Tuesday, September 27, 1994

Bedford Town FC

Bedford Town 5 Harlow Town 0 - Isthmian League, Division Three

Bedford was a market town for the surrounding agricultural region from the early Middle Ages. In 1660 John Bunyan was imprisoned for 12 years in Bedford Gaol, it was here that he wrote The Pilgrim's Progress. Bedford is home to one of the largest concentration of Italian immigrants in the UK. According to a 2001 census, 2 in 7 (1 in 3.5 or almost 30% of the town's population) of Bedford's population are of at least partial Italian descent. This is mainly as a result of labour recruitment in the early 1950s by the London Brick Company in the southern Italian regions of Puglia, Campania, Calabria, Molise, Abruzzo and Sicily. Bedford's Little Italy feel is enhanced by a wide variety of Italian bars, restaurants and social clubs throughout the town. Bedford has, since 1954, had its own Italian vice-consulate.


A midweek post work jaunt via Thameslink enabled us to reach Bedford with plenty of time to spare before this match. The town centre is unremarkable but we were able to grab a bite to eat at an Italian restaurant. Our research had established that Bedford Town FC were running a special bus from the town centre to all matches at their newstadium. The 'Eagles Special' was half full as it chugged the 20 minute journey out to Cardington, the location of The Eyrie. The landscape in the vicinity is dominated by the enormous aircraft hangers at Cardington.


Bedford Town walloped visitors Harlow Town 5-0 in a completely one sided encounter. The Eagles Special was waiting for us as we exited the ground and within 5 minutes of the final whistle, we were on our way back to the railway station.

Tuesday, September 6, 1994

Burnham FC

Burnham 0 Erith & Belvedere 5 - Southern League, Southern Division

Burnham lies north of the River Thames, and sits on the border with Berkshire, between the towns of Maidenhead and Slough. The M4 motorway passes through the south of the parish. The village name is Anglo Saxon in origin, and means 'homestead on a stream'. It was first recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Burneham, when the manor belonged to Walter Fitz-Other. Burnham was once a very important village. The road from London to Bath passed through the extensive parish of Burnham and as a result, in 1271, it received a Royal charter to hold a market and an annual fair. However, when the bridge crossing the Thames in Maidenhead opened the road was diverted away from Burnham, which fell into relative decay. The market was then transferred to Maidenhead. In 1265 a Benedictine abbey was founded near the village by Richard, King of the Romans. This was, however, disbanded by King Henry VIII in the Dissolution of the Monasteries. Since 1916, a contemplative order of Anglican Augustinian nuns has been based in the restored remains of the original abbey.

Saturday, September 3, 1994

Braintree Town FC

Braintree Town 4 Newport IOW 2 - Southern League, Southern Division
 

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