It's the first and the last in terms of the eras of Wolves' illustrious history for today's final two announcements for the 2010 Hall of Fame - Billy Harrison and Graham Turner.
From opposite ends of the timescale it's Billy and Graham to join Bill Slater, Bert Williams, Peter Broadbent, Mike Bailey and John Richards in completing the list of Molineux greats to be inaugurated into the second year of the Hall of Fame.
Harrison, who went from non league player to FA Cup Final hero in one season, and Turner, who dragged Wolves up from their lowest ebb to back-to-back promotions and a Wembley success, will now join the other inductees in being honoured at the Hall of Fame dinner at Molineux on January 14.
We are still searching for any relatives of Billy ahead of what is sure to be another fantastic evening - anyone related to Billy should e-mail comments@wolves.co.uk or telephone (01902) 828376.
Harrison, a tricky right sided player who stood at just over 5ft 5in, joined Wolves from Crewe in the summer of 1907.
A year later he had scored a brilliant individual goal in an FA Cup final as the Molineux Men, then in the Second Division, overcame hot favourites Newcastle at the Crystal Palace.

A crowd favourite, Harrison remained with Wolves through the war years and had amassed 317 league appearances and notched 43 goals before departing for Manchester United in October, 1920.
In a full profile to be featured in the programme for the home match with Bolton, avid Wolves historian and author Steve Gordos writes: "Billy Harrison set a Molineux standard for tricky right-sided players that was resurrected some 40 years later by Johnny Hancocks and continued by Norman Deeley. None of them was above 5ft 6ins tall.
"When 1911 saw the arrival of Brierley Hill-born Sammy Brooks to play on the left Wolves had two diminutive wingers in the side and both were crowd-pleasers."
If Billy played a major part in Wolves' early piece of silverware then Graham Turner was the man who masterminded the club's return from the abyss of the early 1980s.

"Cometh the hour, cometh the man," adds Gordos, in another profile to feature in the Bolton programme.
"When Wolves were at their lowest ebb an unlikely figure arrived at ramshackle Molineux to try to pick up the pieces at a once great club.
"That Graham Turner, not every Wolves fan's choice as manager at the time, brought pride and self-respect back to one of the Football League's founder members is now a fondly recalled chapter in the club's history."
Turner, previously an outstanding player and manager of Shrewsbury Town, arrived at Molineux after a mixed spell in charge of Aston Villa.
Wolves were in crisis - within weeks of Turner's arrival they suffered arguably the worst defeat in their history courtesy of a cup exit at the hands of non-league Chorley, and the manager was not unanimously welcomed by a public who had started getting used to the idea of caretaker boss Brian Little taking charge.
But by the time he departed after an eight-year tenure, there was no doubt of the impact this boyhood Wolves fan had played on the course of Molineux history.
Boosted by the initial signings of a certain Steve Bull and Andy Thompson, Turner produced a cocktail of young ambition and wily experience and it helped the club to back-to-back promotions from the then Fourth Division as well as a memorable Sherpa Van Trophy success in front of over 80,000 at Wembley.

Since leaving Wolves Graham has been heavily involved with Hereford United, as manager, chairman and majority shareholder and continues to serve as chairman after handing over the managerial reins earlier this year.
Only this week he was present at another Hall of Fame dinner, this run by the League Manager's Association to honour those managers who have presided over 1,000 club matches, an elite club in which Turner stands alongside the likes of Sir Alex Ferguson, Graham Taylor and greats who have now passed on such as Sir Matt Busby, Brian Clough and Sir Bobby Robson.
This new Wolves honour however, will be no less significant.
"To have managed the club which I supported as a boy meant so much to me," he says.
"And to now go on and be recognised in this manner by being inducted into the Wolves Hall of Fame is something really special.
"I am absolutely delighted and very proud to receive the honour.
"You never ever lose that affinity for the club you support and my time at Wolves provided some of the most memorable moments of my career."
* A small number of individual places remain for the dinner on January 14, at just £65 plus VAT. For further details call our commercial team on 0871 222 2220 (option 4) or email commercial@wolves.co.uk