About Greystanes Soccer Club
Organisation
Organisation 
Greystanes Soccer Club Inc.
ABN 26 764 858 070
Established in 1970
Greystanes Soccer Club is well established, typically registering in excess of 500 players in all age groups. We are located in the western suburbs of Sydney, Australia not far from the City of Parramatta. (Locality map at the end of page.)
We cater for:
- SSG (Small Sided Games) aimed at Under 5’s through Under 8’s.
- Junior Boys and Girls aimed at Under 9’s through Under 18’s.
- All Age Ladies
- Over 30 Ladies
- Under 21’s
- All Age Men
- Over 35 Men
- Over 45 Men
Greystanes Soccer Club expect a high standard of behaviour when representing our Club.
Management
Management Committee
The Club is run by a volunteer management committee comprising a 4-person executive and supported by 8 other committee members, each performing and managing a different role(s) for and within the club.
Sub-committees exist from time to time for specific projects. In 2010, our 40th birthday year, two sub-committees formed to organise celebrations and review the Club's constitution.
The Management Committee may be contacted by email.committee@ greystanesfc.com.au
If you are able to contribute or assist, in any other way, please contact the This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .
More info and application on the Club Administration page.
Correspondance
Correspondance 
| Secretary Greystanes Soccer Club Inc. PO BOX 5349 GREYSTANES LPO, NSW 2145 |
Email: please use the enquiry form. |
Playing Fields
Playing Fields
Bathurst Street Greystanes (parking available in Ballina Street)
Alpha Road Greystanes
Affiliations
Affiliations
GDSFA - Granville & Districts Soccer Football Association
GDSRA - Granville District Soccer Referees Association
FNSW - Football New South Wales
FFA - Football Federation Australia
Uniform
Current Playing Uniform
White shirt with grey stripes; Black shorts with grey stripe; White socks with GSC monogram
Alternate shirt is grey with white strips.
Rollover image to see alternate shirt

Club History
History
1970 
Greystanes Soccer Club was formed in August 1970. Four local men felt the Greystanes area was growing rapidly and was big enough to have its own soccer club.
If you have been part of the Club and you're able to add to the record of the Club's history, in any way, please contact us using the general enquiry form.
Local Area History
Why is it Greystanes?
Why is it called Greystanes?
Greystanes takes its name from a historical home on Prospect Hill, built by Nelson Lawson, third child of Lieutenant William Lawson. The house was demolished in 1946.
The name "Grey Stanes" given by Nelson Simmons Lawson comes from the outcrop of basalt on Prospect Hill. "Grey" being its colour and "Stanes" being Scottish for stones.
The land was originally granted to Lieutenant William Cummings in 1799, before being acquired by William Lawson in approximately 1810. It was from this land that William Lawson, Gregory Blaxland and William Charles Wentworth set out on their successful crossing of the Blue Mountains in 1813 and discovered the Bathurst Plains. The Lawson family crypt still exists at St. Bartholomew's Church, Prospect.
Source: Frances Pollon: The Book of Sydney Suburbs, 1988.
St. Bartholomew's Church, Prospect

Where is Holroyd?
Where is Holroyd?
Holroyd is a Local Government Area and a suburb of Sydney. From 1872, the Holroyd Local Government Area was known as the Municipality of Prospect and Sherwood. The name was changed in 1927 to the Municipality of Holroyd to honour the first Mayor, Alderman Judge Arthur Todd Holroyd and in December 1990 was declared as the City of Holroyd.
Until 1994 there was no suburb called Holroyd anywhere in the Holroyd Local Government Area The "new" suburb of Holroyd, comprises an area bordered by Neil Street, Pitt Street, Walpole Street and the rail line, encompassing the Holroyd Gardens Development. The suburb was extended in 1999 to include the area bordered by Walpole Street, Pitt Street, the Western Freeway (M4) as the northern boundary, Church Street, Woodville Road and the rail line.
Source: Frances Pollon: The Book of Sydney Suburbs, 1988.
Holroyd, Dr Arthur Todd
Arthur Todd Holroyd was the first mayor of the city, which now bears his name. Born in London in 1806, the youngest of seven children, he studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh and Christ's College Cambridge. However, he chose to pursue a legal vocation instead and in 1842 was called to the Bar. In 1842 he migrated to New Zealand, and 2 years later arrived in Sydney.
In October 1845 he was admitted to the New South Wales Bar. Holroyd entered politics to represent Western Boroughs (Bathurst Plains and Carcoar) in the Legislative Council from 1851 to 1856 and returned to the new Assembly in 1856-57. In 1861 he re-entered the assembly as Member for Parramatta. For some time he acted as judge of New South Wales Supreme Court.
In March 1855, Holroyd acquired a large portion of William Sherwin's grant at Merrylands West and called his property Sherwood Scrubs. In 1878 Holroyd established the Great Western Steam Brick and pottery works. On July 5 1872 the Municipality of Prospect and Sherwood was incorporated, with Dr Arthur Todd Holroyd as its mayor.





















