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  2. Kent County League - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kent_County_League

    The league was founded in 1922 as the Kent Amateur Football League and comprised Eastern and Western sections which functioned and were administered separately. [1] In 1984 the league renamed itself the Kent County Football League. A single mixed Eastern and Western sections Premier Division was formed in 1992 and three years later, in 1995 ...

  3. 1977–78 Kent Football League - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1977–78_Kent_Football_League

    The 1977–78 Kent Football League Challenge Cup was won by Tunbridge Wells, their second win in four seasons. [ 5 ] The competition, contested by all eighteen clubs in the league, comprised five single match tie rounds (with the first round featuring two ties) culminating in the final which was played on a neutral ground (at Sittingbourne [ 6 ...

  4. 1969–70 Kent Football League - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1969–70_Kent_Football_League

    The league featured teams from 15 clubs including five reserves teams. Fourteen of the clubs had competed in the league the previous season and they were joined by one additional club: Kent Police, joined from the Kent County Amateur League [1] The league was won by Faversham Town, [2] the first of two successive Kent League titles.

  5. Kent County Football Association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kent_County_Football...

    Kent FA was formed in 1881 and has governed the game of football, under the aegis of The Football Association since that date. Kent FA became a Company Limited by Guarantee on November 1, 2000. Kent is the fifth largest county affiliated to The Football Association and is divided into four geographical divisions for administration purposes.

  6. Greenwich Borough F.C. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenwich_Borough_F.C.

    The club was established in 1928 as Woolwich Borough Council Athletic Club. [1] They joined the Woolwich and District League and were champions in their first season. [2] The following season saw them join Division One of the Western Section of the Kent County Amateur League. [3]

  7. Gravesend United F.C. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravesend_United_F.C.

    For the following two seasons (from 1933 through to 1935) 'the Shrimpers' were members of the Kent League Division 2 with a reserve team continuing in the Kent Amateur League. Gravesend United were semi–finalists in the 1933–34 Kent Amateur Cup losing, following a replay, to the eventual winners the Chatham Royal Naval Depot.

  8. Deal Town F.C. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deal_Town_F.C.

    The club re-entered the Kent League for a third time in 1933, joining Division Two, but left in 1935, [5] returning to the renamed Kent County Amateur League. [6] They finished as runners-up in Division One of the Eastern Section in 1935–36, and later returned to Division Two of the Kent League for a fourth spell in the league in 1939.

  9. Crockenhill F.C. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crockenhill_F.C.

    Crockenhill Football Club is a football club based in the village of Crockenhill near Swanley in Kent, England. Affiliated to the Kent County Football Association , the club are currently members of the Kent County League Division Two West and play at Wested Meadow.