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Kiveton Park F.C.

Coordinates: 53°20′23″N 1°15′30″W / 53.33977°N 1.25845°W / 53.33977; -1.25845
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kiveton Park
Full nameKiveton Park Football Club
Founded1881
GroundHard Lane
Capacity1,000 (80 seats)
ChairmanChris Nelson
ManagerDan Stewart
LeagueSheffield & Hallamshire County Senior League Division One
2023–24Sheffield & Hallamshire County Senior League Division One, 7th of 12
Websitehttp://www.kivetonparkfc.com/

Kiveton Park Football Club is a football club based in Kiveton Park, South Yorkshire, England. They are currently members of the Sheffield & Hallamshire County Senior League Division One and play at Wales High School.

History

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Although a team representing the village played two games with a side from Anston during the 1877–78 season,[1] Kiveton Park FC was not formed until 1881. Two years later, the club affiliated with the Sheffield Football Association.[2] Its first club colours were believed to be red and black quarters.[3]

Sheffield Independent article from September 1883 announcing the club's affiliation with the Sheffield FA

In 1891–92 they were founder members of the Sheffield & District Football League[4] (being Chesterfield F.C.'s first ever league opponents on the first day of that season) and lifted their first trophy after beating Sheepbridge in the final of the Sheffield Minor Cup.[5]

For 1893–94 the Minor Cup changed from a knockout competition to a league, and Kiveton moved to join, also entering the Hatchard League at the same time. They were the first winners of the latter in 1894[6] and repeated the success two years later,[7] remaining in the competition until the outbreak of the First World War.

Kiveton spent the majority of the time between the two world wars in the Sheffield Amateur League, with the exception of brief spells in the Sheffield Association League and the Holbrook & District League. They made their FA Cup debut in 1920, and reached the 3rd qualifying round of the competition two years later, losing to Rotherham Town at Clifton Lane. In 1923, the club was renamed as Kiveton Park Colliery, reflecting its close ties with the village pit.

The Kiveton Park team which won the 1914 Portland Challenge Cup

The club, like most others in the country, did initially break up when the Second World War broke out, but in 1942 they joined the Worksop & District League, remaining in this competition until the end of the war. The 1945–46 season saw the club come close to winning two prestigious competitions – going out in the semi-finals of the Sheffield & Hallamshire Senior Cup and finishing as runners-up in the Sheffield Invitation League play-offs, after beating Sheffield United reserves in the semi-final at Hard Lane.[8]

They spent the first four post-war years in the Sheffield Association League, before joining the Yorkshire League in 1949.[9] After suffering two disastrous campaigns at this higher level, they moved back to the Worksop & District League, where they were renamed as Kiveton Park United.[10] They stayed in Worksop football until 1959, when they moved to the East Derbyshire League, and before long they were finding great success - in the 1961–62 season they won seven trophies.[11] In 1963 the club successfully applied to re-join the Yorkshire League, and was accepted by the name of Kiveton Park.

A Kiveton Park programme cover from 1977

In 1967 they won promotion to Division One and two years later finished in third place – the club's highest ever league finish. [4] A year later however they were relegated back to Division Two. In 1972 they completed a league and cup double, winning the prestigious Sheffield & Hallamshire Senior Cup for the first time, and gaining promotion back to the Yorkshire League's top flight.[4] Their yo-yo existence would continue however – up to 1982 they flitted constantly between Division One and Two, winning the Division Two title in 1978.[4]

A year after Kiveton reached the 4th Round of the FA Vase in 1981, the Yorkshire League merged with the Midland League to form the Northern Counties East League (NCEL), and Park were among the founder members of the new competition.[4] They spent the first three years in Division Two South before being moved to Division One South when the competition went through a restructure in 1985, a year after the club's reserve team had won the last ever Wharncliffe Charity Cup final.[4] They were promoted to Division One in 1986, but were relegated back again in 1990 because of ground grading issues. At the end of the 1990–91 season they left the NCEL to join the Central Midlands League (CMFL)[4]

The main entrance to the club's new home at Wales High School

Park finished as Premier Division North runners-up in their first season, and a year later won promotion to the CMFL's Supreme Division. In 1994 the village's colliery closed, and two years later, after losing its biggest financier, the club went into hibernation.[12] The club was reformed in 1999, re-joining the CMFL Premier Division. In 2003 they finished as runners-up, gaining promotion back to the Supreme Division, but were relegated back again two years later because of their failure to install floodlights.[13] This blow came just days after they had won the Sheffield & Hallamshire Association Cup for the second year running.[14] It wasn't until the league restructured in 2011 to form North and South divisions that the club regained Step 7 status in the English football league system.

