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New Cross Stadium

Former sports venue in London

New Cross Stadium

Summary

Former sports venue in London

FieldValue
nameNew Cross Stadium
imageFile:Greyhound racing at New Cross Stadium c.1950.png
captionGreyhound racing at the Stadium circa.1950
locationOld Kent Road, South East London, England
opened1 June 1933
closed3 April 1969

New Cross Stadium, Hornshay Street, Old Kent Road, in South East London opened 1 June 1933, as a greyhound racing stadium and later speedway. The ground was adjacent to The Old Den, the then home of Millwall F.C. and was used as a training ground by the club when they did not have facilities of their own. The track was often referred to as 'The Frying Pan'. It was built inside the greyhound track and had banking all the way round. At the time of its closure in 1969 the stadium had a capacity of 26,000. The stadium was demolished in 1975.

Origins

Previously the site had been used for athletics during the early 1900s. In 1933, the site was used for a new stadium construction. The construction cost the New Cross Greyhounds Ltd £100,000 and the stadium was designed by Mr. G. Simpson and built by Robert McAlpine & Sons.

Greyhound racing

History

The greyhound track was small compared to the average London track and the racing was initially independent (unaffiliated to a governing body). The track was a very tight circumference of 354 yards with a surface of peat, short straights of 86 yards and heavily banked bends. The stadium could accommodate 25,000 people.

The opening race meeting was held on Thursday 1 June 1933 and was opened by the celebrities Cicely Courtneidge and Jack Hulbert. Mr L. O. Browne was appointed as the first Racing Manager. The main race distance was over 550 yards. The first trainers were John 'Jack' Kennedy, Bill Smith, Godfrey Hyde Clark and Harry Spoor and a complex of 200 kennels were attached to the stadium. In 1934, the kennels increased to 250 and Albert Bedford joined the training ranks.

Before the start of the war the stadium was acquired by the Greyhound Racing Association (GRA), who took a controlling interest in January 1938. The GRA subsequently licensed the track with the National Greyhound Racing Club (NGRC), with the first meeting under rules taking place during January 1938.

Also in 1938, the GRA introduced a new competition called the Greenwich Stakes (later to be called the Greenwich Cup) and this was soon followed by the Berkeley Cup in 1939, held over 415 yards. Both events were the principal events at the stadium and they became prominent races on the open race circuit.

After the war Totalisator turnover figures peaked at £3,095,736. The healthy bank balance of the New Cross Greyhounds Ltd Company and the GRA allowed the construction of three new covered stands, two on the home straight and one on the back straight. Restaurant buffet bars, tea buffet bars and licensed bars were to be found in all three enclosures.

In 1946, the hare system used was a 'Sumner' and the kennel facilities for the New Cross trainers were situated at nearby Silwood Street within ten minutes walking distance of the track.

New Cross Stadium 1950s

Trainer Jack Tallantire joined the track in 1952 and Joe Pickering experienced great success that included a double English/Scottish Grand National win by Prince Lawrence in 1954 and 1955. Pickering also lifted the Trafalgar Cup with Our Tim II.

A third major competition called the Ben Truman Stakes was introduced in 1962, when the training ranks consisted of Norman Chambers, Sanders, John Shevlin, Smith and Charlie Smoothy.

John Field arrived as the new Racing Manager in the 1960s and in August 1968 the usual racing schedule of Thursday and Saturday nights was altered after the introduction of Bookmakers Afternoon Greyhound Service (BAGS) fixtures when the Stamford Bridge closed to greyhound racing.

Closure

The BAGS racing lasted less than one year, when the stadium closed with relatively little notice on 3 April 1969 after difficulties over the lease with landowners British Rail.

The stadium was left derelict for several years until it was demolished in 1975 as part of a plan to redevelop the football ground, although those plans fell through. The site is now a public open space called Bridge House Meadows. Millwall F.C. have since moved to a new site north of the stadium, with houses now occupying the location of their old ground.

Competitions

Greenwich Cup

Main article: Greenwich Cup

Berkeley Cup

The Berkeley Cup was inaugurated in 1939. The competition was given dispensation to be held during World War II but the 1940 edition was postponed.

YearWinnerTrainerTimeSP19391941194319461947194819491950195119521953195419551956195719581959196019611962196319641965196619671968
Return Fare IIArthur Jonas (Stamford Bridge)25.115/2
Ballynennan MoonSidney Orton (Wimbledon)30.0713/8f
Wavecrest IITom Johnston Sr. (Private)30.233/1
Winsome SealGordon Nicholson (Catford)24.391/5f
Latest SelectionLilah Shennan (Private)24.857/1
Jacks ArrowStanley Biss (Clapton)24.37100/8
Buzzing AfterwardsAlf Turner (Catford)24.135/1
DerrycrussanTom Smith (Clapton)24.224/9f
Pluckanes BelleJack Harvey (Wembley)24.105/-1
Kale SeedGunner Smith (Private)24.125/2
Home LuckStan Martin (Wimbledon)23.681/6f
Baby JoeHarry Spoor (New Cross)24.088/1
Rosey CoaldustPaddy McEvoy (Private)24.088/1
Rosey CoaldustPaddy McEvoy (Private)24.242/1jf
Charming StyleHenry Parsons (Crayford)24.267/4f
Town PrinceLeslie Reynolds (Wembley)23.9711/10f
Sporting MaggerDal Hawkesley (West Ham)24.43100/7
Victory StreakJohn Shevlin (New Cross)23.802/1
Wonder BlueErnie Butler (Private)23.6433/1
Greenane BoulevardeDennis Hannafin (Wimbledon)24.48
Greenane BoulevardeDennis Hannafin (Wimbledon)23.99
Tralong JetJohn Shevlin (New Cross)24.544/1
Mimi IIIvy Regan (Private)34.80
Fawn PoacherErnie Butler (Private)34.90
Big RocketHenry Parsons (Crayford)35.34
Local ViewJohn Shevlin (New Cross)35.22

