Bolton Association F.C. was an English association football club from Bolton in Lancashire.
The club was founded in 1883 by a Mr J. Walker of the Bolton Cricket Club, who became the club's initial captain, as a contrast to the illegal professionalism of Bolton Wanderers. The Association was part of the club name, rather than a descriptor for the code the team played, to avoid confusion with the Bolton Rugby Football Club.
The club started as a side "solely for the recreation to be obtained from its pursuit, and not with the exclusive determination to win at all hazards which actuates the management of the other organisation"; when trying to recruit players, the club relied on persuasion rather than "inducement", an attitude contrasting with a local unnamed club offering 5 shillings per win and half-a-crown per defeat. Membership of the club was set at 10/6, or free with membership of the cricket club.
The quixotic nature of such an approach, and the change in the nature of the game, were shown up before the season's end. The club's first competitive football came in the Lancashire Senior Cup, and the club only lost narrowly at home to the more experienced Enfield in the first round. In the FA Cup that season, the club easily beat Bradshaw 5âÂÂ1 in the first round, and in the second was considered to have done well to restrict Bolton Wanderers to three goals, especially as the forward Tom Sowerbutts was "rendered almost useless by a violent charge early in the game".
However, although the Association beat Cambridge University 2âÂÂ1 at home at Christmas 1883 and Chorley by 10 goals to 1 a month before, as well as only going down 3âÂÂ1 at home to Preston North End, the club's second half of the season showed up the problems the club was facing; it lost 7âÂÂ1 at Notts County, 6âÂÂ1 in the return at Preston North End, 11âÂÂ0 at Great Lever (despite playing with 13 men), and 12âÂÂ2 at Blackburn Olympic. New captain W. E. Walker had the consolation of representing the Lancashire FA in December 1883, called up as a last-minute reserve to play at half-back in a match against the Sheffield Football Association; however his performance was not to the crowd's pleasing, in part because they expected to see a Blackburn Rovers player, in part because Walker was not in his usual right-wing position.
At the end of the club's first season, three of its better players left for professional contracts; Richard Turner and Fred Harper to Blackburn Rovers, and George Dobson, to Bolton Wanderers. A number of other players soon followed suit, leaving the club having to recruit an almost entirely new first XI; for the club's 5âÂÂ0 Lancashire Senior Cup first round win over the obscure Heapey Institute (the Chorley club's only match in the competition), 10 of the Association were being new players, only the faithful Walker surviving from the previous season. The second round saw a by-now habitual thumping, 10âÂÂ1 at Oswaldtwistle Rovers.
Despite the club's adherence to amateurism, in October 1884, the club was part of a proposed breakaway group, the British Football Association, which agitated for professionalism. Its adherence to amateurism at least got it past the first round of the 1884âÂÂ85 FA Cup, scheduled opponent Astley Bridge withdrawing after the Lancashire FA fell out with the Football Association over the professionalism issue and a number of professional clubs scratched, while Bolton Association, despite rumours, confirmed its wish to continue. In the second round an "indifferent" team lost 7âÂÂ2 at Darwen Old Wanderers.
Outgunned in a professional environment - the victory over Heapey Institute being the club's only win in 1884âÂÂ85, otherwise recording 3 draws and 14 defeats - the club retreated to amateur football. The last references to the club are from 1891, when the club was playing in the Bolton Junior League and Cup. A 5âÂÂ3 Cup defeat at Deane in November 1891, in which the Association was playing "worse than ever", seemed to confirm that there were "good grounds for the rumours about the split in the club". The club did at least see out the season but did not re-emerge for 1892âÂÂ93. One sad aftermath was the club's last secretary, Peter Cornett, was held liable for ã9 unpaid rent on the club's final ground.
The club adopted colours which were "quite out of the common"; dark blue and canary yellow vertical striped shirts, rather than jerseys.
The club originally played at Green Lane, which was the cricket club's ground, and reputed to be the best in the county. In 1884, the club moved to a new ground, which the club prosaically christened New Ground, on the Manchester Road. The club's final ground was on Ainsworth Lane.