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OFFICIAL THORNBURY TOWN MATCH PROGRAMME - £1.50
RED Black SEASON 2013/2014
DAVID WILSON HOMES GLOUCESTERSHIRE COUNTY LEAGUE
KINGS STANLEY SATURDAY 3RD MAY 2014 - 3PM
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19th October 2013 King Stanley Thornbury Town
Previous Meetings
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14th May 2013 Thornbury Town King Stanley 3th November 2012 Kings Stanley Thornbury Town
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Kings Stanley - 3rd May 2014
they finished third to gain promotion, but were relegated in 1977-78, only to bounce back after just one season. 1980-81 saw them relegated again and it was not until the 1986-87 that they returned to Division 1, but their topsy-turvy form continued and they were relegated at the end of the 198788 season. True to form they regained Division 1 status at the first time of asking and remained they’re until 2003, recording their longest consecutive run in the first division. In 1985 the club joined forces with the Kings Stanley Cricket Club to build a Sports Club, which was opened in 1986 to provide the clubs with some excellent facilities and it is no coincidence that the fortunes of the Football Club improved, as the honours list will show. The Senior League Division One title and the Senior Amateur County Cup had eluded the Bluebells, until the 2002-03 season, when, under the guidance of manager Steve Doughty, they claimed both to give the Club a season to remember with a remarkable League and Cup Double. The following season, Kings Stanley were accepted into the County League for the first time in their history. After leading the club through one of the most successful periods in the clubs history, Doughty resigned at the start of the 2007-08 season leaving the club in some turmoil, but Ian Grenfell Williams took on the managers position and with Russell Tritton as assistant the duo steered the club back on course to finish in a respectable mid table position. Russell Tritton became manager for the 2008-09 season with club stalwart Bob Hartfield as his
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and did an excellent job with the side finishing in a creditable 8th position in the league. The following season former player Andy Jones took over but was forced to stand down due to work commitments and first team skipper Sam Prior stepped into the breach and did an excellent job to end the season in 8th position. With Prior still in charge, last season was one of mixed fortunes. After an excellent start our form dipped and we had to settle for a mid table finish, but we did have something to show for our seasons efforts winning the Les James League Cup against local rivals Taverners to gain revenge for our defeat by them in the Final in 2009-10.
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Kings Stanley Football; Club was founded in 1907 and played their first competitive game in Stroud League Division 2 in season 1908-09. The club has not missed a season in the Stroud League since they joined, other than two breaks enforced by the two World Wars.. The Club’s headquarters in those days was the Red Lion Inn and it remained so until the pubs closure in the early 70’s. Stanley did not actually start to play football in Kings Stanley as their home games were played on the’ Marsh Field’, which is on the border with Leonard Stanley. They used this field until they moved to their present location at the Marling Close in 1921. Kings Stanley 2XI played in the first ever Division 4 of the Stroud League in the 1920-21 season and claimed the Clubs first championship. The most successful period in the clubs history to date was from 1925 to 1937, when they dominated football in the Stroud area, as can be seen from the clubs honours list. The club joined the newly formed Northern Senior League’s first season in 1922-23 but left after only one season but returned for a spell from 1935-39 before leaving again. They returned in the 1946-47 season and were ever present members until they gained promotion to the Gloucestershire County League following the 2002-03 season, a period of 57 years. Kings Stanley gained promotion to the First Division of the Senior League for the first time following the 1958-59 season but were relegated at the end of the 1960-61 season following an exodus of key players at the end of the previous season. They remained in Division 2 until 1972 –73 when
Club History
assistant and they built on the foundations laid the previous season to claim runners up position in the County League, the highest position in the clubs history and also winning the Les James League Cup to end a very successful season. 2009-10 season saw the Bluebells finish in 6th position and despite getting to the League Cup final again, were unable to produce their best form on the day and finished runners up to local rivals Taverners. Ian Grenfell Williams returned as first team manager for the 2010-11 season and was faced with rebuilding the side following the departure of a number of players to Hellenic League football
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RED&BLACK // Thornbury Town v Berkeley Town
Season 2002/03 also saw the team win the County Cup and Stroud Charity Cup for a remarkable treble under the leadership of Terry Stevenson and his assistant Gary Watkins. Promotion was achieved at the first time of asking the following season, taking the club straight into Division 1 where they would join local rivals such as Sharpness, Cam and Kingswood. In their first season, under the leadership of new
The 1998/99 season (ironically the clubs centenary) was a disastrous one for the club as the first team were relegated to Stroud League Division 1. However, four seasons of rebuilding culminated in the Stroud League Division 1 title and promotion back to the Northern Senior League Division 2.
