Skerton F.C.

Skerton F.C.
Full nameSkerton Football Club
Nickname(s)the Skertonians, the Red and Blacks[1]
Founded1888
Dissolved1900
GroundMorecambe Road
PresidentCouncillor Turney (1889–94),[2][3] Councillor Gladstone (1897)[4]
SecretaryJ. Pye (1889),[5] A. Ireland (1894)[6]

Skerton Football Club was an association football club from Lancaster, Lancashire, active in the 19th century.

History

The earliest references to the club are from the 1888–89 season.[7] It took a more serious turn in 1891, when it decided to appoint a trainer for the first time, Councillor Smith agreeing to defray the expense.[8]

After a successful 1896–97 season, in which the club won more matches than ever before (27 out of 35), the club joined the Lancashire Combination for the 1897–98 season, and, to raise money for the extra expenses, was floated as a limited company.[9] The club then enjoyed two mid-table finishes,[10] and won the Lancashire Junior Cup in both of those seasons. The Skertonians had twice been runner-up before reaching the 1897–98 final, and the Skertonians had trained especially at Lytham St Annes for the match, against St Helens Recs at Deepdale; goals from Blatchford and Fryers in the first half, and Blatchford scoring his second with a shot in-off the crossbar in the second, saw the club lift the trophy for the first time.[11] The same two clubs contested the final at the same venue in 1898–99, Skerton winning 2–0,[12] and it proved more attractive than the Lancashire Senior Cup final the following week - fewer than 4,000 turned up to Burnden Park for the latter,[13] but there was a 50% higher gate for the Junior.[14]

However, the club's fortunes took a turn for the worse in 1899; the cost of erection of a new grandstand proved crippling.[15] In March 1900, having only registered 1 win in 22 Combination games,[16] and with debts of £150 (a third of which was due to the grandstand),[17] it resigned from the Combination, its record was expunged,[18] and the club dissolved.

Colours

The club wore red and black.[19] This caused an incident with Lytham in 1892, in which both clubs wore the same coloured kits.[20]

Ground

The club's ground was on Morecambe Lane.[21]

References

  1. ^ "Athletic notes". Barrow Herald: 3. 26 March 1892.
  2. ^ "Notice". Lancaster Gazette: 4. 31 August 1889.
  3. ^ "Skerton Football Club". Lancaster Gazette: 5. 2 June 1894.
  4. ^ "Another Lancashire club to be floated". Liverpool Echo: 3. 20 July 1897.
  5. ^ "Notice". Lancaster Gazette: 4. 31 August 1889.
  6. ^ "Skerton Football Club". Lancaster Gazette: 5. 2 June 1894.
  7. ^ "Under Association rules". Lancaster Gazette: 7. 26 January 1889.
  8. ^ "Local intelligence". Lancaster Gazette: 2. 20 May 1891.
  9. ^ "Another Lancashire club to be floated". Liverpool Echo: 3. 20 July 1897.
  10. ^ "Skerton". Football Club History Database. Retrieved 23 April 2025.
  11. ^ "Lancashire Junior Cup - Final". Liverpool Mercury: 9. 21 March 1898.
  12. ^ "Presentation of the Cup". Lancashire Evening Post: 3. 18 March 1899.
  13. ^ "Notes on out-door sports". Derby Evening Telegraph: 4. 29 March 1899.
  14. ^ "Sporting notes". Ramsbottom Observer: 2. 24 March 1899.
  15. ^ "Registration of football clubs". The Citizen: 4. 16 March 1901.
  16. ^ "Lancashire Combination". Manchester Courier: 9. 12 March 1900.
  17. ^ "Another club in financial straits". Manchester Evening News: 4. 2 March 1900.
  18. ^ "Lancashire Combination". Manchester Courier: 11. 17 March 1900.
  19. ^ "Athletic notes". Barrow Herald: 3. 26 March 1892.
  20. ^ "Lancashire Association". Lancaster Gazette: 7. 12 November 1892.
  21. ^ "Open handicap foot race". Lancaster Gazette: 2. 10 September 1890.