 July 1893.
  22. ^Wilkie, Jim (1984).Across The Great Divide. Edinburgh: Mainstream. p. 24.
  23. ^"The Northern League".Dundee Courier: 4. 15 January 1894.
  24. ^"Saturday's Football Association".Aberdeen Journal: 3. 22 January 1894.
  25. ^"The Dundonians and their title".Dundee Courier: 5. 8 March 1894.
  26. ^Fleming, J. S. (1880).Scottish Association Football Annual 1880–81. Gillespie Brothers. p. 56.
  27. ^Livingstone, Robert (1881).Scottish Football Association Annual 1881–82. Gillespie Brothers. p. 114.
  28. ^M'Dowall, John (1882).Scottish Football Association Annual 1882–83. Glasgow: W. Weatherston. p. 144.
  29. ^McDowall, John (1885).Scottish Association Annual 1885–86. Glasgow: H. Nisbet. p. 75.
  30. ^M'Dowall, John (1892).Scottish Football Annual 1892–93. Glasgow: Hay Nisbet. p. 95.
  31. ^Fleming, J. S. (1880).Scottish Association Football Annual 1880–81. Gillespie Brothers. p. 56.
  32. ^M'Dowall, John (1882).Scottish Football Association Annual 1882–83. Glasgow: W. Weatherston. p. 144.
  33. ^M'Dowall, John (1892).Scottish Football Annual 1892–93. Glasgow: Hay Nisbet. p. 95.
  34. ^"Football".Dundee Courier: 3. 4 September 1891.
  35. ^"Northern League Committee".Dundee Courier: 4. 31 July 1893.
Founder members of theScottish Football Association
Entrants to thefirst Scottish Cup
FormerScottish Football League members
FormerScottish Football Alliance members
FormerScottish Football Federation members
FormerScottish Football Combination members
FormerScottish Football Union members
FormerNorthern League members
FormerHighland League members
FormerEast of Scotland League members
FormerEastern League (and successors) members
FormerMidland Football league members
FormerSouthern Counties/South of Scotland League members
FormerLanarkshire Football League members
FormerNorth Caledonian Football Association members
Other senior clubs
Senior clubs without dedicated pages
Junior/amateur clubs
SPFL teams
Former senior teams
Junior /Midlands League teams
Women's teams
Venues
Major cup finals played in Dundee
Other topics
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