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History Of Lincoln City Football Club
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Though often forgotten, the City of Lincoln was one of
the pioneers of English football with the game being
played in the city as early as the 1860's.
Lincoln FC, who later became known as Lindum FC,
regularly hosted matches during that time against such
respected teams as Sheffield FC. Like Sheffield FC,
Lincoln FC had no direct association with any of the
present day football teams that are now based in the
city. Football in the mid-Nineteenth Century was regarded
as a sport mainly for the rich, ironically this is a
situation which we find ourselves heading for today.
During the 1870's this changed as the local factories
altered their working hours, allowing Saturday afternoon
as a holiday. This increase in workers' leisure time led
to the founding of Lincoln Recreation Football Club in
1872, situated just down the road from the present day
Sincil Bank.
Lincoln Recreation FC played their matches on the
Cowpaddle so called because cows grazed on the fields but
this did not stop Lincoln Recreation becoming a
reasonable team and rivalling the firmly established
Lindum FC.
1881 saw the formation of the Lincolnshire Football
Association but it was in the south of the county that
the stronger teams emerged. A proposal was put forward
suggesting that Lincoln should field a combined team to
take on the stronger sides and help place Lincolnshire's
largest and only City on the footballing map. By now
Lincoln Recreation FC had changed their name to Lincoln
Rovers, though Lindum FC were still the better side. The
idea of a combined team was given a trial period and a
better class of opposition were attracted to the City,
which in turn increased the popularity of football in
Lincoln. However both Lincoln teams were reluctant to
merge altogether so continued with their separate
identities.
Three years later, in the summer of 1884, a series of
public meetings directly led to the formation of today's
Lincoln City FC. As Lincoln Recreation/Rovers were
disbanding, the players and committee members alike
offered their support and skills to the new Lincoln City
FC. Several players became Lincoln City players and the
shirts of Lincoln Recreation/Rovers, red and white, were
adopted by City. This new team abandoned the Cowpaddle
and found a new pitch at John O'Gaunts, unfortunately it
was owned by a stables and was little improvement from
the cows roaming wild.
Lincoln City 9 Sleaford 1 was the result of City's first
ever match, played on the 4th October 1884. During that
season the new club progressed to the third round of the
FA Cup, a feat which the present day club mostly finds
impossible to achieve. The average crowd was around 500
spectators though depending on the match this could
double.
Meanwhile Lindum FC, still the better team in Lincoln,
were becoming increasingly worried by the new club and in
1885 their representatives approached Lincoln City with a
merger plan under the name of Lindum FC.
The committee members of Lincoln City felt that this was
a backward step and that the idea would effectively be a
take-over by Lindum, so rejected the proposal. Lindum
were miffed at this so set about effectively killing the
new club by hiring a field opposite John O'Gaunts but
nearer to the Sincil Drain. Though this pitch was
slightly northwards from today's Sincil Bank it was still
the origin of the present ground.
History Of Lincoln City FC - Pages 1 2 3 4 5 6.
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