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| An early Magpies team |
Founded in 1880, Dorchester Town Football Club
were Dorset Senior Cup finalists in 1888 and 1890 before joining
the Dorset League in 1896. Despite being founder members of the
league, the club had little success before winning the championship
in 1937/38 with a 2-0 victory at Sherborne on 25th April 1938.
The club joined the Western League in 1947, winning promotion from
Division Two in 1950, and going on to take the league championship
in 1954/55. The fifties proved to be a successful decade for the
Magpies, winning the Dorset Senior Cup for the first time, and having
a number of good runs in the FA Cup facing the likes of Norwich
City, Queens Park Rangers, Port Vale and Plymouth Argyle. In 1954,
Dorchester reached the 2nd Round before eventually losing out to
York City in front of 5,500 fans at the old Avenue ground, in a
season where York went on to reach the semi-finals.
Following four more victories in the Dorset Senior Cup, the club
entered the Southern League (Division One South) in 1972. They first
tasted success in this division when they finished runners-up to
Margate in 1977/78, going unbeaten in the final 16 matches of the
season, with manager David Best utilising his links with old club
AFC Bournemouth to attract former first-teamers such as John O'Rourke,
Jack Howarth and Harry Redknapp to the Avenue.
The formation of the Alliance League (now the Football Conference)
unfortunately meant the Magpies ended up back in the reformed Southern
Division a year later, but the club celebrated its centenary by
winning the Southern Division in 1979/80 by a one point margin over
Aylesbury. Stuart Bell succeeded David Best as manager during the
season, and the Magpies went unbeaten in the last 14 games to clinch
the title. A young Trevor Senior impressed alongside ever-present
top scorer Paul Thorne, whilst Graham Roberts joined neighbours
Weymouth early in the campaign for £6,000 before going on
to star for Tottenham Hotspur and England.
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| Graham Roberts |
Senior stayed with Dorchester for a further two seasons, before
signing for Portsmouth during the 1981/82 season for £35,000,
going on to play for Watford, Middlesbrough and Reading, where he
broke the Berkshire club's all-time goalscoring record. Before leaving
the Magpies, Senior helped the club reach the 2nd Round of the FA
Cup again before losing out to AFC Bournemouth in a replay at Dean
Court in front of a crowd of 8,700. A goal four minutes from the
end of extra time was enough to end Dorchester's dreams of a place
in the third round - a feat they have still yet to achieve.
Relegated at the end of the 1983/84 season following a severe financial
crisis, the club only just avoided dropping out of the league altogether
the following year. However, a remarkable turnaround followed, and
Dorchester returned to the Premier Division as champions at the
end of the 1986/87 season, taking the title following a goalless
draw at runners-up Ashford on the final day of the season.
The return to the top southern division has been a rollercoaster
of emotions for Dorchester fans. Having been a mid-table team for
a number of years, a brush with relegation came at the start of
the nineties, and Stuart Morgan was introduced as manager in 1993.
In his first full season, Morgan took the club to sixth in the league,
followed by the sale of Darren Garner to Rotherham United for £30,000
during the summer.
The following seasons were a mixture of highs-and-lows, flirting
with relegation on a number of occasions, facing Oxford United in
the 1st Round of the FA Cup, reaching the last 16 of the FA Trophy
for only the second time, and finishing fourth in the Premier Division
in 1997/98.
Unfortunately in the following seasons, the Magpies were unable
to rekindle the same form, and following a number of close-shaves
at the wrong end of the table, the club were relegated to the Eastern
Division at the end of the 2000/01 season, despite a strong FA Cup
run culminating in a 3-1 First Round defeat at Wigan Athletic's
impressive 25,000 all-seater JJB Stadium.
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| Southern League Eastern Division Champions
2002/03 |
Under the guidance of manager Mark Morris, Dorchester's young squad
regained their Premier Division status within two years, defeating
King's Lynn on the final day of the 2002/03 season to take the Eastern
Division title ahead of Eastbourne Borough, having won 16 of their
last 17 matches and scoring 114 goals in their 42 league games.
A season earlier the Magpies had picked up the Southern League Cup
for the first time, again defeating King's Lynn in a 4-0 aggregate
victory in the final.
The first season back in the Premier Division was a difficult one
but the club succeeded to reach the end-of-season play-offs, where
two fine victories over Bath City and Tiverton Town saw Dorchester
become a Conference club for the first time in the newly formed
Conference South division. A season later the Magpies almost saw
further play-off glory, but missed out on another promotion opportunity
on the final day of the season, going down 7-3 at Bognor Regis Town.
A mid-table finish the following year ended with the resignation
of Mark Morris - arguably the club's most successful manager in
recent history - with Mick Jenkins taking charge of the first team.
His reign, however, was short-lived. Despite the club's tenth success
in the Dorset Senior Cup, the team narrowly avoided relegation by
finishing 17th in the league, and Jenkins was sacked just a month
later in the wake of Eddie Mitchell taking over the ownership of
the club.
Mitchell's arrival at the helm saw former Dorchester midfielder
Shaun Brooks installed as Director of Football, and the club announced
it would be making the step up to full-time football ready for the
2007/08 season.
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