1984–85 Combined Counties Football League
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1984–85 Combined Counties Football League
The 1984–85 Combined Counties Football League season was the seventh in the history of the Combined Counties Football League, a football competition in England. The league was won by newcomers Malden Vale for the first time. Another new club, Southwick, finished as runners-up and were promoted to the Isthmian League. League table The league was increased from 17 to 19 clubs after Alton Town, Chessington United, Guildford & Worplesdon and Yateley Town left and six new clubs joined: * Farleigh Rovers, joining from the Surrey Premier League. * Fleet Town, joining from the Athenian League. * Horley Town, joining from the Athenian League. * Malden Vale, joining from the London Spartan League. *Merstham, joining from the London Spartan League. * Southwick, transferred from the Sussex County League The Southern Combination Football League (named Premier Sports Southern Combination Football League) is a football league broadly covering the counties of East Sussex, West Sussex ...
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Combined Counties Football League
The Combined Counties Football League is a regional men's Association football, football league in south-eastern England with members in Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Hampshire, Hertfordshire, Kent, Middlesex, Oxfordshire, Surrey, and the western half of Greater London, featuring a number of semi-professional clubs. It is sponsored by Cherry Red Records and is officially known as the Cherry Red Records Combined Counties Football League. It was founded in 1922 as the Surrey Senior League and was renamed in 1978 to the Combined Counties League. Initially, the league was a single division, but it consists now of 63 teams in three divisions: Premier Division North, Premier Division South and Division One. The league also has a new Division Two of nine teams, many being reserve and development teams, six teams competing in an Under-23 Development Division, known as the John Bennett Development Division, and 20 Under-18 teams split across North and South divisions, known as the Tony Fo ...
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Merstham F
Merstham is a town in the borough of Reigate and Banstead in Surrey, England. It lies 17 miles south of Charing Cross just beyond the Greater London border. Part of the North Downs Way runs along the northern boundary of the town. Merstham has community associations, an early medieval church and a football club. Neighbourhoods Old Merstham Old Merstham forms the north and north-west of modern Merstham and is the original village centre. There is a small day school by the railway station, a pub, a few barbershops and a small number of other shops. The Merstham Estate/New Merstham After World War II the London County Council built the Merstham Estate, originally entirely public housing, to a geometric layout in the eastern fields. This area has its own parade of shops, the Brook recreation ground, three schools, and a youth/community centre along Radstock Way. Oakley, a small country house, is listed and has Victorian gothic architecture features. South Merstham South Mersth ...
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Cove F
A cove is a small bay or coastal inlet. They usually have narrow, restricted entrances, are often circular or oval, and are often situated within a larger bay. Small, narrow, sheltered bays, inlets, creeks, or recesses in a coast are often considered coves. Colloquially, the term can be used to describe a sheltered bay. Geomorphology describes coves as precipitously walled and rounded cirque-like openings like a valley extending into or down a mountainside, or in a hollow or nook of a cliff or steep mountainside. A cove can also refer to a corner, nook, or cranny, either in a river, road, or wall, especially where the wall meets the floor. Formation Coves are formed by differential erosion Weathering is the deterioration of Rock (geology), rocks, soils and minerals (as well as wood and artificial materials) through contact with water, atmospheric gases, sunlight, and biological organisms. It occurs ''in situ'' (on-site, with litt ..., which occurs when softer rocks are wo ...
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Cobham F
Cobham may refer to: Places * Cobham, Kent, England * Cobham, Surrey, England * Cobham, South Australia, a former town in Australia * Cobham, Albemarle County, Virginia, United States * Cobham, Surry County, Virginia, United States Aviation * Cobham (company), a British aerospace manufacturing company * Cobham Aviation Services (other), an Australian airline People * Cobham (surname) * Baron Cobham * Viscount Cobham Other * Cobham Intermediate School, Burnside, New Zealand * Cobham Oval, a cricket pitch in Whangarei, New Zealand * Cobham Training Centre, Academy of London-based Chelsea Football Club * Cobham's Cubs, a political faction in the eighteenth century See also * Chobham (other) Chobham is a village in Surrey, England. Chobham may also refer to: Places * Chobham Common, near Chobham, Surrey, location of a British tank research centre * Chobham Academy, an academy in the East Village of Stratford, London * Chobham Mano ...
