Somerton Park

Coordinates: 51°35′0.97″N 2°57′54.52″W / 51.5836028°N 2.9651444°W / 51.5836028; -2.9651444
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Somerton Park
Cromwell Road, Newport
OwnerDemolished
OperatorW.R. Lysaght's Works Committee and Newport City Council (both former)
Capacity25,000
Construction
Opened1912, reopened 1990
Closed1989, and 1992
Demolished1993
Tenants
Newport County A.F.C.
Newport Wasps
Greyhound racing

Somerton Park was a football, greyhound racing and speedway stadium in Newport, South Wales.

Football

In April 1912, Newport County had been accepted to play in the Southern League for the 1912–13 season. Shortly afterwards, the site for the ground was obtained by the club's chairman Bert Moss.

The stadium was nearly sold for housing in June 1919, but it was bought and transferred to a committee of employees from the

Football Conference that season but their bankruptcy saw them expelled from that league for being unable to fulfill their fixtures.[1]

The club was again reformed within four months and began the

1989–90 season as a Hellenic League side. The new club's first season was spent in Moreton-in-Marsh, followed by two seasons at Somerton Park, the next two seasons were played in Gloucester before finally settling at the newly built Newport Stadium for the 1994–95 season, where the club played their home matches until moving to Rodney Parade in 2012. By 1993, Somerton Park had been redeveloped as a housing estate.[2]

The stadium's record attendance was 24,268 for a Football League Third Division South match between County and arch-rivals Cardiff City on 16 October 1937.

Speedway

The stadium was home to the Newport Wasps speedway team between 1964 and 1977, attracting some the biggest names in the sport. The tight track meant that turf had to be brought on to make the corner flag area for football matches and removed once the match had finished.[3]

Greyhound racing

Origins

Following the success of the greyhound racing at Cardiff Arms Park which opened in 1927, the Arms Park Greyhound Racing Company Limited decided to construct another track around the football pitch at Somerton Park. On 17 November 1932, the first greyhound meeting took place at the stadium.[4][5]

The track was one of fifty affiliated to the National Greyhound Racing Society (NGRS) in 1932 and would run under National Greyhound Racing Club.[6] The same Arms Park greyhound trainers would also supply the greyhounds for the Somerton Park; the kennels of the trainers were based at nearby being kennelled at Cefn Mably.[7]

The principal event was the Monmouthshire Stakes and the circumference of the track was 384 yards with small straights of 60 yards but wide sweeping bends. Race distances were 450, 600, and 640 yards and there was a glass fronted enclosure above the grandstand for viewing the racing.[7]

The venue was popular and the management formed a close relationship with the football team for over thirty years. The twice-weekly meetings were held every Tuesday and Friday. During the early 1960s, the venue began to experience lower attendances and by 1963, the decision was taken to close the track.[8]

An attendance of just 700 gathered to witness the final night's racing. The last race resulted in a no race when the traps opened too soon and the greyhounds charged around the track without the hare. Len Davies, secretary at Somerton Park, told a local newspaper: "Some of the best dogs in the country have raced at Somerton Park. Perhaps the best of them all was Antarctica, a white bitch which set a track 450 yards record in a Somerton Stakes heat in 1958".

Competitions

  • Monmouthshire Stakes

Track records

Yards Time Date
450y 25.37 1947
640y 37.75 1947

References

  1. ^ Somerton Park in Jerry Sherman interview
  2. ^ Piping hot Bovril and hot dogs: Remembering Newport's lost Somerton Park stadium
  3. ^ "Newport Speedway (Somerton Park)". Defunct Speedway Tracks.
  4. ^ "NEWPORT SOMERTON PARK GREYHOUND STADIUM". Greyhound Derby.com.
  5. ^ "SOMERTON PARK GREYHOUND STADIUM SUMMARY". Greyhound Racing Times.
  6. ^ Ash, Edward C (1933). The Book of the Greyhound. Hutchinson & Co. Ltd (London). p. 303.
  7. ^ a b Tarter, P Howard (1949). Greyhound Racing Encyclopedia. Fleet Publishing Company Ltd. p. 87.
  8. .

See also

51°35′0.97″N 2°57′54.52″W / 51.5836028°N 2.9651444°W / 51.5836028; -2.9651444