Location | Marshbank Farm The Old Gun Site Old Ferry Road Sittingbourne ME9 8SP |
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Coordinates | 51°23′24″N0°43′44″E / 51.39000°N 0.72889°E |
Operator | Motorcycle speedway |
Iwade Speedway is a motorcycle speedway venue approximately four miles north of Sittingbourne in Kent. The track is located off Old Ferry Road, on the site of a former gun site. [1] [2]
The Iwade training track was initially built in 1971 by Ivor Thomas and his brother, former Hackney Hawks rider Barry Thomas, whilst he was still a rider for the Canterbury Crusaders. [3] The site would later serve as the Swale Banger Racing Iwade Raceway. [4] The site was then taken over by Chris Galvin (father of Andy Galvin).
In 1986, Wally Mawdsley retired and the Kingsmead Stadium and Canterbury Crusaders, lease was taken over by Chris Galvin. [5] Galvin would allow the Canterbury riders to practice on the Iwade training track but unfortunately the team was forced to disband on 31 October 1987, when the Canterbury Council refused to renew the Kingsmead Stadium lease. [3]
However, the Iwade Speedway track continued as a training track until 1994, when a new team called Iwade Kent Crusaders would race there during the 1994 British League Division Three season. [6] When the Canterbury Crusaders closed in 1987, the supporters club remained active in attempts to bring back speedway to Kent. They helped improve the Iwade training track to league standards [7] and led by promoter Terry Whibberley who spent over £80,000 in improving the track, it was ready for racing. [8] However, the year was a disaster, in January a young rider called Karl Nicholls was tragically killed in practice and at the end of July, Whibberley pulled out due to poor health and put the track up for sale, resulting in the team withdrawing from the league. [9]
The Iwade site was bought by a consortium that included Graham Arnold and Peter Mason [10] and the team lined up for the 1995 Academy League season, under the new team name of Sittingbourne Crusaders. [11] The 1996 season then saw the club suffer problems when Swale Council stated that the planning permission given in 1971 was a 25-year temporary agreement. Graham Arnold applied for a lawful development certificate. [12]
The team did return to race again at the track from 2004 to 2008 before folding for good and the track would not see league racing again until 2022, when the Kent Kings arrived to race, having been kicked out of Central Park Stadium. [1]
Swale is a local government district with borough status in Kent, England. The council is based in Sittingbourne, the borough's largest town. The borough also contains the towns of Faversham, Queenborough and Sheerness, along with numerous villages and surrounding rural areas. It includes the Isle of Sheppey and is named after The Swale, the narrow channel which separates Sheppey from the mainland part of the borough. Some southern parts of the borough lie within the Kent Downs, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
Sittingbourne is an industrial town in the Swale district, in Kent, southeast England, 17 miles (27 km) from Canterbury and 45 miles (72 km) from London, beside the Roman Watling Street, an ancient British trackway used by the Romans and the Anglo-Saxons.
Iwade is a village and civil parish 2 miles (3.2 km) north of the town of Sittingbourne in the English county of Kent.
The A249 is a road in Kent, England, running from Maidstone to Sheerness on the Isle of Sheppey. It mainly functions as a link between the M2 and M20 motorways, and for goods vehicle traffic to the port at Sheerness.
The Canterbury Crusaders were a motorcycle speedway team who operated from the Kingsmead Stadium, Kingsmead Road, Canterbury from 1968 to 1987. For all of their 20-year existence, the Crusaders operated at the second level of British league speedway, in British League Division Two and the National League.
The Lakeside Hammers were a speedway team who raced in the British league system from 1984 to 2018, most recently racing in the SGB Championship in 2018. The team were nicknamed the Hammers after the West Ham Hammers, a speedway team that closed twelve years earlier. The team's home track, the Arena Essex Raceway, closed shortly before the end of the 2018 season.
The Sittingbourne Crusaders formerly the Iwade Kent Crusaders were a British speedway team based in Iwade, Kent. England who raced in the Conference League.
The Middlesbrough Bears were a British speedway team which operated under various names from 1939 until their closure in 1996.
The 1994 British League Division Three was the third tier/division of British speedway. It was also the final season of the British League before a restructure of the sport.
The 1995 Academy League was the second tier/division of British speedway. It was effectively the same division of teams that had competed in the 1994 British League Division 3 but was renamed because the British League Division 1 and 2 had merged.
The Kent Kings are a British motorcycle speedway team formed in 2013. They currently race in the NORA Speedway League, based at the Iwade Speedway.
The 1995–96 Kent Football League season was the 30th in the history of the Kent Football League, a football competition in England.
The 1990–91 Kent Football League season was the twenty-fifth in the history of the Kent Football League, a football competition featuring teams based in and around the county of Kent in England.
The 1989–90 Kent Football League season was the twenty-fourth in the history of the Kent Football League, a football competition featuring teams based in and around the county of Kent in England.
The 1986–87 Kent Football League season was the twenty-first in the history of the Kent Football League, a football competition featuring teams based in and around the county of Kent in England.
The 1985–86 Kent Football League season was the twentieth in the history of the Kent Football League, a football competition featuring teams based in and around the county of Kent in England.
The 1981–82 Kent Football League season was the sixteenth in the history of the Kent Football League, a football competition featuring teams based in and around the county of Kent in England.
The 1980–81 Kent Football League season was the fifteenth in the history of the Kent Football League, a football competition featuring teams based in and around the county of Kent in England.
Edward Raymond Hubbard nicknamed "Hurricane Hubbard" was a motorcycle speedway rider in National League (speedway) and British League.
The 1975–76 Kent Football League season was the tenth in the history of the Kent Football League, a football competition featuring teams based in and around the county of Kent in England.