Clevedon United FC
Coleridge Vale
Southey Road
Clevedon
Somerset
BS21 6NY
Ground Number: 1545
Saturday 18th April 2026
Clevedon United 1-1 Clevedon AFC
Somerset County Premier
CLEVEDON UNITED FC - A BRIEF HISTORY
Clevedon United was formed in 1974 as a merger between Clevedon Sports AFC and Tickenham United. They carried on in the Somerset Senior League Premier Division, enjoying some good finishes in the early 80s. They finished as runners-up to Robinsons DRG in 1988, Bridgwater Town in 1992, Long Sutton in 1993 & Portishead in 1998. They were finally champions in 1999, but could not take promotion due to ground grading. In 2003, a 3rd place finish and a groundsharing agreement with local rivals Clevedon Town allowed them to make the step up to the Western League D1. They generally finished in the lower half of the table, their best finish of 9th coming in 2005. The groundshare agreement came to an end in 2010, and United returned to Coleridge Vale and the Somerset County League. After a couple of seasons of struggle, they went down to Division 1 in 2013. Clevedon won the regionalised Division 1 West in 2015, returning to the Premier Division. They sailed close to the wind in 2017, finishing 3rd from the bottom, but had a good season in 2022, finishing 3rd.
The club played in both FA Competitions for a decade after the millennium. In the FA Cup, they reached the 2nd Qualifying Round in 2003, beating Dawlish Town and Frome Town before losing 8-2 at Lymington & New Milton. Clevedon United made their debut in the FA Vase in 2000, enjoying their best run. They beat Bristol Manor Farm and Torrington before losing 2-0 to Hallen in the 2nd Round. The club won the Somerset Senior Cup for the first and only time in 2021. Notable former players include Jack Butland, the current Rangers and former England goalkeeper, who was born in the town. Clevedon United were his first club as a youth. The club is based in Clevedon, a town in North Somerset with a population of around 21,300. The name derives from the Old English cleve, meaning "cleave" or "cleft" and don meaning "hill". Victorian Clevedon changed from a farming village into a popular seaside town. The Victorian craze for sea bathing was met in the late 19th century by saltwater baths next to the pier (since demolished, though foundations remain), and bathing machines on the main beach. The first large-scale production of penicillin took place in the town. Football-wise, Clevedon Town of the Western League and fellow Somerset League side Clevedon play in the town as well as Swiss Valley Rangers FC, founded in 2000, a junior football club, based at Clevedon School, that has teams from ages under 6 to ages under 18.
MY VISIT
With this game being at 3, there were plenty of hoppers drifting to other games, especially amongst those who were experienced in this neck of the woods. A popular destination was Portishead. One Essex-based hopper, with the penalty-taking skills of Peter Devine, then continued to whine all afternoon about how rubbish the ground was. Colin had gone with the Essex lads too, so it was nice to get a bit of peace. It was an OK drive, but I arrived after many hoppers, and the roads around the ground were chocca. I got a space and went to the ground; entry was free for the only time on the hop. I headed to the bar. The cider selection had been disappointing so far, but Clevedon came up trumps with the rarely spotted Thatchers Dry. I'd last had that nine years ago at Ashton & Backwell, a ground I'd driven past earlier. It went down very nicely. There were club glasses, and the bar was a lovely place to sit, type my blog, and charge my phone on my laptop. There was a good number of people at the game, despite the competition. I was hungry, so I got a cheeseburger. Dull but delicious and a bargain at £3.50. Best of all, the club got the money.
Clevedon United were 8th in the league. They had won 12, drawn 2, and lost 9 so far. They'd won three of their last four, beating Stockwood Wanderers 5-0 last weekend. Clevedon AFC had previously been known as Uphill Castle, based in Uphill, a suburb of Weston-Super-Mare. Established in 2013, they moved to Clevedon Town FC and rebranded as Clevedon AFC at the start of the season. They were in 5th, having won fourteen, drawn five and lost six. They were unbeaten in three and had drawn 1-1 at Chard Town in their last game. Clevedon AFC took the lead on six minutes, Ollie Willcox on the end of a good break as he made a good run and finished into the corner of the net. The attendance was announced as 327, just as United had a series of chances to get back in the game. Half-time came and went quickly, with the second half starting at 15:57. United really pushed forward in the second half. On the hour, they got clean through, but the shot hit the post. On 68 minutes, it was all square. A home player was tripped in the area, and the resulting spot kick was scored. That was it, perhaps the hosts could have won it, but it was a fair result.
From the game, it was a short but difficult drive to Nailsea. More bad roads with passing places, a tractor decided that they had the right of way, but it was easy enough for a few cars to reverse back. Bad results filtered in from back home. Wycombe lost 1-0 to ten-man Blackpool to continue their bad run. Holmer Green ended their eleven-game winning streak with a loss at Westside, and Colin's Amersham Town side were relegated after losing at home to Holyport. Parking was easy for this one, and I was in place by 5.10. The club had a bog-standard BBQ, and so with time to kill, I went in search of food. Wetherspoons was one of the closest, so although it was a revisit,, I walked the 20 minutes there. It was still the cheapest and easiest way to get fed. Spice bag with Aspalls was £10.81. I went from starving to stuffed very quickly. I then walked the 20 minutes back to the ground, arriving bang on kickoff. Yet another red and black team, the 4th host in succession to don those colours. We were still waiting for the first home win, but Nailsea quickly went into a 2-0 lead, two well-taken goals around the ten-minute mark. They made it 3-0 on 19 minutes. Stockwood Wanderers had been poor, and their task was made harder on 33 minutes when they were reduced to ten men after a bad tackle. Nailsea continued to dominate and made it 4-0 on 62 minutes with a looping header. Two further goals made it 6-0 at the end.
THE GROUND
COLERIDGE VALE is another good step 7 ground. Fully railed but with no hard standing, there is also no cover. There is a great bar, though, with a decent range and club glasses. There was a BBQ outside selling burgers and hot dogs. Parking is quite limited, but there are lots of streets nearby to use. Buses also run close by.
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