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West Ham Stadium

West Ham Stadium existed between 1928 and 1972 in Custom House,[1] east London, England, on Prince Regent Lane, near the present-day Prince Regent DLR station.

West Ham Stadium
LocationLondon
Coordinates51°30′52″N 0°02′06″E / 51.51444°N 0.03500°E / 51.51444; 0.03500
Opened1928
Closed1972

The venue was used for greyhound racing and speedway on weekdays[2] and had no connection with West Ham United football club, who played at the nearby Boleyn Ground, Upton Park from 1904 until 2016.

Greyhound racing Edit

Origins Edit

Plans for a very large stadium in a rural area near Plaistow Marsh, east of Canning Town were unveiled in the late 1920s and work began on the structure where an old sports ground (built in 1855) was situated that had belonged to the workers of the custom house of Royal Victoria Dock.[3]

The stadium was designed by Archibald Leitch,[4] responsible for most of the major football stadia at the time including Goodison Park and Highbury. There was a large two tier stand accommodating 80,000 spectators with a smaller stand able to hold a further 20,000 bringing the capacity for the stadium up to 100,000.[5] The track was the largest in Great Britain with a circumference of 562 yards and 123-yard straights. The standard trip of 550 yards did not even require a greyhound to complete a full lap. The track was lit by 70 x 750 watt lamps and used a special monorail train weighing 500lbs to carry the hare. There was also a very unusual design regarding the track surface which used turf laid on a wooden foundation which had been raised twelve inches above ground level which would consequently result in a very fast track. It was described as a well-sprung dance floor matted with a special fibrous substance.[5]

The kennels consisted of six ranges totalling over 200 kennels within the two acres of the stadium grounds.[5]

Pre war history Edit

The first meeting took place on 4 August 1928. The stadium management brought in a race called the Cesarewitch which gained classic status; the race started over the distance of 600 yards but become a competition for marathon greyhounds.[6]

Early successful trainers were Ken Appleton and Stan Biss, both of whom had owned greyhounds on Wembley's opening night and subsequently taken out trainers licences at Wimbledon Stadium before joining West Ham. Biss trained a famous bitch called Bradshaw Fold when she finished runner up to Mick the Miller in the 1930 English Greyhound Derby.[7] Two weeks later Mick the Miller won the Cesarewitch winning by seven lengths in his heat and on the same day winning the first prize of £200 in the final.[8]

West Ham won the Derby in 1931 with the Wally Green trained Seldom Led and one year later Future Cutlet recorded a second successive Cesarewitch victory setting a new world record of 33.78 sec in his semi-final. In 1936 the track introduced the Cambridgeshire which would stand as the tracks second major competition. One year later in 1937 the track opened a veterinary hospital on site.[9] The Second World War forced the racing to be suspended on more than one occasion and the Canning Town area suffered terrible bombing damage due to the fact that the docks were seen as a primary target. The stadium was lucky to miss the destruction that many buildings suffered in the immediate area but there were continual closures until 1946. The West Ham operation was largely moved to Dagenham Greyhound Stadium from March 1944 until 1946.[10]

Post war history Edit

 
West Ham trainer Kenric Appleton

Due to war closures West Ham lost the services of Stanley Biss who did not return deciding to stay at Clapton Stadium. This left Ken Appleton, Johnny Bullock and Dal Hawkesley as the main trainers. Director of Racing was Captain W J Neilson and the Racing Manager was A W H Watson. Ken Appleton died in 1960 and his kennels were taken over by his son Kenric 'Ken' Appleton Jr. In addition Tom Johnston senior retired in 1962 and his son Tom Johnston Jr. took over his range at West Ham and achieved great success becoming Greyhound Trainer of the Year in 1963.[11]

In 1966 the Greyhound Racing Association (GRA) bought an interest in the West Ham site and two years later Stamford Bridge trainer Sid Mann switched his runners to West Ham following the closure of the track. During the same year the GRA decided to move all of the greyhounds out of the Clapton and West Ham kennels and put them in their renowned training establishment at Hook Estate and Kennels in Northaw. The Northaw kennels would now house all trainers from Harringay Stadium, White City Stadium, Clapton and West Ham which brought the estate under considerable pressure. This sale of the West Ham and Clapton kennels brought unease with concerns over the stadia themselves.[11]

