Dunfermline Football Club was an
association football club from
Dunfermline
Dunfermline (; sco, Dunfaurlin, gd, Dùn Phàrlain) is a city, parish and former Royal Burgh, in Fife, Scotland, on high ground from the northern shore of the Firth of Forth. The city currently has an estimated population of 58,508. Accord ...
in
Scotland. The club entered the
Scottish Cup every season from
1876–77 to
1889–90. However the club only won 3 ties, plus one after which it was disqualified; on 7 occasions the club scratched before playing a match.
History
The club was formed in 1874 as a way for members of the Dunfermline Cricket Club to keep fit over the winter, after cricket club member David Brown saw a
Queen's Park F.C.
Queen's Park Football Club is a Scottish professional association football, football club based in Glasgow, which currently plays in the Scottish Championship, the second tier of the Scottish football pyramid. Queen's Park is the Oldest footba ...
match in
Glasgow and bought a football to take home.
As one of the first clubs in the east of Scotland, the club in its early days found it difficult to find opponents, but before the 1876–77 season it was admitted to the Edinburgh Football Association, entitling it to take part in the
Edinburgh FA Cup; this was welcome to the local sides as the
Heart of Midlothian had just "broken up". The club's first entry to the Scottish Cup saw it placed in the Edinburgh geographical grouping in the first round and gain a walkover, as the temporarily-defunct Hearts had already entered and the clubs were drawn together. Dunfermline lost at
Hamilton F.C. in the second round. The club did not win a tie until
1879–80, when it beat
Edinburgh Thistle.
The club had a little more success in the Edinburgh Cup, a competition it entered until 1883–84. Its best run came in 1879–80, when three wins took Dunfermline into the final, against
Hibernian F.C. at
Powderhall
Powderhall is an area lying between Broughton Road and Warriston Road in the north of Edinburgh, the Scotland, Scottish capital. Until recently it was best known for Powderhall Stadium, a greyhound racing track, which has now closed. The stadiu ...
on 6 March in front of a crowd of over 2,000. Dunfermline had a strong wind behind the side in the first half, but the scores were level at 3–3 at half-time; in the second half the local side scored 3 unanswered goals. Perhaps because of the weather, the match was "declared undecided", and a re-play held at the same venue a fortnight later. This time Hibernian dominated from start to finish and won 5–0. Notably the crowd had almost doubled for the second match.
In
1884–85, the club reached the third round for the only time. In the first round, Dunfermline gained its biggest Cup win, 10–2 over
Newcastleton F.C., in front of a crowd of 2,000. In the second round, the club was drawn at home to
Heart of Midlothian F.C.
Heart of Midlothian Football Club, commonly known as Hearts, is a professional football club in Edinburgh, Scotland. The team competes in the Scottish Professional Football League. Hearts, the oldest and most successful football club in the Sco ...
, and took a surprise lead from the kick-off. Hearts replied with 11 unanswered goals. However Dunfermline protested that two of the Hearts players (Chris M'Nee and James Maxwell) were professionals and, "after careful consideration", the protest was upheld; the players were receiving 26 shillings per week. In the third round, the club lost 7–1 at
Wishaw Swifts, having been outclassed all match and scoring a consolation via the one chance the club had.
The club had more success on a local level. It was a founder member of the
Fifeshire Football Association in 1882 and in David Brown provided the first President. It also won the first
Fifeshire Cup in 1882–83, beating
Cowdenbeath 4–1 in the final after two ties against minor clubs. The club repeated the feat in 1883–84, beating
Alloa Athletic in the final, and were runners-up to Cowdenbeath in 1884–85.
In April 1885, over a dispute as to whether the club should allow non-cricketers to play for the football side, the best football players, including Bob Sandilands and Jim Toddie, broke away to form Dunfermline Athletic. The split worked in favour of the new club; the only competitive match between the two, in the Fifeshire Cup in 1886, ended 6–0 to the Athletic.
Although Dunfermline continued to enter the Scottish Cup until
1889–90, it only played one more tie, scratching on four occasions (twice to the Athletic) and being disqualified after beating
Lassodie
Lassodie is an abandoned settlement located two miles south-west of Kelty, bertween Dunfermline and Cowdenbeath, in Fife.
History
The name Lassodie was a collective for three settlements, named Old Rows, New Rows (or Parley), and Fairfield, a ...
in
1887–88, on the basis that the secretary had sent in the list of registered players after the deadline. Dunfermline also never won another Fifeshire Cup tie and stopped entering after 1890–91.
With Dunfermline Athletic having taken over as the top club, Dunfermline abandoned senior football from the 1891–92 season. The club essentially merged with South-side Athletic, which moved to Ladysmill and changed its name to Dunfermline Juniors, which reached the final of the
Scottish Junior Cup in 1896–97, and wound up at the end of the 1900–01 season.
Colours
The club played in blue and white hoops, with navy shorts.
Ground
The club originally played on the Town Green. By 1882 the club was playing at Ladysmill.
Honours
*
Fifeshire Cup:
**Winners: 1882–83, 1883–84
**Runners–up: 1884–85
*
Edinburgh Cup
The Dewar Cup Edinburgh was an indoor men's and women's tennis event held from 1968 to 1972, and played in Edinburgh, Scotland as part of the second leg of Dewar Cup Circuit of indoor tournaments held throughout the United Kingdom.
History
Th ...
:
**Runners-up: 1879–80
External links
Scottish Cup results
References
{{Defunct Scottish football clubs
Defunct football clubs in Scotland
Association football clubs established in 1874
1874 establishments in Scotland
Football clubs in Fife
Association football clubs disestablished in 1891
1891 disestablishments in Scotland