They became the first club from outside Dublin to win the league title in 1932–33 and they won the FAI Cup for the first time in 1941–42.
The winners of the FAI Cup are the 'Cup holders' and enter the qualification streams of the UEFA Europa Conference League.
It was first run in 1892–93 and is the oldest football cup competition in Ireland.
It is organised by the FAI and was first run in 2014, replacing a similarly named tournament, the LFA President's Cup.
It was played in a variety of formats and was seen as the third most important trophy after the League and FAI Cup.
The winners of the Shield gained entry to the following season's Inter-Cities Fairs Cup until that competition became defunct after 1970–71.
The Dublin City Cup ran from 1934–35 to 1972–73 (with two subsequent attempts to revive the competition).
It was contested annually by all League clubs (not just those from Dublin) and had a number of formats.
It was a knock-out competition, contested annually by clubs from each of the two jurisdictions in Ireland represented by the FAI and the IFA.
It was a knock-out competition, contested annually by six clubs from each of the two jurisdictions in Ireland represented by the FAI and the Irish Football Association (IFA).
It was the first official cross-border football tournament following the North/South split within the IFA in 1921.
Casey Cup was a single-season competition run in 1962–63 to replace matches lost due to the reduction in teams that season.
Casey - a long time Honorary Treasurer of the League, and former committee member at Dundalk, who had died in late 1961.
were eligible to compete in the competition until they joined the Leinster Senior League in 1922–23.