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Hartley Wintney F
Hartley may refer to: Places Australia *Hartley, New South Wales * Hartley, South Australia ** Electoral district of Hartley, a state electoral district Canada *Hartley Bay, British Columbia United Kingdom *Hartley, Cumbria * Hartley, Plymouth, Devon *Hartley Wespall, Hampshire *Hartley, Sevenoaks, Kent * Hartley, Tunbridge Wells, Kent * Hartley, Northumberland (Old Hartley), part of Seaton Sluice *New Hartley, Northumberland United States * Hartley, California *Hartley, Iowa * Hartley, Michigan * Hartley, South Dakota *Hartley, Texas *Hartley County, Texas *Brohard, West Virginia, also Hartley Zimbabwe * Chegutu, formerly Hartley People * Hartley (surname) * Hartley Burr Alexander, (1873–1939), American philosopher * Hartley Alleyne (born 1957), Barbadian cricketer * Hartley Booth (born 1946), British politician * Hartley Coleridge (1796–1849), English writer * Hartley Craig (1917–2007), Australian cricketer * Hartley Douglas Dent (1929–1993), Canadian polit ...
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Frimley Green F
Frimley is a town in the Borough of Surrey Heath, in Surrey, England. It lies approximately south-west of central London. The town is of Saxon origin, although it is not listed in Domesday Book of 1086. History The name ''Frimley'' is derived from the Saxon name ''Fremma's Lea'', which means "Fremma's clearing". The land was owned by Chertsey Abbey from 673 to 1537 and was a farming village. More recently, it was a coach stop on a road between London and Portsmouth and Southampton for about four hundred years. Frimley was not listed in Domesday Book of 1086, but is shown on the map as ''Fremely'', its spelling in 933 AD. Frimley Lunatic Asylum was opened in 1799; it catered for both male and female patients, and received four patients from Great Fosters, Egham. Magistrates visited in 1807 and ordered the proprietors to stop chaining the patients. An 1811 inventory from Frimley Workhouse can be seen on the Surrey County Council website. The present St. Peter's Church w ...
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Chobham F
Chobham is a village and civil parish in the Borough of Surrey Heath in Surrey, England. The village has a small high street area, specialising in traditional trades and motor trades. The River Bourne and its northern tributary, the Hale, Mill Bourne or Windle Brook run through the village. Chobham lost a large minority of its land to West End, in 1968, which has a larger population and was long associated with another parish. Chobham has a wide range of outlying businesses, particularly plant growing and selling businesses, science/technology and restaurants. Chobham has no railway line; it is approximately midway between London-terminating services at Woking and Sunningdale, just under away. The village sits to the south of Chobham Common, a Site of Special Scientific Interest. History Neolithic flints have been found and there are several round barrows on the heaths; such as the Bee Garden in rolling Albury Bottom, a scheduled monument and the "Herestraet or Via M ...
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Farnham Town F
Farnham is a market town and civil parish in Surrey, England, around southwest of London. It is in the Borough of Waverley, close to the county border with Hampshire. The town is on the north branch of the River Wey, a tributary of the Thames, and is at the western end of the North Downs. The civil parish, which includes the villages of Badshot Lea, Hale and Wrecclesham, covers and had a population of 39,488 in 2011. Among the prehistoric objects from the area is a woolly mammoth tusk, excavated in Badshot Lea at the start of the 21st century. The earliest evidence of human activity is from the Neolithic and, during the Roman period, tile making took place close to the town centre. The name "Farnham" is of Saxon origin and is generally agreed to mean "meadow where ferns grow". From at least 803, the settlement was under the control of the Bishops of Winchester and the castle was built as a residence for Bishop Henry de Blois in 1138. Henry VIII is thought to have spent pa ...
