Finally, the club was dissolved in 2013, when its owners, Mihai Ionescu and Municipality of Turnu Măgurele refused to continue the financing.
[2] The squad that achieved the promotion in 1975 was managed by Gheorghe Fusulan and composed of the following players: Cojoacă, Zîmbrea, Zavera, Șcheau, Dragole, Pîrvu, Stoichiță, Domnișoru, Solomon, Meiroșu, Sardu, Radu, Rusu, Ceangîru, Roatămoale, Ciotec, Dumitru Chioțea, Cărbunaru, Popa, Dobre and Penuș.
1983 squad of Chimia was managed by Gheorghe Costinescu and included the following footballers: Zariosu, Titirică, Ștefan, Potîng, Doncea, Văduva, Cristea, Bogheci, Bădăluță, Vlădescu, Bastardu, Zaharia, Iliescu, B. Nica, Ionescu, I. Nica, Huțan, Neațu, Dimirache, Chivu, Cîrjan, Ceatean, Bartales, C. Zamfir, Cochiță, Dumitrache and Cărbunaru.
[4] For Dunărea Turris, the summer of 2010 was a "very hot one" as the old investors were unable to find more funds to support the team that was risking the bankruptcy.
[5] When everything seemed lost, however, Mihai Ionescu, a businessman from Turnu Măgurele, bought the club and signed new players, as well as a new manager, in the person of Daniel Sava.
[6] On 14 September 2010, Mihai Ionescu fired Daniel Sava after only one point in three games and replaced him with Dumitru Bolborea.
The second season in the Liga III, under the ownership of Ionescu, began with the official goal of finishing on the promotion spot and in the first five rounds of the championship the team managed to stay in the lead, followed by CS Buftea and Conpet Ploiești.
Before the winter break the situation changed dramatically bad in the relationship between Ionescu and the mayor of the town and during the second part of the season Dunărea went down to the middle of the table.
[11][12] In the summer of 2022, along with the promotion in the third tier of Romanian football system, the team coached by Costin Lazăr formalized the change of name to CSM Cetatea Turnu Magurele.