Durham County Football Association
Nickname | Durham FA |
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Formation | 1883 |
Purpose | County football association |
Headquarters | 'Codeslaw' Riverside South |
Location |
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Region served | County Durham |
John Topping | |
Website | durhamfa.com |
The Durham County Football Association (also simply known as the Durham FA) is the governing body of football in the county of Durham, from grassroots to professional level. The Durham FA was founded on 25 March 1883.[1] They run a number of cups for teams across the county for under-18, under-21, ladies teams, and an under-18 representative team.
History
[edit]In 1879, the joint Durham and Northumberland Football Association was founded, until 1883, when travel problems for the clubs prompted a change. On 11 May 1883, 40 clubs met in the Alexandra Hotel in Newcastle and voted to form an independent body known as the Northumberland Football Association. The Durham clubs followed suit by holding a meeting at the Three Tuns Hotel, Durham City, on 25 May 1883. The nine clubs who were represented at that meeting formed the Durham County Football Association.
In its second season, 18 clubs took part in the Durham Challenge Cup, the only county cup competition in the country at that time. On its 125th anniversary in 2007–08, the association organised 11 county cup competitions at various levels, and a total of 988 clubs participated. The association now has 2,386 teams and 1,055 referees affiliated, with 13 staff. In 1883, the staff consisted of a part-time honorary secretary.
The association opened its first rented office at 10 Tenters Terrace, Durham City, on 1 October 1913. In June 1923, it purchased Codeslaw, The Avenue, Durham City, to provide "an office, meeting rooms and residence for the secretary". In 1971, the association moved to larger offices at The Sands, Durham City, which were officially opened by its then President, Arthur Askew. Owing to an increase in staff, another move was required and a custom-built suite of offices was erected at The Riverside, Chester-le-Street, which were officially opened on 9 June 2005 by the association's president, Frank Pattison, and the chairman of The Football Association, Geoffrey Thompson.[2]
Development
[edit]The Durham County Football Association (FA) assists clubs, leagues, and educational institutions. It collaborates with external development officers. Between 2008 and 2012, the Durham County FA established new partnerships.[3]
Governance
[edit]The governance department runs the day-to-day running of the County Football Association to provide assistance and advice in administration matters.[4]
Leagues
[edit]Affiliated leagues
[edit]
Men's Saturday leagues[edit]
Ladies and girls leagues[edit]
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Men's Sunday leagues[edit]
Other leagues[edit]
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Youth leagues[edit]
Small sided leagues[edit]
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Disbanded or amalgamated leagues
[edit]Leagues that were affiliated to the Durham County FA but have disbanded or amalgamated with other leagues include:
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Affiliated member clubs
[edit]Among the notable clubs that are (or at one time were) affiliated to the Durham County FA are:
- Billingham Synthonia
- Billingham Town
- Birtley Town
- Bishop Auckland
- Brandon United
- Chester-le-Street Town
- Cleator Moor Celtic
- Cockfield (now defunct)
- Consett
- Craghead United (now defunct)
- Crook Town
- Darlington
- Darlington Railway Athletic
- Dunston Federation Brewery
- Durham City
- Easington Colliery
- Esh Winning
- Gateshead
- Hartlepool United
- Hebburn
- Horden Colliery Welfare
- Jarrow Roofing
- Leadgate Park (now defunct)
- Murton
- Newton Aycliffe
- Norton & Stockton Ancients
- Peterlee Town
- Prudhoe Town
- Ryhope Colliery Welfare
- Seaham Coast Youth
- Seaham Red Star
- Shildon
- South Shields
- Spennymoor Town
- Spennymoor United (now defunct)
- Stockton (now defunct)
- Sunderland
- Sunderland Albion (now defunct)
- Sunderland Nissan (now defunct)
- Sunderland RCA
- Tow Law Town
- Washington
- West Auckland Town
- West Hartlepool (now defunct)
- West Stanley (now defunct)
- Whickham
- Willington
- Wolviston
County Cup Competitions
[edit]The Durham County FA ran the following Cup Competitions:[5]
- Durham County Challenge Cup
- Durham County Trophy Competition
- Durham County Minor Cup Competition
- Durham County Sunday Cup Competition
- Durham County Under 18s Sunday Cup Competition
- Durham County Bill Upsall Youth Minor Cup Competition
- Durham County Under 14s Cup Competition
- Durham County Tesco Under 13 Cup Competition
- Durham County Under 12s Cup Competition
- Durham County Women's County Cup Competition
- Durham County Youth Cup Competition
County cup winners
[edit]Competition | Winners (2010–11)[5] |
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Durham County Challenge Cup | Gateshead Reserves |
Durham County Trophy | Hebburn Reyrolle |
Durham County Minor Cup | Sunderland Redhouse |
Durham County Youth Cup | Gateshead Under 18s |
Directors and officials
[edit]
Directors[edit]
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Key officials[edit]
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References
[edit]- ^ "Durham FA – About Us". Durham FA. Archived from the original on 28 September 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2008.
- ^ "Team's Work- The magazine of the Durham County FA Ltd – Issue 1 – Summer 2008 Edition" (PDF). Durham County FA. Retrieved 18 June 2011.
- ^ "Durham County FA – Development". Durham County FA. Archived from the original on 10 July 2011. Retrieved 20 June 2011.
- ^ "Durham County FA – Governance". Durham County FA. Archived from the original on 10 July 2011. Retrieved 20 June 2011.
- ^ a b "Durham County FA – Fixtures & Results – County Cups". Durham County FA. Archived from the original on 8 May 2009. Retrieved 20 June 2011.
- ^ "Durham County FA – About Us – Directors of The Durham County FA Ltd". Durham County FA. Retrieved 18 June 2011.
- ^ "Durham County FA – About Us – Staff of The Durham County FA Ltd". Durham County FA. Retrieved 18 June 2011.