Best away day in this division

Master D

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 21, 2015
Messages
7,662
Reaction score
3,855
Points
113
Location
Wrexham
Supports
The Natural Order
Consult the Natural Order for the definitive list of who's who.
 

shoddycollins

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2015
Messages
11,452
Reaction score
3,535
Points
113
Location
In the Paul Simpson wonderland
Supports
Carlisle United
Who's who then?
Well this isn't my opinion, but I remember when we were drawn to play Rochdale or Maidstone in last year's FA Cup, someone said the Maidstone fans thought their brief time in the league meant they were a massive club. I'd say the former group contains the likes of Hereford.
 

Pliny Harris

Frightened Inmate #2
Site Supporter
Joined
Jan 17, 2015
Messages
1,857
Reaction score
1,511
Points
113
Location
Western Cumbria
Supports
The Provisional Brotherhood
I've walked/cycled loads round Sowerby/Hebden Bridge,Mythomroyd,Todmorden is that we're the clogg factory was?
So might be but muddled.
Last time I was there parked in Sowerby Bridge & walked back towards Halifax along the canal,with a river down below.Theres a pub where canal came to a dead end.
I might have seen a sign for Triangle & it's stuck in my mind as I thought it's a strange nameplace

Yeah the clog factory's Mytholmroyd as far as I'm aware! I think I had my 6th birthday party there or summat because we visited once and it had a tiny indoor play area. Time to go back I reckon.

We're a great area for having ordinary, everyman place names, with two exceptions: the sprawl villages of Triangle and Friendly. Not much worth seeing in either bar the names, unless you're keen on attractive cricket grounds (Triangle CC). No nonsense place names like Phylum St. Edwin or Meston-le-Peanuts to be seen over here, just proper ones like Stainland and Midgeley.

Honestly unsure which pub it is you're hinting at sadly, though when it comes down to it the Three Pigeons is easily one of the best pubs within a few minutes of a ground in the country, and for those willing to go a little further out, The Big 6 is also both brilliant and unique.
 

Silver Stone

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 18, 2015
Messages
1,083
Reaction score
468
Points
83
Supports
Maidstone United
Well this isn't my opinion, but I remember when we were drawn to play Rochdale or Maidstone in last year's FA Cup, someone said the Maidstone fans thought their brief time in the league meant they were a massive club. I'd say the former group contains the likes of Hereford.
:dk: literally no Stones fan has ever said that.
 

Farleigh

Active Member
Joined
Mar 30, 2017
Messages
480
Reaction score
163
Points
43
Location
Maidstone
Supports
Maidstone
I would say Maidstone are well aware of their place in the non league world's pecking order. Those who do remember our brief dismal stay in the fourth division are gradually being replaced by a new generation who are creating a completely new identity for the club.
 

shoddycollins

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2015
Messages
11,452
Reaction score
3,535
Points
113
Location
In the Paul Simpson wonderland
Supports
Carlisle United
Yeah the clog factory's Mytholmroyd as far as I'm aware! I think I had my 6th birthday party there or summat because we visited once and it had a tiny indoor play area. Time to go back I reckon.

We're a great area for having ordinary, everyman place names, with two exceptions: the sprawl villages of Triangle and Friendly. Not much worth seeing in either bar the names, unless you're keen on attractive cricket grounds (Triangle CC). No nonsense place names like Phylum St. Edwin or Meston-le-Peanuts to be seen over here, just proper ones like Stainland and Midgeley.

Honestly unsure which pub it is you're hinting at sadly, though when it comes down to it the Three Pigeons is easily one of the best pubs within a few minutes of a ground in the country, and for those willing to go a little further out, The Big 6 is also both brilliant and unique.

Personally my favourite and most stereotypically Yorkshire place names are Thorngumbald and Heckmondwike
 

Back in the DHSS

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 16, 2015
Messages
1,854
Reaction score
946
Points
113
Location
Cheshire
Supports
Tranmere Rovers
Honestly unsure which pub it is you're hinting at sadly, though when it comes down to it the Three Pigeons is easily one of the best pubs within a few minutes of a ground in the country, and for those willing to go a little further out, The Big 6 is also both brilliant and unique.[/QUOTE]

I think the Three Pigeons is worth a visit on its own, without any football. Not as good as when it was a Websters house though. Probably in my all time top 3 pre\post match watering holes along with Wolverhampton's Great Western and Rochdale's Cemetry hotel.
Shears inn, Paris gates not as brilliant or unique as the Big 6, but always worth a visit when in Halifax.
 

shoddycollins

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2015
Messages
11,452
Reaction score
3,535
Points
113
Location
In the Paul Simpson wonderland
Supports
Carlisle United
Honestly unsure which pub it is you're hinting at sadly, though when it comes down to it the Three Pigeons is easily one of the best pubs within a few minutes of a ground in the country, and for those willing to go a little further out, The Big 6 is also both brilliant and unique.

