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Belfast Celtic F.C.

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Belfast Celtic
Full nameBelfast Celtic Football Club
Nickname(s)The Celts; The Grand Old Team
Founded1891
Dissolved1949
GroundCeltic Park
Belfast
LeagueIrish League

Belfast Celtic Football Club was a football club in Northern Ireland that was founded in 1891,[1] and was one of the most successful teams in Ireland until it withdrew from the Irish League in 1949.

History

The club was named after Celtic Football Club, and was founded on the same principle of raising community spirit and money for charity. Their home was Celtic Park on Donegall Road in west Belfast, known to the fans as Paradise.[1] Celtic won their first league title in 1900 after beating fierce rivals Linfield by a single goal. The team was affectionately referred to as The Mighty Belfast Celtic by its support.

The political violence that engulfed Ireland in the 1920s spilled on to the terraces of the Irish League and Celtic was forced to withdraw in 1920, not rejoining until 1924. Celtic's support base was strongly Irish nationalist.

Despite this, the club went from strength to strength and the inter-war years proved to be Celtic's strongest: they were league champions four years running after their return. The club also produced some of the greatest players of their generation and at one stage had five international goalkeepers in their squad. The famous Charlie Tully, a legend at Celtic, learned how to kick a ball with Belfast Celtic.

The end came on Boxing Day 1948 at the annual Linfield-Celtic game at Windsor Park. Celtic were winning for most of the match but Linfield equalised in the last minute. Linfield fans invaded the pitch and attacked several Celtic players including centre-forward Jimmy Jones who suffered a broken leg.[2]

After the 1948/49 season The Mighty Belfast Celtic went on a tour of America from which they returned midst internal wrangling over flags and financial issues. At a meeting of the board it was decided that Celtic would temporarily leave the league until such matters had been resolved. They were not and the internal wrangling at boardroom level continued until Celtic Park was sold to developers. The club would never again play a competitive match but played several friendlies including an historic victory over Scotland in the United States in 1949 and a match at home to Celtic on May 17, 1952. A final match was played away to Coleraine on June 24, 1960.

The ground continued to function as a greyhound stadium until the 1980s when it was bulldozed and replaced by The Park Centre, a small shopping mall.[1] Today, a small plaque reminds shoppers of the glory days.

Honours

Senior honours

  • Irish League: 19
    • 1899/00, 1914/15, 1918/19, 1919/20, 1925/26, 1926/27, 1927/28, 1928/29, 1932/33, 1935/36, 1936/37, 1937/38, 1938/39, 1939/40, 1940/41, 1941/42, 1943/44, 1946/47, 1947/48
  • Irish Cup: 8
    • 1917/18, 1925/26, 1936/37, 1937/38, 1940/41, 1942/43, 1943/44, 1946/47
  • City Cup: 8
    • 1925/26, 1927/28, 1929/30, 1930/31, 1932/33, 1939/40, 1947/48, 1948/49
  • Gold Cup: 10
    • 1911/12, 1925/26, 1934/35, 1938/39, 1939/40, 1940/41, 1943/44, 1944/45, 1945/46, 1946/47
  • County Antrim Shield: 7
    • 1894/95, 1926/27, 1935/36, 1936/37, 1938/39, 1942/43, 1944/45
  • Dublin and Belfast Inter-city Cup: 1
    • 1947/48 (shared)

Intermediate honours

† Won by Belfast Celtic II

Selected former players

See also Category:Belfast Celtic F.C. players

Selected former managers

References

  1. ^ a b c "Belfast Celtic". Groundtastic. Retrieved 2009-02-11.
  2. ^ "The History of the Grand Old Team". Belfast Celtic Society. Retrieved 2009-02-11.

Further reading

  • Mark Tuohy, Belfast Celtic, 1978 ISBN 0-85640-139-0
  • Flynn, Barry, "Political Football: The Life and Death of Belfast Celtic", 2009, Nonsuch Publishing
  • Padraig Coyle, Paradise Lost & Found: The Story of Belfast Celtic , Mainstream Publishing 1999
  • Padraig Coyle, Alex Moore's Almanac: A Young Man's Diary of a Sporting Farewell , Marine Media 2005