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The
first Horsham Football Club was founded in 1871, though
its existence largely depended upon enough players being
available to form a side. In 1881 the club was firmly
re-established, playing its first game against Dorking,
and, in September 1882, helped found the Sussex County
Football Association, with club official A. R. Bostock
becoming one of three original Vice Presidents. Horsham
became founder members of the West Sussex Senior League
in 1896, winning the championship in 1899-00, 1900-01
and 1901-02, and claiming the Royal Irish Rifles Cup in
1900 by defeating the champions of the East Sussex
Senior League, Hastings. After having played at both
Hurst Park and Springfield Park, the club secured Queen
Street as its permanent home in 1904, but some lean form
over the ensuing years saw Horsham overlooked when the
Sussex County League was created in 1920. The club
eventually became members of that competition after
winning the West Sussex Senior League for the fourth
time in 1925-26.
This was a golden age for
the club and the County League was won in 1932,1933,
1935, 1936, 1937 and 1938, regularly scoring over one
hundred goals a season. The Sussex RUR Cup was taken in
1931, 1932, 1934, 1935, 1936, 1937 and 1938, and the
Sussex Senior Cup in 1934 and 1939. After the break
brought on by hostilities, Horsham won the first
post-war title in 1947, the RUR Cup in 1946, 1949 and
1951, and the Sussex Senior Cup in 1950.
In
1947-48 Horsham reached the First Round Proper of the FA
Cup for the first time, taking a first
minute lead against Tommy Lawton's Notts County, before
losing 9-1. For many years Horsham had been looking to
test themselves at a higher level but had seen their
annual applications to join the Athenian League come to
nothing. In 1951 the club changed tack and successfully
applied to become members of the Metropolitan League.
This was a league that included the 'A' sides of top
Football League clubs, the reserve sides of
'professional' non-league clubs and a few amateur teams.
Despite some people insisting the Sussex club could not
compete at such a level, Horsham answered their critics
in the best possible way by winning the championship at
the first attempt. However, over the years the league
became stronger and stronger and eventually the amateur
clubs struggled to make any impact at all. Having
decided to quit the league in 1956-57, Horsham finished
that season at the foot of the table. During this spell
the Senior Cup was won for the fourth time in 1953-54
when Whitehawk & Manor Farm were beaten 1-0 at
Brighton's Goldstone Ground. The RUR Cup was also won in
1952 and (for the last time) in 1957. In 1957 the club
joined the amateur Corinthian League and began a period
of consistent progress, finishing thirteenth, ninth,
eighth and fifth before their best ever season in
1961-62 when third place was achieved.
Following
a mass exodus of players, a young, local team then
finished twelfth in 1962-63 after which the league
merged with the Delphian and Athenian Leagues to form
the new three division Athenian League. The Corinthian
League became the new Division One and Horsham finished
thirteenth in 1963-64 and fourth in 1964-65 before a
strong team consistently underachieved in 1965-66,
finishing in fifteenth place and becoming the first
Horsham side ever to be relegated. Under coach Pat
Tobin, Horsham rebuilt their team in an effort to fight
their way back to Division One and this reaped dividends
in 1966-67 when the club once again reached the First
Round Proper of the FA Cup when Swindon Town made the
trip to Queen Street and emerged 3-0 victors in front of
an 8,000 record crowd. Despite this achievement, this
was a frustrating period of near misses for the club. In
the league, promotion was just out of reach as the team
finished third, third and fifth - and to make matters
worse Horsham fell to three consecutive defeats in the
final of the Sussex Senior Cup. The club (nicknamed the
Hornets by their supporters in a popular competition in
the 1968-69 season) appointed former Eastbourne United
boss Roy Osborne as their new manager and the change
brought immediate success, with the Division Two
championship being won in 1969-70, and the Division One
championship followed in 1972-73. The Sussex Senior Cup
was then won again in 1972 when Whitehawk were defeated
2-1, again, at the Goldstone Ground.
