Ponta Delgada Football Association

The Ponta Delgada Football Association (Portuguese: Associação de Futebol de Ponta Delgada) is the governing body for association football and futsal competitions in the Portuguese former-district of Ponta Delgada. This organization regulates football in the Azorean islands of São Miguel and Santa Maria.

Football Association of Ponta Delgada
AbbreviationAF Ponta Delgada
FormationAugust 4, 1921 (1921-08-04)
TypeNGO
Legal statusFoundation
PurposeFootball Association
HeadquartersAvenida Natália Correia, 51 Fajã de Cima
Location
Region served
São Miguel, Santa Maria
Official language
Portuguese
Secretary General
José Manuel Almeida Medeiros
President
Robert DaCamara
Adjunt President
Helder Medeiros
Vice-President
José Botelho
Vice-President
Libério Câmara
Main organ
General Assembly
Parent organization
Portuguese Football Federation
Websiteafpd.fpf.pt
Formerly called
Associação de Futebol de Ponta Delgada

History

A committee from the Club Sport Marítimo on a visit to the island of São Miguel
A plaque dedicated to the Marquess of Jácome Correia, a key supporter of socio-cultural activities of the island

The foundation of the Football Association began with the growth of many social and cultural institutes and organizations, unrelated to organized sport. One was the Ateneu Comercial de Ponta Delgada (Commercial Athenaeum of Ponta Delgada) at the edge of celebrating its first century of existence, and that inherited a voluminous and well-elaborated place in the society and culture.[1] The Associação de Socorros Mútuos União e Trabalho which began in the last century, and helped to motivate public training, that formed schools, including one in Lagoa.[1] The Sociedade Promotora de Instrução e Recreio (Society for the Promotion of Training and Recreation), who had a century of existence, but which eventually ceased, providing an important role in the social context, during the many festivals and cultural activities.[1]

Within the Ateneu Comercial functioned the Associação Auxiliadora do Ensino Industrial e Comercial (Auxiliary Association of Commercial and Industrial Training) taught by professors António Maria Lopes (Portuguese) and Urbano de Arruda Carreiro (Accounting).[1] Further, there was the commercial course of the Associação dos Empregados do Comércio e Indústria do Distrito Oriental dos Açores (Association of Commercial and Industrial Employees of the Eastern District of the Azores), which ended in the middle of the 20th century, when the Escola Industrial e Comercial de Ponta Delgada (Industrial and Commercial School of Ponta Delgada) began to operate, under the direction of Governaor Rafael Sérgio Vieira, at the Solar Jácome Correia (later site of the Roberto Ivens Secondary School).[1]

At the beginning of the 20th century, the Liga Micaelense de Instrução Pública (Micalense League of Public Instruction) founded by Aires Jácome Correia, then Marquess of Jácome Correia, operated unnoticed, if not for the acts of the Ponta Delgada Cultural Institute.[1] One of the two initiatives, that were generously financed, was the Escola Industrial de Rendas de Bilro (Industrial School of Rendas de Bilro), which survived, with the activities of female youth in the 1930s (along a building of Rua do Brum).[1] Also around this time, at the end of 1911 and beginning of 192, was the celebrated Sociedade Promotora da Agricultura Micaelense (Promotional Society of Micalense Agriculture), with many meetings at the building along Alameda Duque de Bragança, seat of the Meteorological Observatory Afonso de Chaves for more than 50 years.[1] Dating from 1843, this organization had its agricultural garden, that later were sold off to João Augusto Carreiro de Mendonça, along Rua Diário dos Açores, later the Banco Comercial dos Açores offices.[1]

It was in the Sociedade Promotora da Agricultura Micaelense, Sociedade Promotora da Instrução e Recreio and the Sociedade dos Amigos das Letras e das Artes, founded in 1884 by António Feliciano de Castilho, that fomented the associative movement of São Miguel, managing several initiatives and, ultimately, founding other organizations, sport clubs and the need to form a football association in Ponta Delgada.[1]

Football

A few Micalense educated in the United Kingdom, travelling on holiday, brought a football, and in 1898, formed two groups: one in red, and the other blue, facing-off in the pitch of the agricultural market of São Gonçalo.[2] Both groups consisted of the early pioneers of football to the island: Rolando de Viveiros, Marquês de Jácome Correia, Weber Tavares, Edgardo Garcia and Alfredo Pinto, along with other locals, José de Carvalho, António Botelho da Câmara, José Morais Pereira, Padre James Machin (do Colégio Fisher), Raul Pregadeiro, Alberto Morais de Carvalho, Martiniano da Silva, Ernesto Pinto, Guilherme Machado de Faria e Maia, Manuel da Silva, Joaquim Correia e Silva, among others. Dr. Aristides Moreira da Mota, João de Morais Pereira and João José de Viveiros occupied the positions of leaders, thus stimulating, with the prestige of his name and his age, the sporting initiative.[2]

At end of the 19th and early 20th century, the newspapers, and specifically the paper A Persusão, directed by Francisco Maria Supico, celebrated the achievements of several organizations.[2] But, it was just after the First World War, that football began to be practiced regularly, such as the Mata do Doca, where stationed North American forces during the war could be found, increasing local commerce.[2]

Member clubs

Member clubs include:

Current divisions

The AF Ponta Delgada runs the following division covering the fifth tier of the Portuguese football league system.

See also

References

Notes
  1. Jorge do Nascimento Cabral (14 July 1997), p.2
  2. Jorge do Nascimento Cabral (14 July 1997), p.3
Sources
  • AFPD, ed. (14 July 1997), "Intervenção do Sr. Jorge do Nascimento Cabral, aquando do 79º Aniversário da A.F.P.D.: Subsídios para a História da A.F.P.D.", Jornal Oficial (in Portuguese), Ponta Delgada (Azores), Portugal: Associação de Futebol de Ponta Delgada (26, Série I)
  • "Futebol Total - Ponta Delgada". Retrieved 2012-04-09.
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