Dal Hawkesley retired in 1966 replaced by his son Peter who was training in his own right at Romford who in turn moved to Harringay replaced by Wilf France. Hawkesleys head kennelhand Ted Parker and Colin West were also appointed by West Ham.[11]

Sherrys Prince one of the great hurdlers was trained by West ham trainers during his first two Grand National wins in 1970 and 1971; they were John Shevlin and Colin West respectively.[12]

Competitions Edit

Cesarewitch Edit

The Cambridgeshire Edit

Speedway Edit

The speedway Hammers were involved in the top flight leagues from 1929 to 1939; 1946 to 1955 and 1964 to 1971. They won the inaugural British League in 1965.[13] Romford Bombers moved to the stadium in 1972, taking the name West Ham Bombers, but lasted for only part of the season before being evicted with the stadium due for demolition and its site to be used for re-development. The stadium and the surrounding land was sold for a total of £475,000. There are over 200 houses situated where the stadium stood.

The Lakeside Hammers speedway team, originally known as the Arena-Essex Hammers, who raced at Arena Essex Raceway in Essex, took their name from the defunct West Ham Hammers outfit.

West Ham Hammers riders included Australians Bluey Wilkinson, Jack Young and Aub Lawson, Swedish riders Björn Knutsson, Christer Löfqvist and Olle Nygren, Scotland's Ken McKinlay, American Sprouts Elder, and English riders Tiger Stevenson, Malcolm Craven, Eric Chitty, Tommy Croombs, John Louis, Dave Jessup and Malcolm Simmons. In 1966, ITV television commentator Dave Lanning, known as the "Voice of Speedway", became the promoter of the Hammers.

Football Edit

To fill the stadium on weekends a football team, Thames Association FC, was founded. After two years in the Southern Football League, Thames were elected to the Football League Third Division South in 1930, replacing Merthyr Town. The stadium could hold 120,000, but Thames shared a catchment area with Charlton Athletic, Clapton Orient, Millwall and West Ham United so it had trouble attracting crowds and created the lowest recorded attendance in Football League history when just 469 people turned up to watch Thames take on Luton Town on 6 December 1930. Thames only stayed two seasons in the football league, coming 20th and 22nd out of 22 teams during their brief stay. They resigned from the Football League in May 1932 after finishing bottom and were dissolved soon afterwards. They were replaced by Aldershot in 1933.

In his book One Day I'll Lose My Trousers, Pete Murray, a 60s and 70s English disc jockey, recalls times he watched Thames A.F.C with his uncle Bill Reece, who had a small bus company and was one of the directors of Thames. Murray states that he lived at the Nottingham Arms in Plaistow close to the Custom House Stadium.

Baseball Edit

The stadium also hosted local baseball sides' home games in the 1930s and 1940s.[14]

Stock car racing Edit

BriSCA Formula 1 Stock Cars racing was held in the stadium in the 1950s and 1960s. In 1961 the BriSCA Formula 1 Stock Cars World Championship was held at West Ham and won by Jock Lloyd, it was held again in 1965 and won by Ellis Ford. In those decades many enthusiasts and garage owners throughout the London area built and raced cars, by the mid 1960s BriSCA F1 stock cars had evolved from modified road cars into purpose-built single-seater "specials" of great power and stout construction.[15][16]

Closure Edit

Towards the end of 1971 an announcement was made by Newham Council that West Ham would be sold for re-development. It survived until 26 May 1972 which still came as a shock because many had hoped for a reprieve. The speedway team had been evicted and the Cesarewitch was transferred to GRA sister track Belle Vue Stadium with the Cambridgeshire sent to White City. The stadium sold for a reputed £475,000 and was subsequently demolished with housing built on the cleared site, with some streets named after former speedway stars. These are Atkinson Road (Arthur Atkinson), Croombs Road (Tommy Croombs), Young Road (Jack Young), Wilkinson Road (Arthur 'Bluey' Wilkinson), Lawson Close (Aub Lawson) and Hoskins Close (Johnnie Hoskins).

