Friday, 3 April 2026

FC Hartlepool - Grayfields Enclosure


FC Hartlepool
Grayfields Sports Pavilion
Jesmond Gardens
Hartlepool 
TS24 8PJ







Ground Number: 1535
Friday 3rd April 2026
FC Hartlepool 1-0 Seaham Red Star
Northern League D2







FC HARTLEPOOL - A BRIEF HISTORY

FC Hartlepool were formed in 1993 and was originally known as The Fens Hotel FC. In 2002, the club was renamed as Teesside Arriva due to a sponsorship deal from Arriva, which provided the club with minibuses for away games. In the summer of 2003, the club changed names again and was now known as Hartlepool FC. The final name change to FC Hartlepool came in 2019. They started out in the Hartlepool Church League before joining the Teeside League in 2001. Starting in Division 2, they were runners-up to SMG Redstripes in 2003 before winning the Division 1 title a year later. Following more high finishes, they were accepted into the Wearside League in 2006. They remained there until 2023, when they were champions, winning promotion to the Northern League D2, where they remain to this day. This made them the first side to play in the Northern League within Hartlepool since Hartlepool United Reserves in 1987, while the defunct Hartlepool Town were in the league for the 1994–95 season, they played their home games in Ferryhill.


The club entered the FA Vase for the first time in 2024, beating Sunderland RCA, Chester-Le-Street United & Jarrow before going out to Ashton Town in the 2nd Round. Local cup wins include the Wearside League Cup in 2018. Their record attendance of 1,516 came against Hartlepool United for a friendly in July 2025. The club badge states 1979 as its year of formation. This marks the establishment of the youth and junior setup in the town. Before FC Hartlepool was a senior team playing in the Northern League, it existed for decades as a community-focused youth club providing football for local children. The club chose to put 1979 on the crest to honour this long-standing heritage in the Hartlepool community.


MY VISIT

This was the first groundhop in the Northern League since 2014. Back then, I believe the league did it under their own steam rather than let Groundhop UK organise coach travel and hotels. In fact, the league organised the first ever hopping event (multiple games in one day) way back in 1992, a decade before GHUK were established and almost twenty years before I started hopping. Those 90s hops included the likes of Peterlere New Town, Murton and Evenwood Town, who have ceased to exist. Various stories emerged from those hops, such as the Shotton Colliery ball boy who parachuted into the centre circle from a light aircraft. There was also the Esh Winning Monsoon on Good Friday 1993. In a game that saw the hosts beat Norton & Stockton Ancients 2-1, a relentless, torrential downpour began just before kick-off and didn't stop. It wasn't just rain; it was a "monsoon" that turned the pitch into a marsh and the uncovered areas into a mudbath. In modern football, the game would have been called off after ten minutes. However, with 423 travellers having paid for a "hop" ticket and the schedule being so tight, there was immense pressure to finish. The referee allowed play to continue in conditions that were better suited for water polo. The clubhouse became a sardine can of steaming wet coats and soggy programmes. Legend has it that the tea lady did more business in 90 minutes than the club usually did in a season.

 

In any case, all of this bore no relevance to today. GHUK impose the '20 year rule', meaning that if a ground had been visited on a hop, it had to wait 20 years for another go. For that reason, the 2014 hosts - North Shields, Whitley Bay, Jarrow Roofing, Washington, Birtley Town, Consett, Ryton & Crawcrook Albion, Bishop Auckland, Spennymoor Town & Newton Aycliffe - would have to wait a while. I'd been to six of those games and got round to visiting all of the grounds eventually.

  

It was around half an hour to FC Hartlepool from Grangetown Boys Club. It was an easy ground to get away from, despite the heavy traffic. We got to Hartlepool to find the car park full, but street parking was fine. It was a fiver to get in, just as with the one before, excellent value. A nice old shirt was a fiver too. The food was doing a roaring trade, and there were rumours that the beef had sold out already. Service was pretty decent, albeit no menu was displayed. Chicken curry and hand-cut chips were superb for £6.50 and filled me up, along with a can of cider. I got a space behind the goal with PuffPuff and Sean for the start of the game.

 

FC Hartlepool sat in 6th, outside the playoffs, but with quite a bit of work to do if they were to make the cut. They had played 21, drawn three and lost 13 games so far. They were on mixed form, but had beaten 2nd-place Redcar Town 2-1 in their last game. This was a crunch game with Seaham Red Star sitting in 5th. They'd won 22, drawn six and lost nine and were five points ahead of Hartlepool with a game in hand. They'd won six in a row, beating Alnwick Town 2-0 on Saturday but would play their game in hand on Tuesday when they faced Newcastle University. They won that 3-2 so it was a disappointment to see such a dull opening with FC Hartlepool having the best of the limited chances. The sun came out in the second half, but it was still nippy for April. The game brightened up too, but there still wasn't much goalmouth action. A penalty was awarded for a trip on 78 minutes, but it was well saved. Another goal-mouth scramble on 80 minutes, another penalty with Seaham's Lewis Cowan sent off for foul and abusive language. Tom Gavin scored the penalty this time, blasting high into the net. That was enough to win the game for them, not the greatest contest.

 

THE GROUND 

GREYFIELDS ENCLOSURE is a typical new build ground with metal stands added to what was a basic railed pitch. These at least have a bit of club colours and signage. All in all, around 100 seats and the same standing under cover. Food, drink and merch are all good, especially the hand-cut chips. Parking is available in nearby side streets. 

