Birkenhead Park FC

Summary

Birkenhead Park Football Club is an English rugby union team based in Birkenhead, Wirral. The club operates five senior teams, a ladies team (Birkenhead Park Panthers) and six junior sides. The men's senior team play in North 2 West at the sixth level of the English rugby union system, however have gained promotion returning to North West 1 after finishing the 2023-24 season as league champions.

Birkenhead Park
Full nameBirkenhead Park Rugby Club
UnionCheshire RFU
Founded1871; 153 years ago (1871)
LocationBirkenhead, Merseyside, England
Ground(s)Upper Park
ChairmanBarry Fitzgerald
PresidentRichard Morris
Captain(s)Sean Mooney
League(s)North 2 West
2023-24Champions
Team kit
Official website
birkenheadparkrfc.rfu.club

History edit

Birkenhead Park was formed in 1871, the same year as the Rugby Football Union, from the amalgamation of two smaller clubs, Claughton and Birkenhead Wanderers during the 1871/72 season.[1] After an initial period where the club failed to find any form, the season of 1877/78 saw the team losing only two matches from 19. The club was central to the formation of the Cheshire County Union, and in 1887 Birkenhead Park was chosen as the venue for the Home Nations clash between Wales and Ireland; the first time a Home Nations Championship game had ever been played on neutral soil.

The club has a rich history and have hosted the New Zealand All Blacks team on four occasions most recently in 1978 and in 1984 they hosted the North of England's match against Romania.

The club has won two promotions in the 25 years of club rugby - winning South Lancashire and Cheshire Division One and North 2 West in consecutive seasons in the early 2000s.[2] The first team now plays at the sixth level - North 1 West.

Club honours edit

Notable former players edit

 
The pitches

British Lions edit

International players while at Birkenhead Park edit

Other notable players edit

References edit

  1. ^ W. W. Wakefield, Rugger - The History, Theory and Practice of Rugby Football pp322
  2. ^ Club website history page

External links edit

  • Official website