• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

JOIN US TODAY!

BUTTON

Australian Motor Heritage Foundation

Australian Motor Heritage Foundation

Proud of our Past, Passionate about our Future

  • HOME
  • EVS
  • ABOUT
    • VIDEO INTRODUCTION
    • ORIGINS OF OUR FOUNDATION
    • DIRECTORS
    • AMBASSADORS
    • VOLUNTEERS
    • PARTNERS
    • VISIT US
    • Economic Value Study of Australia’s Historic Vehicle Sector
    • COMPLIANCE
  • THE COLLECTION
    • OUR LIBRARY
    • ARCHIVE DATABASE
    • RACE RESULTS
    • RACE PROGRAMMES
    • Donate to the AMHF Library
  • ROBBO’S ARCHIVES
  • ARTICLES
    • Retro Stories by David Burrell
    • Racing Guru: Brian Goulding
    • Library Acquisitions
    • Stories
    • News
    • Newsletters
    • EVENTS
    • Earlier Events
  • CONTACT US
  • JOIN/RENEW
  • SHOP
    • My account
    • Cart
    • Checkout
  • Show Search
Hide Search

AINTREE DOWN UNDER Warwick Farm and the Golden Age of Australian Motor Sport

motorheritage · Oct 19, 2020 ·

I cannot recommend this book too highly; Andrew Moore, as well as being a keen enthusiast, is also an adjunct professor at Western Sydney University where he taught Australian History for 30 years.
This is not a book about lap times, race results and let’s face it, topics of which many of us are well aware, but a serious history of Warwick Farm’s place in both this country’s motor racing and social history.  It is also an acknowledgement and a celebration of the impact Geoff Sykes and his brilliant team at the AARC had in those years.
The author teases out the politics of the times with the Melbourne based CAMS under the rule of Donald Thompson not always being in step with what was at the time probably Australia’s most successful circuit located in Western Sydney.  I was quite involved with the AARC from 1970, playing with their racing cars, flying their aeroplanes and working at most of the meetings in the Press Office. I was a regular visitor to the building at the corner of Sussex and King Street so was aware of much of what was going on at the time, leading up to the circuit’s closure in mid 1973.  I was also well aware that a World Championship race had been on the cards for our bicentennial year in 1970 but that fell through for reasons well explained in the book.
My personal view is that this is as good a book on Motor Racing, albeit on a specific subject, as has been written in Australia.  Graham Howard’s excellent biography of Lex Davison, and the Scuderia Veloce book by David McKay spring to mind, but Aintree Down Under is up there with them.
Andrew Moore
Walla Walla Press Sydney 2017
< Previous
Next >

Stories

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • The Graham Howard papers: a jewel of the Australian Motor Heritage Foundation
  • Corvette Concept
  • Skoda 1000 MBXL Communist Cult Classic
  • Albanita: GM’s secret 1933 “aero” concept car 
  • You wouldn’t repaint a Rembrandt

Categories

  • Earlier Events
  • Eli Solomon
  • Gautam Sen
  • International Correspondents
  • Kooverji Gamadia
  • Library Acquisitions
  • News
  • Newsletters
  • On The Lighter Side
  • Racing Guru: Brian Goulding
  • Retro Stories: David Burrell
  • Robbo's Archives
  • Stories

Join Us Today!

Interested in joining or supporting the Australian Motor Heritage Foundation?

How to join

Champions of Australia's motor heritage
Copyright © 2025 AMHF

ABN 26 615 709 254
NSW Authority to Fundraise CFN/26761

HOME | ABOUT | PRIVACY POLICY | TERMS OF USE | COMPLIANCE | CONTACT

Website by Hubsite Builder