Tyldesley was a rugby league club in Tyldesley, Lancashire, England.
Club information | |
---|---|
Full name | Tyldesley FC |
Nickname(s) | the Bongers[1] |
Founded | 1881 |
Exited | 1901 Re-joined the RFU |
The club took part in the meeting at the George Hotel, Huddersfield in 1895 and, after the schism, became founder members of the Northern Rugby Football Union (now Rugby Football League), playing for five seasons from 1895–96 to 1899–1900
History
editEarly Days
editThe first rugby club in Tyldesley was formed in 1881 when, after a meeting of local businessmen and rugby players from other clubs, they decided to move from Garrett Hall to Tyldesley and become Tyldesley Football Club.[2]
In 1891, Tyldesley signed future England International Half-back John "Buff" Berry from Kendal Hornets. He went on to win caps for England (RU) while at Tyldesley in 1891 against Wales, Ireland, and Scotland.[3]
He continued playing for Tyldesley under the Northern Union rules as a stand-off half. Tyldesley beat Widnes to win the 1895 Lancashire (Rugby Union) Cup at Wilderspool Stadium, Warrington, in front of around 15,000 spectators.
Northern Union
editPrior to the Schism, Tyldesley, like many other clubs from Lancashire (and Yorkshire), had suffered punishment by the RFU for "broken time" payments. And so Tyldesley, represented by a Mr. G Taylor, attended a meeting at The George Hotel, Huddersfield, together with representatives of 21 other clubs, and agreed to form the Northern Rugby Football Union.
After the Great Schism[4] in 1895, Tyldesley were one of the founder members of the new league. In the first season 1895-96 the league consisted of 22 clubs and Tyldesley finished in a very creditable 6th position.
In season 1896-97 the league was divided into Yorkshire and Lancashire, Tyldesley playing in the latter section, where they would stay for the remainder of their (semi) professional existence. They again had a quite successful season finishing in 3rd position out of 14 teams
In the two following seasons, still in the Lancashire section, season 1897-98 & 1898-99 they could only manage a lowly 12th position (out of 14 teams).
In the final season, 1899–1900 they won the wooden spoon, finishing 14th out of 14 teams, with only five points thanks to two wins and one draw.
Revert to Rugby Union
editAt the end of the 1901–02 season the club, which had played in the Lancashire second competition, disbanded as the club had amassed substantial liabilities.[5] A reformed Tyldesley club was admitted to the Rugby Football Union in 1911.[6]
In 1926, landowning Club President (Mr. William Hesketh Ramsden[7]) gave the Well Street ground in trust to the Club.
Club League Record
editThe League positions for Tyldesley for the 5 years in which they played (semi) professional Rugby League are given in the following table :-[8]
Season | Competition | Pos | Team Name | Pl | W | D | L | PW | PA | Diff | Pts | % Pts | No of teams in league | Notes | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1895–96 | RL | 6 | Tyldesley | 42 | 21 | 8 | 13 | 260 | 164 | 96 | 50 | 22 | [9] | ||
Only limited County League information is available for this season. | |||||||||||||||
1896–97 | Lancs Sen Comp | 3 | Tyldesley | 26 | 15 | 2 | 9 | 159 | 80 | 79 | 32 | 14 | |||
1897–98 | Lancs Sen Comp | 12 | Tyldesley | 26 | 8 | 1 | 17 | 111 | 281 | -170 | 17 | 14 | |||
1898–99 | Lancs Sen Comp | 12 | Tyldesley | 26 | 3 | 5 | 18 | 82 | 240 | -158 | 11 | 14 | |||
1899–1900 | Lancs Sen Comp | 14 | Tyldesley | 26 | 2 | 1 | 23 | 66 | 336 | -270 | 5 | 20.83 | 14 |
Heading Abbreviations
RL = Single Division; Pl = Games played; W = Win; D = Draw; L = Lose; PF = Points for; PA = Points against; Diff = Points difference (+ or -); Pts = League points
% Pts = A percentage system was used to determine league positions due to clubs playing varying number of fixtures and against different opponents
League points: for win = 2; for draw = 1; for loss = 0.
