Street Football Club, nicknamed “The Cobblers,” is a non-league football club based in Street, Somerset.
They currently compete in the Jewson Western League Premier Division, which is part of the ninth tier of English football. The team calls Tannery Ground their home ground.
Street enjoyed early success in local football, winning the Somerset Senior League several times in the late 19th century and adding Somerset Senior Cup triumphs before the turn of the century. Further league and cup victories followed in the early 1910s before the club joined the Western League, where they remained until the outbreak of the First World War. On the resumption of football, Street re-joined the Western League but dropped back to the Somerset Senior League for much of the 1920s. The late 1930s brought strong league performances and a memorable appearance in the first round of the 1938–39 FA Cup, when they faced Ipswich Town.
After the Second World War the club competed in the Western League First Division, with the highlight being a third-place finish and another FA Cup first-round appearance in 1947–48 after a notable victory over Yeovil Town. A downturn in form saw relegation in the mid-1950s and a return to the Somerset Senior League in 1960. The 1960s brought a revival, with Somerset League titles in 1964 and 1966 and a move to a new permanent home at the Tannery Ground in 1967. However, by the early 1990s they had slipped to the Third Division before a rapid recovery under Noel O’Hare and later Simon White, which restored their place in the Western League by the late 1990s.
The early 2000s saw further managerial changes, with White returning to guide the club back into the Western League once again. Dan Badman oversaw some of the club’s best league finishes in the 2010s before Richard Fey’s tenure delivered a historic 2017–18 campaign, when Street won the Western League after a record-breaking run of victories and secured promotion to the Southern League. Although they finished mid-table at that higher level, the club opted for voluntary relegation the following year. Richard Fey departed in 2019, with Des Bulpin taking over as manager.