Following a couple of fortuitous meetings and discussions in
The Digby Tap Public House, a group of players were put together by Alan Fall, Doug Hamilton and Tom Kelly in the second half of the 1979–80 season to play some friendly fixtures against the second or third teams of local sides, always playing away from home (as there was no home pitch) and wearing an assortment of mismatched jerseys. As a result of a determined effort by these three men, by the beginning of the 1980–81 season the club was fully functioning with a committee, complete fixture list, a home pitch on the Terrace Playing Fields, the use of Sherborne Cricket Club's clubhouse (on the site of the current Terrace Clubhouse) and a set of shirts complete with club emblem. After various suggestions and discussions revolving around a multi-coloured set of shirts to reflect the disparate jerseys of their first unofficial matches the previous year, a playing kit of entirely black shirts, shorts and socks was chosen by the club members. This was in recognition of
Charles John Monro who was believed to have been a Sherborne schoolboy who had introduced rugby to New Zealand in 1870. In addition, the New Zealand national team had recently had tours to the UK in
1978,
1979 and
1980 winning 34 of 36 games and the Sherborne players wanted to emulate their style of play and this success. Unfortunately for Sherborne, although Monro had taken the game to New Zealand, he was never at school in the town; he had actually been a pupil at
Christ's College in
Finchley near
London. Remarkably, Sherborne does have a real connection with New Zealand rugby, the man who gave the
Bledisloe Cup to be competed for between the national teams of
Australia and
New Zealand had been a boy at the School,
Charles Bathurst, 1st Viscount Bledisloe! By the end of the first season the fledgling club had won their division and were promoted. In the first eleven years of the club, Sherborne won their division five times, became runners-up four time, were promoted six times and were never relegated. The
local press began referring to them as
the Dorset All-Blacks. Players joined from a radius of 30 miles or more. The club put out a second XV for the first time in the 1981–82 season, they had a colts side in the 1983–84 season, then a third XV in 1985–86 and a fourth XV (nicknamed
the Mooseheads) in 1986–87. At about the same time the junior section of the club was established with mini-rugby sessions being run on Sunday mornings. The club achieved its zenith in its 13th and 14th seasons (1992–94), playing in
South West One (the fifth level in the
English rugby union system), playing against such clubs as
Cinderford RFC,
Henley RFC (then being coached by
Clive Woodward),
Maidenhead RFC and
Salisbury RFC. Between 1993 and 1998 the club were relegated five times in five years back to the division they had occupied in their second season of existence. Since then the club has achieved an equilibrium in the seventh division of English rugby. ==Community links==