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History
A club called Dewsbury was formed in 1875
following a meeting at the Little Saddle Inn on 22 October
1875.
The first fixture was played near Sugar Field adjacent to
the Crown Flatt ground. The team consisted of seven members
of the committee. The club soon realised they needed a
ground and the following year secured a sub tenancy at Crown
Flatt for £20. 1881 saw the clubs first success in the
Yorkshire Challenge Cup beating Huddersfield, Bradford and
Halifax before an Alfred Newsome drop goal gave them victory
over Wakefield in the Final.
Crown
Flatt was rapidly gaining the reputation as one of the
best-equipped ground in Yorkshire. This was further enhanced
when the club purchased the famous "Noah's Ark" stand at a
cost of £250 Two years later however the club amalgamated
into the Dewsbury and Saville and Dewsbury United Clerks
Cricket club. The Yorkshire Senior Competition was formed in
1892 and Dewsbury immediately became members. However, the
club struggled and finished in the bottom three due to
financial problems. It therefore came as a big surprise
that, at the famous meeting at the George Hotel, Dewsbury
were the only members of the YSC not to agree to form the
Northern Union. They elected to remain in the YSC and
marginally improved their position in the league to 10th.
Next season however they were back at the bottom.
In 1897-98 it was no better and halfway through the season
the club decided to abandon Rugby Football and withdrew from
the league concentrating on soccer instead. A breakaway
movement soon developed and moves were soon afoot to found
the club known today as Dewsbury Rams.
On 21 April 1898 an historic meeting was held at the Black
Bull public house to consider the possibility of forming a
new Northern Union club. The question was discussed at some
length and over £100 in donations was promised. Ironically
it was local rivals Batley who helped Dewsbury gain election
to the Northern Union. They were fully supportive of
Dewsbury's bid and obviously looked forward to rekindling
the rivalry, as well as their pockets, with the derby
matches and also to thank the old Dewsbury Supporters who
had switched their support to Mount Pleasant during the two
or three proceeding seasons.
The club therefore kicked off it's long history in the
1898-99 season. Many people argued the validity and
otherwise of the centenary celebrations held in 1975,
holding that the centenary should not have been held until
1998. Whichever way you look at it, Crown Flatt was the
centre of rugby in Dewsbury from 1875 until The Stadium Fire
in 1989.
Dewsbury's
only championship title came in the 1972/73 season when they
beat Leeds in the play-off final at Bradford's Odsal Stadium
22-13. Dewsbury, captained by Mike Stephenson finished 8th
in the league but, for the final time until their
reintroduction in 1998, the title was to be decided through
a series of play-offs in which they also defeated Oldham,
Featherstone and Warrington on their way to glory.
On 13 September 1988, at about 4pm, three youths
deliberately set fire to the historic wooden stand erected
in 1914. The stand was in excellent condition considering
the club had just spent £25,000 bringing it up to the
required safety standards. The tragedy is that the stand was
not the only thing lost. The club also lost everything
gathered over the past 113 years; programmes, records and
memorabilia.
However, the fire enabled the club
to build a new state of the art stadium in the Shaw Cross
area of Dewsbury (Owl Lane) and on the 14 April 1991
Dewsbury RLFC played their last home game at the dilapidated
ground against Barrow and went on to stage their home games
at Mount Pleasant, home of neighbours Batley, while the new
ground was being built.
The club played their first home game at the new Crown Flatt
stadium (often, but erroneously, called New Crown Flatt), as
the ground was originally Christened, on 6th September 1994
in front of a packed house again against Barrow, a match they
won 82-6. The stadium has two covered stands, one seated and
one standing with an approximate capacity of 3,500 including
900 seats and fantastic disabled facilities. As part of the
Rams' Community Development Programme, the stadium also
hosts matches for a number of other organisations. This
ranges from local schools matches, representative amateur
and student rugby league games to American football matches
and fun days. The ground was renamed to Ram Stadium in 1998
and then in 2005 to the Tetley's Stadium. There are plans to
develop the complex over the next couple of years as the
club aims to bring the ground up to Super League standards.
The Rams have enjoyed a high degree of success in recent
years. They finished top of what was then known as the
Northern Ford Premiership for 2 consecutive seasons in 1999
and 2000, as well as winning the Grand Final and
Trans-Pennine Cup in 2000 (endearingly termed by Rams fans
as the Grand Slam). The NFP was the division below Super
League, the sport's elite division, and despite the Rams'
sustained success they were denied entry due mainly to an
insufficient stadium capacity. The Rams proposed ground
sharing with Sheffield Eagles playing home games at their
Don Valley Stadium while Dewsbury's stadium was improved,
this was turned down by the RFL however. After a difficult
couple of seasons which saw the club relegated to Rugby
League's 3rd tier for the first time in 10 years, the Rams
enjoyed great success in National League Two in 2005 thanks
mainly to a successful recruitment drive which brought
several big names to the club. The Rams went on to reach the
play-off final where they were defeated by NL1 strugglers
and local rivals Batley Bulldogs, 28-26. The team's last
piece of silverware was won on Boxing Day 2005 when they
beat Batley Bulldogs in the annual Boxing Day Challenge.
After a successful 2005, the Rams'
recruitment drive picked up pace again. The club brought in
several new faces in 2006 which promised to be another
successful year for the developing club and, as was in 2005,
the main aim was promotion to NL1.
2006
was the year the Rams did it. 19 wins from 22 games saw the
Rams crowned National League Two Champions, finishing 2
points ahead of eventual Grand Final winners Sheffield
Eagles. With the Championship comes promotion to National
League One and a new set of objectives. The first of which
will surely be survival in the first season of NL1 rugby.
Andy Kelly has retained most of the NL2 winning squad and
has also brought in several new players as well as some of
the local young talent, who will be keen to kick things off
with the annual boxing day bash at Mount Pleasant this
winter. |