Brandon United F.C.
Full name | Brandon United Football Club | ||
---|---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | United | ||
Founded | 1968 | ||
Ground |
The Welfare Ground 54°45′24″N 1°37′32″W | ||
Capacity | 2,500 | ||
Chairman | David Bussey | ||
League | Northern Football League Division Two | ||
2014–15 |
Northern Football League Division Two, 22nd | ||
|
Brandon United F.C. are an English football club based at the Welfare Ground in Brandon, near Durham, County Durham. They play in the Northern Football League Division Two.
Brandon United F.C. were originally formed as a Sunday morning side called Rostrons, the name of the waste paper company where most of the founders worked. They began by playing in the Durham & District Sunday League in 1968/69, Joining the Third Division and gradually played their way up to the First Division. They were basically local lads, however the inclusion of Northern League and Wearside League players turned the club into one of the most powerful Sunday football sides in the North East. From 1968/69 until 1976/77 they were First Division champions four times, Durham County FA. Sunday Cup winners three times, then the ultimate, F.A. Sunday Cup winners in 1975/76, defeating Evergreen 2-1. Brandon United's proudest moment came in 1979/80 when entering the F.A. Cup for the first time, they reached the first round proper, on the way taking care of Northern League opponents Spennymoor United, Tow Law Town, South Bank and North Shields. In the first round proper, Brandon were beaten 3-0 by Football League opponents Bradford City, in a game played at Spennymoor. The club joined the Wearside League in 1981/82, winning the Sunderland Shipowners Cup. The following season they reached the quarter finals of the F.A- Vase and repeated the same the following season.
==Honours==*Northern Football League Division One[1]
- Champions 2002–03
- Northern Football League Division Two
- Champions 1984–85, 1999–2000
- Northern Football Alliance
- Champions 1977–78, 1978–79
Records
References
- 1 2 Brandon United at the Football Club History Database