Aberdeen Harp F.C. was an association football club from Aberdeen, active in the 1900s.
The earliest record of the club is from 1904; it was unrelated to a previous Aberdeen Harp which played in the 1889âÂÂ90 season.
The club's earliest competitive football came in the Aberdeenshire Cup in the 1904âÂÂ05 season, and it entered the competition every season until 1911âÂÂ12. Its first season in the competition was its best, as it won through to the final, only losing 3âÂÂ2 to the new combination Aberdeen F.C. side, albeit a reserve Aberdeen XI. Harp repeated the run to the final in 1906âÂÂ07 but this time lost 3âÂÂ1 to the same outfit.
These entries encouraged the club to join the Scottish Football Association in 1907 (an application the previous year had been refused), and it entered the Scottish Qualifying Cup in 1907âÂÂ08 for the first time. Its first match as a senior club was a 5âÂÂ3 win at Montrose in a friendly, and it followed this up by beating Peterhead 3âÂÂ2 in its first Qualifying Cup tie, a Peterhead protest that linesman William Jeffrey (of Aberdeen F.C.) was a suspended player not getting any traction. However McIntyre was suspended for a month for rough play in the tie. Harp lost in a replay at Elgin City in the second round, having conceded a last-minute equalizer in the original tie.
In 1909âÂÂ10, Harp reached the third round of the qualifying cup, one round short of earning automatic qualification to the Scottish Cup proper, but lost 3âÂÂ0 at East Fife, Willie Wilkie scoring a first-half hat-trick; Wilkie had scored a hat-trick two weeks earlier in a Scottish League match, which had been the Fifers' first-ever hat-trick in the competition.
1910âÂÂ11 was the club's final season at a competitive level. It gained its biggest win - 8âÂÂ2 over Peterhead Hibernians in the Qualifying Cup first round - and it was struck from the Scottish FA's membership roll in August 1911.
The club wore maroon jerseys.
The club's ground was Central Park, but it often played home Cup ties at Pittodrie, or ceded home advantage for Cup ties, for instance in its record win over Peterhead Hibs and in the Aberdeenshire Cup in 1909âÂÂ10. Harp lost its ground for the 1908âÂÂ09 season, which almost caused it to lose its Scottish FA membership.