Great Yarmouth Town F.C.
Great Yarmouth Town Football Club is a football club based in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, England. They are currently members of the and play at the Wellesley Recreation Ground, whose grandstand is believed to be the world's oldest football stand still in regular use, having been opened on 11 June 1892. The club is affiliated to the Norfolk County FA.
History
The club was established on 20 July 1897, taking most of their players from two local clubs, Yarmouth Fearnoughts and Yarmouth Royal Artillery, which between them, had won the Norfolk Senior Cup for the previous four years running. The new club were founder members of the Norfolk & Suffolk League in 1897, and in their first season in existence, they won the Norfolk Senior Cup, beating Lynn Town 4β3 in a replay after a 0β0 draw in the first match. They won the cup again in 1901β02 and retained it in each of the next four seasons, each time defeating Lynn Town in the final. They finished bottom of the Norfolk & Suffolk League in 1903β04, and in 1908β09 the club also entered a team into the East Anglian League, finishing bottom of the table. They finished bottom of the East Anglian League again the following season, but were runners-up in 1911β12 and 1912β13.Great Yarmouth were expelled from the Norfolk & Suffolk League during the 1912β13 season, but after being reinstated during the close season, the club were league champions in 1913β14. They withdrew from the East Anglian League in 1920. The club won back-to-back Norfolk & Suffolk League titles in 1926β27 and 1927β28, and were runners-up in 1929β30 and 1933β34. In 1935 they were founder members of the Eastern Counties League, and won the League Cup in 1938. In the 1947β48 season the club reached the first round of the FA Cup for the first time, but lost 4β1 at home to Shrewsbury Town in front of a crowd of 4,160. In 1951β52 they won the East Anglian Cup, and the following season saw them reach the FA Cup first round again, beating Guildford City 1β0 in a replay after a 2β2 draw, before losing 4β1 at home to Wrexham in front of a new record attendance of 6,963. They reached the second round again the following season, beating Crystal Palace 1β0 before another record crowd of 8,944, before losing 5β2 at Barrow.
After finishing as league runners-up in 1956β57 and 1967β68, Great Yarmouth won the Eastern Counties League for the first, and to date only, time in 1968β69 under the management of Jimmy Moran. Former Norwich City player Bill Punton took over as manager, and in a 21-year spell in charge, they won the League Cup again in 1974β75 and 1980β81, the Norfolk Senior Cup four times, as well as finishing as league runners-up twice and FA Vase semi-finalists in 1982β83, losing in extra-time to VS Rugby in front of a crowd of 4,552.
In 1988 the Eastern Counties League gained a second division, with Great Yarmouth placed in the Premier Division. They won the league's Millennium Trophy in 2002β03, and remained in the Premier Division until being relegated to Division One at the end of the 2004β05 season. They won Division One in 2009β10, earning promotion back to the Premier Division. However, they were relegated again two seasons later. A third-place finish in Division One in 2015β16 saw the club promoted back to the Premier Division. In 2018β19 they finished second-from-bottom of the Premier Division and were relegated to Division One North. The 2023β24 season saw the club win Division One North, earning promotion back to the Premier Division.
Ground
Great Yarmouth Town initially played at the Beaconsfield Recreation Ground before moving to the Wellesey Recreation Ground at the start of the 1901β02 season. The Wellesley Recreation Ground had opened on 6 August 1888, with the first event, cycle races on a cinder track, watched by a crowd of around 3,000. Cricket pitches and a tennis court were also created in the ground, with the first football match at the ground thought to have been on 11 April 1890 when a County Captain's team played a Yarmouth XI. After fundraising started in 1891, a new grandstand was erected the following year and opened on 11 June 1892 for a joint athletics and cycling meeting watched by around 4,200 spectators. The stand was given Grade II listed building status in 2000.Norfolk County Cricket Club played two Minor Counties Championship matches on the ground in 1898 and 1899. The club used the ground for other matches in the period before the First World War, including playing three fixtures against MCC on the ground.
Concrete terracing and cover was installed on the western side of the pitch in 1931. The record attendance of 8,944 was set on 21 November 1953 for an FA Cup first round match against Crystal Palace. Floodlights were installed in 1983 and inaugurated in a friendly match against Ipswich Town on 7 October.
Honours
- Eastern Counties League
- *Champions 1968β69
- *Division One champions 2009β10
- *Division One North champions 2023β24
- *League Cup winners 1937β38, 1974β75, 1980β81
- *Millennium Trophy winners 2002β03Norfolk & Suffolk League
- *Champions 1913β14, 1926β27, 1927β28
- Norfolk Senior Cup
- *Winners 1897β98, 1902β03, 1903β04, 1904β05, 1905β06, 1928β29, 1929β30, 1961β62, 1964β65, 1978β79, 1979β80, 1984β85, 1989β90
- East Anglian Cup
- *Winners 1951β52
Records
- Best FA Cup performance: Second round, 1952β53, 1953β54
- Best FA Trophy performance: Third qualifying round, 1969β70
- Best FA Vase performance: Semi-finals, 1982β83
- Record attendance: 8,944 vs Crystal Palace, FA Cup first round, 21 November 1953
- Most appearances: Mark Vincent, 700
- Most goals: Gordon South, 298