Women's football has been played in
England
England is a Countries of the United Kingdom, country that is part of the United Kingdom. It is located on the island of Great Britain, of which it covers about 62%, and List of islands of England, more than 100 smaller adjacent islands. It ...
for over a century, sharing a common history with the men's game in the country in which the
Laws of the Game were codified.
Women's
football
Football is a family of team sports that involve, to varying degrees, kick (football), kicking a football (ball), ball to score a goal (sports), goal. Unqualified, football (word), the word ''football'' generally means the form of football t ...
was originally very popular in the early 20th century, but after being banned by the men's
Football Association
A football association, also known as a football federation, soccer federation, or soccer association, is a governing body for association football. Many of them are members of the sport's regional bodies such as UEFA and CONMEBOL and the world gov ...
, its popularity declined. It took until the 1990s for the number of female players and spectators to increase, culminating in England hosting the
Women's European Championships in 2005.
History
Origins
It is impossible to locate the precise moment at which women started playing football, just as much of the history of the men's game is uncertain. While football in the medieval era is generally believed to have been a men's game, limited evidence suggests that women were occasionally involved.
Sir Philip Sidney
Sir Philip Sidney (30 November 1554 – 17 October 1586) was an English poet, courtier, scholar and soldier who is remembered as one of the most prominent figures of the Elizabethan age.
His works include a sonnet sequence, '' Astrophil and ...
briefly mentioned female involvement in his 16th Century poem ''A Dialogue Betweene Two Shepherds''; meanwhile,
Mary Queen of Scots
Mary, Queen of Scots (8 December 1542 – 8 February 1587), also known as Mary Stuart or Mary I of Scotland, was List of Scottish monarchs, Queen of Scotland from 14 December 1542 until her forced abdication in 1567.
The only surviving legit ...
was known to have been a spectator of the sport.
A ball formerly in her possession is claimed by some to be the oldest football still in existence.
As football developed from a disorganised village sport into a codified game, with more spectators than players at the end of the 19th century, women's football also developed. A team represented England in a series of matches against Scotland, in 1881 in Edinburgh, Glasgow and the north-west of England, organised by two theatre entrepreneurs and played by members of the theatre community – Lily St. Clare scored the first goal in the first match, a 3–0 win for Scotland at
Hibernian Park.
Their games in Glasgow (with a crowd of more than 5,000) and Manchester were marred by pitch invasions and match abandonments.
These matches are understood to have been the first international women's association football matches in history. Later in the decade, a match scheduled in 1887 between Edinburgh and Grimsby also inspired claims that Grimsby was the first women's football club side.
Other women's football clubs were reported to exist in 1889, in England, Scotland and Canada.
Development
Nettie Honeyball
Nettie Honeyball, also referred to as Nettie J. Honeyball, was the founder of the British Ladies' Football Club, the first known women's association football club, and one of their players until spring 1895. The name Nettie Honeyball was a pse ...
later founded a team in late 1894 called the
British Ladies' Football Club (BLFC), of which Lady
Florence Dixie
Lady Florence Caroline Dixie (née Douglas; 24 May 18557 November 1905) was a Scottish writer, war correspondent, and feminism, feminist. Her account of travelling ''Across Patagonia'', her children's books ''The Young Castaways'' and ''Aniwee ...
, daughter of the
8th Marquess of Queensberry, was president.
The Lady Footballers and the British Ladies Football Club were able to tour England, playing teams across the country.
However, women footballers in England were not entirely able to operate without prejudice, as evidenced in the way many elected to play under assumed names such as
"Mrs Graham", to avoid reprisals for their participation.
The British Ladies Football Club experiment lasted for less than two seasons.
Football clubs took advantage of women's budding interest in the sport. In 1885, seeking to curb the more boisterous behaviour of male spectators,
Preston North End began offering free admission to women in the hope that their presence would restrain the men.
This was successful, attracting 2,000 women to Preston's next match, and was rapidly adopted by other clubs around England. It was so successful that by the late 1890s free entry had been entirely discontinued as clubs realised how much revenue they were losing.
As women's teams continued to grow in reputation, some began to stage games on grounds used by teams of their all-male, and longer-established, counterparts, often reaching respectably high attendances. Notably, a game played in 1895 at the home of
Reading
Reading is the process of taking in the sense or meaning of symbols, often specifically those of a written language, by means of Visual perception, sight or Somatosensory system, touch.
