The hosts took a fifth-minute lead when Jermaine Anderson fired home after Luke Wilkinson had challenged goalkeeper Elliot Justham.
But they were ahead for just six minutes as Josh Rees flicked on a Justham free-kick and Ryan Hill levelled.
Daggers went close to a second when Inih Effiong headed over and keeper Will Jaaskelainen clawed away another attempt from Hill before Rees missed an open goal just before half-time.
Woking went ahead with five minutes remaining when Kevin Berkoe lifted the ball over Justham after being fed by Luker.
Luker made it 3-1 three minutes into stoppage time before Conor Lawless reduced the deficit but ultimately to no avail.
Phil Brown’s Harriers had won six of their previous eight league games and looked like escaping the bottom four themselves following Jack Lambert’s sweet 11th-minute strike.
But Woking, who had Ricky Korboa’s early effort disallowed for offside, levelled after 75 minutes through Curtis Edwards’ drilled free-kick.
Woking claimed the winner in the 90th minute as Korboa was pushed over and Charley Kendall headed home the rebound after Christian Dibble had saved his penalty.
Jim Kellerman fired Woking into a 42nd-minute lead from the penalty spot after Ricky Korboa was fouled by Darren McQueen in the box.
Woking striker Padraig Amond had spurned a pair of early chances and came close again early in the second half when his effort was tipped over the bar by Ebbsfleet goalkeeper Mark Cousins.
Looking to end a run of two straight defeats, the visitors responded well and hauled themselves level just before the hour mark when Ouss Cisse was on hand to bundle home a Craig Tanner corner.
Jayden Luker, Jermaine Anderson and Dan Moss all went close for the home side, but they had to wait until first-half stoppage time to go ahead when Akinola stabbed home Curtis Edwards’ free-kick.
Rhys Browne fired just wide after linking up with Luker as the game got back under way, but it was Akinola who doubled the home side’s advantage after 51 minutes when he chested down a corner at the far post before finding the net.
Fylde goalkeeper Chris Neal did well to keep out Charley Kendall’s low strike, but there was nothing he could do to about Kevin Berkoe’s 77th-minute piledriver that made it 3-0.
It took until the last minute of the first half for the first noteworthy chance of the afternoon when Jayden Luker brought down a long punt upfield from goalkeeper Will Jaaskelainen and fired in a shot that was saved by Marcus Dewhurst.
The visitors made a bright start to the second half and after Tarryn Allarakhia had sent one effort inches wide and brought a save from Jaaskelainen with another, Nathan Ferguson opened the scoring with a smart finish at the far post in the 66th minute.
Curtis Edwards hit a post as Woking looked for an immediate response, and they levelled through substitute Charley Kendall’s bullet header in the 78th minute.
The Welsh outfit ended a 15-year exodus from the English Football League with promotion to League Two this season, Phil Parkinson's men finishing as champions with a record 111 points.
Under Hollywood owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney, the Red Dragons have experienced an explosion of fortunes both on and off the pitch.
Any prospect of top-flight football is still several seasons away at the very least, but reflecting on their impressive rise, Jones does not see their hopes as fanciful.
"I think with the way that the owners have come in and started to put infrastructure in the club, they're doing it the right way," he told Stats Perform.
"The way that they've got that connection with fans, with players, they've really got together [and] united the whole club.
"Anything's possible, especially with these owners and what we've witnessed in the last two years.
"Obviously, we're not naive enough to say that it's not going to be a difficult challenge to get to the Premier League.
"Many teams try and do it every year, and they're already in the Championship, investing huge sums of money. There's no guarantee of anything in football.
"But with the current manager and the staff that he's put in place, they're experienced football guys who know what it takes to get promoted and get through the leagues, and what the club needs to progress.
"If those things are in place, you stand a better chance of success. I think it's a realistic aim, if we keep doing the things that we've been doing for the last couple of years."
Eyebrows were raised when actors Reynolds and McElhenney took over at Wrexham, but any fears the move was a mere publicity stunt have abated amid the club's revival.
