- Yorkshire Football League
The Yorkshire Football League was a football competition founded in 1920 which existed until 1982 when it merged with the Midland League to become the Northern Counties East League.
Original League
There had previously been a short lived Yorkshire League founded in 1898-99, featuring 10 teams, however it only lasted for two seasons and was dissolved by the end of 1899. It is generally not viewed as the same competition as that which emerged in the 1920s.
During the two years of its existence, the original Yorkshire league was won first by Sheffield United reserves and then in 1898-99 Wombwell were champions. The competition took place before many of the more well known clubs of today were formed, for example it featured a team from
Leeds , which predated both Leeds City and Leeds United. The same could be said for the Huddersfield, Halifax and Bradford sides.The teams who participated were;
*Barnsley
*Bradford
*Doncaster Rovers
*Huddersfield
*Hunslet
*Leeds
*Mexborough
*Sheffield United reserves
*Sheffield Wednesday reserves
*WombwellThe Yorkshire League
The second Yorkshire League was formed in 1920, catering for a mixture of
semi-professional andamateur local football teams. Some of theFootball League clubs entered their reserve sides and third teams. The league ran until 1981-82, when it merged with the Midland League to form theNorthern Counties East League .Founding members of the 1920 Yorkshire League included;
*Acomb
*Bradford Park Avenue reserves
*Dewsbury & Saville
*Fryston Colliery
*Goole Shipyards
*Harrogate
*Rowntrees
*Selby Town
*Wakefield City
*Wath Athletic
*Wombwell
*Yorkshire Amateur
*York YMCAThere were only six seasons where the title was not competed for, this was during part of the 1940s when, due to
World War II , many of the players in football competitions all over the country were called up to fight and thus the leagues were put on hold.Pre-World War II
The first champions were Bradford Park Avenue reserves. They were the only reserve outfit in the league during that inaugural season, but their success in the Yorkshire League induced other bigger clubs to sign their reserves up for inclusion for the following seasons.
No club dominated the league in particular before
World War II , with Selby Town the only team who managed to win successive titles in 1934-35 and 1935-36.Bradford Park Avenue reserves along with Selby Town remained the overall most successful however, with three titles each to their names.Continuation
After the War, the league resumed for the 1945-46 season, and within five years had enough clubs to form two divisions, entitled Division One and Division Two. This pattern continued until 1961, when a third division was formed (although that only lasted three seasons, and then lay dormant until revived for the 1970-71 season).
Stocksbridge Works became the dominant force in the Yorkshire League of the 1950s. They were founder members of Division Two and won that league in its second season, gaining promotion. In their debut year in the top division they took the title. After a two-year hiatus, when Selby Town again completed a double, Stocksbridge won the Championship for four consecutive seasons, a record which stood until the league's demise. After their sustained period of success, Stocksbridge became a "
yo-yo " club, spending short periods in Divisions One and Two, and also dipped down to Division Three for a single season.Cup competitions
During the lifetime of the Yorkshire League, member clubs competed in all four major F.A. competitions. In the now defunct
FA Amateur Cup , the best performance was from Yorkshire Amateur, who reached the semi-finals in 1931-32, while in the replacement tournament, theFA Vase , Sheffield went one better, but lost out in the final of 1976-77. In the more senior competitions, the best Yorkshire League performances were Selby Town reaching the second round proper of theFA Cup in 1954-55, and Mexborough Town's place in the third round of theFA Trophy during the 1972-73 season.Northern Counties East League
No Yorkshire League club progressed directly to the
Northern Premier League after that league was founded in 1968 - ambitious clubs could move to the Midland League, but when regional football in the North of England was rationalised in 1982, the Yorkshire League and the Midland League merged to become theNorthern Counties East League . Emley won the last ever Yorkshire League. The Northern Counties East Football League continues on today, as a level 9 league in theEnglish football league system .League and divisional Champions
1920-39 - The early days
The league originally consisted of a single section of 13 clubs, and although numbers rose and fell, by 1935 had reached a stable membership of 20 clubs. However, the league ceased operations in 1939 on the outbreak of
World War II . For the 1931-32 and 1932-33 seasons, the number of clubs competing was so small that two separate competitions were organised, with the winners of the first competition playing the winners of the second competition for the league championship.1961-64 - Three divisions
With the league membership at an all-time high of 37 clubs in 1960-61, the decision was taken to split the league into three divisions for the 1961-62 season. The third division only lasted three seasons All the members of the third division were reserve or "A" teams in the first two years, but two first teams did join for the 1963-64. The third division was then disbanded and the league resumed with two divisions.
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