For educators and researchers, reading is a multifacete ...
and featuring the
British Ladies Football Club managed to draw a crowd higher than the previous highest attendance for the men's team.
First World War
Whereas the
1915 FA Cup Final marked the final organised male football match before the men's sport was suspended, the
First World War
World War I or the First World War (28 July 1914 – 11 November 1918), also known as the Great War, was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War I, Allies (or Entente) and the Central Powers. Fighting to ...
in Europe saw women's football games increase in popularity and raise the equivalent of millions of pounds for charitable causes.
The changing nature of women's work in wartime Britain helped to raise the profile of the game both as a women's sport and more generally. Although women workers were encouraged to engage with official workplace sports teams to improve health and productivity, many played football with each other in their lunch-breaks, forming unsanctioned teams such as Bella's Team, the Blyth Spartans, and the Carlisle Munitionettes.
Others were invited to join the remaining men's kick-arounds outside working hours. After observing women munitions workers playing football from his office window, Alfred Frankland suggested to worker Grace Sibbert they should establish a team and play for charity.
Taking the factory's name and becoming well known as
Dick, Kerr's Ladies F.C., they played a total of 828 games between 1917 and 1965 and raised tens of thousands of pounds for charity in its first few years,
a sum equivalent to tens of millions in the 2010s.
One of these matches, played at
Goodison Park
Goodison Park is a Association football, football stadium in Walton, Liverpool, Walton, Liverpool, England, it was the home of Premier League club Everton F.C., Everton from 1892 until 2025. It is now the home of Everton F.C. (women), Everton's ...
, Liverpool on
Boxing Day 1920, attracted a crowd of 53,000, with another 10,000–15,000 reportedly turned away because the ground was full. In north east England, the
Munitionette
Munitionettes were British women employed in munitions factories during the time of the First World War.
History
Early in the war, the United Kingdom's munitions industry found itself having difficulty producing the amount of weapons and ammunit ...
s Cup contest in 1917–18 was another very popular event, featuring star goal-scorer
Bella Reay.
Even though the
end of WWI in 1918 saw many men return to work and women return to the home, the immense popularity of women's football continued, with the Dick, Kerr's Ladies playing more games in 1920 than any professional men's team in the same period.
Women's international games emerged. In 1920, Alfred Frankland liaised with the Federation des Societies Feminine Sportives de France to send a French team to tour England and play the Dick, Kerr's Ladies. They competed at four venues - Preston, Stockport, Manchester and London - and played to crowds in the tens of thousands. The first ever international matches between women's clubs resulted in two wins for the English side, one for the French and one draw. The series was popular enough to result in Dick, Kerr's being invited over to France for a corresponding away tour.
Going unbeaten in France, the team returned home to cheering crowds lining the streets, the equal of any accolade a men's team had received.
Banning, decline, and reappearance
The 1920s saw the re-emergence of unsubstantiated theories which contended that football threatened women's health and morality.
In 1921, the
Football Association
A football association, also known as a football federation, soccer federation, or soccer association, is a governing body for association football. Many of them are members of the sport's regional bodies such as UEFA and CONMEBOL and the world gov ...
banned all women's teams from playing on Association-affiliated grounds, arguing that the game is "not fitted for females", citing the high costs of player expenses, and alleging financial corruption.
Dick, Kerr's player Alice Barlow recounted how women players disputed these rulings, explaining that "we could only put it down to jealousy. We were more popular than the men and our bigger gates were for charity".
While a handful of teams, like Dick, Kerr's, found alternative venues, the FA's decision saw most women's teams disband and reduced spectator numbers for the few who remained.
For several decades, this decision meant that professional women's football virtually ceased to exist. Women developed their own amateur leagues, such as the English Ladies' Football Association (ELFA) which incorporated 57 teams, but these leagues drew in far smaller crowds and funding remained limited.
In the context of widespread popular interest in the game following England's men's
1966 World Cup triumph, the
Women's Football Association
The Women's Football Association (WFA) was the governing body of women's football in England. It was formed in 1969 and was disbanded in 1993, as responsibility for overseeing all aspects of the game of women's football in England passed to t ...
was established in 1969 which oversaw the creation of a women's England and premier league team.
It would take a further two years – and an order from
UEFA
The Union of European Football Associations (UEFA ; ; ) is one of six continental bodies of governance in association football. It governs football, futsal and beach soccer, beach football in Europe and the List of transcontinental countries#A ...
