Bootham Crescent in York, North Yorkshire, England, is the home of York City football club and York City Knights rugby league club. With a capacity of 8,256, it is near the city centre, just over a mile from York railway station. The ground was constructed in four months, and opened on 31 August 1932. It hosted Football League matches from 1932 to 2004 and from 2012 to 2016, both spells ending after York were relegated into non-League football.
About Bootham Crescent in brief

The Popular Stand was erected in 1959, and replaced by ones twice as powerful in 1995. A number of improvements were made in the early 1980s, with a gymnasium, offices and a lounge for officials built. The stadium was renovated over the summer of 1932; the area was drained and then built to the design of local architects Leck, Leck & Wardenby. In the Second World War, the Popular stand was converted into an air-raid shelter, and it suffered slight damage when a bomb landed on houses along the Shipton Street End. The main stand was built in 1959 and the Popular Stand in 1995, with the Main Stand and the Grosvenor Road End built at the opposite end of the ground. After four months of construction, the ground was ready for the 1932–33 season, with an initial capacity of over 30,000. The club president, Sir John Hunt, marked the occasion by cutting a ribbon of the opening of the match by the Sheriff of York Football League, the treasurer of the Football Association and the local Member of the Parliament. The match was played in a Third division North Third Division Third Division match between York City and Stockport. York played in the match on August 31, 1932, when York played a third Division North Third League match. The game was won by Stockport by a score of 2-1.
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This page is based on the article Bootham Crescent published in Wikipedia (as of Nov. 04, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






