Das Team Forenränge
Tippen Alle Tipps Ergebnisse Tabelle Rangliste Spieltag Gesamtrangliste Tipprunden-Regeln
FAQ Nutzungsbedingungen Datenschutzrichtlinien
  • Nachrichteneingang
  • Nachricht verfassen
  • Administration Moderations-Bereich Info Boxes
  • Übersicht
  • Profil
  • Einstellungen
  • Freunde und ignorierte Mitglieder
  • Celtic-Points Informationen
    Scottish Cup Semi Final
    20.04.2024 13.30 Uhr DZ
    Hampden Park
    Celtic FC - Aberdeen

    Unbroken history since 1888

    Alles zur ruhmreichen Geschichte des Celtic FC

    Re: History of Glasgow Celtic FC 1888

    Beitragvon wakes_green » Sa 25. Mai 2013, 16:05

    Gollum hat geschrieben:Ab 9:56, einfach mal anhören. :celt2


    Sehr schön, übrigens auch die anderen Geschichten, vielen Dank!!
    Against the famine and the crown
    Benutzeravatar
    wakes_green
    Bobo Balde
    Bobo Balde
     
    Sternzeichen:
    Europ.: Wassermann Chin.: Affe
    Beiträge: 1090
    Registriert: Di 1. Jan 2013, 23:06
    Wohnort: Berlin
    Geschlecht: männlich
    Celtic-Points: 41.046,40 Celtic-Points
    Land: Deutschland

    Re: History of Glasgow Celtic FC 1888

    Beitragvon Lubo » Sa 25. Mai 2013, 17:42

    Gollum hat geschrieben:
    Ab 9:56, einfach mal anhören. :celt2


    ;D ;D ;D
    Celtic F. C. = ambitionsloses Import-Export-Unternehmen
    Benutzeravatar
    Lubo
    John Hartson
    John Hartson
     
    Beiträge: 4976
    Registriert: Sa 15. Mai 2010, 12:12
    Geschlecht: keine Angabe
    Celtic-Points: 161.500,40 Celtic-Points
    Land: Deutschland

    Re: History of Glasgow Celtic FC 1888

    Beitragvon Gollum » Di 28. Mai 2013, 19:21

    Heute vor 125 Jahren:

    Five-star Celts give new club the perfect start

    CELTIC´S first ever match, on May 28, 1888, proved to be a successful one as the new club beat Rangers 5-2. Neilly McCallum scored the first goal, while Tom Maley can lay claim to the club´s first ever hat-trick.
    And this nineteenth century match report from the Glasgow Observer newspaper, paints a vivid picture of an historic match and a memorable victory.

    ´The Rangers kicked off against the wind and at once made an incursion into Celtic territory. With some difficulty, Dolan and the backs cleared their charge and play was transferred to the other end. A mistake by Meikle gave the Celts a corner-kick. Dunbar placed the ball in front of goal and McCallum was enabled to head the first point of the game.
    ´The Rangers, after a pass by Sutar equalised after ten minutes play. Nicol was saving in grand style and, but for his clever goalkeeping, the Celts must have increased their score on several occasions.
    ´A foul against the ´light blues´ further enhanced the prospects of the home team. The ball was kept in dangerous proximity to Nicol´s charge and to avert what proved to be only a temporary and insufficient relief, the Rangers were forced to concede a corner-kick.
    ´Like the former, and placed by the same player, Kelly, who was playing a judicious game, headed the second goal for the home team a few minutes before half-time.
    ´The Rangers opened the second half with great vigour. The home defence, however, was not to be overcome. By short passing and keeping the ball low, the Celts carried it to the other end where Tom Maley was enabled to score another goal.
    ´In retaliation, the Ibrox forwards were soon in front of their adversaries´ upright and a second goal was registered by Suter. Ultimately, Maley put in a fourth goal for the ground team. Through the instrumentality of McCallum, the same player shortly afterwards notched a fifth point.
    ´A sixth point was put through but was disallowed owing to an infringement of the offside rule. The whistle sounded with the ball hovering in front of Dolan.´


    Celtic: Dolan (Drumpelier); Pearson (Carfin Shamrock), McLaughlin (Govan Whitefield), W Maley (Cathcart), Kelly (Renton), Murray (Cambuslang Hibs), McCallum (Renton), T Maley (Cathcart), Madden (Dumbarton), Dunbar (Edinburgh Hibs), Gorevin (Govan Whitefield).

