At the beginning of the 1934-35 season
senior football in the North Wales coast area was covered
by two senior Leagues - the
North Wales Coast League and the Welsh League, largely along
geographic lines. Both competitions had been formed following
the collapse of the Welsh National League set-up in 1930,
the former under the title of North Wales Football Combination.
By
1934 stagnation had once more crept in to the game in the
north and at a meeting held
at the Royal Hotel, Colwyn
Bay in October of that year a proposal formulated by Col.
J Llewelyn Williams of Holywell - then FAW Treasurer
- was put to a meeting of both the aforementioned leagues,
convened by the FAW.
Originally put together in July 1933, the plan had been
discussed on September the 5th by a special sub-committee
made up of four prominent members of the North Wales Coast
League, namely D A Rodger (Rhyl), Percy Weekes (Holyhead),
E W Hughes (Bangor) and Hugh R Williams (Bangor).
Following the meeting they submitted a report which the
North Wales Weekly News quoted as concluding:
“ The committee from the outset felt that senior football on
the North Wales Coast is drifting to its doom. Senior clubs
are going into junior football and if this is allowed to
go unchecked it will mean an end to Junior football too.
“
It is the unanimous decision of this committee that we adopt,
in principle, the ‘Zone Scheme’ so aptly propounded
by Col. J Llewelyn Williams.
“ We sincerely believe that every town that has had a senior
club should again carry a senior club before it is allowed
to run merely a junior club.”
They then listed a number of clubs that “should be
compelled to enter the ‘Zone Scheme’ which should
be divided into two sections”.
It was a revolutionary but complex system which was originally
put forward. Clubs in Section A would have the option of
playing in Section B and vice-versa but ten clubs would be
compelled to play in both (!).
Three clubs not in the ten,
namely Pwllheli, Portmadoc and Blaenau Ffestiniog would also
be allowed to play in the Cambrian League (sic).
FAW Secretary Ted Robbins set a timetable for the next two
meetings within tight schedules. The first, held at Rhyl
was of the Management Committee. The officials in place were:
Joint Secretaries - W F Morris and H R Williams……
A meeting of the North Wales Coast Football League formally
adopted the proposals the same week
Further meetings were held to resolve differences but it
was not until June 1935 that matters came to a head when
two of the Junior leagues - the Vale of Conwy and Flintshire - expressed
reservations on the effect on junior football of the rules
being imposed within the new system. They were joined in
their concerns by the Bangor & District League and the
Anglesey League. These leagues were criticised by Col. Williams
as lacking in vision and the Bangor & District League,
who had decided to run independently was told in no uncertain
terms to toe the line or not to be allowed to function at
all.
The Flintshire Amateur Football League wrote to the new Welsh
League and the FAW stating their intention to manage their
own affairs for the coming term.
The Welsh League, which covered Denbighshire and Flintshire,
was quite a successful league and three of its clubs, namely
Flint Town, Denbigh Mental Hospital and Ruthin, were the
chief objectors, having been virtually forced to join the
top division. So far a rough ride for the new system.
As it stood at this point - the end of July 1935 - the
three zones of the top division remained in the frame with
the Flintshire League First Division forming Division II
and the area leagues, Bangor, Anglesey, Conway, Mold, Dyserth
plus the Second Division of the Flintshire League would form
Division III. And it would appear that the Welsh League was
to be, as described by Mr J Lloyd Kearns (Denbigh) at the
League’s AGM in Rhyl on July 13th, “washed away”.
The arguing continued but eventually the Division II and
III set-up was adopted at a meeting in Llandudno Junction
in September 1935. The Welsh League disbanded. Denbigh MH
and Flint Town opted to join the senior League which eventually
kicked off at the end of the month.
Llanddulas and Abergele went into the Dyserth League whilst
the fate of Prestatyn Town, Llysfaen and Ruthin are not known
although Llysfaen reappeared in the Vale of Conwy League
in 1938.
A senior division eventually took shape and comprised of
eleven clubs: Bangor City, Blaenau Ffestiniog FC, Colwyn
Bay FC, CPD Porthmadog, Denbigh Mental Hospital, Flint Town,
Holyhead Town, Llandudno FC, Llanfairfechan Town, Penrhyn
Quarry FC and Rhyl FC.
The first season was something of a failure with original
dissenters Flint Town and Denbigh MH failing to complete
their fixtures - the season closing with fourteen fixtures
unplayed and Llandudno FC taking the title.
Llanfairfechan and Denbigh MH dropped out at the end of the
first term and Pwllheli British Legion entered the fray and
together with the remaining nine clubs continued into the
second season.
The League continued to flourish with regional second divisions
being formed in 1948 which continued until a single 18-club
division format returned in 1960.
It was to be the most successful league in the history of
North Wales football, running uninterrupted bar the war for
forty-nine years until its transition into the Welsh Alliance
League in 1985.
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