Colne Town Football Club was an English association football club based in the town of Colne, Lancashire. It played in the Lancashire Combination between 1925 and 1927 and competed in the 1926âÂÂ27 Extra Preliminary Round of the FA Cup.
The club was founded in 1920, originally as Colne Carlton. In 1925 it changed its name to Colne Town.
The club originally played in the North-east Lancashire Combination, winning the competition shield in 1921âÂÂ22 and 1924âÂÂ25. It was forced into applying to join the Lancashire Combination for the 1925âÂÂ26 season, after the North-east folded for lack of members, and was successful in its application; it finished 16th out of 20 teams in its inaugural season. The following campaign, Colne Town finished 19th in the league, the drop due mostly to releasing all its professionals halfway through the season for financial reasons. It left the Lancashire Combination for one season in the West Lancashire League and in 1928 joined the Craven and District League, winning the title in 1929âÂÂ30.
In 1926, it entered the FA Cup, the major cup competition in England, for the only time. However, they were knocked out in the Extra Preliminary Round after losing 1âÂÂ4 at home to Clitheroe.
By 1934 the club was in serious financial difficulties, losing ã40 over the 1933âÂÂ34 season and holding a debt of over ã120, and only the support of comedian Dick Hoskin enabled the club to continue - even then it was forced to run one XI only, withdrawing its reserves from the Nelson Amateur League. In 1936, the club committee gambled on re-joining the West Lancashire League, in the hope of generating greater income, but the move turned out to be disastrous; the financial losses over the season ran to over ã200, and as a result the club disbanded.
In June 2010, an unrelated amateur team with the same name was formed in Colne.
For the two seasons in which it played in the Combination, the club's ground was known as Old Earth, which lay between Oak Street and what later became Park School.