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Barnes Football Club

Barnes Football Club is an association football club in Barnes, London. The club had great importance in the development of the game in the nineteenth century and was the first team ever to win a match in the FA Cup.[1]

Barnes F.C.
Full nameBarnes Football Club
Nickname(s)Knights
Founded1862
GroundRosslyn Park 'The Rock', Barn Elms Park
ChairmanRanko Davidov
ManagerKehinde Emmanuel Enisan

History

Origins

 
Map of locations significant to the early development of Barnes FC.

Two other sports, cricket and rowing, were important in the foundation of Barnes FC:

A Barnes Cricket Club, playing on Barnes Green, is recorded from 1835.[2] In rowing, the Barnes and Mortlake Regatta took place in 1853, and annually from 1857. Barnes FC founder Ebenezer Morley took part in the 1858 and subsequent regattas, and served as the regatta's treasurer in 1860 and secretary from 1862.[3][4][5] The regatta was organized from the White Hart public house, the same address subsequently used by the football club.[6] According to an 1870 newspaper article, Barnes FC was "generally considered as an offshoot of the London Rowing Club".[7] According to Barnes FC (and Football Association) secretary Robert Graham, the members of Barnes FC were "recruited from the rowing element and the noted army cramming establishments of Messrs. Baty and Inchbald". Graham added that "J. Johnston, the owner of Pretender, ... plac[ed] his field, opposite his residence, Castelnau House, at its disposal for matches and the club's athletic sports".[8]

Both Morley himself, and his successors as FA secretary Robert Willis and Robert Graham, were keen oarsmen.

Date of foundation

There is a significant amount of evidence indicating that Barnes Football Club was founded in 1862. This includes:

  • The absence of known reports of any matches prior to November 1862.
  • The newspaper report of the first known match, played in November 1862, mentioning that the Barnes Club had "only [...] been in existence a short time".[9]
  • The club reporting its own foundation date as 1862 to the Football Annual in every issue from 1868 (the first year the Annual was published) until 1881 (when the club stopped reporting to the Annual altogether).

In 2005, a claim of an earlier foundation date was made by BBC sports presenter John Inverdale. Inverdale, citing unspecified "club records", wrote in The Daily Telegraph that Barnes Rugby Football Club (which Inverdale identified with Barnes Football Club) "were born" in 1839, and went on to "play[] fixtures against a whole mish-mash of teams of which no match results have been kept."[10] No other writer supported this claim, and the rugby club itself, via its website, does not claim to have been founded earlier than the 1920s.[11]

Early history

Ebenezer Cobb Morley was the club's first Captain.[12] The first known rules of the club, dating from 1862, banned running with the ball and "holding" or "hacking" an opponent. They specified that the "place for play" should be Barnes Green, and that the "balls and other property of the club" should be kept at the White Hart public house.[13]

Barnes FC's earliest recorded result, played at Barn Elms Park against Richmond F.C. on 29 November 1862, was a 2–0 victory. A contemporary newspaper report described the club as "only having been in existence a short time", but "already numbering a large number of members, and consequently powerful".[9] The club proceeded to draw the return match played at Richmond Green in December that year.[14] A match against Blackheath FC on 20 December went less happily. The Blackheath club played a rugby-style game, necessitating the adoption of compromise rules. "Very weak" play by Barnes resulted in a loss by two goals to nothing, with Morley narrowly escaping being "garrotted".[14]

Barnes FC was a founder member of the Football Association, with Morley being elected the Association's first Secretary,[15] and consequently being responsible for drafting its first set of laws that were published in December 1863. Morley subsequently served as President of the body, and "could be called the 'father' of The [Football] Association".[16] On 19 December 1863 Barnes participated in the first ever match under FA rules, against Richmond. The first three secretaries of the FA were all members of Barnes: Morley was succeeded by Robert Willis (1866–1867) and Robert Graham (1867–1870).

According to an undated list in the Football Association archives, probably dating from 1864, the colours of Barnes FC were "blue with white spots – a cap".[17] In successive editions of the Football Annual (from that magazine's first publication in 1868 until the club stopped reporting in 1881), the colours of the club were consistently described as blue and white stripes or hoops.

