N.N. Club or N.N. Kilburn—N.N. standing for "No Names"[1] —was an amateur English football club based in the Kilburn district of London.
History
The club's first recorded matches were victories over Barnes F. C. in January and April 1863.[2] It was one of the eleven founding sides of the Football Association on 26 October 1863,[3] and was represented by club captain Arthur Pember,
who was elected as the FA's first president.[4]
Although the N.N.s enjoyed goodwill as an FA founder, and in 1866 was one of the mere three clubs that played exclusively Association laws,[5] the club was never considered one of the elite clubs, and, after Arthur Pember's emigration in 1868,[6] interest in the club dwindled. In the 1869–70 season, the club often had to play without new captain Tebbutt[7] and by the time of the club's final reported match - a defeat by Upton Park FC on 5 February 1870 - only seven members turned up to play. [8]
The Brondesbury club, founded in 1871, was considered a resurrection of N.N.[11] and occasionally listed as Brondesbury N.N.[12]
Colours
The club's colours were blue jerseys, with N.N. embroidered on the chest in red letters.[13]
Ground
The club originally played in a field adjoining the Edgware Road in Kilburn, but did not play any home matches from December 1866 until the next season because it was frequently under water;[14] in 1867 the club secured a pitch near St Mark's Church,[15] a 10-minute walk from Edgware Road station.[16][17] In 1869 it moved back to Edgware Road, adjoining the station.[18]
Nickname
The club's nickname of the Mudlarks came from the poor state of its original Edgware Road ground,[19] described as a "mire".[20]