Jones applauded the owners for uniting the city, highlighting how they have not sought to cut corners in helping to turn matters around after a decade-and-a-half in the doldrums.
"With that kind of energy, anything's possible," he added. "From the word go, they've done everything the right way. They've done fantastically.
"To be able to enter the football world and to be able to have the impact they have done is very difficult. Sometimes it's a closed shop, and if you don't speak the football language it is difficult for people to have to buy in.
"The way that they've done things, they have the respect of everybody. I can't speak highly enough of the job they've done."
There has been a great deal of focus on Wrexham over the past two seasons after the club were bought by Hollywood actors Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney.
The Welsh side have thrived in the spotlight, finishing second last year and falling agonisingly short in an epic play-off defeat to Grimsby Town.
Wrexham bounced back this season and are now in pole position for the single automatic promotion place, needing only to beat Boreham Wood on Saturday to seal their return to the Football League.
That is only after a remarkable tussle with Notts County, however, culminating in the dramatic 3-2 Easter Monday win at the Racecourse Ground.
Both Wrexham and Notts have passed 100 points, with the league leaders setting a points record for the top five divisions of English football.
For defender Tozer, that incredible standard encourages comparisons with perhaps football's greatest rivalry, which saw Messi at Barcelona and Ronaldo at Real Madrid hit their peaks at the same time.
"Everyone would rather have won the league by March, and that's just the way things are," Tozer said, looking forward to the Boreham Wood game.
"People generally want things easy, but if you want to go and win a league, it's tough, it's hard. You have to do the right thing day in and day out.
"And again, it's been great to have that pressure. It probably was the same. We'd both be pushing each other really, and that's okay.
"It's a bit like the Messi and Ronaldo situation pushing each other on. It's been tough and it's been good."
But Wrexham striker Paul Mullin, who scored 47 goals in all competitions, lost out on the player of the season award to Macaulay Langstaff.
Notts County striker Langstaff scored 42 National League goals – four more than Mullin – as Luke Williams’ side finished four points short of champions Wrexham’s record total of 111.
Parkinson steered Wrexham over the line amid the fierce spotlight on the Welsh club because of their Hollywood star owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney.
Wrexham missed out on promotion in the play-offs last season, but the Red Dragons ended a 15-year absence from the English Football League on the season’s penultimate weekend this time.
Notts County, who pushed Wrexham all the way in a thrilling title race, will contest the play-off final against Chesterfield on Saturday for the second promotion spot.
The top two dominate the National League team of the year with eight players. Notts County supply five players, two more than Wrexham.
National League Team of the Year: N Ashmore (Boreham Wood), J King (Chesterfield), A Chicksen (Notts County), B Tozer (Wrexham), K Cameron (Notts County), E Lee (Wrexham), M Palmer, R Rodrigues, M Langstaff (all Notts County), P Mullin (Wrexham), R Colclough (Chesterfield).
Ashley Nathaniel-George gave the visitors the lead with a superb strike after 16 minutes.
York drew level 12 minutes later when Will Davies was on hand to convert after the away side failed to deal with a cross from Scott Burgess.
The Minstermen had the better of the second half with Dipo Akinyemi hitting the post but were unable to force a winner.
The hosts showed no ill effects from Saturday’s loss to Hartlepool as Cordner blasted home a long-range effort with just six minutes on the clock.
City had travelled north on the back of two straight wins but could make few inroads and both Davies and Dipo Akinyemi came close to increasing the home side’s lead.
The second duly arrived on 18 minutes when Davies poked home from close range and York played out the second period in relative comfort.
Will Davies gave York the lead after just four minutes and goalkeeper George Sykes-Kenworthy kept the home side in front with an excellent close-range save from Marcus Dinanga.
Dinanga was presented with the chance to equalise in first-half stoppage time when Callum Whelan was fouled in the area, but the striker hit his penalty straight down the middle and saw it kept out by the feet of Sykes-Kenworthy.
Dipo Akinyemi, who had been restored to the starting line-up after coming off the bench in the reverse fixture on Boxing Day, sealed the win shortly before the hour mark with his ninth goal of the season following a swift counter-attack.