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Godalming Town F
Godalming ( ) is a market town and civil parish in southwest Surrey, England, around southwest of central London. It is in the Borough of Waverley, at the confluence of the River Wey, Rivers Wey and River Ock, Surrey, Ock. The civil parish covers and includes the settlements of Farncombe, Binscombe and Aaron's Hill, Surrey, Aaron's Hill. Much of the area lies on the stratum, strata of the Lower Greensand Group and Bargate stone was quarried locally until the Second World War. The earliest evidence of human activity is from the Paleolithic and land above the Wey floodplain at Charterhouse was first settled in the middle British Iron Age, Iron Age. The modern town is believed to have its origins in the 6th or early 7th centuries and its name is thought to derive from that of a Anglo-Saxons, Saxon landowner. Kersey (cloth), Kersey, a woollen cloth, dyed blue, was produced at Godalming for much of the Middle Ages, but the industry declined in the early modern period. In the 17th ...
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Westfield F
Westfield may refer to: Places Australia *Westfield, Western Australia Canada * Grand Bay-Westfield, New Brunswick *Westfield, Nova Scotia New Zealand *Westfield, New Zealand United Kingdom England * Westfield, Cumbria, a location *Westfield, East Sussex * Westfield, Hampshire, a location * Westfield, Herefordshire, a location * Westfield, Norfolk * Westfield, Redcar, North Yorkshire *Westfield, York, North Yorkshire * Westfield, Somerset *Westfield, Sheffield, South Yorkshire *Westfield, Woking, Surrey *Westfield, Bradford, West Yorkshire * Westfield, Kirklees, a location in West Yorkshire Scotland * Westfield, Angus, a location *Westfield, Highland *Westfield, Cumbernauld, North Lanarkshire *Westfield, West Lothian United States *Westfield, Alabama, former settlement near Fairfield, Alabama *Westfield, Illinois *Westfield, Indiana, a city in Hamilton County *Westfield, St. Joseph County, Indiana, an unincorporated town *Westfield, Iowa *Westfield, Maine *Westfield, Massachuset ...
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Virginia Water F
Virginia, officially the Commonwealth of Virginia, is a state in the Southeastern and Mid-Atlantic regions of the United States between the Atlantic Coast and the Appalachian Mountains. The state's capital is Richmond and its most populous city is Virginia Beach. Its most populous subdivision is Fairfax County, part of Northern Virginia, where slightly over a third of Virginia's population of more than 8.8million live. Eastern Virginia is part of the Atlantic Plain, and the Middle Peninsula forms the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay. Central Virginia lies predominantly in the Piedmont, the foothill region of the Blue Ridge Mountains, which cross the western and southwestern parts of the state. The fertile Shenandoah Valley fosters the state's most productive agricultural counties, while the economy in Northern Virginia is driven by technology companies and U.S. federal government agencies. Hampton Roads is also the site of the region's main seaport and Naval Station Norfol ...
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Malden Town F
Malden may refer to: Places United Kingdom *Old Malden, historically known as Malden, Kingston upon Thames, England * Malden Rushett, Kingston upon Thames, England *New Malden, Kingston upon Thames, England United States *Malden, Illinois, a village * Malden, Indiana, an unincorporated community *Malden, Massachusetts, a city * Malden, Missouri, a city * Malden, New York, a census-designated place * Malden, Washington, a town *Malden, West Virginia, an unincorporated community * Malden Hollow, a stream in the U.S. state of Missouri Elsewhere *Malden, Netherlands *Malden Island, an uninhabited island in the central Pacific Ocean belonging to the Republic of Kiribati *Fort Malden, a history museum in Amherstburg, Ontario, Canada In fiction * Malden, a fictional country and recurring setting in the ''Operation Flashpoint'' and ''Arma'' video game franchises, based on Lefkada, Greece People with the surname *Charles Robert Malden, (1797-1855), British naval officer, surveyor and ...
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