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Club history
Boston United
Although it was 1933 before the name Boston United first appeared,
football had been played in the town since the late 1800s and, indeed,
always on the same site as the present York Street stadium. The first
time that a team from Boston entered the FA Cup was in 1887. In the
first round they were drawn against Gainsborough Trinity and were
soundly thrashed 7-0. Those early years saw some spectacular defeats in
the FA Cup, including a 9-0 defeat at Lincoln City in 1890 and in the
following season Grimsby Town went one better to notch up a 10-0 win.
By the start of the First World War there were two clubs in Boston,
Boston Town, whose headquarters were "The Coach and Horses," and Boston
Swifts, who used "The Indian Queen" as their HQ. In fact, as both the
public houses were situated on "Main Ridge" and the pitch was virtually
just opposite, it wasn't surprising that for the first 40 years or so
that was what the ground was called. A small stand was erected in the
early 1900s but other than that there were no other facilities, and the
teams changed at the back of the appropriate pub! Both teams were
members of the Lincoln and District League.
After the First World War only one club, called simply Boston, emerged.
After winning the Lincoln and District League in successive seasons, in
1921 the club joined the Midland League as a semi-professional side. In
1925 it went on to achieve the first Boston giant-killing in the FA Cup
by beating the then-powerful Football League club Bradford Park Avenue
1-0 in the second round. The club was also achieving respectable
positions in the Midland League, being runners up in 1924-25, behind
Mansfield Town and again in 1926-27 behind Scunthorpe United. Both
Mansfield and Scunthorpe were non-league sides at this time.
With entrances and dressing rooms at the west end, the ground was now
known as "Shodfriars Lane." At the end of the 1932-33 season, the
directors of Boston FC decided to wind up the club and they took the
company into liquidation. Lack of success had meant that the club was
not bringing in sufficient funds to make continuation of the Midland
League side financially viable. It was proposed to keep football
present in the town by running an amateur team in the Peterborough
League. However, on July 3, a group of Boston FC supporters held a
meeting in the Friendly Societies Hall to discuss an alternative
proposal; to form a new club, to be called Boston United, that would
take the place of Boston FC in the Midland League. There was enough
support for the new proposal, so the new club was born and began
playing in the summer of 1933. It was able to replace Boston FC in the
Midland League and the Lincolnshire League, but was unable to get
agreement from the FA in time to take over Boston's entry to the FA Cup
for the upcoming season. The new club was also able to play on the
Shodfriars Lane ground. For the first few games of the season they wore
the blue strip of the old Boston side, but after a month they switched
to black shirts with a white V-neck as they found that the blue shirts
tended to fade and were looking untidy.
In January 1934, Ernest Malkinson, a local entertainment entrepreneur,
was elected to the board. For most of the next 70 years, the Malkinson
family, owners of the Gliderdrome bingo and dance hall, were one of the
driving forces behind Boston United as the club established themselves
as a major semi-professional side.
In 1936, a player who is arguably the most famous to ever pull on a
United shirt joined the club. It was Freddy Tunstall, the former
Sheffield United and England winger. He had made seven appearances for
England between 1923 and 1925 and was England captain for matches
against Canada and France. He had also scored the only goal in the 1925
FA Cup Final when Sheffield United beat Cardiff City at Wembley Stadium
in front of 91,763 fans. Tunstall was soon appointed as player-manager
at Boston and went on to become the longest-serving manager in the
club's history with a total of almost nine seasons in charge to his
credit.
The club would find major success elusive until 1954 when they
appointed former Derby County goalkeeper Ray Middleton as their new
player-manager. Middleton put together a squad that would challenge for
honours over the next few seasons. Many of his signings were from his
former club and when Boston reached the second round of the FA Cup in
1955-56, Middleton was delighted to be drawn against Derby County at
their Baseball Ground. With six former Derby players in the United team
they won by an amazing 6-1 margin. This is still a record score by a
non-league club against a League club on their own ground. A brave
fight against Tottenham Hotspur in the third round wasn't enough to
stop them going out. They also finished as runners-up to Peterborough
United in the Midland League that season, their best-ever performance.
Attendances at Boston at that time were averaging 5,000 to 6,000 for
league games, and when floodlights were first used for the visit of
Corby Town in 1955 over 9,000 people were in the ground!
In a search for more honours, and a Football League place, United
joined the Southern League for the 1958-59 season, finishing third in
the North Western Zone. A mid-table position was all that was gained
the next year, while the following season saw them rock-bottom and they
resigned and spent 1961-62 in the Central Alliance completing a league
and cup "double." The next season they re-joined the "new" Midland
League but by 1964 financial problems were at such a point they were
forced to resign and to keep the club name alive while they sorted
themselves out, they ran an amateur side in the local Boston and
District league during 1964-65.
Season 1965-66 saw the start of the climb back to senior non-league
football with a United Counties League and cup "double." Refused entry
back into the Midland League in 1967, they became something of an
oddity by being an east coast club playing in the West Midlands League!
The travelling didn't seem to bother them as they won the championship
both years and the League Cup as well in the second year. 1968 saw
United as founder-members of the newly-formed Northern Premier League
and the start of an 11-year period in which all kinds of honours were
won and records were set.
Only twice were they not involved in the championship race, winning it
a record four times. Boston were the first club ever to win a NPL
"treble" of league, cup and shield. The League Cup was won twice, the
NPL Shield four times and the non-league Champions of Champions Trophy
twice. United also created a record of conceding only three goals at
home in league games in a whole season, 51 consecutive home and away
league games without a defeat, and 64 home league games (over three
years) without a defeat. During this period a number of FA Cup triumphs
over Football League opposition were gained and, notably, a return to
the Baseball Ground in 1974 when they held Derby County, the team which
would finish in third place in the league that season and win it the
following season, to a 0-0 draw. The replay saw 11,000 spectators at
York Street by which name the ground was now known and Derby through
with few problems.
