Westbury United F.C.

In its first season, the Club finished third from bottom of the County league and in the 1920s they struggled, but in the 1930s they won everything possible in Wiltshire football.

The Club purchased and moved to its present ground in Meadow Lane in 1934, the cost of the four-acre site being £475.

The club has produced many players who have gone on to make the grade at professional football, two of them being centre forwards for Bristol City.

He died suddenly in June 1993, aged 61, and now has a grandstand named after him at City's Ashton Gate ground as well as a street in his home village of Dilton Marsh (a few miles from Meadow Lane).

Former Club President, Ernie Barber, who died in December 2012, carried the team kit as a seven-year-old in 1933, and after the war he started playing.

The 2018–19 season saw Westbury stay unbeaten until Boxing Day (17 games, 14 wins and 3 draws) before losing to local rivals Bradford Town FC 1–0 at home.

They continued their good form and ended up finishing in their joint highest league position ever, 5th place with 74 points.

In their first venture into the FA Cup since 2010 they reached the first qualifying round, beating Cribbs and Saltash before being knocked-out by Bitton.

In the FA Vase they got to the first round proper, where Saltash took their revenge and earned a 2–1 win on a very windy day.

The highlight of the 2019–20 season was their match against Swindon Town FC – the county's only professional team – in the quarter-final of the newly formed Wiltshire FA Senior Shield competition, where Westbury lost 7–0.

Ex-players Lewis Porter and Ricky Hulbert were installed as joint managers for the start of the 2020–21 season, which was curtailed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

[2] During the off season Chairman Greg Coulson stepped down to concentrate on his career, he was quickly replaced by former first team manager Sam Gooding.

The club has competed in the FA Cup in most seasons since 1922, with the highlight being reaching the First Round Proper in 1937–38, losing to London side Walthamstow Avenue at home by 3–1.

Trees that surround the ground make it look enclosed, and there is plenty of space for additional stands to be built if necessary.