Callander Football Club was a short-lived 19th-century football club from Glasgow.
The club was formed in 1872, out of members of the defunct original Thistle F.C., and named after the Perthshire village which was the origin of many of its members.
In its first half-season, the club claimed to have played three matches, all of which were 0âÂÂ0 draws. One of those draws, at Fleshers' Haugh on Glasgow Green in May 1872, was the first match for Rangers F.C.
The club was one of the original 16 teams to participate in the inaugural season of the Scottish Cup. It lost in the first round of the 1873âÂÂ74 Scottish Cup, 2âÂÂ0 to Alexandra Athletic; the Glasgow Herald stated that the Callander side "manoeuvred at times very badly". One issue is that its membership overlapped with that of the bigger Eastern club (which also played at the Haughs) and some of its better players, including back W. Somers and forward Peter Andrews, had thrown their lot in with Eastern for the tournament. Callander also changed its line-up from 2âÂÂ1âÂÂ7 to 2âÂÂ2âÂÂ6, so the players may not have been as familiar with each other and their roles as the Athletes were.
The club seems to have wound up shortly afterwards as there is no record of it playing again; it was in effect absorbed into Eastern, as players such as goalkeeper G. Pickering, backs J. B. Connell, Somers, and W. M'Farlane, and forwards J. Davidson, J. Blackadder, and Andrews, are found in Eastern line-ups in 1874.
The club colours were blue caps, white jerseys, and blue knickerbockers.
The club played at the Haughs, on Glasgow Green, one and a half miles from the Royal Exchange.