Southport Football Club was founded on 29 November 1872 and is one of the oldest rugby clubs in the world. The first president of the club was Samuel Swire, the Mayor of Southport. In line with the origins of the modern game, the club was originally composed of old public school boys, and was formed with the intention of improving the physical development of our young townsmen. The driving force behind the formation of the club was Dr George Coombe of Southport Infirmary. The first ground is recorded as being a large field next to the Alexandra Cricket Club in Manchester Road, which from an ordnance survey map at the time appears behind Hartwood Road area with access off Roe Lane. The club was one of several playing the handling code in the town, and other teams under the titles Southport Olympic, Southport Wasps, Southport Hornets and The Grasshoppers are recorded. The fixture list included Birkenhead Park FC away, a drawn game, no score, with teams twenty a side.
History
The Early Years (1872-1918)
The 'List of Matches' for 1879 records the club's colours as being blue, white and red, and the ground as Roe Lane, Southport. In 1881, after some heavy defeats, Southport Football Club switched to association football. Most of the rugby players made the switch to the round ball game, and with a lack of new recruits, the original club faded out. There was a merger with Southport Olympic and Southport Wasps, and games were played at a ground at the corner of Scarisbrick New Road and Ash Street, backing onto Southbank Road. Records show that Southport Olympic drew one game with Liverpool Old Boys. The Lancashire County Rugby Football Union was formed in Manchester in the same year, but Southport was not represented. The club's familiar red, black and amber colours were first mentioned in a game with New Brighton in February 1888. After a number of years of little or no rugby due to inter-club conflicts over professional versus amateur status, Southport Olympic completely reformed at Victoria Park, Southport and rejoined the Lancashire County Rugby Football Union in 1906. In April 1913, a proposal to drop the Olympic name in favour of Southport Rugby Union Football Club was carried at a general meeting. When Britain joined the First World War in September 1914, an extraordinary meeting of the club cancelled all fixtures and recommended that all members 'join some military organisation'. Fourteen club members lost their lives in the war, including the 1914 club captain J.E. Grimshaw, who was killed in the Gallipoli Campaign while serving with the Lancashire Fusiliers.
The club returned to playing fixtures in 1919, and by 1922 it had regained some of its former strength with 75 players and 176 patrons. The year 1926 saw the start of the last season at Victoria Park, and on 26 March 1927 the club celebrated the opening of the new ground at Waterloo Road with a victory over Preston Grasshoppers. During World War II, the government requisitioned the ground and the pavilion, and there is no record of the club playing rugby during this period. Twenty seven members lost their lives in the war, including six first XV players.
Modern Club
Southport RFC's first XV currently plays in South Lancashire & Cheshire 1 in the Rugby Football Union Northern Division, and the club fields many sides at all age levels.
Senior: First XV, Second XV, Third XV, Ladies, U18 Colts
Junior: U13s to U17 Colts
Mini: U6s to U12s
Club Honours
Senior:
South Lancs/Cheshire 2 champions: 1996–97
North West 3 champions: 1997–98
South Lancs/Cheshire 3 champions: 2006–07
Merseyside champions: 2015–16
Junior:
Lancashire Colts Cup champions : 1972–73, 2018–19
U18 RFU Northern Plate champions: 2017–18 Lancashire under 16s cup champions: 2016–17