It was not until 1946 that Northern Senior League football returned to Berkeley but this time the stay was longer, some 43 years. This ended in 1989, when winning the Division One championship took the club into the Gloucestershire County League for the first time. Unfortunately this only lasted two seasons before the club returned to the Northern Senior League.
Founded in 1898, Berkeley Town Football Club joined the Dursley & District League and remained there until 1923. The club was then elected to the Northern Senior League, but stayed only two years before returning to the Dursley & District League.
Club History
Berkeley Town
The 2010/11 season proved to be the clubs most successful to date in the County League as they achieved
The 2008/09 and 2009/10 seasons saw the club go through a transitional period, with many reserve team and younger players given the chance to play in the first team. Despite the sides inexperience it was still able to maintain its County League status. In the 2009/10 season the first team reached the final of the Stroud Charity Cup, but despite a fantastic team effort were narrowly beaten on penalties by local rivals Slimbridge.
Further improvement was to follow in the 2007/08 season, when under the guidance of former managers Terry Stevenson and Phil Orsborn, achieved a respectable 12th position with a young and inexperienced side.
After a slow start to the 2006/07 season, the Hunters finished the season with a respectable four wins, and three draws from ten games to finish well clear of relegation.
It was the nucleus of this team, coupled with the experienced management of Dougie Gray and Steve Billett, that became champions of the Northern Senior League in the 2005/06 season in only the second season of competing in the league, leading to a return to the County League after an absence of 16 years.
manager Phil Orsborn, the team finished a respectable 4th place as a result of several memorable performances against their local rivals.
Daniel Turner Thomas Palmer Samuel Strickland Daniel Gayner Smith, Shaw, Crowcombe
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Recent Form
The 2012/13 saw the first team overcome its biggest challenge since
The 2011/12 was another season in which the club consolidated its County League status, a strong second half of the season ensured relegation was avoided. Better was to follow in the Stroud Charity Cup final, when the Hunters beat Longlevens to claim the trophy they had narrowly missed out on 2 years earlier.
a respectable 11th place under the management duo of Phil Orsborn and Lee Mason. An excellent team spirit was formed, which led to a number of excellent results against the top sides in the league.
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18 May 2013 Berkeley Town Thornbury Town
2nd November 2013 Berkeley Town 3 Thornbury Town 3
1st March 2014 Thornbury Town Berkeley Town
Previous Meetings
The 2013/14 took a similar direction to that of the previous season, with the first team well adrift at the bottom of the table for the majority of the season. However, they were unable to repeat the same heroics and despite a late surge finished joint bottom with Yate Town Reserves.
joining the league. With only 7 points from 19 games at the end of February and a change of Manager, with Pete Lavis being assisted by Lee Mason, the team achieved the impossible to avoid relegation. Accumulating 24 points in the remaining games saw the team leap frog Taveners and DRG Frenchay to avoid relegation by a single point.
