Beeston St John's F.C.

Beeston St John's F.C. was an association football club from Nottingham, active in the late 19th century.

Beeston St John's
Full nameBeeston St John's Football Club
Founded1886
Dissolved1895
GroundPadgers Road
SecretaryE. Wright[1]

History

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The first record of the club is from 1886, when it entered the Nottinghamshire Church Football Association Cup.[2] The club however had greater ambitions, and entered the Nottingham Express Challenge Cup for more senior clubs that year, although it lost 7–0 in the first round to Kimberley Town.[3]

The club first made its mark by beating Loughborough Town in a friendly at the end of 1887 - Beeston had turned up to Loughborough to play the second XI, but, after the Town first XI was disappointed in its fixture, offered to play the senior side instead.[4] It finished the season by winning the Church Cup with a 1–0 win over Mapperley, in front of 1,200 on the Castle Ground in Nottingham, albeit its opponent was handicapped by losing a man to a broken leg in the first half.[5]

The club therefore entered the FA Cup for 1888–89, although that season qualifying rounds had been brought in. It won its first tie, 2–0 at home to Notts Olympic;[6] in the second qualifying round, the club was drawn away to Notts County. As County also had a scheduled Football League match against Burnley on the same day, County hosted the matches as a double header, and fielded a reserve XI against St Johns - which was still good enough to win 4–2.[7]

The turning professional of Nottingham Forest indirectly prevented the club from proceeding further. A number of the Forest players left to form a new amateur club, simply called Beeston,[8] and both clubs entered the 1889–90 FA Cup qualifying rounds. Both lost at the first time of asking (St John's to Jardines at home)[9] and St John's did not enter again.

The club played in the Notts League from 1889–90[10] until 1894–95, but withdrew from the competition in the middle of the latter season,[11] and disbanded before the 1895–96 season.[12]

Ground

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The club's ground was at Padgers Road, near the Humber Limited works,[13]

Notable players

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  • Harry Walkerdine, who was made captain of the club in 1889 after a successful first season, but was poached by Notts County after one further match.[14]

References

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  1. ^ Alcock, Charles (1888). Football Annual. London: Wright & Co. p. 122.
  2. ^ "Notts Church Football Association". Nottingham Evening Post: 3. 4 September 1886.
  3. ^ "Notes on sports". Nottingham Journal: 7. 6 November 1886.
  4. ^ "Loughborough Town F.C.". Loughborough Herald: 5. 29 December 1887.
  5. ^ "Notts Church Cup - Final". Nottingham Evening Post: 3. 3 April 1888.
  6. ^ "Beeston St John's v Nottingham Olympic". Nottingham Evening Post: 3. 6 October 1888.
  7. ^ "Notts County v Burnley". Sporting Life: 4. 29 October 1888.
  8. ^ "Notts Cup - Final Tie". Nottingham Evening Post: 3. 5 April 1890.
  9. ^ "Jardine's v Beeston St John's". Nottingham Evening Post: 3. 26 October 1889.
  10. ^ "Beeston St John's v Notts Amateurs". Nottingham Guardian: 7. 30 September 1889.
  11. ^ "Notts Football League". Nottingham Evening Post: 3. 18 January 1895.
  12. ^ "Notts Church Football Association". Nottinghamshire Guardian: 3. 19 October 1895.
  13. ^ "Items". Athletic News: 2. 11 September 1888.
  14. ^ "Sports and pastimes". Nottingham Evening Post: 4. 15 August 1891.