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Belfast Celtic F.C.

Belfast Celtic Football Club was an Irish football club. Founded in 1891 in Belfast,[1] it was one of the most successful teams in Ireland until it withdrew permanently from the Irish League in 1949. The club left the league for political reasons, as the team and its supporters were largely Catholic and Irish nationalist.[2][3] Belfast Celtic was one of four clubs that attracted the biggest crowds in the Irish League, the other three being Linfield, Distillery and Glentoran.[3] Belfast Celtic played its last match in 1960.

Belfast Celtic
Full nameBelfast Celtic Football Club
Nickname(s)The Celts; The Grand Old Team
Founded1891
Dissolved1960
GroundCeltic Park, Belfast
LeagueIrish League

History edit

Early years edit

The club, formed in 1891 simply as Celtic, was named after Celtic Football Club of Glasgow. Upon incorporation as a limited company in 1901, however, was known colloquially as the Belfast Celts, the title "The Celtic Football & Athletic Company Ltd" already being officially registered by the Glasgow club.[4] Their home from the same year was Celtic Park on Donegall Road in west Belfast, known to the fans as "Paradise".[5] Celtic won their first league title in 1900 after beating fierce rivals Linfield by a single goal.

The severe political violence that began to engulf Ireland in the 1920s spilled onto the pitches and terraces of the Irish League. In 1920, the Irish Football Association fined and suspended the club following violent incidents at the Irish Cup semi-final. Celtic was forced to abandon their participation in the 1920–21 season, and did not rejoin the league until 1924–25 season.[6] Celtic's support base was strongly Irish nationalist and Catholic but the club also enjoyed significant support from some local west Belfast Unionists and Protestants, who accounted for about 10 percent of the fan base.[2]

Despite the background of political turmoil, the club went from strength to strength and the inter-war period proved to be Celtic's strongest: they were league champions four years running after their return to the league. The club also produced some of the greatest players of their generation, and at one stage had five international goalkeepers in their squad.

1948–49: Withdrawal from the Irish League and North American tour edit

The catalyst for the end of the club came on 26 December 1948, at the traditional Boxing Day league game between Linfield and Celtic at Windsor Park. Celtic were winning for most of the match but Linfield equalised in the final minute. Ecstatic Linfield fans invaded the pitch and began attacking several Celtic players, including centre-forward Jimmy Jones, who suffered a broken leg and was kicked unconscious, and Robin Lawlor and Kevin McAlinden, who were both seriously hurt.[7][8]

Linfield issued a statement in which they blamed the attack on continual provocation from Celtic. Celtic's own statement, whilst equally blaming Linfield, focused particular criticism on the police who were present, who remained passive and made no arrests: "During the whole of this concerted attack the protection afforded to the unfortunate players may be fairly described as quite inadequate. In the circumstances the directors wish to make the strongest possible protest against the conduct of those responsible for the protection of the players in failing to take measures either to prevent the brutal attack or to deal with it with any degree of effectiveness after it developed."[2]

Celtic also felt that the response from the Irish Football Association had been wholly inadequate. The team's management met on the night of the match and decided that the club had no option other than to withdraw entirely from the league after the end of the 1949 season.[2][8] Northern Irish journalist Frank Curran later commented, "[Belfast F.C.] knew that it wasn't a football problem, and that there was nothing they as a football club could do to end it. So they got out."[2]

Belfast Celtic played their final Irish League match on Thursday April 21, 1949 when they defeated Cliftonville 4–3 at Celtic Park.[9] [10] The club then went on a 10-game tour of the United States and Canada in May and June 1949. The dates of the tour forced the team to withdraw from the County Antrim Shield after qualifying to the semi-final, in which they were replaced by Linfield, whom they had earlier beaten 4–0.[11] While the team was preparing to set sail for New York, it was announced publicly that Celtic intended to leave the league, pending the final decision of the club's shareholders at their annual meeting in June.[6][12][13]

In New York City, the team were embraced as political martyrs by Irish nationalists. The team were introduced to New York City Mayor William O'Dwyer, a native of County Mayo, at New York City Hall on 4 May. They were presented by Deputy Commissioner Sean P. Keating, an IRA member, with a commemorative solid silver sugar bowl. Manager Elisha Scott fastened the club's pin, featuring the team's green and gold harp logo, upon the mayor's lapel.[14] The first tour match was played 8 May 1949 against a representative team of players from the Greater New York professional American League clubs Brookhattan, Brooklyn Hispano and Brooklyn Hakoah at Triborough Stadium in New York City.[15]

