After many successes in the 1970s and 1980s, the club was held in high regard in footballing circles not only in the North West but also further afield, indeed it was once one of the leading lights in the Northern Ireland Intermediate League.
A successful Mini-Soccer Academy was set up in 2012 with the hope of building a strong club for the local community.
By the end of the 1970s, Roe Valley became a founder member of the present day Northern Ireland Intermediate League.
The first piece of silverware at intermediate level arrived in 1983, when the club won the Craig Memorial Cup.
On 26 July 1985 Roe Valley claimed possibly their biggest scalp when they beat the mighty Glentoran F.C.
Another high-profile game the club was involved in came in the 1986/87 season, when the first team were defeated 3–0 by the PSNI F.C., then called the RUC in the IFA Intermediate Cup Final.
The nineties may not have been as successful as the previous two decades, in the regards to trophies, but the club still produced two strong sides.
Agonisingly, the club's first team were Runners-Up in the NI Intermediate for three seasons in succession, coming second twice to Donegal Celtic F.C.
After the millennium, Roe Valley still competed in the NI Intermediate League but began gradually to struggle after each season.