Full name | Reading Hornets Football Club | |
---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | Hornets | |
Founded | 1873 | |
Dissolved | 1878 | |
Ground | Recreation Ground [1] | |
|
Reading Hornets F.C. was an English association football club.
The club claimed a foundation date of 1873 and was certainly playing matches in the 1874–75 season. [2]
The Hornets competed in the FA Cup in 1876 and 1877. In 1876-77 the club lost 2–0 to the Swifts in the first round; as local rivals Reading F.C. had not entered the competition, two of the Reading players (Rogers and Marks) guested for the Hornets. [3] The club had generally had a good season, with a win over Cup regulars Maidenhead [4] and no heavy defeats.
However a defeat against Reading in 1876 under acrimonious circumstances [5] saw key players leaving the Hornets for the more established club at the start of the 1877–78 season (including captain Gilbert Sillence), [6] and, after losing 10–0 to Maidenhead in the first round of the Cup (a tie so one-sided that the tenth goal was scored by the Maidenhead goalkeeper W. E. Lovegrove, who had come out of goal for the last ten minutes [7]) the club did not have enough players remaining to fulfil the next two fixtures which it had arranged. [8] Its last members joined Reading.
The club wore black and amber jerseys, with a black cap and gold tassel. [9]
Full name | Reading Hornets Football Club | |
---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | Hornets | |
Founded | 1873 | |
Dissolved | 1878 | |
Ground | Recreation Ground [1] | |
|
Reading Hornets F.C. was an English association football club.
The club claimed a foundation date of 1873 and was certainly playing matches in the 1874–75 season. [2]
The Hornets competed in the FA Cup in 1876 and 1877. In 1876-77 the club lost 2–0 to the Swifts in the first round; as local rivals Reading F.C. had not entered the competition, two of the Reading players (Rogers and Marks) guested for the Hornets. [3] The club had generally had a good season, with a win over Cup regulars Maidenhead [4] and no heavy defeats.
However a defeat against Reading in 1876 under acrimonious circumstances [5] saw key players leaving the Hornets for the more established club at the start of the 1877–78 season (including captain Gilbert Sillence), [6] and, after losing 10–0 to Maidenhead in the first round of the Cup (a tie so one-sided that the tenth goal was scored by the Maidenhead goalkeeper W. E. Lovegrove, who had come out of goal for the last ten minutes [7]) the club did not have enough players remaining to fulfil the next two fixtures which it had arranged. [8] Its last members joined Reading.
The club wore black and amber jerseys, with a black cap and gold tassel. [9]