Track records Edit

Distance
yards
Greyhound Time Date Notes
400 Brilliant Bob 22.11 06.08.1934
400 Cooks Sandhills 21.91 19.09.1942
400 Wireless Time 21.91 27.12.1943 = track record
500 Come on Wonder 30.17 1970
525 Brilliant Bob 29.61 20.10.1934
525 Selsey Cutlet 29.26 01.04.1940
525 Coolkill Chieftain [17] 28.65 1956
550 Maidens Boy 31.36 27.10.1930
550 Cottage Luck 30.87 22.08.1942
550 Drumgoon Boy 30.53 1949
550 Hash Up 30.25 29.10.1965
550 Come On Wonder 30.17 1972
600 Mick the Miller 34.06 30.06.1930 National Record/Cesarewitch first rd
600 Mick the Miller 34.01 09.07.1930 National Record / Cesarewitch semis
600 Future Cutlet 33.86 07.1931 Cesarewitch Heats
600 Future Cutlet 33.78 11.07.1932 World & National Record/ Cesarewitch semi-finals
600 Ataxy 33.50 16.10.1935
600 Shove Halfpenny 11.1936 Cesarewitch semi-finals
600 Magourna Reject 33.24 16.10.1953 Cesarewitch Final
600 Gulf Of Darien [18] 32.99 14.10.1955 Cesarewitch Final
600 Dromin Glory [19] 32.97 05.10.1962 Cesarewitch
600 Failte Mal 32.96 23.09.1964
600 Westmead Villa [20] 32.96 03.10.1969 = track record
600 Cals Pick 32.72 1970
700 Bradshaw Fold 40.04 31.03.1930
700 Lilacs Luck 39.88 24.07.1946
700 Don't Divulge 38.72 05.1959
700 Park Nightingale 38.96 27.08.1965 Changed to outside hare
700 Westmead Villa 38.96 1972 = track record
880 Whipped Cream 51.79 31.08.1931
880 Joystick 50.01 24.07.1964
880 Spotted Nice 49.55 1970
1000 Loughnagare 61.16 20.12.1930
1112 Lucky Fire 64.85 1972
550 H Juvenile Classic 31.40 10.11.1938
550 H Captain Digger 31.21 20.08.1954
550 H Indoor Sport 31.26 04.10.1963
550 H No Chips 31.00 1970
550 H Sherrys Prince 30.89 1972
600 H The Longfellow II 34.94 30.09.1933

See also Edit

  • New West Ham Stadium

References Edit

  1. ^ Bamford, R & Jarvis J.(2001). Homes of British Speedway. ISBN 0-7524-2210-3
  2. ^ Belton, Brian (2003). Hammerin' Round. ISBN 0-7524-2438-6
  3. ^ "OS County Series Essex 1919". old-maps.co.uk.
  4. ^ "West Ham: Worthies, entertainments, sports and pastimes". British History Online. Retrieved 1 December 2006.
  5. ^ a b c Tarter, P Howard (1949). Greyhound Racing Encyclopedia. Fleet Publishing Company Ltd. p. 63.
  6. ^ Ash, Edward C (1933). The Book of the Greyhound. Hutchinson & Co. p. 303.
  7. ^ Dack, Barrie (1990). Greyhound Derby, the first 60 years. Ringpress Books. pp. 57–58. ISBN 0-948955-36-8.
  8. ^ Barnes, Julia (1988). Daily Mirror Greyhound Fact File. Ringpress Books. ISBN 0-948955-15-5.
  9. ^ "Remember When - May 1937". Greyhound Star. 2012.
  10. ^ Genders, Roy (1975). The Greyhound and Racing Greyhound. Page Brothers (Norwich). p. 97. ISBN 0-85020-0474.
  11. ^ a b c Genders, Roy (1981). The Encyclopedia of Greyhound Racing. Pelham Books Ltd. ISBN 07207-1106-1.
  12. ^ Genders, Roy (1990). NGRC book of Greyhound Racing. Pelham Books Ltd. ISBN 0-7207-1804-X.
  13. ^ Speedway information on West Ham Retrieved 11 May 2007
  14. ^ Belton, B. & Chetwynd, J. (15 January 2007). British Baseball and the West Ham Club: History of a 1930's Professional Team in East London. McFarland & Co Inc. U.S. ISBN 978-0-7864-2594-5.
  15. ^ "West Ham: Worthies, entertainments, sports and pastimes". British History Online. Retrieved 7 November 2007.
  16. ^ BriSCA Formula One - The first 50 years 1954-2004 Keith Barber p 168-169
  17. ^ "Monthly Greyhound Star (Remember When 1957) January edition". Greyhound Star.
  18. ^ "Remember When - October 1955". Greyhound Star. 7 October 2018.
  19. ^ "Monthly Greyhound Star (Remember When 1962) October 2010 edition". Greyhound Star.
  20. ^ "Remember When - October 1969". Greyhound Star. 28 October 2018.

