Cartside Football Club was a football club based in Kilbarchan, near Johnstone, Renfrewshire, in Scotland.

Cartside
Full nameCartside Football Club
Founded1878
Dissolved1881
GroundOver Johnston
Match SecretaryWilliam Boyd
Hon. SecretaryDavid Wedderspoon

History

edit

The club was one of four senior clubs in the area formed in 1878, along with Johnstone F.C., Johnstone Rovers, and Johnstone Athletic.

The club entered the Scottish Cup for the first time in 1879–80, losing 5–0 in the second round to Kennishead[1] after a first round bye. Cartside gained a revenge the following season, with a 6–2 win, albeit by this time Kennishead had been denuded by the more established Thornliebank side which had taken most of its forward line.[2] Cartside had the benefit of a bye in the second round[3] and hosted Yoker in the third round, coming from 3–0 down to take an apparent 4–3 victory,[4] but the tie was declared a draw after a Yoker protest,[5] and Cartside's replay win put the club into the final 21 clubs. At that stage the club lost 3–1 at home to Hurlford.[6]

Cartside was always by far the smallest senior side in Johnstone. By 1880 the three other clubs had 350 members between them; Cartside had just 30.[7] By 1881 it still only had 36 and the next smallest in the town (Johnstone) had 100; even the newly founded Kilbarchan had 54.[8]

Cartside had also played the fewest matches of any of the sides in the town in 1880–81, with 5 wins from its 10 matches.[9] It did not even enter the Renfrewshire Cup. It did however enter the Johnstone & District Cup in 1879–80 and 1880–81,[10] winning one tie, a 6–2 home win over Kilbarchan in 1880–81.[11]

The size gap was too big for Cartside to catch up, and, although it entered the 1881–82 Scottish Cup and was drawn to face Pollok in the first round, it had dissolved before it could play the tie.[12]

Colours

edit

The club wore red and black hooped jerseys and hose, and white knickers.[13]

Ground

edit

The club's ground was Over Johnstone Park, a 3-minute walk from Milliken railway station.[14] Kilbarchan moved into the ground briefly in 1890.[15]

References

edit
  1. ^ "Kennishead (late Caledonia) v Cartside". North British Daily Mail: 7. 13 October 1879.
  2. ^ "Cartside v Kennishead". Paisley Daily Express: 3. 20 September 1880.
  3. ^ "Scottish Football Association". Paisley Daily Express: 2. 22 September 1880.
  4. ^ "Cartside v Yoker - Scottish Association Cup tie". Glasgow Herald: 7. 1 November 1880.
  5. ^ "Scottish Association Cup Ties". Sportsman: 4. 4 November 1880.
  6. ^ "Cartside v Hurlford (Scottish Association Cup tie)". Irvine Times: 3. 27 November 1880.
  7. ^ Fleming, J. S. (1880). Scottish Association Football Annual 1880–81. Gillespie Brothers. p. 43.
  8. ^ Livingstone, Robert (1881). Scottish Football Association Annual 1881–82. Gillespie Brothers. p. 102.
  9. ^ Livingstone, Robert (1881). Scottish Football Association Annual 1881–82. Gillespie Brothers. p. 102.
  10. ^ "Johnstone & District Cup". Scottish Football Historical Archive. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
  11. ^ "Kilbarchan v Cartside (J. and D. A. Cup Tie)". Paisley Daily Express: 3. 11 October 1880.
  12. ^ M'Dowall, John (1882). Scottish Football Association Annual 1882–83. Glasgow: W. Weatherston. p. 75.
  13. ^ Livingstone, Robert (1881). Scottish Football Association Annual 1881–82. Gillespie Brothers. p. 102.
  14. ^ Fleming, J. S. (1880). Scottish Association Football Annual 1880–81. Gillespie Brothers. p. 43.
  15. ^ McDowall, John (1890). Scottish Football Annual 1890–91. Hay Nisbet. p. 98.