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André Breton was an original member of the Dada group who went on to start and lead the Surrealist movement in 1924. In New York, Breton and his colleagues curated Surrealist exhibitions that introduced ideas of automatism and intuitive art making to the first Abstract Expressionists. - ArtStory.org
Selected Poems Andre Breton
Born in 1888 and killed during World War I, Antonio Sant'Elia was an Italian visionary architect who brilliantly anticipated in his remarkable sketches and futurist manifesto many of the characteristics of the great metropolises of the modern age. - Google Books
Manifesto Of Futurist Architecture Antonio Sant’Elia
"Hamlet" is the story of the Prince of Denmark who learns of the death of his father at the hands of his uncle, Claudius. - GoodReads.com
The Tragedy of Hamlet Prince of Denmark William Shakespeare
“As a story, it is superb, packed with the matter of picaresque romance: blood, lust, adventure, vulgarity, comedy, tragedy.” - New York Times
For Whom The Bell Tolls Ernest Hemmingway
PENGUIN COLLECTED A Selection Of Texts From The Penguin Catalogue PENGUIN COLLECTED: A Selection Of Texts From The Penguin Catalogue Hemmingway - Shakespeare - Breton - Sant’Elia
Manifesto of Futurist Architecture
Antonio Sant’Elia
Andre Breton
Selected Poems
A Selection of Texts from the Penguin Catalogue
Hamlet
William Shakespeare
PENGUIN COLLECTED
For Whom The Bell Tolls
Ernest Hemmingway
PENGUIN BOOKS
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Chapter 26
It was three o’clock in the afternoon before the planes came. The snow had all been gone by noon and the rocks were hot now in the sun. There were no clouds in the sky and Robert Jordan sat in the rocks with his shirt off browning his back in the sun and reading the letters that had been in the pockets of the dead cavalryman. From time to time he would stop reading to look across the open slope to the line of the timber, look over the high country above and then return to the letters. No more cavalry had appeared. At intervals there would be the sound of a shot from the direction of El Sordo’s camp. But the firing was desultory. From examining his military papers he knew the boy was from Tafalla in Navarra, twenty-one years old, unmarried, and the son of a blacksmith. His regiment was the Nth cavalry, which surprised Robert Jordan, for he had believed that regiment to be in the North. He was a Carlist, and he had been wounded at the fighting for Irun at the start of the war. I’ve probably seen him run through the streets ahead of the bulls at the feria in Pamplona, Robert Jordan thought. You never kill any one that you want to kill in a war, he said to himself. Well, hardly ever,
been killed or badly wounded since she wrote last. She mentioned ten who were killed. That is a great many for a town the size of Tafalla, Robert Jordan thought.
with the Reds to liberate Spain from the domination of the Marxist hordes. Then there was a list of those boys from Tafalla who had
and dealt almost entirely with local happenings. They were from his sister and Robert Jordan learned that everything was all right in Tafalla, that father was well, that mother was the same as always but with certain complaints about her back, that she hoped he was well and not in too great danger and she was happy he was doing away
he amended and went on reading the letters. The first letters he read were very formal, very carefully written
– Penguin Collected: A Selection From The Penguin Catalouge –
There was quite a lot of religion in the letter and she prayed to Saint Anthony, to the Blessed Virgin of Pilar, and to other Virgins to protect him and she wanted him never to forget that he was also protected by the Sacred Heart of Jesus that he wore still, she trusted, at all times over his own heart where it had been proven innumerable—this was underlined—times to have the power of stopping bullets. She was as always his loving sister Concha. This letter was a little stained around the edges and Robert Jordan put it carefully back with the military papers and opened a letter with a less severe handwriting. It was from the boy’s novia, his fiancée, and it was quietly, formally, and completely hysterical with concern for his safety. Robert Jordan read it through and then put all the letters together with the papers into his hip pocket. He did not want to read the other letters. I guess I’ve done my good deed for today, he said to himself. I guess you have all right, he repeated. “What are those you were reading?” Primitivo asked him. “The documentation and the letters of that requeté we shot this morning. Do you want to see it?” “I can’t read,” Primitivo said. “Was there anything interesting?” “No,” Robert Jordan told him. “They are personal letters.” “How are things going where he came from? Can you tell
never send to know for whom the bell tolls; It tolls for thee. — JOHN DONNE
if a Mannor of thy friends or of thine owne were; any mans death diminishes me, because I am involved in Mankinde; And therefore
No man is an Iland, intire of it selfe; every man is a peece of the Continent, a part of the maine; if a Clod bee washed away by the Sea, Europe is the lesse, as well as if a Promontorie were, as well as
For Whom the Bell Tolls Ernest Hemingway
– Penguin Collected: A Selection From The Penguin Catalouge –
Creation of a digital design from a child’s drawing which won a competition to design a new logo for Dunmore House at Orchard School, Bristol
VIVA VIVA EVENTS
Logo design for a students event company
A screen shot of my live installation which used circles of varying diameters to portray the ETA of tube train at a selection of tube stations.
University Degree Final Major Project
University project where we were given a random company to produce an advertising campaign for.