Shawfield Juniors
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Shawfield Football Club was a Scottish
football Football is a family of team sports that involve, to varying degrees, kicking a ball to score a goal. Unqualified, the word ''football'' normally means the form of football that is the most popular where the word is used. Sports commonly c ...
team that competed in the Junior set-up and won the Scottish Junior Cup in 1946–47. There are also a number of references to them being called Shawfield Juniors.


History

Shawfield was founded in 1918 and disbanded in 1960. Their home ground was
Rosebery Park Rosebery Park was a football ground in the Oatlands area of Glasgow, Scotland. It was the home of Shawfield F.C. from 1918 to 1960, before being acquired by Glasgow Corporation as a venue for schools' football matches. The discovery that the sit ...
, located in the Oatlands area of Glasgow – this is close to, but not within, the
Shawfield Shawfield is an industrial/commercial area of the Royal Burgh of Rutherglen in South Lanarkshire, Scotland, located to the north of the town centre. It is bordered to the east by the River Clyde, to the north by the Glasgow neighbourhood of Oatl ...
district of the town of Rutherglen which includes Shawfield Stadium. The club's first season in the
Glasgow Junior League The Glasgow Junior Football League (GJL) was a Association football, football league competition operated under the Scottish Junior Football Association between 1895 and 1927.
was in 1921–22. They remained a mid-table finishing side through five seasons in that league and four in its successor competition, the
Scottish Intermediate League The Intermediate dispute was a major split in Scottish football which lasted from 1925 to 1931 and concerned the compensation that Junior clubs received when one of their players moved to a Senior football league side. Although largely confined to ...
. In 1931–32, the first season of the next reorganisation — the '' Central Junior League'' — Shawfield won the championship, beating
Yoker Athletic Yoker Athletic Football Club are a Scottish football club based in Clydebank near Glasgow. Yoker is an area of Glasgow adjacent to Clydebank, however Yoker's stadium lies just outside the Glasgow boundary. Nicknamed the ''Whe Ho'', the club wer ...
in the deciding match. In 1937, they were overall runners-up to
Arthurlie Arthurlie is an area of the town of Barrhead, East Renfrewshire, Scotland. History of Arthurlie The lands of Arthurlie were held in medieval times by the Stewart family, a branch of the noble Stewarts of Darnley. Later the lands became the prop ...
, but in 1944 they finished dead last, only improving by one place the following year. They were bottom again in 1954, but generally were a middle-ranking club up to their last season, 1959–60. In the knockout competitions, Shawfield lost the 1939 Scottish Junior Cup final by 2–1 to neighbours
Rutherglen Glencairn Rutherglen Glencairn Football Club is a Scottish football (soccer), football club based in Rutherglen, South Lanarkshire, near Glasgow. Nicknamed ''The Glens'' and formed in 1896, they play at The Hamish B Allan Stadium (New Southcroft Park). G ...
(whose ground was in Shawfield itself) in the final at Celtic Park, watched by 22,363 although they gained some consolation that year by winning the West of Scotland Cup in a 2–0 victory over Clydebank Juniors. They got their hands on the biggest prize of the Junior grade in 1947, defeating
Bo'ness United Bo'ness United Football Club is a Scottish football club, based in the town of Bo'ness. The team plays in the after winning the East of Scotland and gaining SFA membership in 2020. They presently play their home games at Newtown Park, which ...
in the Scottish Cup Final at
Hampden Park Hampden Park (Scottish Gaelic: ''Pàirc Hampden''), often referred to as Hampden, is a football stadium in the Mount Florida area of Glasgow, Scotland. The -capacity venue serves as the national stadium of football in Scotland. It is the no ...
, The first match before a crowd of 56,410 finished 1–1; the replay drew 26,521 with Shawfield prevailing 2–1. Bo’ness would go on to lift the trophy the following year. One of Shawfield’s players, Tommy Farrell, played in both the 1939 and 1947 finals either side of World War II. The club disbanded in 1960, having lost much of their local base for players and supporters – Glasgow's housing improvement programme was in full swing, with much of the population of the crowded, substandard tenements decanted to new overspill estates on the edge of town – for residents of the areas surrounding Rosebery Park like Oatlands, Hutchesontown, Gorbals and Polmadie this typically meant Castlemilk and Pollok, although no new Junior teams were established in these vast schemes (
Pollok F.C. Pollok Football Club is a Scottish football club based in Newlands in the southside of the city of Glasgow. The club competes in the West of Scotland Football League and are one of the biggest football clubs operating in Scottish non-league foo ...
are not based in the residential district of that name). Shawfield were only the first Junior club in that part of the city to fold, followed by Bridgeton Waverley (1962), Parkhead (1963), Strathclyde (1965) and Dennistoun Waverley (1968). Clyde also suffered from a diminishing fanbase and would leave the area in the 1980s.


Former players

''See: :Shawfield F.C. players'' The Post-war Scottish internationals that had played for Shawfield were Bobby Dougan and Frank McLintock.


Honours

''List of Shawfield honours;'' * Scottish Junior Cup: 1946–47 ** Runners-up: 1938–39 * Central Junior League: 1931–32 ** Runners-up: 1936–37 *
West of Scotland Junior Cup The West of Scotland Junior Challenge Cup was an annual Scottish football competition played in a one-leg knockout format (played at 'home' team grounds as drawn, until the final at a neutral venue), organised by the West Region of the Scottish ...
: 1938–39 *
Glasgow Junior League The Glasgow Junior Football League (GJL) was a Association football, football league competition operated under the Scottish Junior Football Association between 1895 and 1927.
Cup: 1925–26 * Glasgow Junior Cup: 1931–32, 1938–39 * North Eastern Junior Cup: 1923–24, 1935–36, 1946–47 * Glasgow Junior Charity Cup: 1933–34 * Glasgow Eastern Charity Cup: 1933–34, 1950–51 * Smyllum Charity Cup: 1931–32, 1932–33 * Elder Cottage Hospital Cup: 1926–27


References

{{Defunct Scottish football clubs
Football clubs in Glasgow Defunct football clubs in Scotland Association football clubs established in 1918 Gorbals Association football clubs disestablished in 1960 1918 establishments in Scotland 1960 disestablishments in Scotland Scottish Junior Football Association clubs