Kilbirnie Football Club was a football club from the village of Kilbirnie,
Ayrshire
Ayrshire ( gd, Siorrachd Inbhir Àir, ) is a Counties of Scotland, historic county and registration county in south-west Scotland, located on the shores of the Firth of Clyde. Its principal towns include Ayr, Kilmarnock and Irvine, North Ayrshi ...
, Scotland.
History
The club was founded in 1874, although it claimed a foundation date of 1865, probably referring to the foundation date a cricket club which may have been the genesis of the football club. The earliest reported match for the club is from March 1875.
The club entered the
Scottish Cup
The Scottish Football Association Challenge Cup,1875–76, withdrawing rather than playing a second round replay at
Mauchline
Mauchline (; gd, Maghlinn) is a town and civil parish in East Ayrshire, Scotland. In the 2001 census Mauchline had a recorded population of 4,105. It is home to the National Burns Memorial.
Location
The town lies by the Glasgow and South Wes ...
. The club's best run came in its first incarnation came in 1879–80, reaching the fifth round (last 13), having twice taken advantage of the rule permitting both teams to proceed if the original tie and replay both ended in draws; at the fifth round stage, the club lost to the quasi-professional
Dumbarton F.C.
Dumbarton Football Club is a semi-professional football club in Dumbarton, Scotland. Founded on 23 December 1872, they are one of the oldest football clubs in Scotland.
The club plays home games at the Dumbarton Football Stadium next to Dum ...
side. The same season, the club reached the final of the
Ayrshire Cup
The Ayrshire Cup was an annual association football regional competition in Scotland. The cup competition was a knockout tournament between football clubs in the historic county of Ayrshire. The Ayrshire Cup was first held in 1877–78, with t ...
, but lost 1–0 to Beith after the "roughest game ever played".
Kilbirnie seems to have gone into abeyance after the 1882–83 tournament. The club entered the Scottish Cup for 1883–84 but withdrew before playing its tie with Kilmarnock F.C.; that season the club's Stonyholm Park ground was described as "lately" occupied by the club, which also did not take part in the
Ayrshire Cup
The Ayrshire Cup was an annual association football regional competition in Scotland. The cup competition was a knockout tournament between football clubs in the historic county of Ayrshire. The Ayrshire Cup was first held in 1877–78, with t ...
until 1884. When the club reached the Ayrshire Cup final for the first time in 1887, the club was described as "rather brilliant but comparatively new", suggesting a re-foundation, as otherwise the club would have been older than its opponent (
Hurlford F.C.
Hurlford Football Club was a football club that existed from 1875 to 1924, from the village of Hurlford, Ayrshire, Scotland.
History
The club was founded in 1875. The club was one of the strongest in Ayrshire in the pre-professional period, ...
). The club lost the final 4–0, thanks to with two goals from William Scobie and two from Johnny M'Knight, but gained revenge over Hurlford in the final the following season, at the same venue, helped by having the majority of the 5,000 crowd behind it, including "a large number of the fair sex"; the match ended 4–3, with Morgans on the left wing scoring one goal, plus his cross resulting in an own goal, to make the half-time score 2–2, and two late goals turning the final around.
The years just before professionalism became legal in Scotland were the best for the club; as well as winning the Ayrshire Cup in 1888, the club also won the Ayrshire Charity Cup in 1889, beating
Ayr F.C.
Ayr Football Club was a Scottish Football League club from Ayr, Scotland. They were formed in 1879 by a merger of the Ayr Thistle and Ayr Academicals football clubs. Their initial home ground was Springvale Park, which they left in 1884 to pl ...
in the final, and in 1889–90 reached the last 8 of the Scottish Cup for the only time. Drawn at home to Cup holders Third Lanark RV, the club trained with the athlete Bobbie Hindle to prepare, but to no avail, as the club lost 4–1. It was in these seasons that Frank Watt became the only Kilbirnie player to be capped, playing four times for Scotland, scoring three times.
However the club missed out on league football at a crucial time. Kilbirnie did not join the
Ayrshire Football League
Ayrshire Football League is a defunct soccer league in Scotland.
Formed in 1891 by Annbank, Ayr Parkhouse, Beith, Galston, Irvine, Kilwinning Monkcastle, Mauchline, Newmilns, Saltcoats Victoria and Stevenston Thistle F.C.
By 1893 the Ayrshire ...
until its second season in 1892–93. The club finished 5rd out of 11, but for the following season seven of the stronger clubs (including Kilbirnie) founded a new league, the
Ayrshire Football Combination
The Ayrshire Football Combination was formed in 1893 as a breakaway from the Ayrshire Football League.
. The competition proved too hot for Kilbirnie, which finished last, and re-joined the Ayrshire League for 1894–95. The Combination season had proved disastrous, and, coupled with professionalism, a season of high expenses and low return, and the foundation of the
Scottish League
The Scottish Football League (SFL) was a league featuring professional and semi-professional football clubs mostly from Scotland.One club, Berwick Rangers, is based in the town of Berwick-upon-Tweed, which is located approximately 4 km sout ...
, the village club had lost the ability to compete. The club duly finished bottom of the Ayrshire League and could not fulfil one of its fixtures.
The club's last match in the Scottish Cup proper had been a 6–1 defeat at Ayr Parkhouse F.C. in the first round in 1890, and its final entry to the competition in 1896–97 saw the club scratch from the Cup rather than face Parkhouse in a proper tie; the clubs played out a friendly instead which Parkhouse won 9–4. That seems to have been the club's final match, as it "dropped out" of the Ayrshire association and there are no further matches for it. The club was formally removed from the Scottish FA in 1897 for no longer having a private ground.
Colours
The club's colours were orange and black hooped jerseys, with white knickers. The club's change jersey was white.
Grounds
The club seems to have played at the same ground from 1874 to 1883, normally known as Stonyholm Park, described as a private ground at Kirkstead, in the north of the village, and also as Bridgend Park.
On its revival the club played at Milton Park, which had a cinder track and pavilion.
Honours
Scottish Cup
*Best run: last 8, 1889–90
Ayrshire Cup
*Winners: 1887–88
*Runners-up: 1879–80, 1886–87, 1892–93
Ayr Charity Cup
*Winners: 1888–89
*Runners-up: 1886–87