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East Thurrock United F.C.

Coordinates:51°31′20″N0°27′42″E / 51.52222°N 0.46167°E /51.52222; 0.46167
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Association football club in England

Football club
East Thurrock United
Full nameEast Thurrock United Football Club
NicknameThe Rocks
Founded27 April 1969
Dissolved1 September 2023
GroundRookery Hill,Corringham
Capacity3,500[1]

East Thurrock United Football Club were afootball club based inCorringham, Essex, England. They last competed inIsthmian League North Division and played at Rookery Hill. The club was placed into liquidation by owner Alfie Best on 1 September 2023. The club stated this was due to historic debts from the previous owners.

History

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The club was founded on 27 April 1969 by a group of fans who felt that the area aroundCorringham andStanford-le-Hope should have a seniornon-league football club, following the successful Corringham SocialSunday league team.[2] The new club played in the Southern Essex Combination for the 1969–70 season and finished third in the league, before joining the reserve section of theGreater London League in 1970.[3] They went on to win the division at the first attempt. The league merged with theMetropolitan League at the end of the season to form theMetropolitan–London League, with East Thurrock remaining in the reserve division. After winning the division in 1971–72, they moved up to the senior divisions, joining Division Two. They also won this division at the first attempt and were promoted to Division One.[4]

After the league merged with theSpartan League to form theLondon Spartan League in 1975, East Thurrock were placed in Division Two.[5] They remained in Division Two until restructuring saw them moved into the Premier Division in 1978.[5] In 1979 the club switched to theEssex Senior League.[6] In 1988–89 they won the League Cup, a feat they repeated in 1991–92,[3] a season that also saw them finish third in the league, earning promotion to Division Three of theIsthmian League. In1999–2000 they were Division Three champions, earning promotion to Division Two. Two seasons later they were placed in Division One North upon league reorganisation, before being moved into the Eastern Division of theSouthern League for the2004–05 season as part of wider restructuring of the non-League pyramid. After finishing as Eastern Division runners-up in the first season, they were promoted and moved back to the Isthmian League, joining its Premier Division.[6]

East Thurrock were relegated back to Division One North of the Isthmian League at the end of the2007–08 season following a one-point deduction for fielding an ineligible player. They finished as runners-up in2008–09, qualifying for the promotion play-offs, but lost 1–0 toConcord Rangers in the semi-finals.[6] A fifth-place finish the2009–10 saw the club qualify for the play-offs again, but they were again beaten 1–0 by Concord Rangers in the semi-finals.[6] In2010–11 the club won the division and were promoted to the Premier Division. In2011–12 they reached the first round of theFA Cup for the first time in their history, losing 3–0 at home toMacclesfield Town. Thefollowing season saw them finish fifth in the Isthmian League Premier Division, qualifying for the play-offs. However, they lost 1–0 toLowestoft Town in the semi-finals.[6]

In2014–15 East Thurrock reached the first round of the FA Cup again, this time losing 2–0 atHartlepool United. In thefollowing season they finished third in the Premier Division, again qualifying for the play-offs. The club beatTonbridge Angels 2–0 in the semi-finals andDulwich Hamlet 3–1 in the final in front of a record crowd of 1,661, resulting in promotion to theNational League South.[3] After three seasons in the sixth tier, the club finished second-from-bottom of the National League South in2018–19, and were relegated back to the Isthmian League's Premier Division in a season that also saw them win the Essex Senior Cup for the first time in their history, defeatingChelmsford City 3–1 in the final.

The club was placed into liquidation by owner Alfie Best on 1 September 2023, with the club stating this was due to historic debts from the previous owners.[7] A phoenix club called East Thurrock Community Football Club was formed in 2023, who joined theEssex & Suffolk Border League for the 2024–25 season.

Ground

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During the club's first season as members of the Southern Essex Combination, in 1969–70, home matches were played at Corringham Recreation Ground. They subsequently moved to the Billet Ground in Stanford-Le-Hope, before ground-sharing with nearbyGrays Athletic during the 1973–74 season in order to be granted senior status by theEssex County Football Association, before returning to the Billet Ground after upgrading works had taken place.[2]

In 1977 the club left the Billet Ground again, groundsharing atTilbury until 1982, when they moved to the Thames Board Mill Ground. They remained at the new ground for two years. Still seeking their own ground, the club bought land on the edge of Corringham Marshes and began building the Rookery Ground, which opened in 1984.[3] The site had previously been the home ground of Lathol Athletic.[8] Temporary seating was installed in 1989 prior to anFA Vase fifth round match againstBashley.[8]

A 160-seat main stand was erected, with a covered terrace built on the other side of the pitch, together with two covered areas behind one goal.[2] In 2016 one covered terrace was converted into a 250-seat stand. The ground currently has a capacity of 3,000.[1]

Honours

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  • Isthmian League
    • Division One North champions 2010–11
    • Division Three champions 1999–2000
  • Essex Senior Cup
    • Winners 2018–19
  • Metropolitan–London League
    • Division Two champions 1972–73
    • Reserve Division champions 1971–72
  • Greater London League
    • Reserve Division champions 1970–71
  • Essex Senior League
    • League Cup winners 1988–89, 1991–92
  • East Anglian Cup
    • Winners 2002–03

Records

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See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdefMike Williams & Tony Williams (2016)Non-League Club Directory 2017, Tony Williams Publications, p118ISBN 978-1869833695
  2. ^abcEast Thurrock United Pyramid Passion
  3. ^abcdeClub History East Thurrock United F.C.
  4. ^Metropolitan London League 1971–1975 Non-League Matters
  5. ^abLondon Spartan League 1975–1987 Non-League Matters
  6. ^abcdefghEast Thurrock United at theFootball Club History Database
  7. ^"East Thurrock United go into liquidation". Southend Echo. 1 September 2023. Retrieved7 November 2023.
  8. ^abJon Weaver (2005)The Football Grounds of Rural Essex, p20
  9. ^Football: East Thurrock legend Sam Higgins set to leave club Your Thurrock, 28 May 2019

External links

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51°31′20″N0°27′42″E / 51.52222°N 0.46167°E /51.52222; 0.46167

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