History The greyhound track was small compared to the average London track and the racing was initially independent (unaffiliated to a governing body). The track was a very tight circumference of 354 yards with a surface of peat, short straights of 86 yards and heavily banked bends. The stadium could accommodate 25,000 people. The opening race meeting was held on Thursday 1 June 1933 and was opened by the celebrities
Cicely Courtneidge and
Jack Hulbert. Mr L. O. Browne was appointed as the first Racing Manager. The main race distance was over 550 yards. The first trainers were John 'Jack' Kennedy, Bill Smith, Godfrey Hyde Clark and Harry Spoor and a complex of 200 kennels were attached to the stadium. In 1934, the kennels increased to 250 and Albert Bedford joined the training ranks. Before the start of the
war the stadium was acquired by the
Greyhound Racing Association (GRA), who took a controlling interest in January 1938. The GRA subsequently licensed the track with the
National Greyhound Racing Club (NGRC), with the first meeting under rules taking place during January 1938. Also in 1938, the GRA introduced a new competition called the
Greenwich Stakes (later to be called the Greenwich Cup) and this was soon followed by the Berkeley Cup in 1939, held over 415 yards. Both events were the principal events at the stadium and they became prominent races on the open race circuit. The healthy bank balance of the New Cross Greyhounds Ltd Company and the GRA allowed the construction of three new covered stands, two on the home straight and one on the back straight. Restaurant buffet bars, tea buffet bars and licensed bars were to be found in all three enclosures. Trainer Jack Tallantire joined the track in 1952 and Joe Pickering experienced great success that included a double English/Scottish
Grand National win by Prince Lawrence in 1954 and 1955. Pickering also lifted the
Trafalgar Cup with Our Tim II. A third major competition called the
Ben Truman Stakes was introduced in 1962, when the training ranks consisted of Norman Chambers, Sanders, John Shevlin, Smith and Charlie Smoothy. The stadium was left derelict for several years until it was demolished in 1975 as part of a plan to redevelop the football ground, although those plans fell through. The site is now a public open space called Bridge House Meadows. Millwall F.C. have since moved to a new site north of the stadium, with houses now occupying the location of their old ground.
Competitions Greenwich Cup Berkeley Cup The Berkeley Cup was inaugurated in 1939. The competition was given dispensation to be held during
World War II but the 1940 edition was postponed. (New Cross, 415 yards)
Ben Truman Stakes Track records == Speedway ==