– to force the (men's) Football Association to remove its restrictions on the playing rights of women's teams.
In the same year, the Mitre Challenge Trophy was created as the first national cup competition for women's teams in England, a competition which would eventually morph into the
FA Women's Cup.
Although the Women's Football Association did much to advance the game, taking an English team to the European Championship Final in 1984, insufficient funds continued to stunt growth at a grassroots level.
Around the same time, women were increasingly becoming involved around the sport in non-playing roles, such as
Mary Raine who in February 1969 was sent to report on the Chelsea-Sunderland league game for radio’s ''
Sports Report
''Sports Report'' is one of the longest-running programmes on British radio, and is the world's longest-running sports radio programme. It started on 3 January 1948, and has always been broadcast from 17:00 on Saturday evenings during the foo ...
'', becoming the first woman to report on sport for the BBC, and Patricia Gregory, who helped found the women's FA.
Resurrection
The FA resumed direct involvement in women's football in 1993, though by this time, the WFA had already created the Women's National League, becoming the
Women's Premier League in 1992, to parallel the renaming of the top level of men's competition.
Most professional men's clubs chose to create, or affiliate to, a women's team and the sport gradually grew. In 2008, the women's league system was transformed following the announcement of a new top-level competition – the
Women's Super League (WSL). Taking the best eight teams following sixteen applications and placing them into a no-relegation single division, the Women's Super League sought to draw greater exposure and funding into the game.
The WSL faced several problems in its early stages, with the league having to be delayed a year until March 2011 due to the lingering financial instability in the aftermath of the
2008 financial crisis
The 2008 financial crisis, also known as the global financial crisis (GFC), was a major worldwide financial crisis centered in the United States. The causes of the 2008 crisis included excessive speculation on housing values by both homeowners ...
.
Launching in 2011, the WSL proved successful enough to expand to a two-division, 20-team set-up in 2014. It wasn't until 2018 that the
Women's Super League
The Women's Super League (WSL), also known as the Barclays Women's Super League for sponsorship reasons, and formerly the FA WSL, is a professional association football league and the highest level of women's football in England. Currently oper ...
become fully professional with all 11 top flight teams strictly full-time.
Today, the FA directly runs the top women's competitions. The most significant national competition is the national cup, the
FA Women's Cup, followed by the top national league, the
FA WSL
The Women's Super League (WSL), also known as the Barclays Women's Super League for sponsorship reasons, and formerly the FA WSL, is a professional association football league and the highest level of women's football in England. Currently oper ...
(Women's Super League). Before the formation of the WSL in 2011, the top flight was the
FA Women's Premier League National Division
The FA Women's Premier League National Division (originally WFA National League Premier Division) was a football division in England. From 1991–92 WFA National League Premier Division, 1991 until 2009–10 FA Women's Premier League, 2010, the ...
, which later become the second-level league and has now been reorganised into the third and fourth levels of the pyramid. Originally, the Premier League champion was the only English representative allowed in Europe. When the UEFA Women's Cup was relaunched as the
UEFA Women's Champions League
The UEFA Women's Champions League, previously called the UEFA Women's Cup (2001–2009), is a European women's association football competition. It involves the top club teams from countries affiliated with the European governing body UEFA.
...
for the 2009–10 season, England became one of eight nations with two Champions League places, a status it has retained ever since. In the first two seasons of the new Champions League, England's two places were filled by the Premier League champion and the FA Women's Cup winner. For 2011–12, the two finalists in the 2010–11 FA Women's Cup earned the Champions League places. Starting with the 2012–13 Champions League, the two berths were initially planned to go to the WSL and FA Women's Cup champions, but the FA chose instead to send the top two teams from the WSL. Women's football also has two significant secondary cup competitions. The
FA WSL Cup, contested by the WSL teams, is held after the league season. The
Premier League Cup, limited to the teams in the Premier League and its regional subdivisions, is held during the league season.
The WSL and Premier League have operated on different season structures – the WSL conducted a summer season contained entirely within a calendar year, whilst the Premier League continues to operate on the traditional winter season spanning two calendar years. Following an abbreviated spring season in 2017, women's football is moving to a parallel calendar to the premier league starting in the fall of 2017.