    Rangers: Nicol, McIntyre, Muir, McPherson, McFarlane, Meikle, Robb, McLaren, McKenzie, Suter, Wilson.
    Referee: Mr McFadden (Edinburgh Hibs)
    Slawa Ukrajini - Tiocfaidh ár lá
    Benutzeravatar
    Gollum
    Administrator
    Administrator
     
    Sternzeichen:
    Europ.: Löwe Chin.: Drache
    Beiträge: 6352
    Registriert: Do 13. Mai 2010, 12:44
    Geschlecht: männlich
    Celtic-Points: 391.631,15 Celtic-Points

    Re: History of Glasgow Celtic FC 1888

    Beitragvon McCeltic » Di 28. Mai 2013, 19:40

    Und gleich ordentlich die SchlĂĽmpfe verprĂĽgelt. ;D :top1
    Season 2016/17 Treble Winner
    Season 2017/18 Treble Winner
    Season 2018/19 Treble Winner
    Season 2019/20 SPL Champion, League Cup Winner


    Celtic Football Club 1888



    Froggies CSC
    Benutzeravatar
    McCeltic
    Administrator
    Administrator
     
    Sternzeichen:
    Europ.: Zwilling Chin.: Hund
    Beiträge: 16520
    Registriert: Mi 12. Mai 2010, 17:32
    Wohnort: Bruchsal
    Geschlecht: männlich
    Celtic-Points: 331.374,15 Celtic-Points
    Land: Deutschland

    Re: History of Glasgow Celtic FC 1888

    Beitragvon Lubo » Do 30. Mai 2013, 09:23

    Celtic F. C. = ambitionsloses Import-Export-Unternehmen
    Benutzeravatar
    Lubo
    John Hartson
    John Hartson
     
    Beiträge: 4976
    Registriert: Sa 15. Mai 2010, 12:12
    Geschlecht: keine Angabe
    Celtic-Points: 161.500,40 Celtic-Points
    Land: Deutschland

    Re: History of Glasgow Celtic FC 1888

    Beitragvon wakes_green » Do 27. Jun 2013, 20:44

    schönes Video über die Lisbon Lions:

    http://www.uefa.com/uefachampionsleague ... oplay=true
    Against the famine and the crown
    Benutzeravatar
    wakes_green
    Bobo Balde
    Bobo Balde
     
    Sternzeichen:
    Europ.: Wassermann Chin.: Affe
    Beiträge: 1090
    Registriert: Di 1. Jan 2013, 23:06
    Wohnort: Berlin
    Geschlecht: männlich
    Celtic-Points: 41.046,40 Celtic-Points
    Land: Deutschland