Several fixtures & results
editThe following are just a few of Tyldesley's fixtures during the five seasons (and other times) in which they played (semi) professional Rugby League :- [9][10][11][12][13]
Season | Date | Competition | Opponent | Venue | H/A | Result | Score | Att | Notes | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1895–96 | Sat 28 September 1895 | Rl | Wigan | Folly Field | A | Draw | 0-0 | " " | 1 | [9] |
1895–96 | Sat 26 October 1895 | RL | St. Helens | Knowsley Road | A | Draw | 3-3 | [12] | ||
1895–96 | 2 November 1895 | Rl | Widnes | Home | H | Won | 9-0 | [13] | ||
1895–96 | 30 November 1895 | RL | Warrington | Home | H | Lost | 3-10 | [11] | ||
1895–96 | Sat 28 December 1895 | Rl | Hull | Boulevard | H | Won | 3-0 | [10] | ||
1895–96 | 8 February 1896 | RL | Widnes | Lowerhouse Lane | A | Lost | 0-11 | 2 | [13] | |
1895–96 | 7 March 1896 | Rl | Warrington | Wilderspool | H | Draw | 3-3 | [11] | ||
1895–96 | Sat 21 March 1896 | RL | Hull | Home | H | Won | 18-0 | [10] | ||
1895–96 | Sat 28 March 1896 | Rl | St Helens | Home | H | Won | 11-10 | [12] | ||
1895–96 | Tue 21 April 1896 | RL | Wigan | Home | H | Won | 5-0 | [9] | ||
1896–97 | -1 -1 1896 | Lanc Sen Comp | Widnes | Lowerhouse Lane | A | Won | 8-4 | 2 | [13] | |
1896–97 | Sat 26 September 1896 | Lanc Sen Comp | St Helens | Knowsley Road | A | Lost | 0-3 | [12] | ||
1896–97 | Sat 31 October 1896 | Lanc Sen Comp | Wigan | Folly Field | A | Won | 3-0 | 1 | [9] | |
1896–97 | 7 November 1896 | Lanc Sen Comp | Widnes | Home | H | Won | | | [13] | ||
1896–97 | Sat 5 December 1896 | Lanc Sen Comp | Wigan | Home | H | Won | 8-0 | [9] | ||
1896–97 | 19 December 1896 | Lanc Sen Comp | Warrington | Home | H | Won | 3-0 | [11] | ||
1896–97 | Sat 20 February 1897 | Lanc Sen Comp | St Helens | Home | H | Won | 12-9 | [12] | ||
1896–97 | 27 February 1897 | Lanc Sen Comp | Warrington | Wilderspool | H | Won | 6-0 | [11] | ||
1896–97 | 27 March 1897 | CC R2 | Leeds | Home | H | Won | 9-3 | |||
1896–97 | Sat 10 April 1897 | CC R4 | St Helens | Knowsley Road | A | Lost | 0-12 | [12] | ||
1897–98 | Sat 25 December 1897 | Lanc Sen Comp | Wigan | Folly Field | A | Lost | 2-3 | 1 | [9] | |
1897–98 | 4 September 1897 | Lanc Sen Comp | Warrington | Home | H | Won | 19-0 | [11] | ||
1897–98 | Sat 25 September 1897 | Lanc Sen Comp | St Helens | Knowsley Road | A | Lost | 0-11 | [12] | ||
1897–98 | Sat 9 October 1897 | Lanc Sen Comp | Wigan | Home | H | Won | 3-0 | [9] | ||
1897–98 | 13 November 1897 | Lanc Sen Comp | Widnes | Home | H | Lost | 2-27 | [13] | ||
1897–98 | 4 December 1897 | Lanc Sen Comp | Warrington | Wilderspool | H | Lost | 0-9 | [11] | ||
18 97-98 | 18 December 1897 | Lanc Sen Comp | Widnes | Lowerhouse Lane | A | Lost | 0-3 | 2 | [13] | |
1897–98 | Sat 15 January 1898 | Lanc Sen Comp | St Helens | Home | H | Won | 8-3 | [12] | ||
1897–98 | Fri 8 April 1898 | Friendly | Hull | Boulevard | H | Lost | 2-9 | [10] | ||
1898–99 | 1 October 1898 | Lanc Sen Comp | Widnes | Home | H | Lost | 4-8 | [13] | ||
1898–99 | 29 October 1898 | Lanc Sen Comp | Warrington | Wilderspool | H | Lost | 4-21 | [11] | ||
1898–99 | Sat 24 December 1898 | Lanc Sen Comp | Wigan | Home | H | Draw | 0-0 | [9] | ||
1898–99 | Mon 26 December 1898 | Lanc Sen Comp | St Helens | Knowsley Road | A | Lost | 5-9 | [12] | ||
1898–99 | 21 January 1899 | Lanc Sen Comp | Warrington | Home | H | Lost | 0-6 | [11] | ||
