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The Lancashire and Cheshire Amateur Football League is an English association football league founded in 1909. As of the 2024/25 season, the league consists of six divisions – Premier, One, Two and Three, then A and B. Historically the divisions named A-D were for Reserve sides of teams in the top four divisions, but 1st teams can now play at the lower levels.
The Cheshire Association Football League is a football competition based in Cheshire, England, which until 2007 was known as the Mid-Cheshire Association Football League. From season 2017–18, the league operates four divisions: the Premier Division, Divisions One and Two, and a Reserve Division.
The West Cheshire Association Football League (commonly known as the West Cheshire League) is an English football league in the county of Cheshire, which also includes teams from Merseyside. Its current principal sponsor is Carlsberg, also sponsor of the South West Peninsula League. It has a Division One, Division Two and Division Three.
The Cheshire Football Association is the not-for-profit governing body for all football in Cheshire and is responsible for the governance, organisation, education and development of grassroots football. Cheshire FA works in conjunction with the National Football Association and is an enterprising and dynamic SME based in the heart of the county.
In 1931, Stockport Georgians joined the Lancashire & Cheshire Amateur League. [1] In 1987, the club absorbed Adswood Amateurs, taking their place in the Manchester Football League, winning the title in their first season in the league. In 2002, the club won the Manchester Football League for the second time, adding a third title in 2015. [2]
The 2024–25 Combined Counties Football League season (known as the 2024–25 Cherry Red Records Combined Counties Football League for sponsorship reasons) will be the 47th in the history of the Combined Counties Football League, a football competition in England. The league consists of four divisions: the Premier North, the Premier South ...
Cheshire and Manchester Sunday League (1971) Eccles Sunday League (1969) Hyde & District Sunday League (1968) Manchester Accountants Sunday League; Manchester Amateur Sunday League (1947) Middleton and District Sunday League (1959) Oldham Sunday Football League (1970) Stockport and Cheadle Sunday League; Tameside Sunday League (1965)
In 1978 the club re-joined the Cheshire County League, finishing in seventh place in their first season back in the league, 1978–79. They won the league in its final season, 1981–82 [12] before the league merged with the Lancashire Combination to form the North West Counties Football League in which they were founder members in 1982–83 ...