Location | Charlton, London |
---|---|
Coordinates | 0° 1' 44.061"E 51° 29' 19.442"N |
Opened | 1928 |
Closed | 1971 |
Tenants | |
Greyhound racing |
Charlton Stadium was a greyhound racing stadium in Charlton, London.
An amusement contractor (someone that had dealings with circus acts) called Thomas Murphy built Charlton Stadium south of the Thames on the Woolwich Road, just east of Gallions Road in 1928.
There is a record of an extraordinary event concerning Murphy and his 13-member Jazz Monkey band. The band escaped in 1926 after thieves let them loose and the 13 monkeys made their way from Latimer Road causing havoc in the Latimer Road tube station and many other parts of London, one even made it to Rugby.
Thomas Murphy died on 8 March 1932 aged 39 leaving his estate and the stadium to his benefactors. His memorial in Charlton cemetery features two life-sized statues of sleeping greyhounds.
Following Murphy's death the shareholders of 'The Charlton Stadium Company Ltd' met and the company was liquidated and wound up in 1936 and then taken over by 'The Charlton Stadium (1936) Ltd'. Under new ownership, the stadium was completely rebuilt. The racing circuit was 361 yards in circumference with short straights favouring sprinters and not galloping types. New ventures such as boxing bouts were organised as the company traded up until the start of World War II. During wartime, racing was severely interrupted but business was booming by the end of the war. Totalisator turnover was in excess of £1 million every year after the war. These represent phenomenal figures based on historic inflation.
During the war the greyhound Ballynennan Moon won the Charlton Spring Cup in 1943; at the time this was Charlton’s second biggest event behind the Cloth of Gold which had begun in 1941 over the distance of 600 yards. On 5 June 1946 Charlton Stadium (1936) Ltd was acquired by London Stadiums Ltd, which also acquired Wandsworth Stadium Ltd and Park Royal Stadium Ltd. The three companies received shares in London Stadiums Ltd.
The greyhounds that raced at Charlton were housed in kennels located in a rural setting on Hamworth Road in Sunbury-on-Thames, over 20 miles from Charlton. The Sunbury kennels, set in 14 acres, accommodated 600 greyhounds and served the London Stadiums of Charlton, Park Royal Stadium and Wandsworth Stadium. The kennels offered a fully equipped veterinary surgery including x-ray, ultra-violet and infra-red ray apparatus with the kennel staff and veterinary surgeon living on site. The self-contained exercising grounds included over three quarters of a mile of special track for road work.