Whitehill F.C.

Association football club in Glasgow City, Scotland, UK

Football club
Whitehill
Full nameWhitehill Football Club
Founded1882
Dissolved1886
GroundHaghill Park
Match SecretaryGeorge Gilmour
Whitehill colours
Dennistoun Athletic colours

Whitehill Football Club was a Scottish association football club based in Dennistoun, in Glasgow.

History

The club was founded in 1882 by the Stewart brothers, former pupils of Glasgow High School,[1] with its first reported match coming at the start of 1883 against a Partick reserve side.[2]

Whitehill entered the Scottish Cup for the first time in 1883–84. In the first round, the club beat neighbours Alexandra Athletic 3–1, Whitehill's two second-half goals coming against the wind. The Whitehill side lined up as:

J. Strathearn, R. Stewart, J. Clark, J. Goodall, A. Macrae, A. Stewart, J. M'Menemy, P. White, J. Rankin, R. Gill, J. Cummings[3]

In the second round, the club was drawn to play Rangers away. Rangers had the disadvantage of losing goalkeeper Chalmers after 15 minutes through a hand injury; however, and despite Whitehill's "young players show[ing] good play at times", the home side won by 14 goals to 2, with two further goals disputed.[4] This remains Rangers' (joint) highest score.

The following season the club had the misfortune to be drawn against Rangers again in the first round, losing this time 11–0.[5]

In 1885, the club changed its name to Dennistoun Athletic.[6] It entered the Scottish Cup one last time in 1885–86 but lost 3–1 at Whitefield.[7]

The club's lack of success on the national stage was mirrored in more local football. It entered the Glasgow North-Eastern Cup from 1882–83 to 1885–86 but lost in the first round each time,[8] the final match being an 8–0 defeat at Clyde in 1886.[9] The last recorded game for the club is a 5–4 defeat at Port Glasgow Athletic in May 1886[10] and the club was struck from the Scottish Football Association register before the 1886–87 season.[11]

Colours

The club originally wore all white, the inspiration possibly coming from the club name. With its change of name, the club changed its colours to black and white one-inch hoops and blue knickers.[12]

Ground

The club originally played at Onslow Park, two minutes' walk from the Dennistoun car stop, taken over from the recently-defunct Harmonic Good Templars.[13]

By the 1883–84 season the club had moved to Haghill Park[14] and as Dennistoun Athletic played at Kennyhill Park.

References

  1. ^ "Scotch Football Notes". Athletic News: 5. 3 October 1883.
  2. ^ "Partick F.C. (Inchview Eleven) v Whitehill". Glasgow Herald: 8. 15 January 1883.
  3. ^ "Whitehill v Alexandra Athletic". Glasgow Herald: 9. 10 September 1883.
  4. ^ "Rangers v Whitehill". North British Daily Mail: 7. 1 October 1883.
  5. ^ "Scottish Challenge Cup - First Round". North British Daily Mail: 7. 15 September 1884.
  6. ^ McDowall, John (1885). Scottish Association Annual 1885–86. Glasgow: H. Nisbet. p. 56.
  7. ^ "Scottish Association Cup Ties". Glasgow Herald: 10. 14 September 1885.
  8. ^ "North-Eastern Cup". Scottish Football Historical Archive. Retrieved 28 March 2023.
  9. ^ "Clyde v Dennistoun Athletics (N.E. Cup tie)". Dundee Courier: 4. 25 January 1886.
  10. ^ "Port Glasgow Athletic 1885 to 1890". Plenty of nothing. Retrieved 28 March 2023.
  11. ^ "Scottish Football Association". Lennox Herald: 6. 28 August 1886.
  12. ^ McDowall, John (1885). Scottish Association Annual 1885–86. Glasgow: H. Nisbet. p. 56.
  13. ^ "Matches held on Saturday". Glasgow Herald: 7. 17 November 1879.
  14. ^ "Whitehill v Alexandra Athletic". Glasgow Herald: 9. 10 September 1883.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Founder members of the Scottish Football AssociationEntrants to the first Scottish Cup
Former Scottish Football League membersFormer Scottish Football Alliance membersFormer Scottish Football Federation membersFormer Scottish Football Combination members
Former Scottish Football Union members
Former Northern League membersFormer Highland League membersFormer East of Scotland League membersFormer Eastern League (and successors) membersFormer Midland Football league members
Former Southern Counties/South of Scotland League membersFormer Lanarkshire Football League members
Other senior clubs
Senior clubs without dedicated pages
Junior clubs