(New Cross, 415 yards)

Ben Truman Stakes

Main article: Ben Truman Stakes

Track records

Distance
yardsGreyhoundTimeDateNotes
415Bantown Banner24.0231 May 1938
415Winsome Seal23.9631 May 1938Berkeley Cup semi final
415Floating Dingy23.9213 July 1946
415Home Luck23.4813 April 1954
550Knockbrack Flyer32.52September 1935
550Congleton Lord32.2526 April 1938
550Prince Norroy32.2625 October 1941
550Tuturama31.261963
600Kinauld Demonstrator35.1726 July 1938
600Shadowlands Delight35.026 September 1947
600Gambling Dick34.95September 1951
600Silent Leader34.5027 August 1964
770The Black Freak46.12November 1958
770Magic Brooklyn=46.12December 1959
770Buckwheat45.3826 October 1963
880Ray-O-Vitol52.622 June 1962
415 HKnockbrack Flyer24.826 April 1938
415 HVintners Cup24.1613 April 1957
600 HMira Chara36.5724 August 1939
600 HMazel Tov36.22November 1958
600 HR.S.II35.471 September 1962

Speedway

Main article: New Cross Rangers

The stadium held speedway from 1934 to 1967. The teams were known as the New Cross Lambs (1934–35), then the New Cross Tamers (1936) and finally the New Cross Rangers from 1937 to 1963.

In 1935 Tom Farndon was killed after crashing at the stadium The stadium was used in the 1949 film Once a Jolly Swagman (released as Maniacs on Wheels in the US) starring Dirk Bogarde as a speedway rider and Sid James as the team promoter.

Stock car racing

The birth of oval track stock car racing in the UK and the first ever BriSCA Formula One Stock Car Racing took place at the New Cross Stadium, London on Good Friday, 16 April 1954. The final was won by car 11, Chevalier D'Orgeix. Racing continued here until 1956. Three meetings also took place in 1968 whilst Harringay was being revamped.

During 1966 racing at the stadium was promoted by Spedeworth International and had its own team, the London Sparrows, who also had Wimbledon Stadium as its home track. The London Sparrows team included Del Stickings, Dave Pierce, Graham North, Johnny Melia, Ken Lambert, John O’Hagon, John Watts, Les Collins, Todd Sweeney and Harry Andrews.

References

References

  1. [http://www.millwall-history.co.uk/The_Den1962.gif Aerial photo of New Cross Stadium and The Den from 1962]
  2. Bamford, R & Jarvis J.(2001). ''Homes of British Speedway''. {{ISBN. 0-7524-2210-3
  3. "New Cross Stadium Guide: Address, Capacity, Build Date and Much More".
  4. (20 May 1933). "New greyhound track". South London Observer.
  5. Tarter, P Howard. (1949). "Greyhound Racing Encyclopedia". Fleet Publishing Company Ltd.
  6. (27 May 1933). "Opening of New Cross Greyhound Track". South London Observer.
  7. (9 June 1933). "London's newest successful track". East End News and London Shipping Chronicle.
  8. (17 June 1933). "How they run". South London Observer.
  9. (February 1938). ""Greyhound Racing Association Trust." Times, 1 Feb. 1938". [[The Times]].
  10. (7 January 1938). "Will new Cross Stadium ebter charmed circle?". South London Observer - Friday.
  11. (1946). "Particulars of Licensed tracks, table 1 Licensed Dog Racecourses". Licensing Authorities.
  12. Genders, Roy. (1981). "The Encyclopedia of Greyhound Racing". Pelham Books Ltd.
  13. Barnes, Julia. (1988). "Daily Mirror Greyhound Fact File". Ringpress Books.
  14. (3 March 1939). "New Cross Greyhound Racing". East End News and London Shipping Chronicle.
  15. (29 March 1940). "New Cross Classic postponed". East End News and London Shipping Chronicle.
  16. (19 April 1947). "Cup-winner". Cheltenham Chronicle.
  17. (1 April 1946). "New Cross record by Winsome Seal". Daily Herald.
  18. (26 April 1938). "Greyhound Racing". East End News and London Shipping Chronicle.
  19. (27 April 1938). "Yesterday's greyhound results". Daily Herald.
  20. (31 October 1941). "Noted greyhounds to visit Bristol". Western Daily Press.
  21. (4 January 1934). "Speedway Moves".
  22. Jacobs, N. ''Speedway in London'', {{ISBN. 0-7524-2221-9
  23. http://www.speedwayresearcher.org.uk, New Cross Speedway
  24. Jacobs, N. ''Out of the Frying Pan'', {{ISBN. 978-0-7524-4476-5
  25. (21 May 1949). "Picture House".
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