Cricket club's 162-year wait to own home ground ends

News imageSion Mills Cricket Club A batsman stretches out of his crease to hit a scoring shot. A wicket keeper stands behind the stumps. Both men are in full whites cricket gear. Another fielder is seen in the background. The pitch they are playing on is well maintained.Sion Mills Cricket Club
Sion Mills have played at The Holm Field since the club's foundation

A cricket club's wait to own the ground where they have played for more than 160 years has ended, thanks to the help of a couple who won £115m on the lottery.

Sion Mills Cricket Club have played at the Holm Field – where Ireland famously beat the West Indies in 1969 - since it was founded by local mill owners in 1864.

Earlier this week, with financial support from the Kathleen Graham Trust, a charitable foundation set up by EuroMillions winners Frances and Patrick Connolly, the County Tyrone club finalised a deal for the ground.

Club secretary Simon Galloway said it was a "huge day, a momentous day for the cricket club".

News imageSion Mills Cricket Club A cricketer, in a blue uniform, holds two trophies, one in each arm. A medal is around his neck and he is smiling.Sion Mills Cricket Club
Simon says owning the ground secures the club's future

Over the last few years Sion Mills Cricket Club, he said, had been working to secure the ground's ownership but had faced "different legal complications and checks and searches and different things".

There had been "false dawns", Galloway told BBC Radio Foyle's Mark Patterson Show, and times when "we thought we were close to getting things over the line".

But only now , he said, were "we able to sign on the dotted line.. and officially announce the purchase and ownership of the grounds after 162 years."

News imagethe exterior of Herdman's mill, a industrial looking mid 18th century building, now no longer in use. A huge chimney stack is seen to the left of a factory type building
Herdman's Mill in Sion Mills once employed more than 1,000 people in the County Tyrone village

Sion Mills Cricket Club club is the oldest and most successful club in Northern Ireland's north west, founded in 1864, under the patronage of the Herdman family, the local mill owners.

It has won the North West Senior League on 28 occasions and the Senior Cup 29 times and is remembered internationally as the ground where, some 57 years ago this month, the Irish national team bowled the West Indies out for 25.

News imageSion Mills Cricket Club A green grassed grass cricket field stretches towards an old industrial building with a high chimney stack. The sky is blue. A number of trees are on either side of the building.Sion Mills Cricket Club
The ground was an integral part of mill life

Herdman's Mill, built in 1835 by James George and John Herdman from Belfast, once employed more than 1,000 staff.

A model village, a school and sporting facilities, including the cricket patch, were also built by the family on the site of the mill.

It ceased spinning linen in 2004 and the company that owned the mill went into receivership in 2011.

News imageA screenshot from a video of a 1969 BBC film of Ireland playing against west Indies in cricket in which a number of people stand around an old style cricket scoreboard. The image is black and white
Ireland stunned the West Indies at Sion Mills, County Tyrone, in July 1969

Galloway said the cricket club had fallen into "harder times" when the mill closed, adding it had to learn to "become self-sufficient".

But not owning the ground meant Sion Mills could not apply for "grants and things that can make differences to facilities and to youth development".

"We're hoping now that this is obviously going to open those pathways," Galloway said.

"That will help us build for the future and secured it hopefully for at least another 162 years," he said.

News imagePacemaker A woman pops open a bottle of champagne as she stands on stpes alongside a mn holding an oversized cheque. He is wearing a blue shirt and jacket. She is wearing a long black coat and green dress. They have won the lottery.Pacemaker
The club received financial support from the Kathleen Graham Trust, a charitable foundation set up by EuroMillions winners Frances and Patrick Connolly

The ground purchase is not the first time the club has been helped by Frances Connolly, who has family connections to the area.

In 2019, an arson attack at the club sparked fears over its survival.

But with her help the club did survive, and now with a grant from the foundation she and her husband set up in memory of her mother.

"We could not have done anything without the Kathleen Graham Trust and we owe a huge debt of gratitude to them for that," Galloway said.

The Connollys from Moira, County Down, and who live in England, have given away more than half of the £115m fortune they won in 2019.

The Kathleen Graham Trust, named after Frances' mother, is one of two foundations the couple set up after their lottery win.

'Ambitious plans'

News imageSion Mills Cricket Club Three men sit at a table with paperwork in front of them. Behind them are three men who are standing . The standing men are wearing the tracksuits of a football club. The man in the middle sitting is wearing a cricket club shirt.Sion Mills Cricket Club
The cricket club and Sion Swifts Football Club both were able to take ownership of their grounds

The cricket club is not the only local sports team to benefit from the Connollys' philanthropy.

Sion Swifts FC, the cricket club's next door neighbours, now also this week finalised the purchase of The Brae, the club's home ground, with the foundation's support

Club chairman Kevin Boyle told BBC Radio Foyle's North West Today programme everyone at the football club is delighted.

Now "ambitious plans" are being made for new pitches, new floodlights and a new clubhouse, he said.