The opening goal came in the 32nd minute when Marvin Armstrong prodded the ball home amid a goalmouth scramble.
Substitute Kido Taylor-Hart almost equalised from the edge of the area but his fierce shot was was saved by Lewis Thomas.
York wrapped up the points through Dipo Akinyemi’s long-range effort with nine minutes remaining.
The Minstermen have made a poor start to the National League season and parted company with former manager Michael Morton last month.
Ardley would have been delighted to see Dipo Akinyemi put the hosts ahead after only 21 minutes following great work from Ryan Fallowfield.
But Lee Ndlovu levelled in the 57th minute and, although Quevin Castro put York back in front five minutes later, Ndlovu’s second in the 66th minute denied the struggling home side a first league win of the campaign.
Dipo Akinyemi had a goal ruled out for offside before Chesterfield, who beat Boreham Wood last week to wrap up the title, took a seventh-minute lead through Joe Quigley on his 100th appearance for the Spireites.
The Minstermen were back on level terms eight minutes after the restart when Akinyemi slid a ball through to Maz Kouhyar, who took a touch before rifling home.
And the home side found the winner in the 71st minute when Akinyemi picked his moment to arrow a left-footed strike through Ryan Boot at his near post to send York five points clear of the drop zone.
Jake Hessenthaler gave the visitors to the LNER Community Stadium the lead by heading in an in-swinging corner in the 11th minute.
York were level when Ryan Fallowfield poked in a cross from Danny Amos two minutes before half-time.
But the Minstermen could not find a winner and a 14th draw of the season – the most in the division – left them three points above the bottom four.
Joe Westley put the Coasters ahead inside three minutes, poking Jonathan Ustabasi’s cross past George Sykes-Kenworthy in the York goal.
York levelled after 14 minutes as Will Smith rose superbly to head home Fin Barnes’ cross.
But the visitors raised the tempo after the break and Ashley Hunter produced an audacious effort before Ustabasi raced away down the right and converted coolly 17 minutes from time, leaving York two points from safety.
The Daggers pushed hard for a breakthrough in the first half, with Charley Kendall shooting wide, Josh Rees firing over and Ryan Whitley tipping Ryan Hill’s curling effort over the crossbar.
Substitute Lenell John-Lewis volleyed wide for York, but Dagenham found the breakthrough on the hour mark when Hill smashed home from Lewis Page’s cutback.
However, John-Lewis fired past Dagenham goalkeeper Elliot Justham in the 85th minute before Dipo Akinyemi’s seventh goal of the season won it for the Minstermen at the death.
Tyrese Sinclair’s 36th-minute penalty gave Rochdale the upper hand.
York struck back on the verge of half-time as Adam Crookes headed home in the 12th minute of added time.
As the second half got under way, it was Dale who started off the better as Sinclair bagged his brace in the 53rd minute, converting from the penalty spot for a second time after Crookes received a red card.
Ian Henderson made it three for Dale late on, netting his third goal of the season.
Bush let fly from distance in the 83rd minute, summoning enough power to beat the best efforts of Minstermen goalkeeper George Sykes-Kenworthy for his first of the season.
That looked to be enough to seal back-to-back victories for Luke Garrard’s men, who had withstood good chances from Billy Chadwick and Will Davies, but they could not hang on.
York did not relent and grabbed a point for the fourth time in five games, and the 12th time this season, when Crookes nodded home via a deflection off Wood’s Matt Robinson following a goalmouth scramble.
Stuart O’Keefe went close to giving Aldershot the lead inside two minutes but his volley from the edge of the area was tipped over by home goalkeeper Rory Watson.
Billy Chadwick put the ball in the net for York in the 19th minute but the assistant referee flagged for offside, and although both sides created further first-half chances, it was goalless at the break.
Ryan Fallowfield had a good chance to open the scoring just before the 70-minute mark but his header was kept out by Shots keeper Jordi van Stappershoef.
John-Lewis then came on in the 89th minute and made an immediate impact, heading in at the back post to secure York’s first win under boss Adam Hinshelwood.