Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Dereham Town F.C.

Association football club in England

Dereham Town F.C.

Summary

Association football club in England

FieldValue
clubnameDereham Town
fullnameDereham Town Football Club
imageDereham Town FC.PNG
nicknameThe Magpies
founded1884
groundAldiss Park, Dereham
capacity2,500 (150 seated)
chairmanDaniel McIlwrath
managerTom Parke
league
season
position
pattern_la1_black_stripes
pattern_b1_blackstripes_thin4
pattern_ra1_black_stripes
leftarm1FFFFFF
body1FFFFFF
rightarm1FFFFFF
shorts1000000
socks1000000
leftarm2008000
body2008000
rightarm2008000
shorts2FFFFFF
socks2FFFFFF
websitederehamtownfc.co.uk

Dereham Town Football Club is a football club based in Dereham, Norfolk, England. They are currently members of the and play at Aldiss Park.

History

The club was founded as Dereham Football Club in 1884, spending many of its early years in the Dereham & District League. In 1891–92 the club reached the final of the Norfolk Senior Cup, losing to CEYMS. By 1910 the club were playing in the Norwich & District League and had been renamed East Dereham. In 1920 they adopted their current name and in 1935 they joined the Norfolk & Suffolk League, which had lost several clubs to the newly established Eastern Counties League. When the Norfolk & Suffolk League merged into the Anglian Combination, the club were placed in the Senior B Division. They won the division at the first attempt and were promoted Premier Division. They were renamed Dereham Hobbies United in 1986 after a local Sunday league team merged into the club. The club were relegated from the Premier Division at the end of the 1988–89 season, but made an immediate return to the Premier Division as Division One champions. In 1991 they returned to the name Dereham Town.

In 1997–98 Dereham won the Anglian Combination Premier Division, earning promotion to Division One of the Eastern Counties League, also winning the Don Frost Memorial Cup. In 2001–02 the club finished second in Division One, beating Stanway Rovers 1–0 on the final day to overtake them and earn promotion to the Premier Division. The club won the Norfolk Senior Cup in 2006, defeating Norwich United 1–0 in the final, and again in 2007 when Wroxham were beaten 1–0 in the final. In 2012–13 they won the Eastern Counties League Premier Division, earning promotion to Division One North of the Isthmian League. The club won the Norfolk Senior Cup for the fourth time in 2015–16, defeating Norwich United 2–0 in the final. A fifth Senior Cup was won in 2018–19, when Dereham beat Thetford Town 2–1 in the final.

In 2022 Dereham were transferred to Division One Midlands of the Northern Premier League. After finishing fourth-from-bottom of the division in 2022–23 they were relegated back to the Premier Division of the Eastern Counties League.

Reserve team

After the club were promoted to the Isthmian League, the reserve team joined Division One of the Eastern Counties League, moving up from the reserve division. They left the league at the end of the 2016–17 season.

Ground

External view of Aldiss Park, the home ground of Dereham Town

Prior to World War II the club played at Bayfields Meadow, after which they moved to the Recreation Ground. However, the council owned the ground and there was no scope for upgrading it. In 1991, the club purchased a 10.2 acre site on the outskirts of the town in order to build a new £750,000 stadium.

The club moved to the new ground at Aldiss Park in December 1996. At the start of 2000–01 season Norwich City visited Aldiss Park for a pre-season friendly and although the club lost 9–0, a new record attendance of 1,800 was set. Norwich City visited for another friendly match in July 2001, with a new record of 3,000 being set.

Current squad

The Eastern Counties Football League does not use a squad numbering system.

Honours

  • Eastern Counties league
    • Premier Division champions 2012–13
  • Anglian Combination
    • Premier Division champions 1997–98
    • Division One champions 1989–90
    • Senior Cup winners 1993–94
  • Norfolk Senior Cup
    • Winners 2005–06, 2006–07, 2010–11, 2015–16, 2018–19

Records

  • Best FA Cup performance: Third qualifying round, 2012–13
  • Best FA Trophy performance: Third qualifying round, 2020–21
  • Best FA Vase performance: Fifth round, 2008–09
  • Record attendance: 3,000 vs Norwich City, friendly match, July 2001

References

References

  1. [http://www.derehamtownfc.co.uk/content.php?pg=clubinfo&pd=1010 Club info] Dereham Town F.C.
  2. link. (2007-10-18 Dereham Town FC)
  3. Blakeman, M (2010) ''The Official History of the Eastern Counties Football League 1935-2010, Volume II'' {{ISBN. 978-1-908037-02-2
  4. "Dereham Town crowned champions". EDP.
  5. [https://www.derehamtimes.co.uk/sport/norfolk-senior-cup-final-dereham-town-2-norwich-united-0-1-4535378 Norfolk Senior Cup final: Dereham Town 2 Norwich United 0] {{Webarchive. link. (14 June 2017 Dereham Times, 13 May 2016)
  6. [https://www.edp24.co.uk/sport/norfolk-senior-cup-football-1-6025732 Dereham Town beat Thetford Town 2-1 after extra-time to lift Norfolk Senior Cup] {{Webarchive. link. (5 May 2019 Eastern Daily Press, 30 April 2019)
  7. {{fchd
  8. {{fchd
  9. Mike Williams & Tony Williams (2012) ''Non-League Club Directory 2013'', p645 {{ISBN. 978-1-869833-77-0
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Dereham Town F.C. — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report