Grangetown Boys Club - B&W Lifting Stadium


Grangetown Boys Club FC
B&W Lifting Ltd Stadium
Trunk Road
19 Grange Farm Rd
Middlesbrough 
TS6 7HP







Ground Number: 1534
Friday 3rd April 2026
Grangetown BC 0-1 Redcar Town
Northern League D2








GRANGETOWN BOYS CLUB - A BRIEF HISTORY

The club was established in 1941 by the North Riding Education Board as part of the national boys' club movement to cater for working-class lads. A range of sports, including boxing, were on offer, but football proved the most popular. Early league successes include the South Bank & District League in 1959, remaining unbeaten all season. They then joined the Teeside League, consistently remaining in the top tier. Grangetown saw success around the turn of the millennium, winning four titles between 1998 & 2003 before adding a 5th title in 2011. The years after this saw lean times, leading to the club withdrawing from Saturday football for the 2016/17 season before joining the North Riding League. In 2024, they finished as runners-up to Darlington United, winning promotion to the Northern League D2. They have found the going tough since joining step 6, consistently around the lower reaches of the table.


Grangetown BC made their debut in the FA Vase this season. They beat Leeds UCFA 1-0 before losing 4-1 to Tadcaster Albion in the 2nd Qualifying Round. Local cup wins include four MacMillan Bowls, two LR Raine Trophies, the North Riding County Cup in 2003 and the Lou Moore Trophy in 2010. Grangetown is an area in the borough of Redcar and Cleveland in North Yorkshire. The area is 3 miles east of Middlesbrough and 4 miles south-west of Redcar. Grangetown's development was a result of the discovery of ironstone in the nearby Eston Hills in 1840. Workers came from other parts of England, as well as Ireland, and Eastern Europe to work in the iron and steel industry along the riverbanks. The most famous person to come from Grangetown is Roy Chubby Brown, the stand-up comedian whose real name is Royston Vasey. Brown appeared in Series 2 of The League of Gentlemen as Larry Vaughn, mayor of the fictional town of Royston Vasey. The town's name comes from Brown's birth name.



MY VISIT

Although the hotels were not as cheap and abundant as they were on the North West Hop. Fortunately, after searching, I found a decent deal on a Travelodge in Sedgefield, £188 for the four nights. I'd rather not take the accessible room, but when Travelodge discriminate against people who don't want to share a bed, it has to be done. The next cheapest twin bed option was about £70 more, so I'd just have to suffer the smaller beds. I could have saved more if we had changed hotels each night, but both Colin & I prefer a single base to avoid switching. Fuel costs had also spiked by 25p a litre since I planned this in February, thanks to Trump & Nethanu's bad antics in Iran. There was also a chance that panic buying would make it difficult to get fuel, but I was hoping for the best. All these factors meant that it was one of the most expensive hops Groundhop UK had ever offered. It worked out at £491 or £423 for the whole trip, although £35 - £41 a game did not sound so bad when it included a programme & ticket. For my part, I could do without the clutter of programmes and wanted to swap out games. I reckoned I could do the hop for around £200 less, though, of course, I was lumbered with the driving yet again.


From West Auckland, it was an easy drive to our hotel. We spotted a Sainsbury's with favourable pricing for petrol, with 100 miles left in the tank, it was good to fill up for the weekend. It was 9p less a litre than I'd paid this morning. We were at Travelodge Sedgefield by 10.15, and the accessible room would be our home for the next few nights. The mobile signal was patchy, so I purchased internet, and things flew by. It felt like a Friday, so I had a few drinks, the sozzled nature aiding sleep as I dropped off straight away. I woke up at 7.30 and had a bath and caught up with all the reactions from last night. It appeared people enjoyed West Auckland as much as I did. We left at 8.50, delayed as Colin left his phone in the room. We stocked up at Tesco before heading to my 495th Wetherspoons - The Red Anchor in Stockton. My breakfast muffin, black pudding and cranberry juice carried a premium compared to other Spoons, but I was famished. The pub rated badly on Google Maps, and it was easy to see why it was reviewed so poorly with a 21-minute wait for drinks. Food took half an hour and was originally the wrong meal, not good. From there, it was 15 minutes to the ground, where parking was again well organised. It was a fiver to get in and was good to catch up with many people.

 

Grangetown BC were in 17th place and had won nine, drawn eight and lost twenty. They had ended a three-game losing run the previous Tuesday with a 2-1 win at home to Durham United, although they did have a game against Jarrow on Wednesday. Redcar Town were in 2nd place, but with games in hand, they could go clear at the top. They had won 25, drawn four and lost five. Their form had been a bit patchy of late, and they had gone down 2-1 at FC Hartlepool on Tuesday. Like the hosts, they had a game in midweek against Billingham Town on Tuesday. Grangetown started excellently, forcing the Redcar keeper into a great save. They continued to dominate the early stages before Redcar had a good spell around 20 minutes in. The attendance was announced as 531 around five minutes before Redcar Town took the lead with a header through Kieran Stares. The game was nice and competitive, and Grangetown really should have equalised, especially with a shot on 85 minutes where it looked easier to score than miss. They also had a last-minute penalty awarded for a trip, but the kick hit the left-hand post and was cleared away.

 

THE GROUND

TRUNK ROAD is a fairly basic ground but decent for the level. There are two small areas of covered standing, holding around 100., There is also a seated stand for 50. Food and drink are available, but I didn't check it out. Parking is available in a nearby grassy area.