Huddersfield Town's finest hour came in 1926 when they became the first English team to win three successive League titles.
The 1920s also saw the Terriers, who had been formed in 1908, achieve FA Cup success, as the football club lifted the famous trophy in 1922 after being runners-up in 1920.
Huddersfield Town's hat-trick of League titles in the 1920s was followed by two seasons as runners-up, while they also competed in three more FA Cup finals and two semi-finals before the Second World War.
Huddersfield Town were relegated in 1952 for a season before returning to the top tier and alternated between the top two divisions until 1973, when the football club dropped into Division Three for the first time.
That wasn't the end of the Huddersfield's problems, though, as they slipped into Division Four two years later.
However, Huddersfield Town fought back in 1980 to become Division Four champions, scoring 101 goals in the process, and manager Mick Buxton also guided the Terriers to promotion from Division Three in 1983, when they set a club points record of 82. Five years later, though, they were relegated after finishing bottom.
A move to a new ground, renamed the Galpharm Stadium in 2004, brought a change in fortune for Huddersfield Town in 1995 as Neil Warnock's men won promotion to Division One via the play-offs.
Six seasons in Division One followed before another relegation and the Terriers returned to football's basement in 2003.
However, in 2004 Huddersfield Town was back in League One. After missing out on automatic promotion on goal difference, Peter Jackson's men beat Mansfield on penalties in the final of the play-offs and Town have remained there since.