Shropshire_Wanderers_F.C.

Shropshire Wanderers F.C.

Shropshire Wanderers F.C.

Shropshire Wanderers were a precursor to Castle Blues and Shrewsbury Town Football Club


Shropshire Wanderers F.C. was an amateur association football club based in Shrewsbury, England. The club was active during the 1870s and once reached the FA Cup semi-finals.

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History

The club was founded out of the Shropshire Wanderers cricket club.[4] It entered the FA Cup competition in each of the years from 1873–74 to 1877–78.

Its greatest success came in 1874–75, when it reached the semi-finals. In the second round the club conceded a late equalizer to the Civil Service F.C. at the Kennington Oval,[5] but the Service scratched from the replay, being unable to travel to Shrewsbury.[6] The only match the club won in the tournament - and the only one the club would ever win in the Cup - was a replay win against Woodford Wells. The initial tie (at the Kennington Oval) ended 1–1, even after the sides played an optional 15 minutes of extra-time.[7] The replay, at the same venue, was an easier match for the Salopians, a goal from Randall (following up his own shot coming back off the post) and an own goal from Frazer (getting in the way of a clearance at a scrimmage) putting the club into the last four.[8]

The club played the Old Etonians at the Kennington Oval in the semi-final; unfortunately the Countrymen were without their star half-back John Denning, and lost 1–0.[9] This was the club's only defeat in its first five years of existence.[10]

The club also has a unique place in FA Cup history, as the only team to be eliminated from the competition by coin toss,[11] the fateful coin toss taking place at the Raven Hotel in Shrewsbury, where the club and opponents Sheffield F.C. had retired to dine together after their Cup tie.[12]

The Shropshire Wanderers were notable as a team that employed passing as early as 1875.[13] The club shared a number of players (including John Hawley Edwards) with the Shrewsbury football club, which focussed on more local competition.

The club had ceased activity after the 1877–78 season, but reformed for a handful of matches at the start of the 1880s. The last recorded match of the club was a 5–3 defeat to Druids F.C. in March 1882.[14] A match was scheduled against a club named Shrewsbury Town the following week but seems not to have taken place; this was not the current club.[15]

Colours

The club's colours were white jerseys, blue serge knickerbockers, and maroon stockings.[16]

Ground

The club played at the Racecourse, using the Raven or the Lion hotels for facilities.[17]

Notable players

  • David Thomson, who won a cap for Wales (alongside Kenrick and Edwards) while a Shropshire Wanderers player.[20]

FA Cup history


References

  1. "Football". Morning Post: 3. 8 February 1875.
  2. "Civil Service 1-1 Shropshire Wanderers". Bell's Life: 5. 19 December 1874.
  3. Alcock, Charles (1875). Football Annual. London: Lillywhite. p. 157.
  4. "Notes and notions". The Sportsman: 3. 10 May 1873.
  5. "Civil Service 1-1 Shropshire Wanderers". Bell's Life: 6. 26 December 1874.
  6. "note". Bell's Life: 5. 19 December 1874.
  7. "report". Sportsman: 3. 26 January 1875.
  8. "report". Sportsman: 4. 9 February 1875.
  9. "report". The Field: 240. 6 March 1875.
  10. 1875 Charles Alcock Football Annual
  11. Collett, Mike (2003). The Complete Record of The FA Cup. p. 537. ISBN 1-899807-19-5.
  12. "Football". Sheffield & Rotherham Independent: 4. 19 November 1873.
  13. Harvey, Adrian (2005). Football, the First Hundred Years. Routledge. pp. 213–119. ISBN 0-415-35019-0.
  14. "Shropshire Wanderers v Druids, Ruabon". Liverpool Mercury: 7. 13 March 1882.
  15. "Fixtures". Wellington Journal: 3. 18 March 1882.
  16. Alcock, Charles (1875). Football Annual. London: Lillywhite. p. 157.
  17. Alcock, Charles (1875). Football Annual. London: Lillywhite. p. 157.
  18. Davies, Gareth; Garland, Ian (1991). Who's Who of Welsh International Soccer Players. Bridge Books. pp. 119–120. ISBN 1-872424-11-2.
  19. "Wales v Scotland". Observer: 3. 26 March 1876.
  20. "England v Scotland". Sheffield Independent: 4. 2 March 1874.
  21. "Football yesterday". Observer: 3. 8 November 1874.

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