Saturday 26 April 2014

Renton FC - World Champions 1888


Renton FC - World Champions 1888


This is a First for me, writing a Blog about Football.

I heard on the TV Quiz show "Pointless" that Renton FC, a small Scottish Football Club had become World Champions in 1888.  So I thought I should investigate. 

Renton Football Club was a prominent team in the early history of Scottish football. The club was based in the village of Renton,West Dunbartonshire. They are remembered as one of the first clubs to have laid claim to the title Champions of the World when in 1888, as Scottish Cup holders, they challenged and beat the FA Cup holders West Bromwich Albion.
Dunbartonshire was a hotbed of the game in the early years of organised football in Scotland, with the county's three leading clubs of the era, Dumbarton, Renton and Vale of Leven all forming in 1872. Although not one of the founder members of the Scottish Football Association in 1873, Renton joined the body in time to enter the inaugural (1873–74) Scottish Cup tournament, and on 18 October 1873 were one of the clubs involved in the first day of competition for the new trophy. Renton faced Kilmarnock on neutral territory at CrosshillGlasgow, winning 2–0. Although full details of the matches played are difficult to ascertain, it is generally believed that this was the first of the three games played that day to kick off, and therefore the first official competitive football match to take place in Scotland. Renton went on to reach the semi final, losing to eventual winners Queen's Park.The following season they went one step further, reaching the final, but again lost to Queen's Park, by 3–0.
During the 1880s Renton were amongst the most powerful clubs in the country. They lifted the Scottish Cup for the first time in 1885, beating local rivals Vale of Leven in the final. The 1886 final once again ended in defeat against Queen's Park, but Renton lifted the trophy for a second time in 1888 with an emphatic 6–1 win over Cambuslang, a winning margin that has never been exceeded in a Scottish Cup final. During this period, Renton also lifted another prestigious trophy of the era, the Glasgow Merchants' Charity Cup, four years in succession. During season 1886-87, Renton competed in the FA Cup. They defeated Accrington 1-0 at home in the first round. Following a 2-2 draw at home in thesecond round, they beat Blackburn Rovers 2-0 in a replayPreston ended their FA Cup run in the third round, winning 2-0 at Renton.
Three months after their second Scottish Cup triumph, Renton returned to the scene, the second Hampden Park in Glasgow, to face FA Cup holders West Bromwich Albion in a challenge match billed as being for the "Championship of the United Kingdom and the World". The fixture was really no more than a friendly organised between the clubs, without any direct sanction from the respective national associations. Given there were no league competitions as yet, a meeting between the English and Scottish Cup winners could reasonably lay some claim to deciding the leading club in the UK (albeit without any opportunity for the Welsh or Irish equivalents to compete). When Renton won the World Cup, the footballing world was in its infancy in 1888, almost exclusively played by Scottish and English clubs. It was a World Cup Championship by default – nevertheless Renton’s claim is undisputed. A “Champion of the World” sign was proudly displayed on the pavilion at Tontine Park. The trophy can be found in the Hampden Park museum.
Two years later, Renton were one of the eleven founder members of the Scottish Football League, the meeting which led to the establishment of the new competition having been instigated by Renton club secretary Peter Fairly. The club's first experience of League competition was to be cut short a month into the 1890–91 season, however, when they were suspended from all football by the SFA for playing a friendly against a team billed as "Edinburgh Saints". This was in reality St Bernard's, who had themselves been suspended following allegations of professionalism, in thin disguise. Renton successfully sued the SFA to have their suspension lifted and subsequently resumed their place in the Scottish League for 1891–92. The St Bernard's case illustrated the growing creep of illegal professionalism in Scottish football, a trend no doubt encouraged by the introduction of regular league competition, and one which was to lead to the decline of small town or village clubs, who could never hope to match the financial muscle of the big city clubs.
At the end of the 1893–94 season — the first following the legalisation of professionalism — Renton were relegated to the League's Division Two, never to return to the top level. They continued to run into trouble with the authorities, failing to turn up for their away fixture against Dundee Wanderers in 1894–95, in favour of playing a more lucrative friendly against Queen's Park. The points were therefore awarded to the Wanderers. The club were more rigorous in their attention to that season's Scottish Cup, however, reaching the final for the fifth (and as it turned out, last) time. Once more pitted against the opposition that had embroiled them in their earlier brush with officialdom — St Bernard's — Renton lost out by a 2–1 scoreline.
Despite this appearance back in the national spotlight, Renton's time in the Scottish League was drawing to a close. Financial hardship began to hit deeply for a club only ever capable of drawing a few hundred spectators to home matches; at one point, the club had even considered relocating to Glasgow as a solution to their problems (where ironically their appearance had always drawn thousands). Their league career ended four games into the 1897–98 season when, unable to meet their financial guarantees, they tendered their resignation. This was accepted, with Hamilton Academical taking on Renton's remaining fixtures - less than a decade after Renton's "world championship". The club continued to play in a variety of minor senior leagues - mainly the Western League along with their derby rivals Vale of Leven before finally folding in 1922 (not 1921 as sometimes stated) - entering the 1922–23 Scottish Cup, but failing to turn up for their tie.
Their final hour of fame came in the Scottish Cup of 1906–07 when they put out St Bernard's - then leading the 2nd Division - after two draws, and then stunned Scottish football by putting out Dundee, who were to finish second in the championship that year. They finally went out to Queen's Park in the last 16 of the competition.

Throughout the club's history, their home ground was Tontine Park. After the club's demise, the ground was built over for housing, with the former location of the centre circle being commemorated in one of the gardens.





Saturday 22 February 2014

ROBERT OWEN - NEW LANARK and NEW HARMONY

Robert Owen - New Lanark and New Harmony.


Many of you have been on my Scottish Tours by Chauffeured car or people carrier, and will have visited New Lanark with me.

When I carried out my Tours of New Lanark, I was unaware that after he left Scotland, he moved in 1825 to Indiana USA, where he bought a former Religious Community called Harmony, which he renamed New Harmony. I was made aware of New Harmony in a rather unusual way, by Ric Savage in his TV programme Savage Family Diggers, in which Ric, and his enlightened crew salvage historical artifacts using methods most US Archaeologists will be familiar with, (the use of dynamite and heavy diggers).


New Lanark

First a short note about New Lanark. In 1799 Robert Owen married the daughter of David Dale, the owner of New Lanark, and became a business partner of his. He instigated a number of reforms, to improve living conditions for the workforce, before moving to Indiana to create a Utopian socialist community. New Lanark exists today as a Protected Village with housing, now updated by the  New Lanark Housinga Association.


New Harmony




In 1825 Owen purchased the former Religious Community of Harmony in Indiana, where he began a brave experimental society based on the Socialist principles of equality and fairness to all workers.
Renamed New Harmony, which was a society based on his theories for a perfect, society, that it should number between 1200 and 2000 people and be run on principles of fairness and equality. Unfortunately, his population was a mixture of committed and enlightened people, who were outnumbered by vagrants and self seekers, and the experiment failed after two or three years. However, Owen’s utopian dream brought significant contributions to American scientific and educational theory, study, and practice. 

Robert Owen


My thanks and acknowledgment to Richard Thornton, for his excellent article on Robert Owen and New Harmony.