W e are all familiar now with names such as Lucy Bronze, Megan Rapinoe and Sam Kerr, thanks to the televising of the Women’s World Cup this summer. The women’s game has enjoyed unprecedented attention and support; and the new domestic season kick off on 7 September. But women’s football has a much longer history than that – comparable to the men’s game – and has endured some tough times… including a complete ban on women playing at all.

According to the Football Association, there were women’s teams playing in the late 19th century, and one game in London’s Crouch End attracted 10,000 spectators. Teams from Scotland and England played exhibition matches on tour in the 1880s, with one game at Liverpool advertised in the local press as “the return visit of the international lady football players”, two games, at 5pm and 7.30pm, on the Cattle Market Inn Athletic Grounds, admission one shilling.