External links Edit

  • Speedway History

51°30′51.95″N 0°2′5.06″E / 51.5144306°N 0.0347389°E / 51.5144306; 0.0347389

west, stadium, existed, between, 1928, 1972, custom, house, east, london, england, prince, regent, lane, near, present, prince, regent, station, locationlondoncoordinates51, 51444, 03500, 51444, 03500opened1928closed1972the, venue, used, greyhound, racing, spe. West Ham Stadium existed between 1928 and 1972 in Custom House 1 east London England on Prince Regent Lane near the present day Prince Regent DLR station West Ham StadiumLocationLondonCoordinates51 30 52 N 0 02 06 E 51 51444 N 0 03500 E 51 51444 0 03500Opened1928Closed1972The venue was used for greyhound racing and speedway on weekdays 2 and had no connection with West Ham United football club who played at the nearby Boleyn Ground Upton Park from 1904 until 2016 Contents 1 Greyhound racing 1 1 Origins 1 2 Pre war history 1 3 Post war history 2 Competitions 2 1 Cesarewitch 2 2 The Cambridgeshire 3 Speedway 4 Football 5 Baseball 6 Stock car racing 7 Closure 8 Track records 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksGreyhound racing EditOrigins Edit Plans for a very large stadium in a rural area near Plaistow Marsh east of Canning Town were unveiled in the late 1920s and work began on the structure where an old sports ground built in 1855 was situated that had belonged to the workers of the custom house of Royal Victoria Dock 3 The stadium was designed by Archibald Leitch 4 responsible for most of the major football stadia at the time including Goodison Park and Highbury There was a large two tier stand accommodating 80 000 spectators with a smaller stand able to hold a further 20 000 bringing the capacity for the stadium up to 100 000 5 The track was the largest in Great Britain with a circumference of 562 yards and 123 yard straights The standard trip of 550 yards did not even require a greyhound to complete a full lap The track was lit by 70 x 750 watt lamps and used a special monorail train weighing 500lbs to carry the hare There was also a very unusual design regarding the track surface which used turf laid on a wooden foundation which had been raised twelve inches above ground level which would consequently result in a very fast track It was described as a well sprung dance floor matted with a special fibrous substance 5 The kennels consisted of six ranges totalling over 200 kennels within the two acres of the stadium grounds 5 Pre war history Edit The first meeting took place on 4 August 1928 The stadium management brought in a race called the Cesarewitch which gained classic status the race started over the distance of 600 yards but become a competition for marathon greyhounds 6 Early successful trainers were Ken Appleton and Stan Biss both of whom had owned greyhounds on Wembley s opening night and subsequently taken out trainers licences at Wimbledon Stadium before joining West Ham Biss trained a famous bitch called Bradshaw Fold when she finished runner up to Mick the Miller in the 1930 English Greyhound Derby 7 Two weeks later Mick the Miller won the Cesarewitch winning by seven lengths in his heat and on the same day winning the first prize of 200 in the final 8 West Ham won the Derby in 1931 with the Wally Green trained Seldom Led and one year later Future Cutlet recorded a second successive Cesarewitch victory setting a new world record of 33 78 sec in his semi final In 1936 the track introduced the Cambridgeshire which would stand as the tracks second major competition One year later in 1937 the track opened a veterinary hospital on site 9 The Second World War forced the racing to be suspended on more than one occasion and the Canning Town area suffered terrible bombing damage due to the fact that the docks were seen as a primary target The stadium was lucky to miss the destruction that many buildings suffered in the immediate area but there were continual closures until 1946 The West Ham operation was largely moved to Dagenham Greyhound Stadium from March 1944 until 1946 10 Post war history Edit nbsp West Ham trainer Kenric AppletonDue to war closures West Ham lost the services of Stanley Biss who did not return deciding to stay at Clapton Stadium This left Ken Appleton Johnny Bullock and Dal Hawkesley as the main trainers Director of Racing was Captain W J Neilson and the Racing Manager was A W