    Re: History of Glasgow Celtic FC 1888

    Beitragvon Gollum » Do 15. Aug 2013, 17:09

    110 Years of the Hoops

    C´MON the Stripes certainly doesn´t have the same ring to it, not to mention uniqueness, as 'C´mon the Hoops', but then if we still wore stripes there´d be no point in adopting the chant - we´d just be another team in stripes. But Celtic aren´t just any other team and that isn´t just down to a history of breathtaking performances.
    There is a bond between the players and supporters and the strongest link in that bond is the shirt they both wear on their backs. And it is the distinctive and eye-catching green and white Hoops that have made people on all corners of the globe with no obvious connection to Celtic sit up and take notice – and it was introduced 110 years ago today, August 15, 1903.
    The 85,000 who crammed the streets of Seville weren´t wearing just any old bland self-coloured football top and similarly, if the Lions had taken to the pitch in Lisbon in the all-green change strip of the period the magic wouldn´t have been quite the same.
    There are those who follow the fortunes of Celtic from afar and when asked what first attracted them to the club, nine times out of 10 the answer isn´t Nine-in-a-Row, Lisbon, Jimmy Johnstone, Kenny Dalglish or Henrik Larsson...Quite simply, the first words out of their mouths are usually: 'The strip.'
    The Hoops are a badge of honour we wear with pride and the great Jock Stein knew exactly what he was talking about when he said: "The Celtic shirt doesn´t shrink to fit inferior players."
    Whoever had the idea 110 years ago to change the strip in those pre-marketing replica strip years couldn´t possibly have known what a historic decision he was making - the green and white Hoops are a promotional tool that money just can´t buy and instantly recognisable throughout the world. It hasn´t been recorded who actually made the decision but J H McLaughlin was chairman at the time while Willie Maley ran the football side of things so both were probably involved in some capacity.
    It was probably the most significant transfer we ever made and remarkably the Hoops are almost certainly an import from Govan of all places. Junior club St Anthony´s have supplied many a player to Celtic down through the decades but history also notes that they were the original wearers of the green and white hoops. It was noted at the time that somebody at Celtic simply took a fancy to the strip after watching St Anthony´s play and the legend of the Hoops was born.
    The irony is that St Anthony´s and their followers in Govan are well-known for their Celtic allegiances and a symptom of that is that many believe they wear the Hoops because they are Bhoys´ fans when the reality is that they blazed a trail and Celtic simply followed suit. It wasn´t all plain sailing for the natty new threads, though, as in the early days there were references in the press likening the Celtic players to convicts.
    Just compare the early version of the Hoops to the prison garb worn by George Clooney and co in the film Oh Brother Where Art Though and you will know where they were coming from but 'C´mon the Convicts' is about as appealing as 'C´mon the Stripes'.
    Still, it´s understandable why the Convicts moniker never caught on as one Canadian journalist who wrote of the Celts on tour as: 'Turning out in jailhouse jerseys,' had to change his phone number when ex-pats literally got shirty and turned on him with some venom.
    It should be noted, though, that Celtic spent nigh on the first 15 years of their existence playing in the club´s early colours, so many Hoops legends such as Sandy McMahon, James Kelly, Jimmy Blessington and Willie Maley himself never actually wore the Hoops.
    The very first strip was, of course, white shirts with a green collar and a Celtic cross in red and green on the left breast. As Maley stated in his 1939 book The Story of the Celtic: 'These were presented to the club by Penman Bros., then the big drapers and clothiers at Bridgeton Cross.'
    The strip soon changed to the green and white vertical stripes and that was the preferred option until 1903 and the sartorial elegance of the Hoops when ´somebody at Parkhead´ was watching rather more than the tactics of St Anthony´s. So did the magic of the Hoops rub off on the team right away? It´s difficult to say as it´s logical to presume that Celtic kicked off the new season of 1903/04 wearing the new strip. They started off with a 2-1 home win over Partick Thistle before winning 1-0 against St Mirren in Paisley. And the new strip did herald some success in a way that the green and white stripes failed to muster.
    When the Celts first changed to the stripes they reached the Scottish Cup final but lost 2-1 to Third Lanark. However, when changing to the Hoops they also reached the final in their first season of use with an altogether more acceptable outcome.
    We met Rangers in the final and despite being two goals down after 12 minutes, the great Jimmy Quinn made sure of his own chapter in the history books by scoring a Scottish Cup final hat-trick and the Hoops never looked back. Happy Birthday to the Hoops!

    Und so sah das Ganze aus vor 110 Jahren:
    Bild

    :happybirth:
    Slawa Ukrajini - Tiocfaidh ár lá
    Benutzeravatar
    Gollum
    Administrator
    Administrator
     
    Sternzeichen:
    Europ.: Löwe Chin.: Drache
    Beiträge: 6352
    Registriert: Do 13. Mai 2010, 12:44
    Geschlecht: männlich
    Celtic-Points: 391.631,15 Celtic-Points

    Re: Unbroken history since 1888

    Beitragvon Gollum » Mi 6. Nov 2013, 19:08

    Bild

    Celtic founded 126 years ago today

    THERE are many significant dates surrounding the formation of Celtic Football Club, from February 12, 1887 when Hibernian beat Dumbarton 2-1 in the Scottish Cup final until August 21, 1888 when the fledgling club were officially registered with the SFA.
    Falling between these dates in the intervening 555 days are a number of historical events that were crucial in the Celtic calendar – not least being May 28, 1888 when the new club, resplendent in their white shirts with green collars and a Celtic Cross on the breast supplied by Penman Bros of Bridgeton, took to the field for the very first time and defeated Rangers 5-2 with Neil McCallum scoring the first ever Celtic goal.

    Other prominent dates were:

    April, 1887: This was when Clyde played Dundee Harp at Barrowfield Park, Bridgeton and a crowd of 4,000 raised money for the Poor Children’s Dinner Table at Sacred Heart School. The match, arranged by Brother Walfrid, would no doubt have had the priest recalling John McFadden’s rallying call of February 12 (see below).

