26th Milestone, Isle of Man

Coordinates: 54°18′04″N 4°23′37″W / 54.30111°N 4.39361°W / 54.30111; -4.39361
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Joey's at the 26th Milestone on the A18 Snaefell Mountain Course looking towards Guthrie's Memorial
Signage approaching the corner

26th Milestone, Isle of Man

Isle of Man TT Races and Manx Grand Prix, the bend was named in honour of 26-times TT winner Joey Dunlop who died after a racing motorcycle crash in Estonia in July 2000.[3]
The area is the location of the only accident in which spectators at the Isle of Man TT races or Manx Grand Prix have been killed in a motorcycle racing accident.

Racing

A serious fatal racing accident occurred at the 26th Milestone during the Centenary TT races in June, 2007 resulting in the death of a solo race competitor and two spectators during lap 5 of the Senior TT race.[4] Newcomer-competitor Marc Ramsbotham riding a Suzuki and spectators Dean Jackob and Gregory Kenzig died, with TT race marshals Hilary Musson and Janice Phillips suffering injuries.[5][6]

Safety work was carried out before the 2007 Manx Grand Prix in late August with the removal of part of a grass bank and a new race marshal's shelter created by the Isle of Man Department of Transport. During the winter of 2007, the 26th Milestone road-side marker, the A18 Mountain Road metal 13th milestone and Mountain Course marker board were also moved from the site.

Three-times British Supersport champion Karl Harris was killed in 2014 after a collision with another competitor at the 26th Milestone[7] during the second lap of the Superstock TT race.[8]

A18 Snaefell Mountain Road

The 26th Milestone curve, situated on a steep up-hill section of the primary A18 Mountain Road, was part of the

Snaefell Mountain Course
used since 1911 for the TT and Manx Grand Prix races.

The A18 Snaefell Mountain Road was developed in the mid-19th century from a number of pre-existing roads and bridle paths.

Keppel Gate is a product of the Disafforesting Commission of 1860[10] and it reflects typical nineteenth century highway and railway construction practices which includes many small scale cuttings, embankments and revetments which follow land contours with purpose built graded-sections intersected by right-angle bends, road junctions and sheep-gates.[citation needed
]

Improvements including road widening and landscaping occurred at the 26th Milestone for the 1938 TT races. A small-size metal milestone[11] from the period of James Garrow as Isle of Man Surveyor-General[12] was situated at the 26th Milestone[13] as the 13th milestone marker on the primary A18 Snaefell Mountain Road.

Sources

  1. ISSN 1358-4391
  2. – "....Two left kink's before Joey's look like they're flat out, but something in my brain tell's me to back off....A big bump on the apex of Joey's has been eased recently. The Mountain Course. A lap of the legendary circuit accompanied by the record holder John McGuinness.
  3. ^ Motor Cycle News page 1, 2–5 EMAP Publication 5 July 2000
  4. ISSN 1358-4383
  5. ^ 'Fatal attraction', The Guardian, 1 July 2007. Retrieved 18 July 2015
  6. ^ Isle of Man Examiner – Brialtagh Ellan Vannin page 16 – Isle of Man Newspapers Ltd (2015) Johnson Press Publishing – Sheffield Web   20 January 2015
  7. ^ Manx Independent – Manninagh Seyr page 1, 3, 5 & 6 Isle of Man Newspapers Ltd (2014) Johnson Press Publishing – Newsprint (Knowsley) Limited 5 – 11 June 2014
  8. ^ Isle of Man Examiner page 5 dated 5 June 1969
  9. ^ Isle of Man Examiner dated 3 May 1913
  10. ^ 1870 Isle of Man Survey – Ordnance Survey Map Grid Ref 230872

External links

54°18′04″N 4°23′37″W / 54.30111°N 4.39361°W / 54.30111; -4.39361