I think the Three Pigeons is worth a visit on its own, without any football. Not as good as when it was a Websters house though. Probably in my all time top 3 pre\post match watering holes along with Wolverhampton's Great Western and Rochdale's Cemetry hotel.
Shears inn, Paris gates not as brilliant or unique as the Big 6, but always worth a visit when in Halifax.[/QUOTE]

The Great Western in Wolverhampton has to be one of the best pubs full-stop.
 

B2TF

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2015
Messages
5,905
Reaction score
975
Points
113
Location
The Moral High Ground
Supports
THE MIGHTY SHAYMEN
The Shears Inn is unique in its own way (as you'd expect :dk:). Just a quarter of a mile from The Shay and often enjoyed by small groups of away fans (or big groups if you're Bristol Rovers) it claims to be Halifax's oldest hostelry, dating from the 1600s. It is situated by the river in a valley bottom, on a historic, medaeval pack horse route from Lancashite (what a serendipitious typo , I think I'll leave it there:ds:) to Leeds- you can still imagine a train of laden mules passing through there. Talking about place names, all my life I've seen buses in the station destined for "Portsmouth", which is presumably somewhere local and I still have no idea where that is.:fart:
 
Last edited:

Pliny Harris

Frightened Inmate #2
Site Supporter
Joined
Jan 17, 2015
Messages
1,857
Reaction score
1,511
Points
113
Location
Western Cumbria
Supports
The Provisional Brotherhood
The Shears Inn is unique in its own way (as you'd expect :dk:). Just a quarter of a mile from The Shay and often enjoyed by small groups of away fans (or big groups if you're Bristol Rovers) it claims to be Halifax's oldest hostelry, dating from the 1600s. It is situated by the river in a valley bottom, on a historic, medaeval pack horse route from Lancashite (what a serendipitious typo , I think I'll leave it there:ds:) to Leeds- you can still imagine a train of laden mules passing through there. Talking about place names, all my life I've seen buses in the station destined for "Portsmouth", which is presumably somewhere local and I still have no idea where that is.:fart:

Oh yeah, the final settlement in Yorkshire is called Portsmouth, situated north-west of Todmorden before the valley dips down again into Lancashire. So-called I believe because a local who joined the navy was so enchanted by the Hampshire city that when he'd finished there, he named the area after it. Being at the top of the Pennine watershed and some 35 miles from the sea as the crow flies, it's about as far from being the mouth of a port as it's possible to be.
 

EnglishRed

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 12, 2015
Messages
7,497
Reaction score
3,664
Points
113
Location
Flintshire UK
Supports
Wrexham
Everything I know about Halifax I learnt from the Steve Bruce novel "Sweeper":

Halifax, like all places in this area, is set among hills. There is moorland all around. Not as high and barren as Pennines, but windy nonetheless. Yet the valleys, with rivers and streams, are sheltered and pleasant. Until twenty or thirty years ago, this was an area that thrived on wool manufacture.
 

rudebwoyben

Site Supporter
Site Supporter
Joined
Jan 17, 2015
Messages
4,526
Reaction score
1,554
Points
113
Location
London WC1E
Supports
Barnet
Everything I know about Halifax I learnt from the Steve Bruce novel "Sweeper":

Halifax, like all places in this area, is set among hills. There is moorland all around. Not as high and barren as Pennines, but windy nonetheless. Yet the valleys, with rivers and streams, are sheltered and pleasant. Until twenty or thirty years ago, this was an area that thrived on wool manufacture.
Bruce's books are masterpieces of literature!
 

Pliny Harris

Frightened Inmate #2
Site Supporter
Joined
Jan 17, 2015
Messages
1,857
Reaction score
1,511
Points
113
Location
Western Cumbria
Supports
The Provisional Brotherhood
Everything I know about Halifax I learnt from the Steve Bruce novel "Sweeper":

Halifax, like all places in this area, is set among hills. There is moorland all around. Not as high and barren as Pennines, but windy nonetheless. Yet the valleys, with rivers and streams, are sheltered and pleasant. Until twenty or thirty years ago, this was an area that thrived on wool manufacture.

