A new study from the University of Exeter has rewritten the history books on how football landed in Mexico. The research, published in the Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies, claims that Cornish tin and copper miners who emigrated to the central Mexican state of Hidalgo in the 19th century brought the beautiful game with them decades before it was previously thought to have arrived.
For years, historians believed that football in Mexico was introduced by British railway workers in the 1880s. But Dr. Helen Walker, a cultural historian and lead author of the study, told the Guardian that her team uncovered evidence in the archives of the Cornish Mining World Heritage Site which pushes that date back to the 1860s. "We found miners' diaries, company records, and even a handball court converted into a primitive football pitch in the town of Real del Monte," she said. "The Cornishmen were renowned for their passion for what they called 'foot-the-ball' games."
The story begins when mining companies from Cornwall, desperate for skilled workers after the Industrial Revolution exhausted local ore, shipped hundreds of men and their families to Mexico. By 1868, the English community in Real del Monte was large enough to form its own football team. According to the research, the first recorded match took place on Christmas Day 1872 between the Cornish miners and local Mexican workers. "It was a rough-and-tumble affair," Dr. Walker noted. "But the Mexicans took to it quickly."
The research is already causing a stir in both Britain and Mexico. In a statement to the BBC, the Mexican Football Federation said: "We are excited by these findings. It shows the deep ties between our nations and the working-class roots of our national sport." Historians in Cornwall are equally delighted. "We've always known the Cornish diaspora was influential in mining and engineering worldwide," said Dr. James Polkinghorne of the Cornish National Archives. "But to see that our lads sparked a football revolution in Mexico is an incredible discovery."
For the working-class families in the North of England who still feel the bite of deindustrialisation, this research is a reminder of the global impact of our industrial heritage. It is not just about posh public schoolboys kicking a ball around. It is about the men with calloused hands and blackened lungs who took their culture, their humour, and their desire for a weekend kickabout across the ocean. And it is the same spirit that fills the terraces of football grounds from Newcastle to Barnsley tonight.
The study validates the oral histories passed down through generations of mining families in Hither Cornwall. "My great-great-grandfather always said he played football in 'someplace hot'," said John Trevail, 68, a retired miner from St. Austell. "We thought he was making it up. But now it's there in black and white."
Dr. Walker hopes the research will lead to a reassessment of the role of the Cornish in Mexican history. "We tend to focus on the colonial elites, but the working class built the bones of modern Mexico. They dug the mines, laid the railways, and, as it turns out, they passed the ball."










