Wearside Football League
Country | England |
---|---|
Founded | 1892 |
Divisions | 1 |
Number of teams | 20 |
Levels on pyramid | Level 11 |
Feeder to | Northern League |
Promotion to | Northern League Division Two |
Relegation to |
Durham Alliance Teesside Football League |
League cup(s) |
Monkwearmouth Charity Cup Shipowners' Charity Cup League Challenge Cup |
Current champions |
Stockton Town (2012–13) |
Website | official |
The Wearside Football League is a non-league football competition based in England. It consists of a single division which sits at step 7 (or level 11) of the National League System and is a feeder to the Northern League Division Two. Following the 2007–08 season, Whitehaven moved up to the Northern League, as did Newton Aycliffe in 2008–09, Ryhope Colliery Welfare in 2011-12 and Willington in 2012-13. The league has had a second division in the past but currently only operates with one. For the 2013–14 season, 20 clubs are competing in the league. The Wearside League is fed by the Durham Alliance and the Teesside Football League.
Despite its name, the league covers a much larger area than just Wearside; for the 2013–14 season it includes clubs as far south as North Yorkshire and as far west as Cumbria.
The league also operates three cup competitions: the Monkwearmouth Charity Cup and the Shipowners' Charity Cup, both of which have been contested since the 1890s, and the League Challenge Cup, which came into being in the 1930s.
Member clubs for 2013–14 season
- Annfield Plain
- Ashbrooke Belford House
- Boldon Community Association
- Cleator Moor Celtic
- Coxhoe Athletic
- Easington Colliery
- Gateshead Leam Rangers
- Hartlepool
- Harton & Westoe Colliery Welfare
- Horden Colliery Welfare
- Jarrow
- Prudhoe Town
- Redcar Athletic
- Richmond Town
- Ryhope Colliery Welfare
- Seaton Carew
- Silksworth Colliery Welfare
- Stockton Town
- Sunderland West End
- Wolviston
History
The Wearside League came into being in 1892 at the instigation of Charles Kirtley, secretary of Sunderland Swifts. In June 1892, a letter written by Kirtley was published in the Sunderland Daily Post and The Herald in which he stated that he had been asked by several club secretaries about the possibility of forming an organisation to play home-and-home matches, so as to find out which was the best amateur team.[1] A similar letter was published in the Sunderland Daily Echo. At a meeting soon afterwards at the Central Coffee Tavern, eleven clubs agreed to form a league, which commenced playing later that year.
During the early years of the league most teams were extremely hard-up, and the league's archive records that one early club had no pitch but instead played on the sands by Sunderland Docks, and another had to play with an old rugby ball as they could not afford an association football ball. By the 20th century, however, the league was better off and was even able to organise matches to benefit local charities during World War I. After the Great War, the league was dominated for many years by colliery welfare teams – in the 1930s every league title was won by a pit team and the mining clubs continued to dominate right through to the 1970s, although an increasing number began to experience financial difficulties from the 1950s onwards due to shrinking workforces at the mines.
In 1964 the North Eastern League was disbanded and a number of its former teams joined the Wearside League. Around this time the team of the 24th Signal Regiment spent one season in the league but then had to withdraw as most of their players were posted overseas. In 1978 Blue Star became the first Wearside League club to reach the final of the FA Vase, and went on to win the trophy, the start of a run of success which would ultimately see them progress much higher up the non-league ranks. Three years later Whickham repeated the feat and also soon moved up to higher leagues. More recently, clubs such as Darlington Railway Athletic, North Shields, Newton Aycliffe, Ryhope Colliery Welfare and Willington have successfully moved up to the Northern League.
Past champions
This is a list of champions since World War II.
|
|
|
References
- ↑ "League History". Wearside Football League. Retrieved 2007-07-14.
External links
|