Yeah that commentary is a classic of the English language. Halifax is actually part of the Pennines, it just lies low cos the range isn't particularly wide at that point. He has a... fairly exotic take. Even when Halifax's Piece Hall (Best away day posts passim) as a place of wool commerce was approaching obsolescence by the start of the 19th century...

There's another classic bit in one of his books where a gang leader's holding a gun to his head and in his "final" moments he decides to go on a rambling internal monologue about how irrigating and building reservoirs in the Pennine moorlands has helped make the land productive :bg:
 

B2TF

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2015
Messages
5,905
Reaction score
975
Points
113
Location
The Moral High Ground
Supports
THE MIGHTY SHAYMEN
Everything I know about Halifax I learnt from the Steve Bruce novel "Sweeper":

Halifax, like all places in this area, is set among hills. There is moorland all around. Not as high and barren as Pennines, but windy nonetheless. Yet the valleys, with rivers and streams, are sheltered and pleasant. Until twenty or thirty years ago, this was an area that thrived on wool manufacture.
Interestingly, my cousin married a Welshman in the early 1970s- he loved Halifax because he said it so reminded him of the "Valleys": the hills, the sheep, the blackened buildings, but mostly the privations (at the time the local textile industries were collapsing like a house of cards) and the "community" among the people. He loves it still. :cool1:
 

SomeMightShay

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 20, 2015
Messages
691
Reaction score
353
Points
63
Supports
FC Halifax Town
Twitter
@SomeMightShay
Honestly unsure which pub it is you're hinting at sadly, though when it comes down to it the Three Pigeons is easily one of the best pubs within a few minutes of a ground in the country, and for those willing to go a little further out, The Big 6 is also both brilliant and unique.

I think the Three Pigeons is worth a visit on its own, without any football. Not as good as when it was a Websters house though. Probably in my all time top 3 pre\post match watering holes along with Wolverhampton's Great Western and Rochdale's Cemetry hotel.
Shears inn, Paris gates not as brilliant or unique as the Big 6, but always worth a visit when in Halifax.[/QUOTE]
Shears serves Tim Taylor's Boltmaker and serves roast beef sandwiches served with a side of roast potatoes and gravy. On that basis alone i'd never want to drink anywhere else pre-match.
 

SomeMightShay

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 20, 2015
Messages
691
Reaction score
353
Points
63
Supports
FC Halifax Town
Twitter
@SomeMightShay
The Train Station pub at Harrogate is one of the best on the non-league route. And given its a bit of a slog to the stadium it was almost tempting to stay there and get text updates last time out.
 

PaulHaddock

people person
Joined
Apr 27, 2015
Messages
3,944
Reaction score
1,760
Points
113
Location
Nottingham
Supports
Grimsby
Never been in the Three Pigeons but I've tried the Shears twice and both times were excellent. We were in quite rush too so that was very helpful. Decent tapas.
 

rocknrollnobody

New Member
Joined
Aug 22, 2017
Messages
24
Reaction score
12
Points
3
Location
Yorkshire
Supports
York City
The Train Station pub at Harrogate is one of the best on the non-league route. And given its a bit of a slog to the stadium it was almost tempting to stay there and get text updates last time out.

The Harrogate Tap
It's a decent place, but as you say, not really close to the Wetherby Rd ground.
 

B2TF

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2015
Messages
5,905
Reaction score
975
Points
113
Location
The Moral High Ground
Supports
THE MIGHTY SHAYMEN
You know you've been in non league way too long when a pub in fucking Harrogate is one of your favourite pre-match venues.:ffs:
 

Pablosammy

Soowhyarmy
Joined
Jan 31, 2015
Messages
2,384
Reaction score
1,486
Points
113
Location
Suffolk Coast
Supports
Tranmere

Forum statistics

Threads
16,447
Messages
1,194,414
Members
8,397
Latest member
ben192

Latest posts

Stronger Security, Faster Connections with VPN at IPVanish.com!

SITE SPONSORS

W88 W88 trang chu KUBET Thailand
Fun88 12Bet Get top UK casino bonuses for British players in casinos not on GamStop
The best ₤1 minimum deposit casinos UK not on GamStop Find the best new no deposit casino get bonus and play legendary slots Best UK online casinos list 2022
No-Verification.Casino Casinos that accept PayPal Top online casinos
sure.bet
Need help with your academic papers? Customwritings offers high-quality professionals to write essays that deserve an A!
Top