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  2. Villa Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villa_Park

    Villa Park is a football stadium in Aston, Birmingham, with a seating capacity of 42,785. [4] It has been the home of Premier League club Aston Villa since 1897. The ground is less than a mile from both Witton and Aston railway stations and has hosted sixteen England internationals at senior level, the first in 1899 and the most recent in 2005.

  3. Aston Villa F.C. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aston_Villa_F.C.

    Aston Villa's current home venue is Villa Park; the team previously played at Aston Park (1874–1876) and Wellington Road (1876–1897). Villa Park is the largest football stadium in the English Midlands, and the eighth largest stadium in England.

  4. Wellington Road (Perry Barr) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wellington_Road_(Perry_Barr)

    However, with an uneven pitch and growing crowds, it became increasingly apparent that a new ground was required. Villa moved to Villa Park towards the end of the 1896–97 season, with the last league match played at Wellington Road on 22 March 1897. Villa beat Bolton Wanderers 6–2, with a crowd of 8,000 in attendance. [1]

  5. History of Aston Villa F.C. (1874–1961) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Aston_Villa_F.C...

    Aston Villa Football Club were formed in 1874, by fifteen members [Report by the Sports Argus on a talk by co-founder Jack Hughes, 1899] of the Wesleyan Chapel at Villa Cross (known as early as 1867 as Aston Villa Wesleyan Chapel) [1] [2] in Lozells. Four of the founders were Jack Hughes, Frederick Matthews, Walter Price and William Scattergood.

  6. Development of stadiums in English football - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Development_of_stadiums_in...

    The Stadium of Light was one of the first new stadiums to be built during the modern era, opening in 1997 as replacement for 99-year-old Roker Park, with then chairman Bob Murray having decided in the early 1990s that a new stadium was the best option as Roker Park was unsuitable for converting into an all-seater stadium as its confined ...

  7. List of Aston Villa F.C. seasons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Aston_Villa_F.C...

    The Aston Villa team of 1897 that won The Double. This is a list of seasons played by Aston Villa Football Club in English and European football, from 1879 (the year of the club's first FA Cup entry) to the most recent completed season. Aston Villa football club was founded in March, 1874, by members of the Villa Cross Wesleyan Chapel in Aston. Throughout the 1870s, Aston Villa played a small ...

  8. History of Aston Villa F.C. (1961–present) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Aston_Villa_F.C...

    The history of Aston Villa Football Club from 1961 to the current season covers the fluctuating fortunes of the club during the 1960s and 1970s, the European Cup victory in 1982 and the present day Premier League club. The late 1960s was a turbulent time for the club.

  9. Thomas Holte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Holte

    Sir Thomas Holte, 1st Baronet (c. 1571 – 14 December 1654) was an English landowner, responsible for building Aston Hall, in the parish of Aston in Warwickshire. The "Holte End" stand of Villa Park , the stadium of Aston Villa Football Club, sits on land originally part of the Aston Hall gardens and is named after Thomas Holte.