Stangmore Park was opened in 1975 after a temporary wooden social club was built after Dungannon Swifts had bought the land from a local company. In 1982, the wooden social club was removed and replaced with a clubhouse. In 2006, Stangmore Park was attacked by vandals. Eight crates of beer had been stolen from the ground. The police reported that half of the bottles in the crates had littered the pitch with glass being stuck in the goals and the centre of the pitch. This also led to the postponement of a semi-final of the
Bob Radcliffe Cup. Stangmore Park has often been used as a nominated home ground for teams promoted into the
IFA Premiership if their own grounds fail to meet
Irish Football Association criteria. In 2012,
Ballinamallard United originally nominated Stangmore Park as their home ground after being promoted from the
IFA Championship if construction at their
Ferney Park ground could not be completed in time for the start of the season. In 2013, Warrenpoint Town also nominated Stangmore Park as their home ground for the first few months of the 2013–14 season as their own home ground,
Milltown, was not up to Premiership standard after the IFA refused permission for them to move to
The Showgrounds,
Newry. During this period, the ground was brought up to Premiership standard. Warrenpoint's final home game at the ground was a 2–1 win over
Coleraine on 30 November 2013, after which they moved back to Milltown. == Usage ==