City Ramblers F.C. was an amateur association football club, notionally based in the City of London, but which played at a number of grounds around Greater London.
The club was formed in 1881, out of a cricket club which had existed the previous decade, originally under the name of The City Cricket Club.
Through the 1880s, the club played at a low-key level, as the game outside London turned more professional; the club's most senior appearances were in the London Senior Cup but it did not get past the second round.
At the start of the 1890âÂÂ91 season, the club amalgamated with the Old St Paul's club, taking the Ramblers' name but the St Paul's colours. The club effectively inherited the Old St Paul's place in the FA Cup so entered the qualifying rounds for the first time, and, after its scheduled opponents from the Crystal Palace School of Engineers admitted it had entered by accident and scratched, was humbled 8âÂÂ0 by the Old Carthusians in the second.
One of the earliest matches for the new merged club, at Marlow in September, was acrimonious, the Marlow board resolving never to play the Ramblers again, "in consequence of the disgraceful behaviour of J. W. Meggs", who was the brothers of the Ramblers' new club secretary Charles. Meggs was suspended for 3 months for using "filthy and disgusting language".
From 1891, London clubs such as Woolwich Arsenal and Millwall Rovers started to turn professional, and the Ramblers were left behind. The club did not enter the Cup in 1891âÂÂ92, but in 1892âÂÂ93 gained its first win in the competition, beating Old Cranleighans 5âÂÂ1 in the first round; the professionals of Woolwich Arsenal scored double figures against the Ramblers in the second. Even at the FA Amateur Cup level the club struggled - it lost 6âÂÂ1 at Tottenham Hotspur in the second round in 1894âÂÂ95.
The players did however finish the 1893âÂÂ94 season with an unexpected set of medals; as Smethwick Carriage Works scratched from the final of the Wolverton Charity Cup, the Ramblers stepped up to play a friendly for the benefit of the local charity, and, in gratitude, the charity voted to award the runner-up medals to the Ramblers players. It was a consolation after the death of Sam Larkin, the club's long-running President, the previous month; Larkin had been one of the leading tenants of the Billingsgate Fish Market.
The last season for the club was 1895âÂÂ96, in which it lost 1âÂÂ0 to Maidenhead in the first qualifying round of the FA Cup (despite Maidenhead starting with 9 men because of a train problem), and finished the season losing to Wolverton in the semi-final of the Wolverton Charity Cup - both sides were reduced to 10 men due to sendings-off for foul play. It had had its best run in the London Senior Cup, reaching the last 16, and losing 4âÂÂ2 at Ealing Association.
There was a curious aftermath for the club, as in 1906 a fraudster, purporting to represent the City Ramblers Football Club, sent letters requesting charity for a widow of a deceased player; one of the contributors was Arthur Balfour. The fraudster - one Alfred Whale of Harringay - was sentenced to 3 months' hard labour.
The club originally played in chocolate and white before adopting the St Paul's school colours of white shirts.
The club had something of a nomadic existence, playing at the following: