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Sunday football's popularity rose rapidly in the 1950s with many more leagues starting to form around England: the Watford Sunday League was founded in 1955, the South Birmingham Sunday League in 1957, the Wolverhampton & District in 1958 and the Middleton & District in 1959.
Several local leagues were set up within Sussex at the end of the 19th century - the West Sussex Football League in 1895, the East Sussex Football League in 1896, the Hastings League in 1897 and the Horsham League in 1898. [3] The Sussex County Football League was created in 1920. [4] The Sussex RUR Cup was set up as a new county football cup ...
The Mid Sussex Football League is an association football league formed in 1900. The league is headed by the Premier Division which is at level eleven of the English football league system and member clubs are based in East Sussex, West Sussex and south-eastern Surrey. Current sponsors are Gray Hooper Holt LLP and the league is currently known ...
After a terrific high school football season in Morris and Sussex ... season in Morris and Sussex counties, see which teams cracked the final Top 10 rankings. ... Group 1 state championship on ...
The club is purely amateur and run by local volunteers. As well as First and Reserve Teams playing Senior level football, the club has a youth section for teams in the Under 8 to Under 18 age-groups, which play and compete in the Sussex Sunday Youth League. Sarah Scott was appointed Club Chair in January 2023, alongside Vice Chair Craig Pooley.
The Sussex County Football Association, also simply known as Sussex County FA or Sussex FA, is the governing body of football in the county of Sussex, England. The Sussex County FA was founded on 23 September 1882 [ 1 ] [ 2 ] and run a number of County Cup competitions at various levels for teams all across the county.
The East Sussex Football League is an English association football competition for amateur teams based in East Sussex and south-west Kent. The league has a total of six divisions, headed by the Premier Division, which sits at level 12 of the national league system .
The area covered by the Sussex County League is coloured in dark blue. Formed in 1920 as the Sussex County Football League, [1] started with just one league with 12 teams. By the end of the 1929–30 season, six of the original twelve teams remained, having played in every campaign since the competition began.