- Palmerston Park
Infobox_Stadium
stadium_name = Palmerston Park
nickname =
caption =
location =Dumfries ,Scotland
broke_ground =
opened = 1919
awards =
closed =
demolished =
owner = Queen of the South Football Club
operator =
surface = Grass
construction_cost =
architect =
former_names =
tenants = Queen of the South Football Club
seating_capacity = 6,412 (3,509 seated)Palmerston Park is a multi-use
stadium onTerregles Street inDumfries ,South West Scotland . The site of the ground was formerly a farm called Palmers Toun. [ [http://www.qosfc.com/faq.htm Official Queen of the South Site ] ] This is on theMaxwelltown side of theRiver Nith in Dumfries. It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home ground ofQueen of the South F.C. The stadium holds 6,412 people. It also holds the record of having the tallest free standing floodlights in Scottish football, standing at 85 feet.Ground purchase
Jimmy McKinnell from Dalbeattie and Tom Wylie were both sold to
Blackburn Rovers at the same time. This combined with the sale of Ian Dickson to Aston Villa helped to fund the purchase of Palmerston Park in 1921 for £1,500. [ [http://www.qosfc.com/qanda Official Queen of the South Site ] ]Current stadium
Of the 6,412 capacity, there are 3,509 seats. There have been many changes in the ground since it was first opened in 1919, including the removal of the "coo shed" which was replaced by a new all seater stand, adjacent to the town's Ice Bowl. Queens' 75th anniversary was commemerated in April 1995 with a challenge match against Rangers. Guests for Queens in the 2 - 2 draw included
Davie Irons , future managersRowan Alexander andIan McCall ,Ted McMinn , Andy Thomson and Budgie McGhie. [ [http://www.qosfc.com/ Queen of the South Site Official Site ] ]Across from this all seater stand is the traditional "old" stand. This is a small, classic looking covered seating stand, where the seating area is raised. There are standing terraces for fans to the left, right and in front of this stand. This stand was constructed after the original main stand burned down in 1964.
The Portland Drive Terrace (home end) is a traditional standing area, reminiscent of all UK football grounds prior to the
Hillsborough disaster . At the other end of the ground stands the Terregles Street end. This was historically the away supporters end, but this has now sadly been closed and has fallen in to disrepair. This is the only blip on what is otherwise a nice little stadium.Proposed development
There are plans afoot to make Palmerston Park in to a 6,000 all seater stadium which would allow Queen Of The South access to the
Scottish Premier League (SPL), should they ever win theScottish League First Division . The 6,000 seats is the minimum requirement to join this league. For this to happen, the Terregles Street end would be demolished and a new all seater stand erected. Similarly, the Portland Drive terrace would be made in to an all seater stand.Attendance
Crowds for Queen Of The South fixtures are normally around 2,200 people unless there is a major cup game against higher league opposition. The first league game against local rivals
Gretna FC at the end of August 2006 attracted almost 5,500 spectators, which was Queen's highest league attendance since 2002. There was a full house at Queens'Scottish Cup Quarter Final clash with Hibs. Similarly over 6,000 watched the victory over Dundee on8 March 2008 for a place in theScottish Cup Semi-finals.In popular culture
Scenes from the film "
A Shot at Glory ", starringRobert Duvall , were shot at Palmerston Park during 1999.References
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