Bournemouth Gasworks Athletic F.C.

Bournemouth Gasworks Athletic F.C. were an English amateur football team from Bournemouth, Hampshire, who were successful in both county and national competitions, reaching the final of the FA Amateur Cup in 1930. They became defunct in 1973.

Bournemouth Gasworks Athletic
Full nameBournemouth Gasworks Athletic Football Club
Nickname(s)Gasmen, The Lights
Founded1899 (as Bournemouth Gasworks)
Dissolved1973
GroundAlder Road, Branksome, Poole

History

Founded in 1899 as the Bournemouth Gas & Water Co works side and joined the Hampshire League West Division in 1904. In 1921 Bournemouth Gasworks were placed in the County Division (later to become Division One) and this marked the start of a very successful period for 'the Lights' as they were crowned champions in 1922–23. The club added the Athletic suffix to their name at this time.

The late Twenties saw the side record some fine runs in the FA Amateur Cup, most notably in 1929–30 when they reached the final, which was played at West Ham United's Upton Park stadium where a crowd of 21,800 saw them hold Ilford 1–1 at the break before they eventually lost by a 1–5 scoreline. In 1932–33 they reached the Semi-Finals but were narrowly beaten 1–2 by Stockton.

The Gasworks remained a strong force in county football and were Hampshire League Division One champions a further four times during the Thirties with the reserve side also winning the Division Two title.

Post war

The post war era saw Bournemouth Gasworks remain a prominent force in the Hampshire League and the cups. During this time they were regular entrants in the FA Cup qualifying rounds and they won the Hampshire Senior Cup in 1952–53 and 1953–54. In 1956–57 the Gasworks were relegated after finishing bottom and after a mid-table finish in Division Two the club left the Hampshire League to play in local Dorset football. They would go on to win the Dorset League nine times, as well as winning the Dorset Senior Cup ten times and the Dorset Amateur Cup nine times.

Demise

Through circumstances beyond their control, the loss of their magnificent Alder Road home ground in 1972 prompted the club's decision to call it a day after a decline in fortunes.[1]

The final curtain came down in March 1973 the Club staged a formal Farewell Dinner to commemorative the end of an illustrious history. The event was well attended with a number of legends from the 1930 FA Amateur Cup final team in attendance.

Honours

  • Hampshire League Champions (5) – 1922–23, 1931–32, 1934–35, 1935–36, 1937–38
  • Hampshire Senior Cup Winners (2) – 1952–53, 1953–54
  • Dorset Senior Cup Winners (10) – 1908–09, 1909–10, 1910–11, 1911–12, 1913–14, 1920–21, 1921–22, 1924–25, 1930–31, 1938–39
  • FA Amateur Cup Runner-up – 1929–30 (semi-finalists 1932–33)
  • FA Cup – Best performance – 3rd Qualifying Round 1946–47, 1952–53, 1953–54

League Records

gollark: https://www.sqlite.org/fasterthanfs.html
gollark: Apparently SQLite actually is faster than the filesystem at retrieving small (<500kB or something) data.
gollark: You could probably use SQLite for a low-traffic messaging app, it *is* quite fast, just not parallelized.
gollark: Well, it has text which is recognizable as numbers.
gollark: It won't be *exact*, being an image and all, but you could probably do "close enough". You would need a lot more resolution on the circle to display it well than the rectangle, though.

References

Print

  • Gone But Not Forgotten (Part 5), by Dave Twydell, ISBN 1-874427-01-1

Internet

  1. Listed as defunct Archived May 15, 2008, at the Wayback Machine: Yore.Demon.co.uk personal website (PDF file).
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.