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ORIGINS

1929

1938-39

1945-51

1961-70

1970s

1980s

1990s

In 2009, Newcastle Speedway celebrated it's 80th anniversary. In association with www.newcastlespeedwayhistory.co.uk John Skinner takes a look back at the history of the sport from the early 1920's through to the current day.

Origins

Before we can look at the origins of the sport in the North East of England, first we need to visit the other side of the world! Australia is where it all began.
 
 
History of Dirt Track Racing The Origins of The Sport - UK, USA Or Australia?
 
The origins of the sport are not entirely crystal clear but it is generally accepted that Australian farmers started it all. They were racing their motorcycles around rough oval dirt tracks during the early 1920s. Early motorcycle owners in the USA can tell a similar story but they did not have a man like Australia's Johnnie Hoskins who had a vision when he watched the farmers racing their motorcycles.
 
In 1923, Johnnie was the secretary of the West Maitland (New South Wales) Agricultural Show.
 
As a "side attraction" to the agricultural show, he introduced motorcycle racing on an oval dirt track under floodlights. Speedway had just been born!
 
From West Maitland it spread across Australia like a wildfire. Hoskins the entrepreneur was so keen on promoting the sport he had helped to invent that he soon had ambitions that lay outside Australia.
 
Pound signs were flashing, the UK was beckoning.
 
By 1927 Johnnie had set sail and arrived in Great Britain to introduce the spectacle of Dirt Track Racing to the unsuspecting British public.
 
 
UK Dirt Track Racing
 
Arguments rage among speedway historians, although most agree that "Dirt Track Racing" first took place in English Towns in the following order; Camberley, Droylsden and at High Beech.
 
Camberley in Surrey, staged racing on 7th May 1927, although it bore little resemblance to speedway. The "track" was mainly sand so this does not really qualify as a Dirt Track.
 
Droylsden near Manchester was next, 25th June 1927. This track was cinder covered (Cinders were a by-product of the local power station). Cinder tracks became the norm at this time, presumably because cinders were cheap and in plentiful supply from Britain's heavy industries. The Droylsden venture suffered from council objections. It never "took off" as a venue.
 
High Beech in Epping Forest also attempted to stage racing in 1927 but their application for a license was refused until 1928. The opening meeting at High Beech was staged on 19 February 1928 before an amazing crowd of 30,000 spectators. It was a huge success and High Beech is considered to be the birthplace of British Speedway.
 
 
Dirt Track Racing On Tyneside
 
This totally novel form of entertainment immediately hooked a large section of the UK public and the North East didn't lag far behind, with not one, or two, but three venues.
 
The Newcastle Motor Racing Club Ltd applied to lay a track inside the recently built horseracing venue at, Brough Park, Byker. A rival company Tyneside Speedways Ltd., applied to use Newcastle's Rugby Union ground in Gosforth Park and also the Rockcliffe Rugby Ground at Hillheads, Whitley Bay for dirt track racing. These ventures had to wait until 1929 to stage their first race meetings.
 
 

 
Early programme cover pages from all three Tyneside tracks. All very collectible items, Whitley Bay's Programme shows more imagination than the other two.
 
At three pence in "old money" they may well have been more affordable than any of today's programmes (priced at £2.50).
 
First up was Whitley Bay. They staged their first Dirt Track racing on 20th April 1929.
 
The first ever Dirt Track meeting at Newcastle's Brough Park took place on 17th May 1929.
 
Then Newcastle's Gosforth Park opened its doors for Dirt Bikes on 1st June 1929.
 
Whitley Bay may have been the first to open but unfortunately they were the first to close too, although the Hillheads Stadium survives to this day as a Football Club. Gosforth lasted until 1931 but by then it had played its part in establishing Newcastle upon Tyne, as a Dirt Track centre. It was left to Brough Park in Byker to entertain the "Geordie" speedway fans and "Brough" remains as the city's only Speedway Track to this day.

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