The Lusitania Cambridge soccer team in 1956. (Photo: Digital Commonwealth)

Harvard’s consideration of athletic offerings for the following school year was news in the Cambridge Tribune in the spring of 1908. Professors and parents had been concerned about the amount of time the school’s most popular sports – most notably hockey – were taking from the players’ studies, requiring time away from campus for practice, games and travel. The article questions what sports might fill the gap if Harvard were to pull out of the collegiate hockey league, noting that “soccer foot-ball would come into the limit of time between the last foot-ball and the spring recess, but it has not taken a strong hold at Cambridge.”

Just over a century later, soccer, called by some “the beautiful game,” is booming in Cambridge, especially in light of this year’s World Cup games at nearby Gillette (“Boston”) Stadium.

Soon after that 1908 article, Harvard would begin to cultivate a soccer program in earnest. A 1909 article in the Cambridge Sentinel reported that “Switzerland is sending over several crack soccer players to Harvard University,” and a Tribune article the same year described how Harvard hockey players were integrating soccer drills into their practices. Over the next several decades, Harvard, MIT and other local colleges would build their programs, often with the help of international students and coaches from countries where soccer was already well established.

Close to the universities, but a world apart, the working classes in Cambridge were establishing their own soccer clubs. One of the earliest clubs in the city was formed by the Prospect Union, a settlement house operating in Central Square and serving a largely immigrant population of working-class Cantabrigians. In 1912, the Cambridge Chronicle reported that “soccer football is getting to be very popular, and many games are being arranged.” The first professional soccer league in the United States had been formed in 1895, but the fallout from a financial crisis in the 1890s put soccer on the back burner for about a decade until a resurgence of interest in 1906, when the American Football Association was revived. Throughout this time, however, immigrant communities continued to engage in soccer matches on teams organized by local churches, settlement houses and cultural organizations. Foreshadowing today’s Tartan Army, the Order of the Scottish Clans fielded a soccer league in Greater Boston in the 1910s, with several teams hailing from Cambridge.

During World War I, reports from the front lines detailed how soldiers spent their downtime, which included working on their soccer skills alongside their British counterparts, for whom soccer was a long-standing tradition. At the tail end of the war, in November 1918, the Tribune reported that athletic practice, including soccer, was helping to “put the ‘pep’ into the push toward Berlin which the Yanks are giving Kaiser Bill.” After the war, some of the returning soldiers brought their newfound fondness for soccer home, further contributing to the game’s popularity in the 1920s and 1930s. This was also a time companies created teams in a number of sports as a means of fostering camaraderie among workers and loyalty to the company, with firms playing one another in formal industrial leagues and departments playing against each other at company picnics.

For many Cantabrigians, whether newly arrived from abroad or having lived here for decades, soccer was a touchstone to their cultures of origin. But the game was subject to much of the same anti-immigrant sentiment that permeated the country and the region in the early 20th century. In 1926 the Tribune reported:

“Prepared to enforce an ordinance which forbids Sunday sports within 1000 feet of a church, Captain Leahy with Sergeant Healey and a squad of officers appeared on a private field on Third street where a soccer game was scheduled between Portuguese and Norwegian teams. Ten days previously the head of the Lord’s Day League, Rev. Martin P. Kneeland, complained to Captain Leahy that, contrary to the law, games were being advertised and collections taken.”

It is notable that, in this case, it was members of previous immigrant groups (Irish and Scottish) who objected to the Sunday soccer-playing of newer immigrant communities (Portuguese and Norwegian).

Soccer continued to gain popularity in the interwar years. In 1927, the national team from Uruguay toured the United States and played a game in Cambridge against the Clan Lindsey Soccer Club, and the newspapers are full of reports of soccer games at the employee outings of Cambridge companies such as Simplex, Gray & Davis and Barbour-Stockwell. In 1941, the Cambridge public schools began offering soccer as part of their athletic curriculum. As in the first World War, American soldiers in World War II played soccer in their time between military campaigns, often squaring off against their British counterparts.

A poster for the George W. Rose Soccer Cup in 1988. (Image: Digital Commonwealth)

With the establishment of the Boston Area Youth Soccer League in 1969 and the Cambridge Youth Soccer Club in 1979, soccer for young people became popular and accessible to many. Unlike sports such as hockey or swimming, which require specialized, expensive equipment and/or elaborate facilities, soccer is inexpensive and logistically simple. It also served as a way for students from diverse backgrounds to come together, whether at school or in a weekend league. A 1975 Chronicle report detailing the settlement of a refugee family from Vietnam who had arrived recently in Cambridge noted that their young son loved playing soccer at his new school, as he had before the family left their homeland. In this way, soccer continued to be a game that bridged cultural divides and helped to create community in the city.

The 1994 World Cup, hosted at what was then called Foxborough Stadium, further stoked the fire of soccer fever in Cambridge, a fire that has only increased as the current World Cup approached. In 2025, the Cambridge Youth Soccer Club reached more than 2,000 young Cantabrigians through its programs, and many of the city’s schools, after-school programs, service organizations and cultural clubs have soccer teams at a variety of levels. Even in an era of increasing polarization and division, “the beautiful game” continues to be the playing field of which all corners of Cambridge can connect.History Cambridge started in 1905 as the Cambridge Historical Society. Today we have a new name and a new mission. We engage with our city to explore how the past influences the present to shape a better future. We recognize that every person in our city knows something about Cambridge’s history, and their knowledge matters. We listen to our community and we live by the ideal that history belongs to everyone. Throughout 2026, we are focusing on the history of West Cambridge. Make history with us at historycambridge.org.

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