1913 bike to star in TT exhibition
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1913 bike to star in TT exhibition
[Image: 350AJS.jpg]
Billy Jones pictured with the 350cc AJS on which he competed in the 1914 Junior TT


A TT motorcycle dating from before the First World War is to be a new star exhibit at the Manx Museum.

The machine, a 350cc AJS built in 1913, originally belonged to Billy Jones of Wrexham, who competed with it in the 1914 Junior TT. He finished fourth in that race.

It is one of only a handful of surviving pre-First World War machines with an undisputable TT history and the first that Manx National Heritage has been able to find after a number of years of searching.

Matthew Richardson, Manx National Heritage curator for social history, said:

‘Unusually, due to a combination of the road registration number, confirmed by vehicle registration records held at Wrexham Archives, and the engine number, it is possible to say with a considerable degree of certainty that this is the machine Billy Jones raced in the 1914 Junior TT.’

The machine was in the hands of a private collector in the south of England, and was acquired on behalf of Manx National Heritage by the British Motorcycle Charitable Trust.

Mr Richardson added:

‘The era of racing on the Isle of Man prior to the First World War was one of the most interesting in the island’s motorsport history.

‘Riders were true pioneers, with no real protective equipment, primitive brakes and riding on roads consisting in many places of little more than loose gravel or rutted cart tracks.

‘On the mountain section, they had to dismount to open sheep gates, then close the gates behind them.

‘This 1913 AJS captures the spirit of that era perfectly, and we are enormously grateful to the British Motorcycle Charitable Trust for its support in helping MNH to acquire the machine for the Isle of Man’s national museum collection.’


The machine will go on display in the new TT Gallery at the museum.

Due to open in 2022, the gallery will tell the story of the Isle of Man TT from its inception in 1907 to now.

The museum promises to offer visitors the ‘opportunity to enjoy the TT atmosphere all year round and feature the real-life stories of everyone involved – riders, families, mechanics, officials, marshals and fans’.

Manx National Heritage has been collecting a range of TT and motorsport material for more than 20 years, with collections ranging from oral history interviews with fans to armbands worn by marshals.

The gallery will feature personal stories using the collections ‘against a backdrop of film and sound’.

Organisers say it will be as much about the social and cultural impacts of the TT and the people who race, watch, marshal and support it.



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29-05-2021, 04:40 PM
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