The club took part in the first ever FA Cup in 1871–72, and was the first team ever to win a match in the tournament, on 11 November 1871 (most first-round games kicked off later that day; the only other 3pm kick-off ended 0-0). Barnes went on to compete in fourteen of the first fifteen editions of the competition, the last being in 1885–86.[18] The club's best performance came in 1878–79, when it reached the third round before losing 2-1 to Oxford University.[18][19] It was also among the ten founder members of the Surrey County Football Association, in 1877.[20] Barnes club captain Charles Morice represented England in the first ever international association football match between Scotland and England played at Hamilton Crescent, Glasgow in 1872.[21]

Subsequent history

The club's subsequent history is more sparsely documented. There are newspaper reports of a club named "Barnes" playing in local leagues during the 1930s, 1950s, and 1960s.[22] A "History of the Football Association", published in 1953, stated:

Of the 'only and original' clubs forming The Football Association the Barnes Club alone has throughout the ages been an active and faithful member of The Football Association.[23]

In 2002, Barnes Rugby Football Club claimed on its website to be the successor of Barnes FC, stating that "Barnes rugby club is one of the oldest in the country. Our earliest recorded match was November 1862 versus Richmond, played at Barn Elms.".[24] In 2005, this claim was amplified in The Daily Telegraph by BBC sports presenter John Inverdale. Inverdale, who stated that he was "[f]or reasons that I'm not altogether clear about, ... one of a number of vice-presidents" of Barnes RFC, wrote that "in 1839, according to the club records, Barnes RFC were born, playing fixtures against a whole mish-mash of teams of which no match results have been kept."[10]

In 2008, a much weaker version of this statement appeared on the rugby club's website, stating only that "Barnes Rugby Club is a club with a rich history and was established in Barnes in the 1920s. Although there are indeed possibilities that our earliest recorded match was in November 1862 versus Richmond and played at Barn Elms, it is from the 1920s that our true history is clear."[25] As of 2018, similar wording remains on the current version of the rugby club's website.[11]

Present day

In June 2021, the grandchildren of ex-chairman Mr. Leslie Kilsby, Janice Kilsby and Julie Burgess, along with local enthusiasts, re-established Barnes FC.[26] In November 2021, £4,937 was fundraised to finance the first season, with £1,395 coming from Sport England. Additional funding was raised from sponsorships with local businesses.[27][28][29][30]

Ranko Davidov has taken a chairman role with a goal to develop the club into a modern sustainable community club. Mid-term plans are to earn semi-professional sports status. The club is going to play again under the Surrey County Football Association for the 2022-23 season.[31] They will be playing at 'The Rock', home of Rosslyn Park F.C. They will be training at Barn Elms Park.[32] Kehinde Emmanuel Enisan will be managing the first team.[32]

Officers

References

  1. ^ "Barnes v. Civil Service". Sportsman: 3. 15 November 1871.
  2. ^ "Single Wicket Match". Bell's Life in London: 3. 28 June 1835.
  3. ^ "Barnes and Mortlake Regatta". The Era: 15. 11 July 1858.
  4. ^ "Barnes and Mortlake Amateur Regatta, 1860". Bell's Life in London: 1. 29 July 1860.
  5. ^ Butler, Bryon (January 2009). "Morley, Ebenezer Cobb (1831–1924)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 9 August 2009.
  6. ^ "Barnes and Mortlake Regatta". Bell's Life in London: 6. 27 June 1858.
  7. ^ "London Athletics". Sporting Gazette. 12 March 1870.
  8. ^ Graham, R. G. (1899). "The Early History of the Football Association". The Badminton Magazine of Sports and Pastimes. London: Longmans, Green, & Co. viii: 78.
  9. ^ a b "Barnes Club v. Richmond Club". Sporting Life: 4. 3 December 1862.
  10. ^ a b Inverdale, John (2 November 2005). "My assumptions about 'oldest' were confounded by Barnes". The Daily Telegraph.
  11. ^ a b "Barnes RFC History".
  12. ^ Butler, Bryon: The Official History of the Football Association, page X. ISBN 0-356-19145-1
  13. ^ Rules of Barnes Football Club (1862) . 1862 – via Wikisource.
  14. ^ a b "Barnes v. Blackheath". Sporting Life: 3. 24 December 1862.
  15. ^ "Meeting of Captains". Bell's Life in London: 10. 31 October 1863.
  16. ^ "The History of The FA". The Football Association. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  17. ^ Reported in Brown, Tony (2011). The Football Association 1863–1883: A Source Book. Nottingham: Soccerdata. p. 22. ISBN 9781905891528.
  18. ^ a b Brown, Tony (1999). The F.A. Cup Complete Results. Nottingham: Soccer Data. ISBN 1899468722.
  19. ^ Barnes at the Football Club History Database
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 September 2007.
  21. ^ 1872 Scotland v England football match
  22. ^ e.g. "Notes of the Week". Dorking and Leatherhead Advertiser (3070): 8. 16 June 1950.
  23. ^ n.a. [Geoffrey Green] (1953). History of the Football Association. London: Naldrett Press. p. 428. However, that same work fails to list Barnes as an FA member for 1952–53 (at pp. 384–388).
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 10 August 2002. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 February 2008. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
  26. ^ "Grandchildren of 'lost' Barnes FC become team's new trustees".
  27. ^ "Re-establishing Barnes Football Club".
  28. ^ "Sport England Support Barnes FC".
  29. ^ "Welcome to our General Sponsors!".
  30. ^ "Property Partnership - Barnes FC New Kit Sponsors".
  31. ^ "Barnes FC History".
  32. ^ a b "Rosslyn Park 'The Rock' - Barnes FC Home Ground".