    May 1887: Glasgow Charity Cup holders Renton played Scottish Cup holders Hibs for the one-off East End Charity Cup when a massive 12,000 paid in at Barrowfield. The match ended in a draw and the replay was staged in August.

    November 13, 1887: The committee leased six acres of land on Dalmarnock Street (Springfield Road, where new apartments are) and work immediately started on what would become one of the most state-of-the-art stadia in the country at the time.

    January 19, 1888: The first general monthly meeting was held before a lively attendance at St Mary’s where it was reported that the pitch was finished and that work was due to commence on the stand that week.

    May 8, 1888: This was the date of the very first game played at Celtic Park when a crowd of 5,000 turned up for a game between Hibernian and Cowlairs. Even before all this, in September 1886, Hibs had come to Glasgow to play St Peter’s of Partick in a match at Glengarry Park in Bridgeton.

    The park had been named after the area in which Catholic Highlanders settled and, indeed, was the home pitch of Columba, the first youth team formed by Brother Walfrid. A thousand paying customers boosted the coffers of St Mary’s Poor Children’s Dinner Table.
    But the crucial date in all this was Sunday, November 6, 1887, exactly 126 years ago today, for it was then that representatives from the upper echelons of the Irish community in Glasgow, most of whom who had witnessed John McFadden’s speech back in February, gathered at St Mary’s Hall.
    Bodies such as the St Vincent de Paul Society, the Catholic Union, the Irish Foresters, the Home Government Branch of the United Irish League, the St Aloysius Association and the Irish National League as well as local Penny Savings Bank and a Total Abstinence Society were present in some manner but the main objective was the formation of a football team to raise money for the Soup Kitchens of the East End.
    It was at the February 12 post-match celebrations at St Mary’s Hall in East Rose Street in the Calton, organised for the Edinburgh side by the Glasgow Irish, that Hibernian secretary John McFadden urged his West of Scotland compatriots to start their own team.
    They, along with Brother Walfrid and his assistant Brother Dorotheus, had been inspired by John McFadden’s urgings and the Marist priest in particular envisaged the benefits of having a team to represent the community AND raise money for the poor.
    Aside from Hibernian and the aforementioned St Peter’s and Dundee Harp, four other clubs with Irish affiliations took part in that season’s Scottish Cup - Erin Rovers, Carfin Shamrock, Broxburn Shamrock and Vale of Leven Hibs.
    The Edinburgh side stood head and shoulders above all others, though, and seemed untouchable so McFadden could little have imagined that his suggestion would result in the formation of a team that would become the biggest of them all.
    It was John Glass who chaired the meeting 125 years ago this week and the Celtic Football and Athletic Club was formally constituted.

    From that historic meeting the first ever Celtic committee was formed with the following members:

    Honorary President, Dr John Conway
    President, John Glass
    Secretary, John O’Hara
    Treasurer, Hugh Darnoch
    Match Secretary, Willie Maley
    Committee: Joseph Nelis, Tom Maley, Michael Cairns, Joe Shaughnessy, Pat Welsh, Daniel Molloy, David Meikleham, John McDonald, William McKillop, John McLaughlin and Joseph McGrory.


    Following somewhat tempestuous meetings between the parishes of St Mary, St Andrew and St Alphonsus during the months prior to the historic November 6 gathering, the baton held by John McFadden was finally taken up and - mainly thanks to the foresight and reasoning of committee member John McLaughlin who, on the club becoming a limited liability company in 1897, became Celtic’s first ever Chairman – Scottish football would never be the same again.
    Slawa Ukrajini - Tiocfaidh ár lá
    Benutzeravatar
    Gollum
    Administrator
    Administrator
     
    Sternzeichen:
    Europ.: Löwe Chin.: Drache
    Beiträge: 6352
    Registriert: Do 13. Mai 2010, 12:44
    Geschlecht: männlich
    Celtic-Points: 391.631,15 Celtic-Points

    Re: Unbroken history since 1888

    Beitragvon Gollum » So 12. Jan 2014, 14:51

    Fergus McCann's battle to save Celtic from bankruptcy detailed in unseen board documents
    TWO decades ago an unlikely saviour walked through the gates of Celtic Park after the club had lurched towards disaster. Armed with new interviews and unprecedented access to boardroom documents, club director and historian BRIAN WILSON remembers how Fergus McCann saved Celtic.
    Slawa Ukrajini - Tiocfaidh ár lá
    Benutzeravatar
    Gollum
    Administrator
    Administrator
     
