There was a football team operating in Tow Law as early as 1881, - TopicsExpress



          

There was a football team operating in Tow Law as early as 1881, when a vicar captained the team.[1] However, the club still playing today was founded as Tow Law in 1890. The club became one of the founding teams of the Auckland and District League in 1892, and won the Durham Amateur Cup the following year. They then joined the Northern League in 1894. In 1896 they won the Durham Challenge Cup. They left the Northern League, and played in the South Durham Alliance from 1900 to 1905.[2] In 1905 the club changed its name to Tow Law Town which they have stuck with ever since.[3] The club played in the Crook and District League from 1912 until 1914. After the end of World War I in 1918, the club again played in the Auckland and District League until 1920, when they returned to the Northern League where they have played ever since. The club were league winners two seasons in a row, in 1923–24 and 1924–25.[2] They were runners up in 1928–29. In the Second World War they resigned from the Northern League on 20 March 1940 and their record of the season was deleted. They rejoined the league in 1945 on its resumption after the War.[4] In the 1967–68 season, the club had their best ever run in the FA Cup. After reaching the first round proper, they beat Mansfield Town 5–1 at Ironworks Road, and took Shrewsbury Town to a second round replay after a 1–1 draw at home. The team went into the third round draw and were drawn against Arsenal at home. However this never happened because they were beaten 6–2 by Shrewsbury in the replay. Arsenal were said to be saved from a fate worse than death – a trip to Tow Law in January.[2] In 1974, they won the Northern League Cup, beating Ashington 2–1 in the final at Crook.[2] In the summer of 1978, Chris Waddle started playing for the club. In the summer of 1980, while Waddle was working in a sausage factory, he was sold to Newcastle United for the fee of £1,000.[5] Tow Law Town were runners-up in the 1988–89 season, before finally winning the league again in 1994–95, sitting 14 points clear at the end of the season.[2][4] They missed out on the runners up spot the following year on goal difference.[4] Harry Hodgson had long served as Chairman of the club, but stood down at the end of 1995–96, but as of 2011 he still remains a member of the committee. John Flynn took over as Chairman. At the end of 1996–97, Harry Dixon, another long standing official at the club, stood down as treasurer, but stayed on as the clubs president. Kevin McCormick took over as treasurer.[2] The club made their first and so far only visit to Wembley Stadium on 9 May 1998, by winning through to the final of the FA Vase, under the management of Peter Quigley and his assistant Tony Heslop.[2] They reached the final, beating Taunton Town 5–4 on aggregate in a two legged semi-final.[6] In reaching the final, Tow Law, with its population of only 2,200, became the smallest town to ever reach a Wembley final.[7] The team took around 4,000 supporters with them down to London, about twice the population of Tow Law at the time.[6] They were beaten in the final 1–0 by Tiverton Town.[2] Tow Law Town (black and white stripe shirts) playing Whitley Bay in January 2009 They finished second in the league in 1998–99 and 2001–02.[4] With Harry Dixons death in 2002, Harry Hodgson took up the post of President. In 2004, John Flynn stood down as chairman, and so for a year long period, Hodgson took up the title of club chairman as well. At the end of the 2004–05 season, he retired from the club. His replacement, Sandra Gordon, is still Chair at the club. She is the first ever female Chair of the club, and only the third in the history of the Northern League. In 2007, Bernard Fairbairn, who had followed his father and grandfather into the job, stood down as club secretary, a post he had held since 1961, giving him a total of 46 years in his position. Stephen Moralee has now taken over as club secretary.[2] Sir Bobby Robson was raised a few miles away from Tow Law, in the village of Langley Park. He had held the title of life president at the club, and had helped them out when they hit financial difficulties after the 2001 foot and mouth crisis, which devastated the local area. He was known to spend a lot of time on the club, attending fund raisers and giving talks. On 1 August 2009, the club held a minutes silence before their game with Workington, following his death the day before.[8] At the end of the 2009–10 season, manager Dave Hagan and his assistant Eric Tate left the club. Hagan felt he could not operate a competitive team on the teams small budget, and so took up an assistant job at Consett. Ian Davison, a player at the club, took up managerial duties, acting as a player-manager, and appointing Gary Innes as his assistant. Gary Anderson is the current Tow Law manager, taking up the role for the 2012-13 season[9] Colours and crest[edit] Tow Law Towns home colours have traditionally been vertical black and white stripes with black shorts and socks. This is common amongst clubs in the North East of England; Premier League club Newcastle United play in black and white, but locally Spennymoor Town, Darlington, Ponteland United and Ashington also wear black and white kits.