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Porth Athletic F.C.

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Not to be confused with AFC Porth. Former association football club in Wales

Football club
Porth Athletic
Full namePorth Athletic Association Football Club
Nickname(s)the Bantams
Founded1906
Dissolved1925
GroundCaemawr Park
LeagueSouthern League
Welsh League

Porth Athletic F.C. was an association football club from Porth, Wales, which won the Welsh League in 1921–22.

History

The first reference to the club is from 1906. It played at a local level until after the First World War, when the club took a more ambitious attitude, entering the Southern League and Welsh League in 1919, the Welsh Cup for the first time in 1920, and the FA Cup in 1921, and recruiting as manager Frederick G. B. Mortimer, formerly of Bristol City and Swansea Town. Mortimer was dismissed in acrimonious circumstances in October 1919; it emerged that he had been accused of stealing income tax payments when he worked as a tax collector. In 1920 the club recruited Billy Ball as player-manager from Swansea Town.

The club was incorporated in May 1921 in order to raise the funds to buy a new ground at Caermawr, and one of the chief investors was the Rhondda Tramways Company. The club's best season was 1921–22, the squad being made up of "a lot of cast-offs of the Swans ", in which it won its only FA Cup tie, won through three rounds of the Welsh Cup for the only time, and won the Welsh League.

However, the success attracted other clubs to the Bantams' players, Harry Thomas moving as soon as the title was won and forward Alfred Hardy, who had scored 40 goals, moving to Barrow after the season end. After a winless season in the Southern League in 1922–23, the club went into abeyance. The Welsh League reduced to 16 clubs at the close of the season and Porth failed with its application for membership. The club's last recorded activity is hosting a fund-raising event in 1925 to clear its debts.

Ground

The club originally played at the Tynycymmer Ground. In 1921 it moved to Caemawr Park. The highest crowd recorded there was "about 14,000" for a match against Ton Pentre on 19 September 1921.

Notable players

  • Charles Cotton, signed from Brentford in 1920
  • Joe Hughes (goalkeeper), who impressed Bristol City in the Southern League so much that the Robins signed him in 1920.

References

  1. "Porth Athletic v Mardy". Caerphilly Journal: 3. 4 December 1920.
  2. "Football". Western Mail: 6. 5 November 1906.
  3. "Rhondda sensation". Western Mail: 6. 22 October 1919.
  4. "Plea for sick wife". Western Mail: 11. 19 December 1919.
  5. "Porth's new player-manager". Western Mail: 6. 3 September 1920.
  6. "South Wales finance". Western Mail: 12. 20 August 1921.
  7. "Swans at Bristol". South Wales Evening Post: 12. 21 April 1922.
  8. "Football 48th English Football Association (FA) Cup 1922-1923 Qualification". todor66. Retrieved 17 January 2025.
  9. "Season 1921–22". Welsh Soccer Archive. Retrieved 17 January 2025.
  10. "Welsh League South Tables 1921–22". Welsh Soccer Archive. Retrieved 17 January 2025.
  11. "The battle of the bottom clubs". Sunday Sun: 10. 23 April 1922.
  12. "report". London Daily News: 7. 10 June 1922.
  13. The club did win one match, but it was struck from the record after opponents Ton Pentre failed to fulfil its fixtures.
  14. "Welsh National Football League". Glamorgan Gazette: 6. 22 June 1923.
  15. "Charity rugby match aid dinner at Porth". Caerphilly Journal: 2. 28 March 1925.
  16. "Llanelly gain two Welsh League points". Western Mail: 6. 6 October 1920.
  17. "Merthyr Hospital Cup". Western Mail: 3. 23 September 1921.
  18. "Football". Caerphilly Journal: 8. 24 September 1921.
  19. "Porth capture Brentford player". Western Mail: 6. 16 August 1920.
  20. "For charity's sake". Western Daily Press: 6. 6 May 1920.
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