    Sternzeichen:
    Europ.: Löwe Chin.: Drache
    Beiträge: 6352
    Registriert: Do 13. Mai 2010, 12:44
    Geschlecht: männlich
    Celtic-Points: 391.631,15 Celtic-Points

    Re: Unbroken history since 1888

    Beitragvon Gollum » Do 27. Feb 2014, 01:28

    Auf Sky Sports kam gestern Nacht eine schöne Doku über die Lisbon Lions, falls es wen interessiert, kann man sich HIER nochmal angucken. :celt3
    Slawa Ukrajini - Tiocfaidh ár lá
    Benutzeravatar
    Gollum
    Administrator
    Administrator
     
    Sternzeichen:
    Europ.: Löwe Chin.: Drache
    Beiträge: 6352
    Registriert: Do 13. Mai 2010, 12:44
    Geschlecht: männlich
    Celtic-Points: 391.631,15 Celtic-Points

    Re: Unbroken history since 1888

    Beitragvon Gollum » Di 4. Mär 2014, 15:07

    It was 20 years ago today...
    It was 20 years ago today, on March 4, 1994, that Fergus McCann saved Celtic. That is the simple, yet dramatic truth. Without his timely intervention with eight minutes to spare, the club would have ceased to exist. Instead, he stepped in and rescued the club, successfully taking it over and laying the foundations for the success that Celtic have enjoyed on and off the park in the past two decades. Supporters have much to thank Fergus McCann for. It was a pivotal moment in Celtic’s long and illustrious history, and Fergus is one of the most important figures in the ongoing Celtic story. He reflects on the events of 20 years ago today...

    Interessante Rückblicke und die großen Verdienste von McCann stehen für mich auch völlig außer Frage, trotzdem sollten aber auch gerade in diesen Tagen des medialen Abfeierns die "Schattenseiten" seiner Zeit bei uns nicht völlig in Vergessenheit geraten:
    Fergus McCann - Bhoys Against Bigotry
    Slawa Ukrajini - Tiocfaidh ár lá
    Benutzeravatar
    Gollum
    Administrator
    Administrator
     
    Sternzeichen:
    Europ.: Löwe Chin.: Drache
    Beiträge: 6352
    Registriert: Do 13. Mai 2010, 12:44
    Geschlecht: männlich
    Celtic-Points: 391.631,15 Celtic-Points

    Re: Unbroken history since 1888

    Beitragvon Gollum » Mi 21. Mai 2014, 17:22

    Seville: When Celtic fans gave an example to the world
    IT was on this day 11 years ago that the Celtic supporters showed the football world how to support your team, regardless of the result. On May 21, 2003, Celtic faced Porto in the final of the UEFA Cup, held in Seville’s Estadio Olimpico.

    Einer der ganz groĂźen Meilensteine auf meinem Weg zum Celtic-Fan! :celt2



    Slawa Ukrajini - Tiocfaidh ár lá
    Benutzeravatar
    Gollum
    Administrator
    Administrator
     
    Sternzeichen:
    Europ.: Löwe Chin.: Drache
    Beiträge: 6352
    Registriert: Do 13. Mai 2010, 12:44
    Geschlecht: männlich
    Celtic-Points: 391.631,15 Celtic-Points

    Re: Unbroken history since 1888

    Beitragvon Gollum » So 25. Mai 2014, 17:28

    Zum CL-Finale waren gestern auch diejenigen geladen, die heute vor 47 Jahren an gleicher Stelle (naja, fast) bereits europäische Fußballgeschichte geschrieben haben:

    Lions watch Real Madrid make history
    THE Lions roared into the history books 47 years ago in Lisbon and last night they watched Real Madrid achieve a new milestone in the Portuguese capital.

    Final
    May 25, 1967
    Estadio Nacional, Lisbon, Portugal
    CELTIC 2
    Gemmell 63, Chalmers 85
    INTERNAZIONALE MILAN 1
    Mazzola 7 pen
    Att: 55,000
    Referee: Tschescher (West Germany)
    Celtic: Simpson; Craig, Gemmell; Murdoch, McNeill, Clark; Johnstone, Wallace, Chalmers, Auld, Lennox.
    Inter Milan: Sarti; Burgnich, Facchetti; Bedin, Guarneri, Picchi; Domenghini, Cappellini, Mazzola, Bicicli, Corso.