There was a public uproar in Northern Ireland when a photograph of the team marching behind an Irish tricolour flag before a match in New York was published in the Belfast Telegraph on 11 May. Likely fearing that the incident would ensure the end of the team in Belfast, the Protestant Elisha Scott[3] sent a letter signed by seven of the players in which he explained the incident and claimed that the team was loyal to the United Kingdom:

"Before the game the team was requested by the American Soccer League officials to parade in single file round the Stadium, led by myself. Half-way round, Mr Connolly, editor of the Irish Echo, New York, took down a Tricolour which was flying in front of the enclosure. He requested me to carry one end and proceed in front of the team. We considered it better to carry on with the parade. Since then, steps have been taken to ensure against a recurrence. On the other side of the picture, which has apparently received no publicity, I may say that while the team was in Toronto, the King was toasted at a dinner given in honour of the Belfast Celtic Club, and further, before the match in Toronto, both teams stood to attention while the British National Anthem was played."[16]

On 29 May, Celtic defeated Scotland 2-0 in front of 15,000 fans at Triborough Stadium. Fights broke out during the second half, including Scotland's Willie Waddell and Celtic's Mick O'Flanagan throwing punches. The New York Times reported that the American crowd was overwhelmingly partisan in favour of the Scots, cheering any of the referee's decisions against Celtic. Reported The Times, "The game held the crowd spellbound from beginning to end. Part of the reason was that it had come to see a highly favored Scots eleven—a team that had won the British Isles triple crown before 97,000 at Wembley Stadium last month—take the Irish into camp. Instead, the throng saw an inspired Belfast combination score once in the opening session and again in the second half to sew up the decision."[17][18] The game was Scotland's only defeat during their nine-match tour of North America[19] and it became one of the most famous in Celtic's history.[20]

At the time, no specific reason was given to the public for the team's withdrawal from the Irish League. The club quietly sold all its players to other teams. Crusaders replaced Belfast Celtic in the league but fans were left without any official explanation for the withdrawal. In a 2011 profile, The Guardian spoke with Celtic fan Jimmy Overend, then 86, about the void left by the team's exit:

Of the demise of the club, which had lit up the lives of politically oppressed, impoverished Catholics such as himself, a general labourer, Overend laments: "It was like a black cloud coming down, as if there was nothing to live for or look forward to on a Saturday. It's a grief which never went away."[3]

Post-exit from league edit

The club would never again play a competitive match but played several friendlies, including a match at home to Glasgow Celtic on 17 May 1952, when a team of ex-Belfast Celtic players took the field under the name of 'Newry F.C.' in aid of De La Salle Boys' Home in County Down. A final match—a testimonial—was played at Coleraine on 24 June 1960.

Celtic Park continued to function as a greyhound racing stadium until 1985, when it was demolished and replaced by the Park Centre, a small shopping centre.[1]

Club heritage edit

Today, a small museum has since been opened in the Park Centre by the Belfast Celtic Society and a plaque reminds shoppers a football team played there.[21]

Padraig Coyle wrote a play, Lish and Gerry, about Elisha Scott and Linfield trainer Gerry Morgan. According to The Guardian, the play was performed to acclaim at Windsor Park in 2010, supported by the IFA and Linfield. The play concerns the team rivalry and the subtle irony of the fact that Elisha Scott of Celtic was a Protestant, while Gerry Morgan was Catholic.[3]

A new amateur club called Belfast Celtic Young Men & Ladies was founded in 2013, Now currently fielding 17 Teams across all age divisions and a senior link up with St Mirren Womens FC

In 2018, third-tier Belfast club Sport & Leisure Swifts F.C. announced plans to revive the 'Belfast Celtic' name.[21]

Honours edit

Senior honours edit

Intermediate honours edit

Honours won by Belfast Celtic II

Junior honours edit

  • Irish Junior League: 3
    • 1893–94, 1894–95, 1895–96

Selected former players edit

Selected former managers edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ An unofficial league which ran for four seasons between 1915 and 1919. It was set up while the Irish League was suspended during World War I.
  2. ^ A temporary competition set up to replace the City Cup while it was suspended during World War I.
  3. ^ An unofficial league which ran for seven seasons between 1940 and 1947. It was set up while the Irish League was suspended during World War II.
  4. ^ A temporary competition set up to replace the Gold Cup while it was suspended during World War II.

