I got a
huge response to the recent article on the Athy
75 motor cycle races which were organised by the Athy Motor Cycle and Car
Club between 1925 and 1930. Some of the
cups presented to winners of the various races have been located, while one
reader knew of the whereabouts of the helmet worn by the unfortunate Harry
Sargeant who was killed while participating in the 1929 race. I have also been told that Harry who worked
as a shop assistant in the town lodged in a house opposite Whelan’s pub in
Offaly Street. This was either No. 4
Offaly Street where Murphy’s lived or next door where I lived in the
1950’s. Harry who was from Naas was a
member of the Athy Club and I am informed was also assistant secretary of the
Club at one time. He entered the 1929
race using the nom-de-plume “Sonny Boy” but wasn’t the only one of the 48 who
started that day to conceal his real name.
Another motor cyclist described as being from Dublin hid his true
identity under the name “B. Smith”.
Harry
Sargeant was driving a 249 Dunlet which he had borrowed for the occasion and as
well was wearing gloves which were too big for him. Unaccustomed to bike racing and to the
machine he was riding he crashed at the Moate of Ardscull, less than a quarter
of a mile from the starting point. He
was the first fatality of the Athy 75
Race which had been run each year since 1925. Incidentally the 500cc class race that year
was run by the legendary Stanley Woods who set a course record of 70.60mph and
completed the race in the record time of 1hr. 5mins and 50 seconds.
The
following year the Athy 75 took place
on Saturday, 24th May starting at 3.30pm from Russellstown
Crossroads. Riders had practiced runs
over the course from 6.00 o’clock each morning for the two weeks prior to the
race day but it was noticeable that the number of competitors in the 1930 race
was down somewhat from the previous year.
Six Athy men had taken part in the 1929 race, but only one man, Jack
Yates of Carlow but a member of the Athy Club raced in 1930. Was this I wonder a result of the unfortunate
accident involving Harry Sargeant the previous year?
The roads
over which the course ran were closed from 3.00pm that Saturday and the race
commenced at 3.30pm. The 43 riders set
off at intervals, each travelling eight laps of the quadrangular course. In what would transpire to be the last of the
Athy 75 races, the riders competed in
four classes, 175cc, 250cc, 350cc and 500cc.
A serious
accident occurred on the third lap when Peter Mooney of 72 Manor Street, Dublin
was killed near Fontstown Cross. Thomas
Masterson, Road Marshall, told the inquest held the following Monday in Athy
that he was responsible for marshalling the area in and around Fontstown
Corner. He saw two competitors, No. 28 Peter
Mooney and No. 7 R.W. Kieran approaching Fontstown Cross. Kieran’s motor bike struck the embankment and
Mooney who was travelling behind was shrouded in dust. Masterson then heard two terrific shrieks and
saw a head and shoulder in the air above the dust. He rushed to the scene with a St. John
Ambulance Brigade man. Kevin McNully of
the St. John Ambulance Brigade recounted how Kieran’s bike struck the bank and
rebounded and Mooney’s bike travelling immediately behind crashed into it.
A juror at
the inquest enquired if there was heavy dust and on it being confirmed that
there was said, “then it was a death trap”.
C.W. Taylor of Forest Farm, the President of the Athy Club told the
inquest that the Club Committee had done its best to get the dust sprayed prior
to the race, but did not succeed. As
clerk of the course he had arranged for stewards, doctors and St. John’s
Ambulance men to be in attendance.
At this
point Peter Mooney’s father who was in attendance questioned why his son was
allowed to race since apparently he stood in at the last moment for another
competitor, something which was prohibited under the Club Rules once the
handicaps had been decided. Clearly
distressed Mr. Mooney claimed that the Club had broken its own rules and “if
the rule had not been broken my son would be alive today.” Mr. Taylor who had presided over the Athy
Motor Cycle and Car Club since at least the inaugural Athy 75 Race in 1925, if not earlier, advised the inquest that the
race would never be held again. So ended
the legendary Athy 75, the first road
race to be organised in the 26 counties under powers granted to the Minister
for Local Government permitting the temporary closure of public roads to
facilitate racing.
The Motor
Cycle magazine of 29th May 1930 devoted an entire page to a report
of the Athy 75, which included a photograph of J.J. Byrne on
his 346 A.J.S. participating in the race.
In the body of the report which was highly complementary of the local
Club’s “excellent handicapping” which allowed the race result to be in doubt to
the very end was the following.
“In the meantime most exciting
things were happening on the tortuous back road of the course. While the main stretch was fast and smooth,
there was some miles of rutted laneway in which owing to the high hedges dust
hung in a thick pall. It was impossible
to see more than a few yards ahead and the rider who kept open the taps and
“chanced it” might win the race or go through a hedge. D. O’Clery and R.W. Mulligan were among those
who went through hedges. E.J. Brady fell
and hurt his hands, while J.R. Smith had his knee badly damaged.”
Clearly the
conditions were not ideal for such a high powered race and the decision of the
Athy Motor Cycle and Car Club members to end their six year old involvement
with the race was quite understandable.
The 3rd
Ernest Shackleton Autumn School is scheduled to take place in the Town Hall
over the October Bank holiday weekend.
In addition to lectures on Saturday and Sunday there will be a showing
of the documentary film “Endurance” which was shot by Frank Hurley during
Shackleton’s “Endurance” expedition to Antarctica. Kenneth Brannagh’s recent film “Shackleton”
will also be shown over the weekend.
Some interesting drama presentations are promised - John MacKenna’s “The
Woman at the Window” and Aidan Dooley’s “Endurance”. Programmes for the weenend can be obtained at
the Heritage Centre, Athy, Tel. [0507] 33075.
E-mail: athyheritage@eircom.net.
No comments:
Post a Comment