
On an afternoon charged with significance, the Seasiders marked a remarkable milestone, 100 years without relegation, by grinding out the point they needed in a tense and disciplined performance.
The visitors started brightly, forcing Shane Bland into early action. Inside five minutes, the Whitby goalkeeper produced a sharp save to deny Leon Gibson-Booth at the back post. Bland was called upon again soon after, reacting well to keep out a low drive from Max Wright.
Cleethorpes continued to apply pressure, and Bland remained equal to it, holding confidently from Liam Hughes’ downward header following a corner on 14 minutes.
Whitby gradually grew into the contest, with Harley Dawson at the heart of their attacking moments. On 27 minutes, his low first-time effort tested Lloyd Allinson, who got down well to make the save. Dawson threatened again later in the half, slicing wide from the edge of the area after a swift counter-attack.
The hosts thought they had broken the deadlock in the 34th minute when Jake Charles found the net, but celebrations were cut short by the offside flag.
As the half drew to a close, Bailey Conway fired over under pressure from Frankie Whelan.
After the interval, chances remained at a premium such was the cagey nature of this encounter from a Whitby perspective. Layton Watts tried his luck from distance early in the second half, but his effort was comfortably gathered by Allinson.
At the other end, Bland produced the save of the match just past the hour mark, diving low to his side to tip a goal-bound header from Hughes behind and preserve parity. This ultimately proved to be the moment that kept Whitby Town in the division.
Whitby continued to push for a breakthrough, with Dawson again going close on 69 minutes, his downward header tipped behind for a corner that came to nothing.
Late on, James Harrison curled an effort over the bar from the edge of the area, but neither side could find the decisive touch.
In the end, it mattered little for Whitby Town. The point was enough. At full-time, relief and pride swept around the ground as the Seasiders secured their status once more at the expense of Prescot Cables and Morpeth Town - extending a century-long record and proving their resilience when it mattered most.