United received a huge body-blow in 1977 when Football League inspectors failed the ground as being suitable for the Football League, and although United were NPL champions yet again, runners-up Wigan Athletic were put forward instead and were elected. The United directors unanimously agreed that this must never happen again, and so commenced the vast undertaking of rebuilding virtually the whole of the York Street Ground, launching new fundraising schemes in 1978. The local population backed them incredibly, and new floodlights, stands, toilets, turnstiles, terracing and snackbars turned York Street into the stadium it now is. Unfortunately, with priorities being centred off the field, memorable events as regards the playing side were few and far after United joined the Alliance Premier League in 1979 as founder members, third place was their highest ever placing in their first spell in the top non-league competition. The highest point they enjoyed was most certainly in 1984-85 when they celebrated 50 years by reaching Wembley in the FA Trophy final. Although they went down fighting 2-1 to Gola League Champions Wealdstone, there were over 12,000 Boston supporters that day in the crowd of 20,775. About 5,000 of them turned out again the next day to welcome the team back to Boston. In the 1992-93 season the club finished bottom of the Conference and were relegated to the Northern Premier League. They did however also reintroduce a reserve side, playing in the TSW Printers Lincolnshire League, which consisted mainly of local players. In the 1995-96 season, United finished as runners-up in the UniBond League but an administrative error meant that they were unable to take the promotion spot and return to the Vauxhall Conference. At the end of the season, long serving chairman, Pat Malkinson "stepped down" allowing him to devote more time to his business commitments. Long-serving vice-chairman Sydney Burgess stepped up to take the reins and immediately introduced a new youth development scheme at York Street. The 1996-97 season saw United enjoy a good cup run for the first time in ten years, finally bowing out to Chester City by a 1-0 margin in the second round proper. They also reached the UniBond League Challenge Cup final, losing 1-0 to county rivals Gainsborough Trinity at Sincil Bank, Lincoln. The 1997-98 season saw the Pilgrims pick up the runners-up trophy again in the UniBond League. The club also introduced a highly successful "Football For Life Scheme" under the guidance of Chris Cook. The youngsters on the scheme won the Lincolnshire Services League Cup at their first attempt and in a close-fought match, lost to Lincoln City Youth in the final of the Lincolnshire Charity Cup by a 2-1 margin. For the 1998-99 season, the Pilgrims moved sideways from the UniBond League into the Dr Martens League. After a poor start which saw them drop into a relegation spot, manager Greg Fee resigned and was replaced by the manager of Stamford AFC, Steve Evans. The turnaround in the club's fortunes was quite dramatic. Although it was always unlikely that Boston would catch up with runaway leaders Nuneaton Borough, they eventually claimed the runners-up spot. The club also had their best run in the FA Trophy since 1993, reaching the quarter-finals before being knocked out by St Albans City. The Pilgrims finally won promotion back to the Conference after a seven-season absence in 1999-2000. They led the Dr. Martens League for much of the season and clinched the title with a victory at York Street over local rivals Grantham Town in front of a huge crowd of over 4,000, with three games to spare. The reserve side won the Lincolnshire League for the first time, completing their matches without losing a single game. In their first season back in the Conference, after a slow start, which saw them go seven games without a win, they began to put the results together and eventually finished in 12th place. For the 2001-2002 season, the club made the decision to go fully professional. This paid dividends when they went on to clinch the Conference title and promotion to the Football League. Boston were subject to an FA investigation in the summer of 2002, but proudly took their place in the Football League, drawing their first match 2-2 with AFC Bournemouth at York Street. Manager Steve Evans left the club during that summer. However, new manager Neil Thompson worked hard to overcome the four-point deficit imposed on the Pilgrims and steer Boston to a respectable position of 15th place. The 2003-2004 season was another unsettled one in United's recent history, with a takeover and a mid-season managerial change at the forefront of the off-field action. However, Steve Evans returned to the club and guided the Pilgrims to their highest-ever league placing of 11th, while the newly-formed Centre of Excellence also enjoyed a fine first season in existence, under the guidance of Daral Pugh and Neil Richardson. The 2004-2005 campaign saw the Pilgrims reach the third round of the FA Cup for the first time in over 30 years, while the youth team replicated this feat by reaching round three of the FA Youth Cup. The first team finished the season in 16th place in the newly-renamed Coca-Cola League Two and striker Andy Kirk became United's first-ever current international, by playing for Northern Ireland during his time with the Pilgrims. Defender Austin McCann, signed from Hearts in the summer of 2004, had an excellent first season at York Street and was duly named "player of the year" by the United supporters. The 2005-2006 season witnessed the Pilgrims claim 11th place in Coca-Cola League Two, although a play-off bid was curtailed by playing budget cutbacks in November and January. Manager Evans overcame the difficulties though and guided his side to a best-ever points tally in the Football League (61) as well as narrowly losing to Doncaster Rovers in the second round of the FA Cup.
The 2006-2007 campaign was a tale of woe for everybody involved at the newly-sponsored 'Staffsmart Stadium' with the season ending in relegation. Players were sold at regular intervals and the remaining squad members and staff went unpaid for the final two months of the season. The Pilgrims took their fight for survival to the last day at Wrexham, but after leading at half-time, United lost 3-1 to lose the Football League status they achieved five years earlier. Drewe Broughton scored eight goals during his loan spell from Chester City, but the Pilgrims were left to look ahead to their first season back in non-league football.
Worse news was still to follow in June 2007 though, with demotion to 'Blue Square North' confirmed after the Pilgrims entered a Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA). It meant that United would begin the 2007-2008 season in the second tier of non-league football for the first time since 2000.
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