Minerva F.C. was an English association football club, originally playing out of Loughborough Junction in Lambeth, London.
Full name | Minerva Football Club | |
---|---|---|
Founded | 1876 | |
Dissolved | 1901? | |
Ground | Ladywell Inn | |
| ||
The club was founded in 1876, including two players from Saxons and played its first game that October.[1] The club was, in essence, the works side of the firm of Copestake Hughes Crampton & Co, a warehousing and mail order company, with the club's correspondence address given as the firm's offices at 5 Bow Church Yard.[2] The club took its name from the company's logo, namely the head of the goddess Minerva.[3]
In its first season, the club was unbeaten, winning 11 out of 15 matches and only conceding one goal.[4] The club decided to take on sterner opposition in 1877-78 and entered the FA Cup. In the first round, Minerva lost 5-2 at the Hawks club at Anerley.[5] Over the season, the club won 12 and lost 7 matches, with 2 drawn. [6]
The club's only FA Cup run was in 1878-79, benefitting from a withdrawal in the first round, and beating Grey Friars in the second, in front of 300 spectators, in what was considered an upset.[7] In the third round, Minerva played the Old Etonians at the Kennington Oval, and was 2-0 up at half-time "amidst most enthusiastic cheers" before succumbing 5-2.[8]
The club's last FA Cup entry was in 1879-80, Herts Rangers beating the club in the first round. The club entered the first London Senior Cup in 1882-83, but lost 18-1, the biggest defeat in the competition's history, to Upton Park in the first round.[9]
The club continued on an amateur level until at least 1901, with significant success in the City of London Challenge Shield, a competition which seems to have been reserved for clubs whose members worked in the City of London, winning the competition from 1892 to 1897.[10] The club beat Gresham 4-0 in the final at the Crystal Palace ground in 1896,[11] beat Olympic to win the title in 1897,[12] and lost to the latter club in the final in 1898.[13]
The club's major claim to fame is being the first opponents of Fulham at Craven Cottage in the Middlesex Senior Cup, in 1896.[14]
The last recorded match for the club is a 13-1 defeat at Chesham Generals in February 1901.[15]
The club wore navy blue shirts, with a white band around each arm.
The club played its first season at Loughborough Junction. In 1877-78 the club moved to a ground one minute's walk from Ladywell Station and used the Ladywell Inn for its facilities.
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