Coordinates: 51°28′30.28″N 0°14′13.03″W / 51.4750778°N 0.2369528°W / 51.4750778; -0.2369528

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See also Barnes Rugby Football Club Barnes Football Club is an association football club in Barnes London The club had great importance in the development of the game in the nineteenth century and was the first team ever to win a match in the FA Cup 1 Barnes F C Full nameBarnes Football ClubNickname s KnightsFounded1862GroundRosslyn Park The Rock Barn Elms ParkChairmanRanko DavidovManagerKehinde Emmanuel EnisanHome coloursHistory EditOrigins Edit Map of locations significant to the early development of Barnes FC Two other sports cricket and rowing were important in the foundation of Barnes FC A Barnes Cricket Club playing on Barnes Green is recorded from 1835 2 In rowing the Barnes and Mortlake Regatta took place in 1853 and annually from 1857 Barnes FC founder Ebenezer Morley took part in the 1858 and subsequent regattas and served as the regatta s treasurer in 1860 and secretary from 1862 3 4 5 The regatta was organized from the White Hart public house the same address subsequently used by the football club 6 According to an 1870 newspaper article Barnes FC was generally considered as an offshoot of the London Rowing Club 7 According to Barnes FC and Football Association secretary Robert Graham the members of Barnes FC were recruited from the rowing element and the noted army cramming establishments of Messrs Baty and Inchbald Graham added that J Johnston the owner of Pretender plac ed his field opposite his residence Castelnau House at its disposal for matches and the club s athletic sports 8 Both Morley himself and his successors as FA secretary Robert Willis and Robert Graham were keen oarsmen Date of foundation Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article 1862 Rules of Barnes Football Club There is a significant amount of evidence indicating that Barnes Football Club was founded in 1862 This includes The absence of known reports of any matches prior to November 1862 The newspaper report of the first known match played in November 1862 mentioning that the Barnes Club had only been in existence a short time 9 The club reporting its own foundation date as 1862 to the Football Annual in every issue from 1868 the first year the Annual was published until 1881 when the club stopped reporting to the Annual altogether In 2005 a claim of an earlier foundation date was made by BBC sports presenter John Inverdale Inverdale citing unspecified club records wrote in The Daily Telegraph that Barnes Rugby Football Club which Inverdale identified with Barnes Football Club were born in 1839 and went on to play fixtures against a whole mish mash of teams of which no match results have been kept 10 No other writer supported this claim and the rugby club itself via its website does not claim to have been founded earlier than the 1920s 11 Early history Edit See also List of Barnes F C seasons Ebenezer Cobb Morley was the club s first Captain 12 The first known rules of the club dating from 1862 banned running with the ball and holding or hacking an opponent They specified that the place for play should be Barnes Green and that the balls and other property of the club should be kept at the White Hart public house 13 Barnes FC s earliest recorded result played at Barn Elms Park against Richmond F C on 29 November 1862 was a 2 0 victory A contemporary newspaper report described the club as only having been in existence a short time but already numbering a large number of members and consequently powerful 9 The club proceeded to draw the return match played at Richmond Green in December that year 14 A match against Blackheath FC on 20 December went less happily The Blackheath club played a rugby style game necessitating the adoption of compromise rules Very weak play by Barnes resulted in a loss by two goals to nothing with Morley narrowly escaping being garrotted 14 Barnes FC was a founder member of the Football Association with Morley being elected the Association s first Secretary 15 and consequently being responsible for drafting its first set of laws that were published in December 1863 Morley subsequently served as President of the body and could be called the father of The Football Association 16 On 19 December 1863 Barnes participated in the first ever match under FA rules against Richmond The first three secretaries of the FA were all members of Barnes Morley was succeeded by Robert Willis 1866 1867 and Robert Graham 1867 1870 According to an undated list in the Football Association archives probably dating from 1864 the colours of Barnes FC were blue with white spots a cap 17 In successive editions of the Football Annual from that magazine s first publication in 1868 until the club stopped reporting in 1881 the colours of the club were consistently described as blue and white stripes or hoops The club took part in the first ever FA Cup in 1871 72 and was the first team ever to win a match in the tournament on 11 November 1871 most first round games kicked off later that day the only other 3pm kick off ended 0 0 Barnes went on to compete in fourteen of the first fifteen editions of the competition the last being in 1885 86 18 The club s best performance came in 1878 79 when it reached the third round before losing 2 1 to Oxford University 18 19 It was also among the ten founder members of the Surrey County Football Association in 1877 20 Barnes club captain Charles Morice represented England in the first ever international association football match between Scotland and England played at Hamilton Crescent Glasgow in 1872 21 Subsequent history EditThe club s subsequent history is more sparsely documented There are newspaper reports of a club named Barnes playing in local leagues during the 1930s 1950s and 1960s 22 A History of the Football Association published in 1953 stated Of the only and original clubs forming The Football Association the Barnes Club alone has throughout the ages been an active and faithful member of The Football Association 23 In 2002 Barnes Rugby Football Club claimed on its website to be the successor of Barnes FC stating that Barnes rugby club is one of the oldest in the country Our earliest recorded match was November 1862 versus Richmond played at Barn Elms 24 In 2005 this claim was amplified in The Daily Telegraph by BBC sports presenter John Inverdale Inverdale who stated that he was f or reasons that I m not altogether clear about one of a number of vice presidents of Barnes RFC wrote that in 1839 according to the club records Barnes RFC were born playing fixtures against a whole mish mash of teams of which no match results have been kept 10 In 2008 a much weaker version of this statement appeared on the rugby club s website stating only that Barnes Rugby Club is a club with a rich history and was established in Barnes in the 1920s Although there are indeed possibilities that our earliest recorded match was in November 1862 versus Richmond and played at Barn Elms it is from the 1920s that our true history is clear 25 As of 2018 similar wording remains on the current version of the rugby club s website 11 Present day EditIn June 2021 the grandchildren of ex chairman Mr Leslie Kilsby Janice Kilsby and Julie Burgess along with local enthusiasts re established Barnes FC 26 In November 2021 4 937 was fundraised to finance the first season with 1 395 coming from Sport England Additional funding was raised from sponsorships with local businesses 27 28 29 30 Ranko Davidov has taken a chairman role with a goal to develop the club into a modern sustainable community club Mid term plans are to earn semi professional sports status The club is going to play again under the Surrey County Football Association for the 2022 23 season 31 They will be playing at The Rock home of Rosslyn Park F C They will be training at Barn Elms Park 32 Kehinde Emmanuel Enisan will be managing the first team 32 Officers EditSeason Captain Secretary1862 63 Ebenezer Morley Unknown 1863 64 Thomas Gregory1864 65 Robert Willis1865 661866 671867 68 Robert Willis Robert Graham1868 691869 70 James Powell1870 711871 72 P Weston1872 73 Charles Morice H Ernest SollyReferences Edit Barnes v Civil Service Sportsman 3 15 November 1871 Single Wicket Match Bell s Life in London 3 28 June 1835 Barnes and Mortlake Regatta The Era 15 11 July 1858 Barnes and Mortlake Amateur Regatta 1860 Bell s Life in London 1 29 July 1860 Butler Bryon January 2009 Morley Ebenezer Cobb 1831 1924 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press Retrieved 9 August 2009 Barnes and Mortlake Regatta Bell s Life in London 6 27 June 1858 London Athletics Sporting Gazette 12 March 1870 Graham R G 1899 The Early History of the Football Association The Badminton Magazine of Sports and Pastimes London Longmans Green amp Co viii 78 a b Barnes Club v Richmond Club Sporting Life 4 3 December 1862 a b Inverdale John 2 November 2005 My assumptions about oldest were confounded by Barnes The Daily Telegraph a b Barnes RFC History Butler Bryon The Official History of the Football Association page X ISBN 0 356 19145 1 Rules of Barnes Football Club 1862 1862 via Wikisource a b Barnes v Blackheath Sporting Life 3 24 December 1862 Meeting of Captains Bell s Life in London 10 31 October 1863 The History of The FA The Football Association Retrieved 6 June 2014 Reported in Brown Tony 2011 The Football Association 1863 1883 A Source Book Nottingham Soccerdata p 22 ISBN 9781905891528 a b Brown Tony 1999 The F A Cup Complete Results Nottingham Soccer Data ISBN 1899468722 Barnes at the Football Club History Database Surrey County Football Association A History Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 1872 Scotland v England football match e g Notes of the Week Dorking and Leatherhead Advertiser 3070 8 16 June 1950 n a Geoffrey Green 1953 History of the Football Association London Naldrett Press p 428 However that same work fails to list Barnes as an FA member for 1952 53 at pp 384 388 About BRFC Archived from the original on 10 August 2002 Retrieved 20 May 2021 Barnes RFC a club going places Archived from the original on 15 February 2008 Retrieved 20 May 2021 Grandchildren of lost Barnes FC become team s new trustees Re establishing Barnes Football Club Sport England Support Barnes FC Welcome to our General Sponsors Property Partnership Barnes FC New Kit Sponsors Barnes FC History a b Rosslyn Park The Rock Barnes FC Home Ground Coordinates 51 28 30 28 N 0 14 13 03 W 51 4750778 N 0 2369528 W 51 4750778 0 2369528 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Barnes Football Club amp oldid 1105547165, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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