Rayleigh Rockets
Rayleigh Rockets | |||||
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Club information | |||||
Track address | Rayleigh Weir Stadium Southend Arterial Road Rayleigh Essex | ||||
Country | England | ||||
Founded | 1949 | ||||
Closed | 1973 | ||||
Club facts | |||||
Colours | Blue and Yellow | ||||
Track size | 365 yards (334 m) | ||||
Major team honours | |||||
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The Rayleigh Rockets were a Speedway team which operated from 1949 until their closure in 1973 from the Rayleigh Weir Stadium in Rayleigh, Essex .[1][2]
History
[edit]The Rockets inaugural league season was in 1949 Speedway National League Division Three, where they finished in 12th place. The team had been formed by Messrs. Greavey and Rundle.[3][4] After two more seasons in Division Three they joined the Southern League (which was a new name for the third division).
The club became champions of the league in 1952 and 1953.[5]
The Rockets closed in 1958 but re-opened again in 1960 and entered the Provincial League. The Provincial league was the second division of speedway at the time and Rayleigh won their third piece of silverware after winning the 1960 Provincial Speedway League.[6]
In 1964, they entered a regional Metropolitan League but this was the last league racing seen until 1968, when Len Silver took over as promoter.
The Rockets rode at the stadium until 1973 when it was announced that the stadium had been sold to developers and the Rockets would need to find a new home. Len Silver took the Rockets to Hoddesdon in Hertfordshire to start the 1974 season as the Rye House Rockets.[7] The former site of Rayleigh Stadium is now a retail park.
Many former Rayleigh fans supported the former Essex speedway team, the Lakeside Hammers, who raced at the Arena Essex Raceway, next to the Lakeside Shopping Centre, until their closure in 2018.
Season summary
[edit]Notable riders
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Bamford, R & Jarvis J.(2001). Homes of British Speedway. ISBN 0-7524-2210-3
- ^ "Rayleigh Speedway". Defunct Speedway. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
- ^ "League speedway reaches Central Essex". Essex Newsman. 18 March 1949. Retrieved 14 June 2023 – via British Newspaper Archive.
- ^ Rogers, Martin (1978). The Illustrated History of Speedway. Studio Publications (Ipswich) Ltd. p. 129. ISBN 0-904584-45-3.
- ^ "BRITISH LEAGUE TABLES - POST-WAR ERA (1946-1964)". Official British Speedway website. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
- ^ "Year by Year". Speedway Researcher. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
- ^ Jacobs, N. Speedway in East Anglia, ISBN 0-7524-1882-3