1895–96 Aston Villa F.C. season
| 1895–96 season | |
|---|---|
| Manager | George Ramsay |
| Ground | Wellington Road |
| First Division | Champions (2) |
| FA Cup | Round 1 |
| Season | 1895–96 |
|---|---|
| Champions | Aston Villa, 2nd title |
| Relegated | Small Heath |
| Top goalscorer | John Campbell Steve Bloomer (22 goals each) |
| Biggest home win | Derby County 8–0 Small Heath (30 November 1895) Sheffield United 8–0 Bury (6 April 1896) |
| Biggest away win | The Wednesday 0–4 Derby County (28 December 1895) |
| Highest scoring | Aston Villa 7–3 Small Heath (7 September 1895) |
| Longest winning run | 9 matches Everton |
| Longest unbeaten run | 14 matches Everton |
| Longest losing run | 6 matches Burnley Small Heath |
| Highest attendance | 30,000 Everton 2–0 Aston Villa (21 December 1895) |
| Lowest attendance | 560 West Brom 3–2 Blackburn Rovers (29 April 1896) |
| Average attendance | 7,682 |
← 1894–95 1896–97 → | |
| 4--0--1 | |
The 1895–96 English football season was Aston Villa's 8th season in the Football League. Under George Ramsay's management committee Villa were League champions for the second time in their history.
This was the season Villa lost the FA Cup – literally. Following their FA Cup win in 1894/95, it was on display in the window of a Birmingham shoe shop belonging to William Shillcock. In the night of 11–12 September 1895 it was stolen and never seen again. The first trophy, the 'little tin idol', had been made by Martin, Hall & Co at a cost of £20. Despite a £10 reward for information, the crime was never solved. The FA fined Villa £25 to pay for a replacement and a replica had to be made to the same design. Luckily they had it insured for £200! Just over 60 years later, 80 year old career criminal Henry (Harry) James Burge claimed to have committed the theft, confessing to a newspaper, with the story being published in the Sunday Pictorial newspaper on 23 February 1958. Burge claimed the cup had been melted down to make counterfeit half-crown coins, which matched known intelligence of the time that stolen silver was being used to forge coins which were then laundered through betting shops at a local racecourse.
Jimmy Crabtree (176) became Aston Villa's record signing in the summer of 1895 when the Club paid Burnley £250 for international back. Crabtree, Reynolds and Jimmy Cowan formed an outstanding line of half-backs. There were also debuts for Johnny Campbell, Jack Cowan, Edward Harris and Jeremiah Griffiths. John Campbell was a Scot from Celtic where he had won the Scottish championship twice, and later returned to the club. He had developed an outstanding reputation in Scotland, and emphasized his skill by scoring his 26 goals in just 26 games. 5 feet 9 inches (1.75 m) tall but nearly 12 stone (170 lb; 76 kg) in weight, he was said to be difficult to stop when running at the opposition's defence.