H Watson Ken Appleton died in 1960 and his kennels were taken over by his son Kenric Ken Appleton Jr In addition Tom Johnston senior retired in 1962 and his son Tom Johnston Jr took over his range at West Ham and achieved great success becoming Greyhound Trainer of the Year in 1963 11 In 1966 the Greyhound Racing Association GRA bought an interest in the West Ham site and two years later Stamford Bridge trainer Sid Mann switched his runners to West Ham following the closure of the track During the same year the GRA decided to move all of the greyhounds out of the Clapton and West Ham kennels and put them in their renowned training establishment at Hook Estate and Kennels in Northaw The Northaw kennels would now house all trainers from Harringay Stadium White City Stadium Clapton and West Ham which brought the estate under considerable pressure This sale of the West Ham and Clapton kennels brought unease with concerns over the stadia themselves 11 Dal Hawkesley retired in 1966 replaced by his son Peter who was training in his own right at Romford who in turn moved to Harringay replaced by Wilf France Hawkesleys head kennelhand Ted Parker and Colin West were also appointed by West Ham 11 Sherrys Prince one of the great hurdlers was trained by West ham trainers during his first two Grand National wins in 1970 and 1971 they were John Shevlin and Colin West respectively 12 Competitions EditCesarewitch Edit Main article Cesarewitch greyhounds The Cambridgeshire Edit Main article The CambridgeshireSpeedway EditThe speedway Hammers were involved in the top flight leagues from 1929 to 1939 1946 to 1955 and 1964 to 1971 They won the inaugural British League in 1965 13 Romford Bombers moved to the stadium in 1972 taking the name West Ham Bombers but lasted for only part of the season before being evicted with the stadium due for demolition and its site to be used for re development The stadium and the surrounding land was sold for a total of 475 000 There are over 200 houses situated where the stadium stood The Lakeside Hammers speedway team originally known as the Arena Essex Hammers who raced at Arena Essex Raceway in Essex took their name from the defunct West Ham Hammers outfit West Ham Hammers riders included Australians Bluey Wilkinson Jack Young and Aub Lawson Swedish riders Bjorn Knutsson Christer Lofqvist and Olle Nygren Scotland s Ken McKinlay American Sprouts Elder and English riders Tiger Stevenson Malcolm Craven Eric Chitty Tommy Croombs John Louis Dave Jessup and Malcolm Simmons In 1966 ITV television commentator Dave Lanning known as the Voice of Speedway became the promoter of the Hammers Football EditTo fill the stadium on weekends a football team Thames Association FC was founded After two years in the Southern Football League Thames were elected to the Football League Third Division South in 1930 replacing Merthyr Town The stadium could hold 120 000 but Thames shared a catchment area with Charlton Athletic Clapton Orient Millwall and West Ham United so it had trouble attracting crowds and created the lowest recorded attendance in Football League history when just 469 people turned up to watch Thames take on Luton Town on 6 December 1930 Thames only stayed two seasons in the football league coming 20th and 22nd out of 22 teams during their brief stay They resigned from the Football League in May 1932 after finishing bottom and were dissolved soon afterwards They were replaced by Aldershot in 1933 In his book One Day I ll Lose My Trousers Pete Murray a 60s and 70s English disc jockey recalls times he watched Thames A F C with his uncle Bill Reece who had a small bus company and was one of the directors of Thames Murray states that he lived at the Nottingham Arms in Plaistow close to the Custom House Stadium Baseball EditThe stadium also hosted local baseball sides home games in the 1930s and 1940s 14 Stock car racing EditBriSCA Formula 1 Stock Cars racing was held in the stadium in the 1950s and 1960s In 1961 the BriSCA Formula 1 Stock Cars World Championship was held at West Ham and won by Jock Lloyd it was held again in 1965 and won by Ellis Ford In those decades many enthusiasts and garage owners throughout the London area built and raced cars by the mid 1960s BriSCA F1 stock cars had evolved from modified road cars into purpose built single seater specials of great power and stout