[10] Tow Law Towns away strips consist of blue and red halves with blue shorts and socks. Between 2006 and 2009, the club were sponsored by McInerney Homes, in a £5,000 a year deal.[11] In August 2010, local company Bodywork Direct took over the club shirt sponsorship deal.[12] The clubs crest features a colliery headframe, reflecting the strong history of coal mining in County Durham.[13] Stadium[edit] The main stand at the clubs Ironworks Road ground in February 2009 Tow Laws first ground was at Church Lane, until 1893, when the current ground at Ironworks Road was built by volunteers during the miners strike of 1892–93. It was rebuilt in 1921, during another miners strike.[2] The ground currently has a crowd capacity of 3,000, with 150 seats and covering for 300 people. The ground is equipped with floodlights and parking facilities.[14] At 1,000 feet above sea level, it is the second highest football ground in England at appr.300 m asl. The highest is The Silverlands, home of Buxton FC, located at appr. 325 m asl.[6] Because of its high altitude, the stadium is said to have its own weather climate. Notts County midfielder Neal Bishop, who used to play in the Northern League, has said of the Ironworks Road ground that it’s hard to get to, it’s always freezing and the pitch was always awful. But he also mentioned that experiences like playing there, developed him as a player.[15] Bishop was not the first to comment on the cold temperatures. In 1967, following Mansfields defeat to Tow Law, their manager described playing in Tow Law as like playing at the North Pole.[7] In September 2004, at the start of the 2004–05 season, a 10 metres (33 ft) wide hole was found in the pitchs surface, rendering the surface unplayable. Old mine workings were found to be to blame for the subsidence, and so the Coal Authority funded the repairs. The club groundshared with Esh Winning F.C. for the remainder of the season while the repair work was done. The repairs took longer than was expected, but by January 2005 games could recomence at Ironworks Road. Chairman at the time Harry Hodgson said of the Coal Authority, [they have] been excellent. We would probably have gone out of business, but they have poured in 850 tonnes of cement and materials and re-laid the turf.[2][16] In March 2010, a wind turbine the club had installed at Ironworks Road came into full operation, making them one of the first non-league clubs in the country to do so. Connected to the National Grid, the turbine is a source of income for the club, as well as reducing costs on electricity.[17] Supporters and rivalries[edit] Followers of Tow Law Town are known as the Misfits. In the clubs run up to the FA Vase final in 1998, they left a trail of devastation in towns as they progressed through the rounds of competition.[18] In 2007, a group of hooligans affiliating themselves with the Misfits caused trouble in Tow Law.[19] However, not all of the clubs fans are hooligans and on a number of occasions supporters have partaken in fund raising activities to raise money for the club. In April 2003, two supporters took part in a coast to coast bike ride in the hope of raising around £800 for the club.[20] In July 2010, a group of the clubs supporters took part in a ten mile sponsored walk to raise £3,000 for the club, which at the time was in financial difficulty.[21] In April 2011, two fans of the club from Genoa, Italy, traveled over 1,000 miles to Tow Law to see the club play. They said the club had captured [their] imagination with their cup runs in 1967 and 1998.[22] Tow Laws main local rivals are Consett, based only 7.5 miles (12.1 km) away from each other, the two having played together in the Northern League since 1970.[23] Club records[edit] Tow Law Towns results since joining the Northern League in 1920. Football was not played from 1939 until 1945 because of the Second World War Tow Law Towns best ever league finish has been three wins of the Northern League Division One (level 9 of the overall English football league system) in 1923–24, 1924–25 and 1994–95. The Lawyers have only ever progressed as far as the rounds proper of the FA Cup four times, reaching the first round in 1968–69, 1984–85 and 1989–90, and the second round in 1967–68 where they held Shrewsbury Town to a 1–1 draw at home but lost the replay 2–6.[4] The club have only reached the rounds proper of the FA Trophy on four occasions, the first round in 1977–78 and 1990–91, and the second round in 1982–83, where they were beaten 0–3 by Altrincham after taking them to a replay, and in 1989–90, when they were beaten 0–2 by Bath City. They have twice reached the third round of the FA Amateur Cup, the first in 1969–70 when they were beaten 0–4 by St Albans City, and the second the following year in 1970–71 when they took Skelmersdale United to a replay and were beaten 0–1. Tow Law reached the final of the FA Vase in 1997–98 but lost 1–0 to Tiverton Town at Wembley Stadium.[4] The highest attendance figure recorded at Ironworks Road came when the team played Mansfield Town in the FA Cup first round in the 1967–68 season in front of a crowd of 5,500 people.[14]
Posted on: Tue, 13 May 2014 01:50:29 +0000

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