The club was established in 1885. Prior to World War I they played in the SouthEastern League, winning the Rye Charity Cup in 1909β10 with a 2β0 win over Icklesham in the final. After winning a league and cup double in 1958β59, the club moved up to the Kent County League, joining the South Division of the Eastern Section. In 1964β65 Lydd were Division One runners-up. After being promoted to the Premier Division, they won the Eastern Section League Cup in 1965β66. In 1969β70 the club won the Premier Division title and went on to retain it the following season. They were Premier Division runners-up in 1971β72, also winning the League Cup, and Premier Division runners-up again in 1979β80. Despite finishing fourth in the Premier Division in 1983β84, the club were not included in the new top-level Senior Division created the following season, instead remaining in the Premier Division. However, they went on to win the Premier Division without losing a match and were promoted to the Senior Division at the first attempt, also winning the Premier Cup. Lydd were Senior Division runners-up in 1987β88 and again in 1988β89 before winning the division three times in succession from 1989β90 to 1991β92. In 1992 the Eastern and Western sections of the league were merged; despite being reigning champions of the Eastern Section, Lydd were placed in Division One East, which they won at the first attempt, losing only once in the league all season; they also won the Les Leckie Cup and the Eastern Floodlit Cup. Denied promotion, the club won the division again in 1993β94 without losing a match and were promoted to the Premier Division; they also retained both cups and went on to win the Floodlit Cup for a third consecutive time the following season. The 1995β96 season saw Lydd finish as runners-up in the Premier Division. They won the Les Leckie Cup again in 2002β03, but finished bottom of the Premier Division in 2005β06 and were relegated to Division One. In 2008β09 the club finished last in Division One East and were relegated to Division Two East. They were Division Two East runners-up in 2010β11 and became founder members of the new Kent Invicta League the following season. In 2013β14 they were Kent Invicta League runners-up. In 2016 the league merged into the Southern Counties East League, becoming its Division One.
Grounds
The club originally played on a ground now used for cricket. They moved to the council-owned Rype ground in 1911, where they played until relocating to the Lindsey Field in 1999. Opened by George Cohen, the new ground was funded by a grant from the National Lottery and was named after the club's longest-serving player and later manager and chairman Pat Lindsey.