References edit

  1. ^ a b . Groundtastic. Archived from the original on 28 August 2008. Retrieved 11 February 2009.
  2. ^ a b c d e McCann, Eamonn (20 December 1998). "The day a team died". Sunday Tribune. Retrieved 7 August 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d e Conn, David (23 February 2011). "Memories of Belfast Celtic reawakened as IFA tries to soothe old wounds". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 August 2017.
  4. ^ Belfast Celtic F.C. – Souvenir History 1891-1939 (1939) (unknown author) (unknown publisher). Available at: The Grand Old Team. http://www.belfastceltic.org/history/souvenir.html. Accessed 12-12-14.
  5. ^ "The battle for the soul of Belfast Celtic, 69 years after the club folded". 29 August 2018.
  6. ^ a b "Irish Club May Quit Football". Dundee Evening Telegraph. 22 April 1949. Retrieved 7 August 2017.
  7. ^ "The History of the Grand Old Team". Belfast Celtic Society. Retrieved 11 February 2009.
  8. ^ a b Doyle, Paul (4 July 2017). "Linfield making strides against sectarianism and hoping to tackle Celtic". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 July 2017.
  9. ^ The infamous day a 'savage mob' broke bones and a club died, BBC, 27 December 2018
  10. ^ John, Seon. "Belfast city tour". Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  11. ^ "Swifts in Final - Belfast Celtic withdraw from Shield". Northern Whig. 16 April 1949. Retrieved 7 August 2017.
  12. ^ "Irish League – Regret at Celtic's Decision". Belfast News-Letter. 22 April 1949. Retrieved 7 August 2017.
  13. ^ "Celtic's Decision". Belfast News-Letter. 21 April 1949. Retrieved 7 August 2017.
  14. ^ "Belfast Soccer Players Give Bowl to O'Dwyer". The New York Times. 5 May 1949. Retrieved 8 August 2017.
  15. ^ "Belfast Team Due Tomorrow". The New York Times. 2 May 1949. Retrieved 8 August 2017.
  16. ^ "Celtic manager and the march behind Eire flag". Northern Whig. 24 May 1949. Retrieved 7 August 2017.
  17. ^ "Fights Mar Tour Games". Dundee Evening Telegraph. 30 May 1949. Retrieved 7 August 2017.
  18. ^ Strauss, Michael (30 May 1949). "Belfast Celtic Eleven Sets Back Scottish International Team, 2-0; Campbell Gets Two Goals in Soccer Before 15,000 at Randalls Island -- McAlinden Stars for Winners on Defense". The New York Times. Retrieved 7 August 2017.
  19. ^ "British Fa Xi Tours".
  20. ^ "Belfast Celtic player also made history with Ireland". The Irish News. 31 October 2015. Retrieved 7 August 2017.
  21. ^ a b "The other Grand Old Team: Belfast Celtic's return could open old wounds in Northern Ireland". The Herald. 17 August 2018. Retrieved 18 August 2018.

Further reading edit

  • Mark Tuohy, Belfast Celtic, 1978 ISBN 0-85640-139-0
  • Flynn, Barry, Political Football: The Life and Death of Belfast Celtic, 2009, Nonsuch Publishing
  • Padraig Coyle, Paradise Lost & Found: The Story of Belfast Celtic, Mainstream Publishing 1999
  • Padraig Coyle, Alex Moore's Almanac: A Young Man's Diary of a Sporting Farewell, Marine Media 2005