Instead of taking their
place in the Athenian League Premier Division, Horsham
became members of the Isthmian League when that
competition expanded to two divisions in 1973-74. The
club finished eighth in its first season, and rounded
the season off in style by once again winning the Sussex
Senior Cup, defeating Worthing 2-1 in a competitive
final. Another eighth place finish was secured in
1974-75 before Osborne left the club, with Tony
Elkins-Green taking over the reins. Though Horsham
finished only 11th in 1975-76, the Sussex Senior Cup was
won again with another 2-1 win, this time over Hastings
United. 1976-77 saw the Hornets have their best Isthmian
season, with a sixth place finish, though 1977-78 was a
poor year in which the team finished sixteenth, with
Elkins-Green departing in September to be replaced by
popular former player Tex Wiltshire. The highlight of
the year was a first ever win in the Sussex Floodlight
Cup when Worthing were defeated in the Final. In 1978-79
Horsham made a concerted bid for promotion, though money
problems before the end of the season did not help the
final push and the team eventually finished fifth, the
club's highest ever position. However, the club's
troubles were far worse than many had realised and only
the dedicated work of chairman Frank King saw the club
saved from bankruptcy and dissolution. A young, amateur
team finished bottom of Division One in 1979-80 and the
club was relegated to the new Division Two. Battling
against their financial problems, the club endured some
dark times under numerous managers in the 1980s,
finishing bottom of the league in 1983-84 (though only
after being deducted two points for fielding an
unregistered player).
Horsham
finished bottom of Division Two South in 1989-90 but a
successful relegation play-off
against Letchworth Garden City maintained the club's
Isthmian status. Progress was made under the management
of Peter Evans from 1990 during which time the club
reached the final qualifying round of the FA Cup only to
lose to neighbours Crawley Town after a replay, though
under his replacement, John Yems, Horsham once again
propped up the entire league in 1993-94. This led to the
appointment of former captain Mark Dunk as manager and
he led his side to the Division Three championship in
1995-96. After narrowly missing out on a second
successive promotion, Dunk departed in 1997 with the
club enduring three years of lower mid-table obscurity
under Russell Mason and Nick Coombes before former
Crawley Town boss John Maggs took over as manager in
January 2000. After taking a struggling side out of the
relegation zone in 1999-00, the following season a
seventh place finish was achieved. Horsham then finished
runners-up in Division Two in 2001-02, rounding off a
successful campaign by beating Crawley Town to win the
Sussex Floodlight Cup for the second time. Following the
league re-organisation, Horsham found themselves in
Division One South in 2002-03, finishing eighth. 2003-04
was a year of struggle as teams competed to win places
in the newly restructured non-league pyramid and Horsham
finished fifteenth, thus finding themselves in Division
One for 2004-05. That season again saw a promotion
charge fade away with the Hornets finishing third and
losing a promotion play-off final to Bromley at Queen
Street by 3-1.
Promotion
to the Premier Division was achieved in 2005/6, with the
Hornets finishing runners-up on goal difference, and the
final of the Senior Cup was reached for the first time
since 1979 but Horsham lost in extra time. Their first
ever season in the Premier Division saw the
Hornets finish a highly creditable eighth, and a promotion challenge in 2007/8
again fell away to see the club end up eleventh.
However, the team beat Maidenhead United 4-1 to reach
the Second Round Proper of the FA Cup for the first time
where two games were played against eventual League One
champions, Swansea City, both matches shown live on Sky
TV.
Having sold their ground
for redevelopment at the end of the season, Horsham
played at Worthing during 2008-9 and reached the fourth
Qualifying Round of the FA Cup where they took
Conference side Stevenage Borough to a replay before
ending an injury-ravaged year in thirteenth place.
Season 2009/10 saw a
return to Horsham, entering into a groundshare agreement
with their old neighbours Horsham YMCA as their quest
for a new ground continued.
Disappointing in the cup competitions, the Hornets
enjoyed a decent league campaign and looked set to take
one of the promotion play-off places until a late slump
left them in mid-table. By contrast, a poor start to the
following season left the club in the relegation places
for much of the campaign, with their Premier Division
status only maintained with two matches remaining.
An acute overhaul of the
club's finances in 2011 resulted in the departure of
Maggs after eleven years at the helm but his successor,
Justin Luchford, lasted just three months before he
himself was replaced by Hugo Langton. With no
improvement in results, the club parted company with
Langton as former Worthing boss Simon Colbran became
Horsham's fourth manager in twelve months but he was
unable to prevent the club from suffering relegation for
the first time since 1980.
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