Stevenage Town F.C.
Full name | Stevenage Town Football Club |
---|---|
Founded | 1894 |
Dissolved | 1968 |
Ground | Broadhall Way, Stevenage |
1967–68 | Southern League Premier Division, 18/22 |
Stevenage Town Football Club was a football club based in Stevenage, Hertfordshire, England. The club existed from 1894 until 1968, after which Stevenage Athletic were established.
History
[edit]The club were established in 1894 as Stevenage Town.[1] They were renamed Stevenage Wanderers the following year, before merging with a club named Rovers, at which point the club reverted to their original name.[1] They joined the Herts County League in 1899 but left after a single season. They rejoined in 1901 and were placed in the Northern Division. They left the league in 1925 when it was disbanded.[2]
In 1951 the club were founder members of the Delphian League. In 1956 they merged with Stevenage Rangers to form Stevenage Football Club, before reverting to Stevenage Town four years later.[3] They moved to Broadhall Way in 1961, and in 1963 they joined Division One of the Southern League. After finishing third in 1966–67 they were promoted to the Premier Division. They finished eighteenth in their first season in the Premier Division, their highest-ever league finish, but folded at the end of the season. A new club, Stevenage Athletic, was formed in their place.[4]
Records
[edit]- Highest league position: Eighteenth in the Southern League Premier Division, 1967–68
- Best FA Cup performance: Third qualifying round second replay, 1966–67
References
[edit]- ^ Jump up to: a b Before Boro' Boro Guide
- ^ Stevenage Town at the Football Club History Database
- ^ Stevenage at the Football Club History Database
- ^ What's in a name: Stevenage The Football League
- Stevenage Town F.C.
- Defunct football clubs in England
- Association football clubs established in 1894
- Association football clubs disestablished in 1968
- Southern Football League clubs
- Defunct football clubs in Hertfordshire
- Stevenage
- Delphian League
- 1894 establishments in England
- 1968 disestablishments in England