Methlan Park Football Club was an association football club based in the town of Dumbarton, in West Dunbartonshire.
The club was formed in 1883 as a somewhat "aristocratic" club, The club may have had links with the Temperance movement as it often held its meetings in the Lennox Temperance Hotel.
The earliest recorded match for the club was at Victoria of Helensburgh in April 1885. Its first competitive match was in the Dumbartonshire Cup at home to Dumbarton Athletic in 1886âÂÂ87 and ended in a 9âÂÂ1 defeat, the Methlan goal being almost the last kick of the game.
Undaunted, the club joined the Scottish Football Association in 1887 and entered the Scottish Cup for the first time in 1887âÂÂ88. Although it suffered heavy defeats in both national and county competitions, the club rapidly improved, and in 1888âÂÂ89 had its best run in both competitions. In the Scottish Cup, wins over Kirkintilloch Athletic (with three goals in seven minutes) and Vale of Leven Hibernians put the club in the fourth round. The run ended at Dumbarton with a 9âÂÂ0 defeat, Methlan Park's poor performance being put down to "funk", and Dumbarton deliberately eased off towards the end.
In the Dumbartonshire Cup, Methlan Park registered its biggest competitive win, 8âÂÂ0 at Kirkintilloch Central in the first round, the game ending eight minutes early when the Central walked off the pitch because of darkness, and only lost 2âÂÂ1 at Dumbarton Athletic in the semi-final, even taking the lead. It reached the semi-final twice more (in 1889âÂÂ90 and 1891âÂÂ92).
Methlan Park's difficulty was that three clubs in the shire - Dumbarton, Vale of Leven, and Renton - were all founder members of the Scottish League, and competing with three clubs backed by local factories was impossible. The club scratched from the qualifying stage of the 1892âÂÂ93 and 1893âÂÂ94 Scottish Cup and did not enter the local competition. The club continuing registering with the Scottish FA, but was defunct by April 1895, although the name survived as that of a juvenile side.
The club played in red and yellow hooped jerseys, with white knickers until 1889 and blue knickers afterwards.
The club played at Lower Woodyard Park until 1888 and then Upper Woodyard Park, which were a pair of fields next door to Woodyard Park, which had been the home of Alclutha and until 1890 was the home of Union.
The Park had rented both fields during the football season, plus one of them over the summer months for practice, at a rent of ã22 per annum, from a John McCallum. McCallum also rented the fields over the summer to a cowfeeder, William Donaldson, who refused to pay the full rent on the basis that he expected both fields over the summer.