External links edit

  • Belfast Celtic Society
  • Belfast Celtic

belfast, celtic, extant, club, same, name, 1978, belfast, celtic, football, club, irish, football, club, founded, 1891, belfast, most, successful, teams, ireland, until, withdrew, permanently, from, irish, league, 1949, club, left, league, political, reasons, . For the extant club of the same name see Belfast Celtic F C 1978 Belfast Celtic Football Club was an Irish football club Founded in 1891 in Belfast 1 it was one of the most successful teams in Ireland until it withdrew permanently from the Irish League in 1949 The club left the league for political reasons as the team and its supporters were largely Catholic and Irish nationalist 2 3 Belfast Celtic was one of four clubs that attracted the biggest crowds in the Irish League the other three being Linfield Distillery and Glentoran 3 Belfast Celtic played its last match in 1960 Belfast CelticFull nameBelfast Celtic Football ClubNickname s The Celts The Grand Old TeamFounded1891Dissolved1960GroundCeltic Park BelfastLeagueIrish LeagueHome colours Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 1948 49 Withdrawal from the Irish League and North American tour 1 3 Post exit from league 2 Club heritage 3 Honours 3 1 Senior honours 3 2 Intermediate honours 3 3 Junior honours 4 Selected former players 5 Selected former managers 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editEarly years edit The club formed in 1891 simply as Celtic was named after Celtic Football Club of Glasgow Upon incorporation as a limited company in 1901 however was known colloquially as the Belfast Celts the title The Celtic Football amp Athletic Company Ltd already being officially registered by the Glasgow club 4 Their home from the same year was Celtic Park on Donegall Road in west Belfast known to the fans as Paradise 5 Celtic won their first league title in 1900 after beating fierce rivals Linfield by a single goal The severe political violence that began to engulf Ireland in the 1920s spilled onto the pitches and terraces of the Irish League In 1920 the Irish Football Association fined and suspended the club following violent incidents at the Irish Cup semi final Celtic was forced to abandon their participation in the 1920 21 season and did not rejoin the league until 1924 25 season 6 Celtic s support base was strongly Irish nationalist and Catholic but the club also enjoyed significant support from some local west Belfast Unionists and Protestants who accounted for about 10 percent of the fan base 2 Despite the background of political turmoil the club went from strength to strength and the inter war period proved to be Celtic s strongest they were league champions four years running after their return to the league The club also produced some of the greatest players of their generation and at one stage had five international goalkeepers in their squad 1948 49 Withdrawal from the Irish League and North American tour edit The catalyst for the end of the club came on 26 December 1948 at the traditional Boxing Day league game between Linfield and Celtic at Windsor Park Celtic were winning for most of the match but Linfield equalised in the final minute Ecstatic Linfield fans invaded the pitch and began attacking several Celtic players including centre forward Jimmy Jones who suffered a broken leg and was kicked unconscious and Robin Lawlor and Kevin McAlinden who were both seriously hurt 7 8 Linfield issued a statement in which they blamed the attack on continual provocation from Celtic Celtic s own statement whilst equally blaming Linfield focused particular criticism on the police who were present who remained passive and made no arrests During the whole of this concerted attack the protection afforded to the unfortunate players may be fairly described as quite inadequate In the circumstances the directors wish to make the strongest possible protest against the conduct of those responsible for the protection of the players in failing to take measures either to prevent the brutal attack or to deal with it with any degree of effectiveness after it developed 2 Celtic also felt that the response from the Irish Football Association had been wholly inadequate The team s management met on the night of the match and decided that the club had no option other than to withdraw entirely from the league after the end of the 1949 season 2 8 Northern Irish journalist Frank Curran later commented Belfast F C knew that it wasn t a football problem and that there was nothing they as a football club could do to end it So they got out 2 Belfast Celtic played their final Irish League match on Thursday April 21 1949 when they defeated Cliftonville 4 3 at Celtic Park 9 10 The club then went on a 10 game tour of the United States and Canada in May and June 1949 The dates of the tour forced the team to withdraw from the County Antrim Shield after qualifying to the semi final in which they were replaced by Linfield whom they had earlier beaten 4 0 11 While the team was preparing to set sail for New York it was announced publicly