In 2013 the club decided, due to the cost of travelling to away games, to leave the CMFL, and join the more local Sheffield & Hallamshire County Senior Football League (S&HCSL).[15] Kiveton entered the Second Division of the S&HCSL for the start of the 2013–14 season. After years in Division Two, Park won promotion to Division One of the S&HCSL in 2017; the same year that the club left its Hard Lane home of nearly a century to move to the playing fields of Wales High School.

Season-by-season record

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Managers

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Notable former players

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Herbert Chapman

Kiveton's most famous sons, Harry and Herbert Chapman, played for the club before going onto greater things – Harry became a Sheffield Wednesday legend while Herbert went on to become one of the most successful managers of all time. In 2004 the Sunday Times voted Herbert the greatest British manager ever,[19] and in 2014 the club featured prominently in Patrick Barclay's book – The Life and Times of Herbert Chapman. Barclay wrote: "Kiveton Park could claim to have been a cradle of two revolutions, one industrial and the other sporting, and beyond question it is the birthplace of at least one great man, widely considered the father of football as we have come to know it."[20]

Although Harry Chapman could claim to be the best player to hail from the village, he never won an international cap – although another Kivetonian did. Bert Morley played for England against Ireland in 1910, just six years after leaving his local football team.

In 1940, Empire News reported that, pro rata, the village had turned out more professional football players than anywhere in England apart from the Shropshire town of Oakengates.[21]

Grounds

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The club's first home was a ground near Kiveton Park station, and they also played on at Wales Cricket Club (which was destroyed to make room for the M1 motorway in 1960).

Prior to the First World War, the club moved to a ground on Hard Lane. Initially Park played on the pitch nearest the road, but in the 1960s they moved to the central pitch and built a stand to hold 200 seated spectators.[22] In 2017, they left Hard Lane for the playing fields of Wales High School. A new 3G pitch was installed at the school in 2022, and in 2024 the club moved its senior section back to its old home at Hard Lane.

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Honours

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Records

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  • Best League performance: 3rd, Yorkshire League, 1968–69
  • Best FA Cup performance: 3rd qualifying round, 1921–22
  • Best FA Amateur Cup performance: 2nd qualifying round, 1946–47
  • Best FA Vase performance: 4th Round, 1980–81
  • Record attendance: 2,500 vs Bramley Sunnyside, Whitlam Memorial Cup final, 1961–62[11]

References

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  1. ^ Sheffield Independent, 23 November 1877, page 4
  2. ^ Sheffield Independent, 13 September 1883, page 4
  3. ^ Sheffield Evening Telegraph, 3 November 1906, page 4
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "Kiveton Park". fchd.info. Retrieved 23 March 2015.
  5. ^ Sheffield Independent, 18 April 1892, page 8
  6. ^ Sheffield Independent, 30 April 1894, page 8
  7. ^ Worksop Guardian, 10 October 1896, page 6
  8. ^ Worksop Guardian, 3 May 1946, page 4
  9. ^ "Kiveton Park Colliery". fchd.info. Retrieved 23 March 2015.
  10. ^ "Kiveton Park United". fchd.info. Retrieved 23 March 2015.
  11. ^ a b Worksop Guardian, 11 May 1962, page 4
  12. ^ "History". Kiveton Park FC. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 23 March 2015.
  13. ^ "We won't roll over". Worksop Guardian. 19 May 2005. Retrieved 23 March 2015.
  14. ^ "Kiveton win final on penalty shoot out". Worksop Guardian. 28 April 2005. Retrieved 23 March 2015.
  15. ^ Rotherham Advertiser, 23 August 2013, page 28
  16. ^ "Club directory". Mitoo. Archived from the original on 30 June 2015. Retrieved 23 March 2015.
  17. ^ "Club directory". Mitoo. Archived from the original on 30 June 2015. Retrieved 23 March 2015.
  18. ^ "Club directory". Mitoo. Archived from the original on 30 June 2015. Retrieved 23 March 2015.
  19. ^ "The Greatest Manager Ever". The Sunday Times. 10 January 2004. Archived from the original on 15 August 2011.
  20. ^ Barclay, Patrick (2014). The Life and Times of Herbert Chapman. W&N. p. 1. ISBN 0297868500.
  21. ^ Rotherham Advertiser, 28 November 1986
  22. ^ Green Un, 21 December 1968, page 13
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53°20′23″N 1°15′30″W / 53.33977°N 1.25845°W / 53.33977; -1.25845