construction 15 16 Closure EditTowards the end of 1971 an announcement was made by Newham Council that West Ham would be sold for re development It survived until 26 May 1972 which still came as a shock because many had hoped for a reprieve The speedway team had been evicted and the Cesarewitch was transferred to GRA sister track Belle Vue Stadium with the Cambridgeshire sent to White City The stadium sold for a reputed 475 000 and was subsequently demolished with housing built on the cleared site with some streets named after former speedway stars These are Atkinson Road Arthur Atkinson Croombs Road Tommy Croombs Young Road Jack Young Wilkinson Road Arthur Bluey Wilkinson Lawson Close Aub Lawson and Hoskins Close Johnnie Hoskins Track records EditDistanceyards Greyhound Time Date Notes400 Brilliant Bob 22 11 06 08 1934400 Cooks Sandhills 21 91 19 09 1942400 Wireless Time 21 91 27 12 1943 track record500 Come on Wonder 30 17 1970525 Brilliant Bob 29 61 20 10 1934525 Selsey Cutlet 29 26 01 04 1940525 Coolkill Chieftain 17 28 65 1956550 Maidens Boy 31 36 27 10 1930550 Cottage Luck 30 87 22 08 1942550 Drumgoon Boy 30 53 1949550 Hash Up 30 25 29 10 1965550 Come On Wonder 30 17 1972600 Mick the Miller 34 06 30 06 1930 National Record Cesarewitch first rd600 Mick the Miller 34 01 09 07 1930 National Record Cesarewitch semis600 Future Cutlet 33 86 07 1931 Cesarewitch Heats600 Future Cutlet 33 78 11 07 1932 World amp National Record Cesarewitch semi finals600 Ataxy 33 50 16 10 1935600 Shove Halfpenny 11 1936 Cesarewitch semi finals600 Magourna Reject 33 24 16 10 1953 Cesarewitch Final600 Gulf Of Darien 18 32 99 14 10 1955 Cesarewitch Final600 Dromin Glory 19 32 97 05 10 1962 Cesarewitch600 Failte Mal 32 96 23 09 1964600 Westmead Villa 20 32 96 03 10 1969 track record600 Cals Pick 32 72 1970700 Bradshaw Fold 40 04 31 03 1930700 Lilacs Luck 39 88 24 07 1946700 Don t Divulge 38 72 05 1959700 Park Nightingale 38 96 27 08 1965 Changed to outside hare700 Westmead Villa 38 96 1972 track record880 Whipped Cream 51 79 31 08 1931880 Joystick 50 01 24 07 1964880 Spotted Nice 49 55 19701000 Loughnagare 61 16 20 12 19301112 Lucky Fire 64 85 1972550 H Juvenile Classic 31 40 10 11 1938550 H Captain Digger 31 21 20 08 1954550 H Indoor Sport 31 26 04 10 1963550 H No Chips 31 00 1970550 H Sherrys Prince 30 89 1972600 H The Longfellow II 34 94 30 09 1933See also EditNew West Ham StadiumReferences Edit Bamford R amp Jarvis J 2001 Homes of British Speedway ISBN 0 7524 2210 3 Belton Brian 2003 Hammerin Round ISBN 0 7524 2438 6 OS County Series Essex 1919 old maps co uk West Ham Worthies entertainments sports and pastimes British History Online Retrieved 1 December 2006 a b c Tarter P Howard 1949 Greyhound Racing Encyclopedia Fleet Publishing Company Ltd p 63 Ash Edward C 1933 The Book of the Greyhound Hutchinson amp Co p 303 Dack Barrie 1990 Greyhound Derby the first 60 years Ringpress Books pp 57 58 ISBN 0 948955 36 8 Barnes Julia 1988 Daily Mirror Greyhound Fact File Ringpress Books ISBN 0 948955 15 5 Remember When May 1937 Greyhound Star 2012 Genders Roy 1975 The Greyhound and Racing Greyhound Page Brothers Norwich p 97 ISBN 0 85020 0474 a b c Genders Roy 1981 The Encyclopedia of Greyhound Racing Pelham Books Ltd ISBN 07207 1106 1 Genders Roy 1990 NGRC book of Greyhound Racing Pelham Books Ltd ISBN 0 7207 1804 X Speedway information on West Ham Retrieved 11 May 2007 Belton B amp Chetwynd J 15 January 2007 British Baseball and the West Ham Club History of a 1930 s Professional Team in East London McFarland amp Co Inc U S ISBN 978 0 7864 2594 5 West Ham Worthies entertainments sports and pastimes British History Online Retrieved 7 November 2007 BriSCA Formula One The first 50 years 1954 2004 Keith Barber p 168 169 Monthly Greyhound Star Remember When 1957 January edition Greyhound Star Remember When October 1955 Greyhound Star 7 October 2018 Monthly Greyhound Star Remember When 1962 October 2010 edition Greyhound Star Remember When October 1969 Greyhound Star 28 October 2018 External links EditAerial photograph of the stadium West Ham s Timeline Speedway History51 30 51 95 N 0 2 5 06 E 51 5144306 N 0 0347389 E 51 5144306 0 0347389 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title West Ham Stadium amp oldid 1173442389, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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