Hallam F.C.

Hallam
Full name Hallam Football Club
Nickname(s) The Countrymen
Founded 4 September 1860 (reformed 1887)[1]
Dissolved 1886[1]
Ground Sandygate Road
Ground Capacity 1,000 (250 seated)[2]
Chairman Steve Basford
Manager Ryan Hindley
League Northern Counties East League
Division One
2015–16 Northern Counties East League
Division One

Hallam F.C. is an English football club based in Crosspool, Sheffield, South Yorkshire. They play in the Northern Counties East League Division One, at level 10 of the English football league system. Founded in 1860, it is second only to local rivals Sheffield F.C. in the list of the oldest association football clubs in the world. Games between these two clubs are known as the Rules derby.

They have played at their Sandygate Road home in the Sheffield suburb of Crosspool since formation, with the ground being officially recognised by the Guinness Book of Records as "The Oldest Football Ground in the World".[3]

In 1867 the club made history by winning the world's first ever football tournament, the Youdan Cup.[4] The club still possess this historic trophy.

History

Although formed in 1860, the football club can trace its links even further back, to 1804, when the owner of the Plough Inn public house on Sandygate Road agreed to allow a new cricket club, Hallam CC, to start playing on an adjacent field he owned.

The club had in excess of 300 members by the 1850s,[5] and in 1860 it decided to form a football club to oppose Sheffield F.C., formed three years earlier. On Boxing Day 1860 the two clubs played each other on Sandygate Road for the first time. The match report for the game in the Sheffield Daily Telegraph[6] states that the game was played between 16 of Sheffield and 16 of Hallam and Stumperlowe (Stumperlowe being a hamlet half a mile from Sandygate).[1]

The Hallam Football club's founder and captain, John Charles Shaw, soon became President of the Sheffield Football Association which organised matches to the locally preferred rules for its growing number of member clubs. Shaw was directly instrumental, with Charles Alcock of the London-based Football Association, in the formation of nationally accepted rules for playing the game. Shaw and Alcock were the respective captains in the first game between a Sheffield XI and a London XI, in 1871, in which the preferred rules were experimented.

In 1867, Hallam won the first ever football competition, the Youdan Cup. The trophy was subsequently lost by the club, and didn't resurface again until 1997 when a Scottish antiques collector who had come into possession of the silver trophy sold it to the club for £2,000. In 2014 the trophy featured on the BBC programme Antiques Roadshow, where it was valued at £100,000. Club chairman Chris Taylor subsequently said the club had no plans to sell the trophy.[7]

Although professionalism began to creep into the game during the 1870s and 80s, Hallam chose to remain fully amateur. In the summer of 1886, for reasons unknown but likely because of financial constraints, the club was dissolved, but a year later the club was re-formed and re-registered with the Sheffield & Hallamshire FA.[1]

Hallam entered their first league competition in 1892 when joining the newly formed Hallamshire League, and they would also play in the Sheffield Minor Cup League, Sheffield Alliance and the Hatchard League at the back end of the 19th century.[1] They won the Hatchard League title for the first time in 1903, and a year later won the league again, though they lost the play-off final played between the top four teams, and so surrendered their title. They also reached the final of the Sheffield and Hallamshire Senior Cup for the first time in 1904, but lost 1–6 to Barnsley reserves at Bramall Lane.[8]

In 1911 the club first competed in an FA cup competition, when they entered the FA Amateur Cup. Three years later the First World War began, but Hallam continued to play, dropping out of the Hatchard League to join the Sheffield Amateur and Minor Leagues, previously staples of the club's reserve team. Eventually, in 1917, Hallam decided they could no longer keep playing, and suspended playing operations, only re-joining the Sheffield Amateur League after hostilities had ended, in 1919.[1]

In 1924 Hallam pulled off one of their greatest ever results when they knocked out five-time Amateur Cup winners Bishop Auckland in front of over 2,000 at Sandygate Road. Two years later the club entered the FA Cup for the first time. After winning the Sheffield Amateur League for the second time in 1927, they were admitted back into the Sheffield Association League.

At the end of the 1932–33 season the landlord of the Plough Inn public house decided to lease the Sandygate Road ground to other teams (Crookes WMC and later Fulwood) as Hallam weren't providing enough bar takings. Although the club retained its affiliation with the local FA, Hallam's eviction from their ground saw them refrain from playing any football for a period of 15 years.[1]

Hallam's return to football came about in 1947 when they finally arranged a return to Sandygate Road, playing in the Sheffield Amateur League and the re-formed Hatchard League (which they won) before finally re-joining the Sheffield Association League in 1949, winning the title for the first time.[1] A year later Hallam won the Sheffield Senior Cup for the first time when they beat Stocksbridge Works at Hillsborough in front of 7,240 spectators, and in 1952 they entered the Yorkshire League.

That same season an Amateur Cup tie with Dulwich Hamlet was switched to Hillsborough stadium because of increased ticket demands – the attendance of over 13,000 proving to be a club record. After winning promotion to the top flight of the Yorkshire League for a second time in 1960,[9] Hallam spent twenty years playing at the same level.

The 1982–83 season saw the demise of the old Yorkshire League, with Hallam entering the new Northern Counties East League (NCEL), which demanded more stringent ground grading rules. With only seven years of its ground lease remaining the club could not commit to expensive improvements. Protracted negotiations with the landlord eventually led to a 99 years extension being granted but a large premium was demanded within one year.[5] A massive fund raising effort secured the new lease and continued for the provision of floodlights, first used in 1992, and a stand behind one goal to shelter 100 people.

The club has spent most of its time in the NCEL in the Premier Division (which currently sits at level 9 of the English football league system), but in 2011 they were relegated back to the First Division. In 2004 the club won the NCEL's League Cup competition when beating Mickleover Sports at Buxton F.C.'s Silverlands ground.[10]

In 2012 Sandygate Road received a much needed facelift, paid for by a posthumous donation by a lifelong supporter who had left the club a substantial amount of money in his will.[11]

Sandygate Road panorama before a friendly fixture against Sheffield Wednesday in 2012

Season-by-season record

* League play-off winners
** League playoff runners-up
*** League play-off semi-finalists
[9][12][13][14]

Notable former players

Players that have played in the Football League either before or after playing for Hallam 

Ground

Sandygate Road is located in Crosspool, Sheffield, postcode S10 5SE.

Gallery

Honours

League

Cup

Records

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Steele, John A (2010). The Countrymen: History of Hallam Football Club. Northern Map Distributors.
  2. 1 2 Hallam Northern Counties East League
  3. World's oldest football teams play in derby BBC
  4. Murphy, Brendan (2007). From Sheffield with Love. SportBooks Limited. ISBN 978-1-899807-56-7.
  5. 1 2 History Hallam FC
  6. Sheffield Daily Telegraph, 28 December 1860
  7. "World's oldest football trophy 'not for sale'". BBC News. 14 October 2014.
  8. Sheffield and Hallamshire Senior Cup Wikipedia
  9. 1 2 Hallam Football Club History Database
  10. Honours Northern Counties East League
  11. . http://news.bbc.co.uk/local/sheffield/hi/people_and_places/history/newsid_9411000/9411566.stm World's oldest football ground receives financial boost] BBC
  12. Hallam WildStat
  13. British Newspaper Archive
  14. Hawthorn, Fred (2009). The FA Amateur Cup : Complete Results. soccerdata.

External links

Coordinates: 53°22′35″N 1°31′52″W / 53.376375°N 1.531225°W / 53.376375; -1.531225

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