1898–99 | Sat 11 February 1899 | Lanc Sen Comp | St Helens | Home | H | Lost | 3-6 | [12] | ||
1898–99 | Sat 4 March 1899 | Lanc Sen Comp | Wigan | Folly Field | A | Draw | 0-0 | 1 | [9] | |
1898–99 | 15 April 1899 | Lanc Sen Comp | Widnes | Lowerhouse Lane | A | Lost | 2-14 | 2 | [13] | |
1899–1900 | 26 October 1899 | Lanc Sen Comp | Warrington | Wilderspool | H | Lost | 0-22 | [11] | ||
1899–1900 | 11 November 1899 | Lanc Sen Comp | Widnes | Home | H | Lost | 3-10 | [13] | ||
1899–1900 | 25 November 1899 | Lanc Sen Comp | Widnes | Lowerhouse Lane | A | Lost | 0-11 | 2 | [13] | |
1899–1900 | Sat 2 December 1899 | Lanc Sen Comp | St Helens | Knowsley Road | A | Lost | 3-26 | [12] | ||
1899–1900 | Sat 23 December 1899 | Lanc Sen Comp | Wigan | Folly Field | A | Lost | 6-15 | 1 | [9] | |
1899–1900 | Sat 30 December 1899 | Lanc Sen Comp | St Helens | Home | H | Lost | 3-14 | [12] | ||
1899–1900 | 7 January 1900 | Lanc Sen Comp | Warrington | Home | H | Lost | 0-11 | [11] | ||
1899–1900 | Sat 13 January 1900 | Lanc Sen Comp | Wigan | Home | H | Lost | 5-7 | [9] | ||
1899–1900 | 17 April 1900 | SWL R1 | Widnes | Lowerhouse Lane | A | Lost | 6-23 | 2 | [13] |
Notes and Comments
edit- Folly Field is the stadium used by Wigan at the time until 1901. They then became sub-tenants of Springfield Park See below - Note 3.
- Lowerhouse Lane is the original site of the current ground used by Widnes. It was renamed Naughton Park in 1932 in honour of club secretary, Tom Naughton - and later renamed Halton Stadium after being completely rebuilt in 1997.
- Wigan became sub-tenants of Springfield Park, which they shared with Wigan United AFC, playing their first game there on 14 September 1901 at which a crowd of 4,000 saw them beat Morecambe 12–0, and the last game on 28 April 1902 when Wigan beat the Rest of Lancashire Senior Competition. A temporary ground was necessary to span the period between moving from Folly Field and the new ground at Central Park being constructed.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Hard lines for Tyldesley". Athletic News: 2. 7 September 1891.
- ^ "Tyldesley RUFC - Club History". Archived from the original on 20 August 2009.
- ^ "International Statistics at scrum.com". scrum.com. 31 December 2008. Retrieved 1 January 2009.
- ^ J C Lindley with personal recollections by D W Armitage (1973). 100 Years of Rugby - The History of Wakefield Trinity Football Club. The Wakefield Trinity Centenary Committee. pp. 34 and 35.
- ^ "Sport and Play". Lancashire Evening Post. No. 4512. 13 April 1901. p. 5 – via British Newspaper Archive.
- ^ "Historic sports club pleads for fundraiser support". Leigh Journal. 20 March 2017. Retrieved 26 November 2021.
- ^ "Archived" (PDF). London Gazette. 21 December 1900. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 March 2016. Retrieved 1 June 2023.[dead link ]
- ^ Jack Winstanley & Malcolm Ryding (1975). John Player Rugby League Yearbook 1975–76. Queen Anne Press.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Cherry and White".
- ^ a b c d "Hull&Proud Fixtures & Results". Archived from the original on 2 March 2012.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Warrington Wolves results and archives". Archived from the original on 21 December 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Saints Heritage Society".
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Widnes Seasons in Review".