Upton Park F.C.

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Upton Park Football Club were an amateur football club from Upton Park, London in the late 19th and early 20th century, now defunct.

Founded in 1866, the club were one of the 15 teams to play in the very first edition of the FA Cup in 1871-72; they never won the competition but did reach the quarter-finals on four occasions. They were also the inaugural winners of the London Senior Cup in 1882, and represented Great Britain at the 1900 Summer Olympics football tournament, which they won, beating a France side 4-0. Although a gold medal was not awarded to the side at the time, the IOC have since retrospectively awarded one.

Famous players for the side included the England international and referee Segar Bastard, and Charlie Dove, one of the early leading players for West Ham United (then known as Thames Ironworks FC). Upton Park also supplied two other England internationals, Clement Mitchell and Conrad Warner.

The Upton Park Trophy, the annual playoff between the league champions of Guernsey and Jersey, is named for the Upton Park side, to commemorate their tenth annual tour of the islands, which they made in 1906.

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