Horden Colliery Welfare A.F.C.

Darlington 1883 Reserves
Full name Darlington 1883 Reserves
Nickname(s) The Quakers
Founded 1908 (As Horden Colliery Welfare)
Ground Eastbourne Sports Complex, Darlington
Chairman Norman Stephens
Manager Mark Fanning
League Wearside League
2015–16 Wearside League, 6th

Darlington 1883 Reserves formerly known as Horden Colliery Welfare Association Football Club is a football club based in Darlington, in County Durham, England. The club was formed in 1908 and joined the North Eastern League in 1935, reaching the second round of the FA Cup in the 1938–39 season.[1] They are currently members of the Wearside League and play at Eastbourne Sports Complex in Darlington

History

From 1975 until 2013, they were members of the Northern League, but were relegated to the Wearside league at the end of the 2012–13 season. Horden finished second in the Northern League Division One in 1980 and 1983 and in 1984 beat Blyth Spartans in the League Cup final under former Middlesbrough coach John Coddington.

There is a great FA cup tradition at Welfare Park, a run to the second round in 1938–1939 when they lost 3–2 at home to Newport County, and five more first round appearances. All brought narrow defeats against Southport F.C. (1948, 1–2), Accrington Stanley (1952, 1–2), Wrexham F.C. (1953, 0–1), Scunthorpe United (1954, 0–1) and Blackpool F.C. (1981, 0–1). In 1985 Horden CW faced the biggest challenge of their history when the club was relegated and around the same time Horden Colliery closed. The impact of the pit closure on the community and the loss of the clubs main sponsor meant that Horden CW found life a struggle, but in the late 1990s under the management of Peter Todd and later Kevin Taylor things started to look up.

Famous players with Horden connections include Bolton Wanderers striker Bob Taylor, Stan Anderson, the only man to captain each of the North-East's big three. Colin Bell (Man City and England), Tommy Garrett (Blackpool), Ritchie Norman (Leicester City) and Mick Fento (York City).

On 21 July 2010, Martin Wilson, a 24-year-old businessman, took over the club. He is believed to be the youngest Chairman in the Football Pyramid. Under the new direction of Wilson, the club aims to re-brand itself in an attempt to make the club more appealing to younger supporters.

Unfortunately in November 2010 Mr Wilson went AWOL from the club and has not been seen since, leaving Norman Stephens with no alternative but to step in and regain his rightful place as Chairman of the club once again. The club have played at Welfare Park ever since they were formed, The Ground has 1 Stand, Which consists of Mainly seating, However below this there is some terracing as well.

In 2016, Horden Parish Council demanded that the club vacate their ground at Horden Welfare Park (where the club has been based since their inception in 1908) for unknown reasons. On January 29 of that year, a court case upheld the council's decision and the club has been ordered to vacate by 25 February 2016 as well as awarding them legal costs.

Darlington 1883 Reserves

See also: Darlington 1883

October 2016 it was announced that Horden would move 30 miles to Darlington to become the Reserve Team of National League North Club Darlington 1883 [2] they will change there name to Darlington 1883 Reserves and play on the brand new 4G Surface at Eastbourne Sports Complex in Darlington. Horden Chairman Norman Stephens said 'If the move had not have happened, Horden would have been dead by Xmas'. Norman Stephens and some of the playing have been retained by Darlington who took Hordens place in the Wearside League. They played there first game under the new name on the 6th October in a 1-0 away defeat to Boldon C.A[3] and are due to play there first home game against Annfield Plain on the 15th October at Eastbourne Sports Complex.

Honours

Records

Former players

1. Players that have played/managed in the Football League or any foreign equivalent to this level (i.e. fully professional league).
2. Players with full international caps.
3. Players that hold a club record or have captained the club.

References

  1. British Pathé. "FA Cup 2nd Round – Horden CW vs Newport County". Retrieved 2010-03-22.
  2. Hartlepool Mail. "Horden CW name dies as club becomes Darlington 1883 Reserves". Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  3. Connor Lamb. "Boldon CA v Darlington 1883 Reserves". Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  4. 1 2 Horden Colliery Welfare at the Football Club History Database

External links

Coordinates: 54°45′52.06″N 1°19′01.88″W / 54.7644611°N 1.3171889°W / 54.7644611; -1.3171889

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