    Wer Lust auf ein bisschen Nostalgie hat, auf CelticTV kann man sich derzeit das gesamte Spiel kostenlos angucken:

    First Half
    Second Half

    :celt5 ;winners: :celt5
    Slawa Ukrajini - Tiocfaidh ár lá
    Benutzeravatar
    Gollum
    Administrator
    Administrator
     
    Sternzeichen:
    Europ.: Löwe Chin.: Drache
    Beiträge: 6352
    Registriert: Do 13. Mai 2010, 12:44
    Geschlecht: männlich
    Celtic-Points: 391.631,15 Celtic-Points

    Re: Unbroken history since 1888

    Beitragvon netzer14 » Do 29. Mai 2014, 11:25

    Cheeky Celtic Shop Sits Replica European Cup In Front Of Rangers Advert
    http://talkingbaws.com/2014/05/28/cheek ... rs-advert/
    :huns
    netzer14
     
    Celtic-Points: Gesperrt
    Bank: Gesperrt

    Re: Unbroken history since 1888

    Beitragvon Gollum » Mi 5. Nov 2014, 12:44

    Controversial artist Peter Howson creates portrait of legendary Celtic founder Brother Walfrid
    THE Scots painter has paid tribute to the man who founded Celtic in a haunting new portrait which also documents the horror of the famine which led to the football club's foundation.

    Bild
    Slawa Ukrajini - Tiocfaidh ár lá
    Benutzeravatar
    Gollum
    Administrator
    Administrator
     
    Sternzeichen:
    Europ.: Löwe Chin.: Drache
    Beiträge: 6352
    Registriert: Do 13. Mai 2010, 12:44
    Geschlecht: männlich
    Celtic-Points: 391.631,15 Celtic-Points

    Re: Unbroken history since 1888

    Beitragvon Armin_Bhoy » Do 6. Nov 2014, 10:31

    http://www.celticfc.net/news/4822

    Celtic founded 127 years ago today

    THERE are many significant dates surrounding the formation of Celtic Football Club, from February 12, 1887 when Hibernian beat Dumbarton 2-1 in the Scottish Cup final until August 21, 1888 when the fledgling club were officially registered with the SFA.

    Falling between these dates in the intervening 555 days are a number of historical events that were crucial in the Celtic calendar – not least being May 28, 1888 when the new club, resplendent in their white shirts with green collars and a Celtic Cross on the breast supplied by Penman Bros of Bridgeton, took to the field for the very first time and defeated Rangers 5-2 with Neil McCallum scoring the first ever Celtic goal.

    Other prominent dates were:

    April, 1887: This was when Clyde played Dundee Harp at Barrowfield Park, Bridgeton and a crowd of 4,000 raised money for the Poor Children’s Dinner Table at Sacred Heart School. The match, arranged by Brother Walfrid, would no doubt have had the priest recalling John McFadden’s rallying call of February 12 (see below).

    May 1887: Glasgow Charity Cup holders Renton played Scottish Cup holders Hibs for the one-off East End Charity Cup when a massive 12,000 paid in at Barrowfield. The match ended in a draw and the replay was staged in August.

    November 13, 1887: The committee leased six acres of land on Dalmarnock Street (Springfield Road, where new apartments are) and work immediately started on what would become one of the most state-of-the-art stadia in the country at the time.

    January 19, 1888: The first general monthly meeting was held before a lively attendance at St Mary’s where it was reported that the pitch was finished and that work was due to commence on the stand that week.

    May 8, 1888: This was the date of the very first game played at Celtic Park when a crowd of 5,000 turned up for a game between Hibernian and Cowlairs. Even before all this, in September 1886, Hibs had come to Glasgow to play St Peter’s of Partick in a match at Glengarry Park in Bridgeton.

    The park had been named after the area in which Catholic Highlanders settled and, indeed, was the home pitch of Columba, the first youth team formed by Brother Walfrid. A thousand paying customers boosted the coffers of St Mary’s Poor Children’s Dinner Table.

    But the crucial date in all this was Sunday, November 6, 1887, exactly 127 years ago today, for it was then that representatives from the upper echelons of the Irish community in Glasgow, most of whom who had witnessed John McFadden’s speech back in February, gathered at St Mary’s Hall.

    Bodies such as the St Vincent de Paul Society, the Catholic Union, the Irish Foresters, the Home Government Branch of the United Irish League, the St Aloysius Association and the Irish National League as well as local Penny Savings Bank and a Total Abstinence Society were present in some manner but the main objective was the formation of a football team to raise money for the Soup Kitchens of the East End.

