The League was founded 4 July 1923 at a meeting of fourteen clubs at the Clarence Place Hall,
Donegall Square East,
Belfast, initially as a league for teams from public bodies, private associations, schools and firms. It was affiliated to the
Irish Football Association (IFA) as a junior league in August. The first season was 1923/24 and by the time the first fixtures were played on 22 September, there were 16 member clubs. The Co-operative and C.P.A. were tied at the top of the table, but the Co-operative won a play-off to be crowned the first Amateur League champions. A knock-out competition – the
Clarence Cup – was also inaugurated in the first season, and the first winners were C.P.A., who beat the Co-operative 2–1 in a replay after a 0–0 draw. The League's first representative game was played on 26 January 1924 against the Minor League at
the Oval, and was a 6–1 win for the Amateur League. In 1932, the League played its first representative match outside Northern Ireland: a 3–3 draw against the
Scottish Juvenile FA at
Celtic Park, Glasgow. This became an annual fixture, which lasted until 1939, only to be halted by the
Second World War. Subsequently, annual fixtures have resumed, first with the Scottish Amateur League and, since 1978–1979 with the
Scottish Amateur F.A., competing for the
Britton Rosebowl. During the next few years, the League gained intermediate status, and a junior-status second division was added in 1926. By 1930, there were 30 clubs in membership. In 1932–1933, the League's strength was demonstrated when Dunville's became the first Amateur League team to win the
Irish Intermediate Cup, and in 1938–1939 when
Sirocco Works won the
Steel & Sons Cup. In the 1936–1937 season, a new competition was introduced: the
Border Regiment Cup (commonly the
Border Cup), which was to become the perhaps League's most prestigious trophy as it established a traditional Christmas final. The cup was presented to the league by the team of the
Border Regiment, stationed at
Palace Barracks, which had been a member of the League since 1933, and which was nearing the end of its
tour of duty. The first winners were Sirocco Works, who beat Whitehouse Recreation Club 4–0 in the final. After the
Second World War, the league expanded its membership and the second division was split into two – Division 2A and Division 2B – in 1947. Division 2C was added in 1950. In 1961, Division 2A was elevated to intermediate status as Division 1B, with the top division renamed as Division 1A. Divisions 2B and 2C consequently became 2A and 2B respectively. The next year, 1962, the league expanded again and a new Division 2C was added, making a total of five divisions. In 1963, it was decided that the Border Cup should be confined to teams in the First Division, and a new knock-out competition – the
Cochrane Corry Cup – was instituted for the Second Division teams. The Clarence Cup is contested by teams of both divisions. From the 1970–1971 season, automatic promotion and relegation within each division was introduced, and in the following season a new Third Division was added for the reserve teams of member clubs. In 1971 Division 2C was abolished, but re-established again in 1975. In 1973 a second reserve section was formed and the Third Division was thus divided into Division 3A and Division 3B. Division 3C was added in 1980, Division 3D in 1986 and Division 3E in 1991. There is now a Division 3F. The League had been growing, particularly since the 1960s, and the milestone of 100 teams in membership was achieved in 1981. (By 1997–1998, there were 144 teams in membership.) In 1985, the League secured a sponsorship deal with
Smithwick's. In 1986, the intermediate First Division was expanded into three sections with the addition of Division 1C. From 1991, the intermediate sections were renamed as the Premier Division, Division 1A and Division 1B. Minimum standards were set for clubs' grounds as a condition of membership of the Premier Division, with promotion only available to those clubs whose facilities measured up. == List of champions ==