that Celtic intended to leave the league pending the final decision of the club s shareholders at their annual meeting in June 6 12 13 In New York City the team were embraced as political martyrs by Irish nationalists The team were introduced to New York City Mayor William O Dwyer a native of County Mayo at New York City Hall on 4 May They were presented by Deputy Commissioner Sean P Keating an IRA member with a commemorative solid silver sugar bowl Manager Elisha Scott fastened the club s pin featuring the team s green and gold harp logo upon the mayor s lapel 14 The first tour match was played 8 May 1949 against a representative team of players from the Greater New York professional American League clubs Brookhattan Brooklyn Hispano and Brooklyn Hakoah at Triborough Stadium in New York City 15 There was a public uproar in Northern Ireland when a photograph of the team marching behind an Irish tricolour flag before a match in New York was published in the Belfast Telegraph on 11 May Likely fearing that the incident would ensure the end of the team in Belfast the Protestant Elisha Scott 3 sent a letter signed by seven of the players in which he explained the incident and claimed that the team was loyal to the United Kingdom Before the game the team was requested by the American Soccer League officials to parade in single file round the Stadium led by myself Half way round Mr Connolly editor of the Irish Echo New York took down a Tricolour which was flying in front of the enclosure He requested me to carry one end and proceed in front of the team We considered it better to carry on with the parade Since then steps have been taken to ensure against a recurrence On the other side of the picture which has apparently received no publicity I may say that while the team was in Toronto the King was toasted at a dinner given in honour of the Belfast Celtic Club and further before the match in Toronto both teams stood to attention while the British National Anthem was played 16 On 29 May Celtic defeated Scotland 2 0 in front of 15 000 fans at Triborough Stadium Fights broke out during the second half including Scotland s Willie Waddell and Celtic s Mick O Flanagan throwing punches The New York Times reported that the American crowd was overwhelmingly partisan in favour of the Scots cheering any of the referee s decisions against Celtic Reported The Times The game held the crowd spellbound from beginning to end Part of the reason was that it had come to see a highly favored Scots eleven a team that had won the British Isles triple crown before 97 000 at Wembley Stadium last month take the Irish into camp Instead the throng saw an inspired Belfast combination score once in the opening session and again in the second half to sew up the decision 17 18 The game was Scotland s only defeat during their nine match tour of North America 19 and it became one of the most famous in Celtic s history 20 At the time no specific reason was given to the public for the team s withdrawal from the Irish League The club quietly sold all its players to other teams Crusaders replaced Belfast Celtic in the league but fans were left without any official explanation for the withdrawal In a 2011 profile The Guardian spoke with Celtic fan Jimmy Overend then 86 about the void left by the team s exit Of the demise of the club which had lit up the lives of politically oppressed impoverished Catholics such as himself a general labourer Overend laments It was like a black cloud coming down as if there was nothing to live for or look forward to on a Saturday It s a grief which never went away 3 Post exit from league edit The club would never again play a competitive match but played several friendlies including a match at home to Glasgow Celtic on 17 May 1952 when a team of ex Belfast Celtic players took the field under the name of Newry F C in aid of De La Salle Boys Home in County Down A final match a testimonial was played at Coleraine on 24 June 1960 Celtic Park continued to function as a greyhound racing stadium until 1985 when it was demolished and replaced by the Park Centre a small shopping centre 1 Club heritage editToday a small museum has since been opened in the Park Centre by the Belfast Celtic Society and a plaque reminds shoppers a football team played there 21 Padraig Coyle wrote a play Lish and Gerry about Elisha Scott and Linfield trainer Gerry Morgan According to The Guardian the play was performed to acclaim at Windsor Park in 2010 supported by the IFA and Linfield The play concerns the team rivalry and the subtle irony of the fact that Elisha Scott of Celtic was a Protestant while Gerry Morgan was Catholic 3 A new amateur club called Belfast Celtic Young Men amp Ladies was founded in 2013 Now currently fielding 17 Teams across all age divisions and a senior link up with St Mirren Womens FCIn 2018 third tier Belfast club Sport amp Leisure Swifts F C announced plans to revive the Belfast Celtic name 21 Honours editSenior honours edit Irish League 14 1899 1900 1914 15 1919 20 1925 26 1926 27 1927 28 1928 29 1932 33 1935 36 1936 37 