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The club was established in 1946 as North Withington Amateur by attendees of St Crispin's Church in nearby Fallowfield. [2] They joined the South Manchester & Wythenshawe League, and were Division Two champions in 1949–50, before winning the Barker Cup in 1950–51. [3] In 1958 the club transferred to the Lancashire & Cheshire Amateur League. [2]
Print/export Download as PDF; ... Level 1 [2] Manchester City: Premier League: ... Wythenshawe Town: Northern Premier League Division One West:
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... People from Wythenshawe (1 C, 30 P) ... Wythenshawe Park; Wythenshawe Town F.C.
The club was established in 1946 by Reg Gauntlet under the name Wythenshawe Lads Club, and joined the Manchester Federation of Lads' Clubs League. [2] In 1949 the players had become too old for the league, resulting in the club developing an adult side that entered the South Manchester and Wythenshawe League, [2] with the club's name changed to Wythenshawe Amateurs.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Wythenshawe Town Centre: 0:07. Robinswood Road: 0:06. Peel Hall: ... [1] [2] The stop is next to ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Macclesfield Town: 5 (1) 2015–2018: ... is an English footballer who plays as a striker for Wythenshawe Town. [2]
The line would have had stops at Wythenshawe Hospital, Newall Green and Davenport Green. [7] Although axed in 2005 to control costs, the Wythenshawe Loop remains an aspiration of TfGM. The route could link with HS2 Manchester Airport High Speed station. [8] TfGM have submitted a bid for funding to extend the Airport Line to Terminal 2. [9]
The area borders Newall Green, on the other side of the M56 motorway, from which it is served by Junctions 4 (Wythenshawe) and 5 (Manchester Airport), to the west, Moss Nook to the south and south-east, Peel Hall to the east and Benchill to the north. The Manchester Metrolink Airport Line runs through Woodhouse Park.