    It was at the February 12 post-match celebrations at St Mary’s Hall in East Rose Street in the Calton, organised for the Edinburgh side by the Glasgow Irish, that Hibernian secretary John McFadden urged his West of Scotland compatriots to start their own team.

    They, along with Brother Walfrid and his assistant Brother Dorotheus, had been inspired by John McFadden’s urgings and the Marist priest in particular envisaged the benefits of having a team to represent the community AND raise money for the poor.

    Aside from Hibernian and the aforementioned St Peter’s and Dundee Harp, four other clubs with Irish affiliations took part in that season’s Scottish Cup - Erin Rovers, Carfin Shamrock, Broxburn Shamrock and Vale of Leven Hibs.

    The Edinburgh side stood head and shoulders above all others, though, and seemed untouchable so McFadden could little have imagined that his suggestion would result in the formation of a team that would become the biggest of them all.

    It was John Glass who chaired the meeting 127 years ago this week and the Celtic Football and Athletic Club was formally constituted.

    From that historic meeting the first ever Celtic committee was formed with the following members:

    Honorary President, Dr John Conway
    President, John Glass
    Secretary, John O’Hara
    Treasurer, Hugh Darnoch
    Match Secretary, Willie Maley
    Committee: Joseph Nelis, Tom Maley, Michael Cairns, Joe Shaughnessy, Pat Welsh, Daniel Molloy, David Meikleham, John McDonald, William McKillop, John McLaughlin and Joseph McGrory.

    Following somewhat tempestuous meetings between the parishes of St Mary, St Andrew and St Alphonsus during the months prior to the historic November 6 gathering, the baton held by John McFadden was finally taken up and - mainly thanks to the foresight and reasoning of committee member John McLaughlin who, on the club becoming a limited liability company in 1897, became Celtic’s first ever Chairman – Scottish football would never be the same again.
    Brendan Rodgers Fenian Army
    Benutzeravatar
    Armin_Bhoy
    Artur Boruc
    Artur Boruc
     
    Sternzeichen:
    Europ.: Fische Chin.: Schlange
    Beiträge: 3106
    Registriert: Sa 23. Jul 2011, 17:14
    Wohnort: Schorndorf
    Geschlecht: männlich
    Celtic-Points: 72.100,40 Celtic-Points
    Land: Deutschland

    Re: Unbroken history since 1888

    Beitragvon Gollum » Do 6. Nov 2014, 15:15

    :celt5 FROM DESPERATION CAME CELEBRATION, GLASGOW CELTIC WAS THE NAME :celt5

    Bild
    Slawa Ukrajini - Tiocfaidh ár lá
    Benutzeravatar
    Gollum
    Administrator
    Administrator
     
    Sternzeichen:
    Europ.: Löwe Chin.: Drache
    Beiträge: 6352
    Registriert: Do 13. Mai 2010, 12:44
    Geschlecht: männlich
    Celtic-Points: 391.631,15 Celtic-Points

    Re: Unbroken history since 1888

    Beitragvon RedBhoy » Do 6. Nov 2014, 22:09

    Happy Birthday CELTIC FC
    :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5 :celt5
    RedBhoy
     
    Celtic-Points: Gesperrt
    Bank: Gesperrt

    Re: Unbroken history since 1888

    Beitragvon Gollum » Fr 7. Nov 2014, 20:46

    Heute vor zwei Jahren...



    immer noch Gänsehaut! :celt4
    Slawa Ukrajini - Tiocfaidh ár lá
    Benutzeravatar
    Gollum
    Administrator
    Administrator
     
    Sternzeichen:
    Europ.: Löwe Chin.: Drache
    Beiträge: 6352
    Registriert: Do 13. Mai 2010, 12:44
    Geschlecht: männlich
    Celtic-Points: 391.631,15 Celtic-Points

    Re: Unbroken history since 1888

    Beitragvon RedBhoy » Fr 7. Nov 2014, 21:24

    sieben Jahre sinds erst 2019 ;) ;D
    RedBhoy
     
    Celtic-Points: Gesperrt
    Bank: Gesperrt

    VorherigeNächste

    ZurĂĽck zu And if you know the history...

    Wer ist online?

    Mitglieder in diesem Forum: 0 Mitglieder und 1 Gast