1937 38 1938 39 1939 40 1947 48 Irish Cup 8 1917 18 1925 26 1936 37 1937 38 1940 41 1942 43 1943 44 1946 47 City Cup 10 1905 06 1906 07 1925 26 1927 28 1929 30 1930 31 1932 33 1939 40 1947 48 1948 49 Gold Cup 6 1911 12 1925 26 1934 35 1938 39 1939 40 1947 48 County Antrim Shield 8 1894 95 1909 10 1926 27 1935 36 1936 37 1938 39 1942 43 1944 45 Belfast Charity Cup 10 1903 04 1909 10 1911 12 1919 20 1925 26 shared 1931 32 1935 36 shared 1936 37 1938 39 1939 40 Dublin and Belfast Inter City Cup 1 1947 48 shared Belfast and District League 1 n 1 1918 19 Belfast City Cup 1 n 2 1918 19 shared Northern Regional League 4 n 3 1940 41 1941 42 1943 44 1946 47 Substitute Gold Cup 4 n 4 1940 41 1943 44 1945 46 1946 47 Intermediate honours edit Honours won by Belfast Celtic II Irish Intermediate League 7 1916 17 1917 18 1931 32 1933 34 1934 35 1935 36 1936 37 Irish Intermediate Cup 5 1913 14 1934 35 1935 36 1936 37 1939 40 Steel amp Sons Cup 5 1912 13 1916 17 1917 18 1934 35 1935 36 McElroy Cup 7 1916 17 1932 33 1934 35 1935 36 1936 37 1942 43 1943 44 Junior honours edit Irish Junior League 3 1893 94 1894 95 1895 96Selected former players edit nbsp nbsp Tom Aherne nbsp Louis Bookman nbsp Bertie Fulton nbsp nbsp Tommy Breen nbsp nbsp Jackie Brown nbsp Jackie Coulter nbsp Sammy Curran nbsp Mickey Hamill nbsp Andy Kennedy nbsp nbsp Jimmy McAlinden nbsp nbsp Billy McMillan nbsp Patrick O Connell nbsp Elisha Scott nbsp Albert Edward Ned Weir nbsp Charlie Tully nbsp nbsp Jackie Vernon nbsp Jimmy Jones nbsp Johnny Campbell nbsp Ron Greenwood nbsp George Kay nbsp John Feenan nbsp Mick O Flanagan nbsp Oscar Traynor nbsp Robin Lawler nbsp Willie McStay nbsp Gerry McAloon See also Category Belfast Celtic F C playersSelected former managers edit nbsp Elisha Scott 1934 1949Notes edit An unofficial league which ran for four seasons between 1915 and 1919 It was set up while the Irish League was suspended during World War I A temporary competition set up to replace the City Cup while it was suspended during World War I An unofficial league which ran for seven seasons between 1940 and 1947 It was set up while the Irish League was suspended during World War II A temporary competition set up to replace the Gold Cup while it was suspended during World War II References edit a b Belfast Celtic Groundtastic Archived from the original on 28 August 2008 Retrieved 11 February 2009 a b c d e McCann Eamonn 20 December 1998 The day a team died Sunday Tribune Retrieved 7 August 2017 a b c d e Conn David 23 February 2011 Memories of Belfast Celtic reawakened as IFA tries to soothe old wounds The Guardian Retrieved 8 August 2017 Belfast Celtic F C Souvenir History 1891 1939 1939 unknown author unknown publisher Available at The Grand Old Team http www belfastceltic org history souvenir html Accessed 12 12 14 The battle for the soul of Belfast Celtic 69 years after the club folded 29 August 2018 a b Irish Club May Quit Football Dundee Evening Telegraph 22 April 1949 Retrieved 7 August 2017 The History of the Grand Old Team Belfast Celtic Society Retrieved 11 February 2009 a b Doyle Paul 4 July 2017 Linfield making strides against sectarianism and hoping to tackle Celtic The Guardian Retrieved 4 July 2017 The infamous day a savage mob broke bones and a club died BBC 27 December 2018 John Seon Belfast city tour Retrieved 2 August 2020 Swifts in Final Belfast Celtic withdraw from Shield Northern Whig 16 April 1949 Retrieved 7 August 2017 Irish League Regret at Celtic s Decision Belfast News Letter 22 April 1949 Retrieved 7 August 2017 Celtic s Decision Belfast News Letter 21 April 1949 Retrieved 7 August 2017 Belfast Soccer Players Give Bowl to O Dwyer The New York Times 5 May 1949 Retrieved 8 August 2017 Belfast Team Due Tomorrow The New York Times 2 May 1949 Retrieved 8 August 2017 Celtic manager and the march behind Eire flag Northern Whig 24 May 1949 Retrieved 7 August 2017 Fights Mar Tour Games Dundee Evening Telegraph 30 May 1949 Retrieved 7 August 2017 Strauss Michael 30 May 1949 Belfast Celtic Eleven Sets Back Scottish International Team 2 0 Campbell Gets Two Goals in Soccer Before 15 000 at Randalls Island McAlinden Stars for Winners on Defense The New York Times Retrieved 7 August 2017 British Fa Xi Tours Belfast Celtic player also made history with Ireland The Irish News 31 October 2015 Retrieved 7 August 2017 a b The other Grand Old Team Belfast Celtic s return could open old wounds in Northern Ireland The Herald 17 August 2018 Retrieved 18 August 2018 Further reading editMark Tuohy Belfast Celtic 1978 ISBN 0 85640 139 0 Flynn Barry Political Football The Life and Death of Belfast Celtic 2009 Nonsuch Publishing Padraig Coyle Paradise Lost amp Found The Story of Belfast Celtic Mainstream Publishing 1999 Padraig Coyle Alex Moore s Almanac A Young Man s Diary of a Sporting Farewell Marine Media 2005External links editBelfast Celtic Society Belfast Celtic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Belfast Celtic F C amp oldid 1181213106, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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