It may be 75 years since the but the implications of that day were so great they can still be felt.
is playing its game on Tuesday - on the anniversary of the accident - in memory of the 266 miners who died at Gresford Colliery on 22 September 1934.
Many had been working a double or extra shift so they could have a day off to watch a Wrexham game the following Saturday.
So, for some on the terraces on Tuesday, the memorial match will have a stronger resonance as they will be relatives - such as grandchildren - of those men who died.
Much has been written and discussed over the years about the accident - caused by an [read Real Price of Coal]. We've recently uploaded some original from that time as well as .
And has in-depth coverage of the disaster online, a and a virtual copy of the which can still be viewed in the .
On Tuesday, the air raid siren at will sound for two minutes at 11am at the same time as an annual memorial service takes place at . Wrexham FC players will take part in the silence at their training ground, Colliers' Park, on the site of the former Gresford Colliery.
It was at 2am an explosion followed by a fire in the of the mine saw the beginning of the worst mining incident in North Wales. Every man on the shift was killed [] apart from six miners who managed to escape.
By the evening of 23 September three rescue workers had also been killed and the final death toll was 266, leaving 166 widows, 229 children, 194 partial dependants and 130 pensioners.
To commemorate Tuesday's 75th anniversary has installed a plaque made from the same cast as the bronze memorial panel on Pandy Road, Gresford. The memorial and zinc pattern list the names of all the mineworkers who died in the disaster.
There will also be a minute's silence before the 'Gresford Colliery Disaster Memorial Game' - Wrexham v Luton Town, at 7.45pm where will be playing the 'Gresford Hymn'.