The women's football pyramid was significantly reorganised in 2014. The WSL added a second division known as WSL 2, with the original WSL becoming WSL 1. The Premier League's regional North and South Divisions became the third level of the pyramid, with the
Combination Women's Football Leagues becoming the fourth level. Further changes came in 2015; the FA announced that both divisions of the WSL would expand by one team in 2016, and WSL 2 would also add a team in 2017. Significantly, the new WSL 2 entries will come via promotion from the Premier League, connecting the WSL to the rest of the pyramid for the first time.
To promote women's football, the FA allows cup finals to be held at various men's Premier League/Football League stadiums throughout the country (as opposed to men's finals which are usually held at the national stadiums). In the 2013–14 season, the FA Cup final was held at
MK Dons's
Stadium mk, the WSL Cup final at
Wycombe Wanderers'
Adams Park, and the League Cup final at
Burton Albion's
Pirelli Stadium.
The Women's FA Cup secured its first sponsorship deal with
SSE as a sign of the huge resurrection women's football has seen since
London 2012
The 2012 Summer Olympics, officially the Games of the XXX Olympiad and also known as London 2012, were an international multi-sport event held from 27 July to 12 August 2012 in London, England, United Kingdom. The first event, the ...
. Despite sponsorship, entering the tournament actually costs clubs more than they get in prize money. In 2015, it was reported that even if
Notts County
Notts County Football Club is a professional association football, football club in Nottingham, England, which competes in EFL League Two, the fourth tier of Football in England, English football, following promotion and relegation, promotion ...
had won the tournament outright the £8,600 winnings would leave them out of pocket. The winners of the men's
FA Cup
The Football Association Challenge Cup, more commonly known as the FA Cup, is an annual Single-elimination tournament, knockout association football, football competition in domestic Football in England, English football. First played during ...
in the same year received £1.8 million, with teams not reaching the first round proper getting more than the women's winners.
Towards the top
The women's game in England took a hit following the
2012 Olympics after England was unable to advance from the group stages at
Women's EURO 2013 in Sweden, which led to
Hope Powell's departure as manager and the appointment of Welshman
Mark Sampson
Mark Geraint Sampson (born 18 October 1982) is a Welsh football coach who was most recently a first team coach at Stevenage F.C., Stevenage.
Born in Creigiau, Wales, Sampson played amateur football for Cardiff Corinthians F.C., Cardiff Corinthi ...
. The women's game did receive an unexpected boost when they finished third at the
2015 Women's World Cup in Canada. Along the way, they beat Norway for their first knockout stage win and then host nation Canada in front of a capacity partisan crowd in Vancouver. Following a devastating loss in the semis against defending champions, Japan, after a
Laura Bassett own goal, the team rebounded to beat Germany for the first time in women's football after a 1-0 extra-time win in the third-place game. It meant that England had finished as the top European team at the World Cup and had recorded the second-best World Cup showing by any England senior team (behind
Sir Alf Ramsey,
Bobby Charlton
Sir Robert Charlton (11 October 1937 – 21 October 2023) was an English professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder, left winger or centre-forward. Widely considered one of the greatest players of all time, he was a member ...
and
Bobby Moore
Robert Frederick Chelsea Moore (12 April 1941 – 24 February 1993) was an English professional footballer. He captained West Ham United for more than ten years, and was the captain of the England national team that won the 1966 FIFA ...
's England men's squad who famously won the
1966 World Cup). During this period, women’s football received a significant amount of largely positive media coverage in the UK. This was complemented by other developments, including the launch of the (then semi-professional)
FA Women’s Super League and, from 2015,
Sport England
Sport England is a non-departmental public body under the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.
Its role is to build the foundations of a community sport system by working with national governing bodies of sport, and other funded partners, ...
’s
This Girl Can national media campaign.
The 2015 Women's FA Cup final between
Chelsea Ladies and
Notts County Ladies
Notts County Ladies Football Club was a women's football club based in Nottingham, England. They played their home games at Meadow Lane.
Notts County Ladies were created in 2014 when Lincoln Ladies were relocated from Lincoln to Nottingham ...
was held at
Wembley Stadium
Wembley Stadium, currently branded as Wembley Stadium connected by EE Limited, EE for sponsorship reasons, is an association football stadium in Wembley, London. It opened in 2007 on the site of the Wembley Stadium (1923), original Wembley Sta ...
for the very first time. The largest known English women's attendances to date were recorded at Wembley in that decade, in the
2012
2012 was designated as:
*International Year of Cooperatives
*International Year of Sustainable Energy for All
Events January
*January 4 – The Cicada 3301 internet hunt begins.
