Accrington F.C.
Accrington Football Club was an English football club from Accrington, Lancashire, who were one of the founder members of The Football League.
History
Accrington F.C. was formed following a meeting at a local public house in 1876. The Owd Reds played at Accrington Cricket Club's ground in Thorneyholme Road, still in use for that sport today.[1]
The club was part of the revolt against the Football Association in 1884 over professionalism, after being expelled from the FA the previous year for paying a player. They were one of the original twelve teams forming the Football League on 17 April 1888. Accrington's best season was in 1889–90, when it finished sixth in the table. However, in the 1892–93 season the team finished fifteenth (of 16) and was relegated after losing a test match 1–0 against Sheffield United at Trent Bridge. Accrington then resigned from the league rather than play in the Second Division, becoming the first of the founding Football League clubs to leave the League.
Shortly afterwards, Accrington F.C. suffered financial problems, which eventually led to its demise. The club continued outside the league until 1896, when it finally folded following a 12–0 defeat on 14 January against Darwen in the Lancashire Senior Cup.
Accrington did not have a Football League team again until in 1921–22 the Lancashire Combination league's Accrington Stanley (formerly a local rival), became a member as part of a major expansion of the league.
League and Cup history
International players
During its short life, the club had three players selected for England:[7]
References
External links
|
---|
|
- Aberdare Athletic (1921–27)
- Accrington (1888–93)
- Accrington Stanley (1921–62)
- Aldershot (1932–92)
- Aldershot Town (2008–13)
- Ashington (1921–29)
- Barrow (1921–72)
- Bootle (1892–93)
- Boston United (2002–07)
- Bradford Park Avenue (1908–70)
- Burton Swifts (1892–1901)
- Burton United (1901–07)
- Burton Wanderers (1894–97)
- Cheltenham Town (1999–2015)
- Chester City (1931–2000, 2004–09)
- Darlington (1921–89, 1990–2010)
- Darwen (1891–99)
- Durham City (1921–28)
- Gainsborough Trinity (1896–1912)
- Gateshead (1930–60)
- Glossop North End (1898–1915)
- Grimsby Town (1892–1910, 1911–2010)
- Halifax Town (1921–93, 1998–2002)
- Hereford United (1972–97, 2006–12)
- Kidderminster Harriers (2000–05)
- Leeds City (1905–19)
- Lincoln City (1892–1908, 1909–11, 1912–20, 1921–87, 1988–2011)
- Loughborough (1895–1900)
- Macclesfield Town (1997–2012)
- Maidstone United (1989–92)
- Merthyr Town (1920–30)
- Middlesbrough Ironopolis (1893–94)
- Nelson (1921–31)
- New Brighton (1923–51)
- New Brighton Tower (1898–1901)
- Northwich Victoria (1892–94)
- Rotherham County (1919–25)
- Rotherham Town (1893–96)
- Rushden & Diamonds (2001–06)
- Scarborough (1987–99)
- South Shields (1919–30)
- Southport (1921–78)
- Stalybridge Celtic (1921–23)
- Stockport County (1900–04, 1905–2011)
- Thames (1930–32)
- Tranmere Rovers (1921–2015)
- Torquay United (1927–2007, 2009–14)
- Wigan Borough (1921–31)
- Wimbledon (1977–2004)
- Workington (1951–77)
- Wrexham (1921–2008)
|
|
|
---|
| Transport | | | Railway stations | |
---|
| Disused stations | |
---|
|
---|
| Sport | |
---|
| Media | |
---|
| Education | |
---|
| Companies | |
---|
| History | |
---|
| Politics | |
---|
|