[3] The record attendance is 47,310, who watched Notts lose 1–0 to York City in the FA Cup Sixth Round on 12 March 1955.
[5] Meadow Lane lies just three hundred yards (270 metres) away from the City Ground, home of Nottingham Forest.
Cricket took priority on the ground and the football club were often forced to play early and late season fixtures at other venues to avoid a clash.
[6] The Football League eventually deemed that this practice was inappropriate and demanded that Notts either seek more favourable terms for the use of Trent Bridge or relocate to a new ground on which they could fulfil all of their fixtures.
However, the cricket club trustees decided not to renew County's lease in 1908, giving them 2 years to find an alternative home.
In 1910, a plot of land near the cattle market on the opposite side of the River Trent was leased from the city council and a new stadium hastily erected.
On 3 September 1910, County moved to Meadow Lane, the first game was a 1–1 draw with old rivals Nottingham Forest, played in front of 27,000 fans paying receipts of £775.
Meadow Lane was bombed during World War II forcing the club to suspend all fixtures during the 1942 season.
The Meadow Lane End was demolished in 1978[11] and replaced by a building which housed new dressing rooms, a social club and a variety of other facilities designed to generate more income.
This features a triangular gable (a replica of that on the old County Road stand) with the name of the club and its year of formation.