Early years The club was formed following a meeting at the Eastville Restaurant in Bristol in September 1883. It was initially called Black Arabs F.C., after the Arabs rugby team and the predominantly black kits in which they played. This name only lasted for the
1883–84 season, and in a bid to draw more fans from the local area the club was renamed
Eastville Rovers in 1884.
Into the Football League For the
1920–21 season, the Southern League teams were moved into the new
Division Three of the
Football League, which became
Division Three (South) the following season. They remained in this division for over 30 years, before winning the league, and promotion in the
1952–53 season. The team has won promotion on six other occasions: in
1973–74 from the Third Division to the Second Division, again in
1989–90 as Division Three champions, in
2006–07 to the Football League One, in
2014–15 to League Two from the Conference Premier, in
2015–16 to League One and then in 2021-22 to League One from League Two. The club has been relegated eight times—in
1961–62,
1980–81,
1992–93,
2000–01,
2010–11,
2013–14,
2020–21 and most recently at the end of the
2024–25 season. The highest position in the football
ladder reached by Rovers at the end of season is sixth place in the second tier, which they achieved twice; once in
1955–56, and again in
1958–59. The closest they came to the
top flight was in 1955–56, when they ended the season just four points below the promotion positions. The lowest league position achieved by the club is twenty-third out of twenty-four teams in the
fourth tier, which has occurred twice. In the
2001–02 season, This position was matched at the end of the
2013–14 season, which this time saw Rovers relegated to the Conference for the first time. They returned to the league at the end of
their first Conference season, with a
penalty shootout victory over
Grimsby Town in
the play-off final. In February 2016, it was announced that a 92%
stake in the club had been bought by the Jordanian al-Qadi family, and that
Wael al-Qadi, a member of the
Jordan Football Association, would become the president. Since 2016, the club has been owned by Dwane Sports Ltd, with 92.6% of the
shares, while Bristol Rovers Supporters Club owns the remaining 7.4%. In May 2016, the club recorded a second consecutive promotion by finishing in the final automatic promotion position in
League Two after a 92nd-minute goal secured victory over
Dagenham and Redbridge and
Accrington Stanley failed to win on the final day of the season. It marked the first time Rovers had reached the
third tier of
English Football since relegation in 2011. after he bought the shares of other members of his family, while it was also announced that the club's debt would be capitalised and a new training facility would begin construction at Hortham Lane,
Almondsbury, which is close to the
M5 motorway. Rovers have owned the site formerly known as 'The Colony' and re-branded by the club 'The Quarters' since 2017, and, in June 2020, the club announced that it would be ready for the beginning of the
2020–21 season. On 3 August 2023,
Kuwaiti businessman Hussain AlSaeed bought a controlling 55% share in Dwane Sports, the
holding company for the football club, thus becoming chairman. As part of the
takeover, all debt owed to the company was capitalised. On 22 November 2024, AlSaeed reached an agreement to purchase the remaining 45% of shares owned by both Wael and Samer al-Qadi, the acquisition to be completed over an eighteen-month period. == Cup competitions ==