* January 12 – Peaceful protests begin in the R ...
Summer Olympic football final, USA–Japan (80,203) and the England–Germany 2019 friendly (77,768).
Euro 2017 saw the national side win their group before being knocked out in the semi-finals by the Dutch. Similarly the
2019 World Cup saw the reach the last four. In July 2022, Dutch coach
Sarina Wiegman led England to a
2-1 win over Germany in the final of
Euro 2022. This marked the 20th match with Wiegman at the helm, of which England had won 18 and drawn 2, including winning the
Arnold Clark Cup
The Arnold Clark Cup is an invitational women's association football tournament hosted by the Football Association in England, starting in 2022. It is named after car retailer Arnold Clark, who signed a multi-year sponsorship deal. ITV acts as t ...
that spring.
League system
The present national league system in women's football in England was created by the
Women's Football Association
The Women's Football Association (WFA) was the governing body of women's football in England. It was formed in 1969 and was disbanded in 1993, as responsibility for overseeing all aspects of the game of women's football in England passed to t ...
. The WFA's Women's National League divisions
played their first season in 1991–92. In previous decades, there had been women's Regional Leagues, which continue today.
The Women's National League (1991–1994) had three divisions: the Northern Division and Southern Division at level 2, and Premier Division at level 1, with annual promotion and relegation between the levels.
The Football Association
The Football Association (the FA) is the Sports governing body, governing body of association football in England and the Crown Dependencies of Jersey, Bailiwick of Guernsey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man. Formed in 1863, it is the oldest footb ...
took over the direct operation of the women's leagues in
the 1994–95 season with the same structure, but renamed the top division the
FA Women's Premier League National Division
The FA Women's Premier League National Division (originally WFA National League Premier Division) was a football division in England. From 1991–92 WFA National League Premier Division, 1991 until 2009–10 FA Women's Premier League, 2010, the ...
; it remained the top tier until
the 2009–10 season. The
Combination Women's Football Leagues, at level 3, began in 1998–99.
When the Women's Super League started in 2011 as the level 1 division, it displaced the Women's Premier League to level 2
and displaced all other divisions by one level. The WPL National Division ended after
the 2012–13 season, replaced in
2014 season by WSL 2, now named the Women's Championship. The WSL operated from 2011 to 2013 on a licence system with no promotion or relegation.
The "Women's Premier League" name was implausibly used from 2014 to 2018 only for lower-league tiers at levels 3 and 4: the
FA Women's Premier League Northern Division and
Southern Division, and the four rebranded regional divisions of the
Combination Leagues. In 2018 the "WPL" was renamed the Women's National League, restoring the name used in the leagues' early years.
At level 5 are eight regional leagues. Below the regional leagues are the county leagues.
As in the men's game, some
Welsh women's football clubs compete in the English pyramid. The most successful are
Gwalia United (formerly known as Cardiff City) and the now defunct
Barry Town, both of which have played in the Women's Premiership.
Including the introduction of the WSL, WSL 2 and rebrands, an overview of the top five levels since 1991 is below. From 2011 to 2016, the WSL divisions changed to a summer season, while other levels stayed on a winter-based season. In 2017–18, the WSL reverted to a winter league.
Pyramid
Regional
County Leagues
Cup eligibility
*
FA Women's Cup: Levels 1–5
*
FA Women's League Cup: Levels 1–2
*
FA Women's National League Cup
The FA Women's National League Cup is an annual English football cup competition, founded in 1991 by the Women's Football Association (WFA).
The first edition of the Cup included clubs from the 1991–92 WFA National League Premier Division a ...
: Levels 3–4
*
FA Women's National League Plate: Level 4
See also
*
Bans of women's association football
*
England women's national football team
The England women's national football team, nicknamed the Lionesses, has been governed by the Football Association (FA) since 1993, having been previously administered by the Women's Football Association (WFA). England played its first interna ...
*
Football in England
Association football, Football is the most popular sport in England. Widely regarded as the birthplace of modern football, the first official rules of the game were established in England in 1863. The country is home to the world's first footba ...
*
List of women's association football clubs in England
*
Women's Super League
The Women's Super League (WSL), also known as the Barclays Women's Super League for sponsorship reasons, and formerly the FA WSL, is a professional association football league and the highest level of women's football in England. Currently oper ...
References
External links
FemaleSOCCER.net – Girls' and women's footballDirectory of Women's and Girls' football Teams in the UK
{{League systems
Football in England