The Hampshire League was a long running amateur football league in Hampshire, England.
The competition ran for 108 years, until it was absorbed the expanding Wessex League in 2004. It has since been succeeded by the Hampshire Premier League with a recognised place on the FA Pyramid system.
The Hampshire Football League was formed in 1896 to provide an organised fixture schedule for clubs within the county.
The inaugural campaign saw eight teams taking part with the first ever fixture being played on Saturday 5th September 1896 between Eastleigh Athletic and Freemantle, who won a thrilling match 5âÂÂ4 with a player called Inglefield scoring the first ever goal! The first-ever league champions were Cowes.
Originally administered by the Hampshire Football Association, the fledgling competition was initially split into regional sections with an end of season play off to decide the champions, but numbers grew and eventually the league formed three larger divisions with straight forward promotion/relegation.
The post-war era saw the Hampshire League at its prime, consisting of many strong clubs destined to later progress further up the pyramid whilst the Reserve and âÂÂAâ sides of Southampton, Portsmouth, Bournemouth, Reading and Aldershot also took part for many years. The strength of the league was well indicated by the performances of its clubs in national cup competitions.
By 1986, most of the top clubs had become semi-professional and left to join the newly formed Wessex League. Along with their Dorset and Wiltshire counterparts, the Hampshire League became a feeder in a revised pyramid system.
To keep pace with the modern ground grading criteria, in 1999 the top-flight was renamed as the Premier Division, for which only clubs with the required facilities were allowed entry. In 2004 it was agreed to dissolve the competition and become part of the expanding Wessex League. Vosper Thornycroft were the last champions.
During its 108-year existence, the Hampshire League was done proud when represented by its member clubs in the national cup competitions, especially in its heyday as listed below, when clubs frequently progressed past the early qualifying rounds:
The following table shows the position of the various Hampshire leagues within the English football league system: