Parkhead F.C.
Full name | Parkhead Football Club |
---|---|
Founded | 1880 |
Dissolved | 1963 |
Ground | The Sheddens Helenslea Park, Glasgow New Helenslea Park, Glasgow |
League | Glasgow Junior League 1895–1927 Scottish Intermediate League 1927–1931 Central Junior League 1931–1963 |
Parkhead Football Club was a Scottish football club from the Parkhead district of Glasgow who played in Scottish Junior Football Association competitions from their formation in 1880 until going out of business in 1963. Originally playing at The Sheddens on Old Shettleston Road, the club moved to Helenslea Park near current day Beattock/Sorby Streets before development forced the club further out towards the Braidfauld area and into New Helenslea Park.[1] In the early years of the Scottish Junior Cup, Parkhead appeared in nine finals and won the cup five times. The club supplied eight players who went on to become full Scotland internationals later in their careers and Andy Auld who played five times for the US national team.[2]
Location and history
Across London Road from Westthorn Park there was a football ground with an ash pitch, earthen terracing, and a perimeter fence of black-painted corrugated iron. This was the home ground of Parkhead Juniors Football Club. Founded in 1880 (seven years before Glasgow Celtic, who were the first British team to win the European Cup, and whose Celtic Park stadium is a couple of bus stops further along London Road), it was the oldest team in the Scottish Junior League. They were one of the eight founder members in 1895 of the Glasgow Junior League, the strongest Junior league of the era.[3]
They won the Scottish Junior Cup five times (1899, 1903, 1915, 1920 and 1924), and appeared as finalists in eight out of the 12 seasons from 1911. "If no single club could claim total dominance over the period (i.e. the first half of the 20th century) Parkhead at least merit an honourable mention with three league titles (one shared); four Glasgow Cups; two Junior cups and three other appearances in the final". On 10 April 1924, at the semi-final of the 1923–24 season they met neighbours Bridgeton Waverley at Celtic Park where they faced a crowd of 11,500, even though the SFA cup final was taking place at Hampden Park at the same time.[4] Another strong Junior side, Strathclyde, were also based close by,[5][6] but none of the three clubs survived into the late 20th century.
The entrance was in Methven Street, but there were turnstiles on Cuthelton Street, just down a little from the "Wee Farm" shop (which was still extant in 2009) and across from Parkhead Fire Station (opened in December 1952). They were still playing in the 1950s, but Parkhead Juniors went defunct in June 1963. In the later 1960s/early 1970s about a third of the ground at the Cuthelton Street/top-end-of Methven St junction was taken up by housing development (Lilybank), the rest of the ground down to London Road being turned into a landscaped area open to the public.
Scottish Junior Cup finals record
Season | Opponent | Result |
---|---|---|
1895–96 | Cambuslang Hibernian | 1–2 |
1897–98 | Dalziel Rovers | 1–2 |
1898–99 | Westmarch XI | 4–1 |
1902–03 | Larkhall Thistle | 3–0 |
1903–04 | Vale of Clyde | 0–3 |
1914–15 | Port Glasgow Athletic | 2–0 |
1915–16 | Petershill | 0–2 |
1919–20 | Cambuslang Rangers | 2–0 |
1923–24 | Baillieston | 3–1 (after 1–1 draw) |
References
- ^ "Junior Football". Parkhead History. Retrieved 4 May 2017.
- ^ McGlone, David; McLure, Bill (1987). The Juniors - 100 Years. Mainstream. p. 188. ISBN 1 85158 056 5.
{{cite book}}
:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help) - ^ McColl, Brian. "Glasgow Junior League". www.scottish-football-historical-archive.co.uk. Scottish Football Historical Archive. Retrieved 4 May 2017.
- ^ McGlone, David; McLure, Bill (1987). The Juniors - 100 Years. Mainstream. p. 115. ISBN 1 85158 056 5.
{{cite book}}
:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help) - ^ "View around Belvidere Hospital, Glasgow, facing south-east, 1952 (showing three grounds: Parkhead left centre, Waverley mid centre, Strathclyde bottom centre)". RCAHMS - Britain from Above. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
- ^ "View around Belvidere Hospital, Glasgow, facing east, 1952 (showing three grounds: Parkhead upper centre, Waverley mid right, Strathclyde bottom left)". RCAHMS - Britain from Above. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
55°50′45″N 4°11′34″W / 55.84583°N 4.192851°W