Edgar Streetis a football stadium inHerefordand was the home ofHereford United Football Clubfrom the club's formation in 1924 until December 2014, when the club was wound up. It is now the home ofHereford FC,a phoenix club formed to replace the former club. It is the largest football stadium in the county ofHerefordshireand is located on the edge of Hereford city centre, adjacent to the former cattle market (now a shopping centre). The name of the stadium directly derives from the name of the street where it is located, which is also theA49.

Edgar Street
Edgar Street
Merton Stand and Blackfriars End in 2022
Map
Full nameEdgar Street Athletic Ground
LocationHereford,HR4 9JU
Coordinates52°3′39″N2°43′4″W/ 52.06083°N 2.71778°W/52.06083; -2.71778
OwnerHereford FC
Capacity5,250[2]
Field size114 m × 76 m (125 yd × 83 yd)
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Builtlate 19th century
Openedlate 19th century
Tenants
Hereford United(1924–2014)
Hereford F.C.(2015–present)[1]

History

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The site has been used as a stadium since the late 19th century, although the year in which it was opened has not been widely recorded. The stadium was originally owned by the Hereford Athletic Ground Company and was also used by amateur football side Hereford City. In those days the ground's official name was Edgar Street Athletic Stadium, there was a running track around the pitch which explains the curious curved "dead" areas behind each goal in front of the terraces. Even in the early days Hereford United struggled financially and the landlord obligingly reduced the rent to help the club.[citation needed]In 1931 the stadium was purchased byHereford City Councilfor £3,000, and in 1952 United secured a lease on the stadium for the first time.

Although now showing its age, the ground's history does have some notable landmarks, such as the installation offloodlightsin March 1953, before many large clubs. In 1974, following the most recent major development seen at Edgar Street, it was the only one outside the First Division with two cantilever-roof stands. At 76 yards (69 m) the ground had, until the advent of new stadia, one of the widest pitches in the Football League. The extreme width of the pitch was created when the old running track was turfed over.

Due to the club's financial crisis in 1997, the lease was handed over to developers. In 2000 an electronic scoreboard was put up at the Blackfriars Street End, using funds bequeathed to the club by a supporter.

On 19 February 2015, Herefordshire County Council rejected a proposal byWorcestershire-basedRedditch Unitedto play at Edgar Street. Later that same week, on 24 February, the council confirmed thatHereford FC,a phoenix club formed following Hereford United's demise, had been granted a lease allowing them to play at Edgar Street.[3]

The stadium's record attendance is 18,114 whenHereford Unitedplayed againstSheffield Wednesdayin the1957–58FA CupThird Round.

Hereford FC's record attendance for a home game at Edgar Street was 4,683, for a 1–0 win in theFA Vasesemi-finals againstSalisburyon 13 March 2016,[4]until the club'sFA Cupfirst round match againstPortsmouthin November 2022 attracted a crowd of 4,912.[5]It hosted Hereford FC's televised FA Cup second round replay againstFleetwood Townin December 2017.[6]The2020–21 FA Trophysemi-final between Hereford FC andWokingwas also played here, although it took placebehind closed doorsdue to theCOVID-19 pandemic,in which Hereford won 1–0 to make thefinal.

Stands

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Merton Stand

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The Merton Stand from the perspective of the Len Weston Stand.

TheMerton Stand,on the eastern side of the ground is the only all-seater stand in the ground and was built in 1968. It currently has a capacity of 1818. Initially it was flanked on either side by standing areas known as theCowsheds,but when the club progressed into the Football League the stand was extended to cover the entire length of the pitch. The Merton Stand is the nominated family stand and includes the director's and press boxes, with matchday sponsors also seated in this stand. In front of the stand lie the dugouts next to the players' tunnel. All of the club facilities, such as offices, changing rooms, boardroom and corporate hospitality are located underneath the stand. The result of this is a number of windows at pitch level.

Meadow End

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TheMeadow Endis located at the northern end of the ground and is traditionally populated with the club's most vocal supporters. It is a fully covered terrace and has a distinctive curve to its shape. The flat area in front of the terracing enables supporters to stand directly behind the perimeter wall of the pitch, very close to the action. It has a capacity of 1,400. Located behind this end is the substantial Merton Meadow car park.

The pitch's distinctive downhill slope is in the direction of the Meadow End, which has seen some memorable goals over the years, most notably the goals scored byRonnie RadfordandRicky Georgein the 1972 FA Cup victory overNewcastle United.

Len Weston Stand

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Len Weston Stand

TheLen Weston Standon the western side of the ground, is a narrow two-tiered stand and was built in 1974, replacing the previous wooden grandstand, which was moved to a field near Risbury in the county. The stand has a total capacity of 1996, comprising 936 seats and a further 1,060 standing. It extends the entire length of the pitch and was named after the former president and benefactor of the club, Len Weston and the stand is now sponsored byWeston's Cider.

The stand is unusual in that the lower tier is terraced and the upper tier seated. The upper tier contains just five steep rows of seating but offers perhaps the best view in the ground as it is higher than the Merton Stand, and also closer to the pitch so supporters may not be able to see the front of the pitch, but seating is narrow. The view from the terracing on the lower tier can be obscured by a number of supporting pillars, but also has the benefit of being very close to the touchline. The proximity of theA49 roadimmediately behind the stand limited the amount of room to build the stand, hence the relatively small number of rows of seating. Ticket allocation is split between home and away supporters with the Meadow End side allocated to home supporters.

Blackfriars Street End

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A terrace situated to the behind the southern goal, the stand was split between home supporters to the east, and away supporters to the west. The stand was popular amongst supporters but had to close its terracing due to health and safety concerns in 2009, then from 2010 to 2012 it adopted temporary seating to accommodate bigger sides in League Two.

In 2023, it was announced that a long term lease had been offered by Herefordshire Council that would allow for the redevelopment of the stand.[7][8]In March 2024, the Council announced they were seeking bids to begin demolition of the stand in the summer.[9]Work began to demolish the stand in June.[10]

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References

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  1. ^"Redditch's Edgar Street switch denied".24 February 2015.
  2. ^"Hereford FC | (Previously 7,700) Edgar Street".Football Ground Guide.July 2018.Retrieved4 March2024.
  3. ^"Edgar Street Lease Deal Agreed with Herefordshire Council - Hereford FC".Archived fromthe originalon 24 February 2015.Retrieved24 February2015.
  4. ^"Hereford FC record one of the highest FA Vase semi-final attendances".13 March 2016.
  5. ^"Hereford vs Portsmouth (1-3) Nov 4, 2022 Match Stats".FootballCritic.Retrieved6 December2022.
  6. ^"Gallery 1: Hereford FC 0-2 Fleetwood Town FA Cup 2nd Round Replay | Hereford FC - the Official website of Hereford FC".
  7. ^Rogers, Paul (15 December 2023)."Hereford FC's Blackfriars End re-development breakthrough".Hereford Times.Retrieved4 March2024.
  8. ^"Bulls bid to redevelop fourth side at Edgar Street".BBC Sport.18 January 2024.Retrieved4 March2024.
  9. ^Moreau, Charlotte (1 March 2024)."Part of Hereford's Edgar Street football stadium to be bulldozed".Hereford Times.Retrieved4 March2024.
  10. ^"Demolition of Hereford FC's Blackfriars End begins".BBC News.18 June 2024.Retrieved23 September2024.