22 October - Jonathan Richardson Wins The 2011 Scott Trial

Jonathan Richardson’s Sherco motorcycle suffered four punctures on his journey across 70 sections and 75 miles of moorland.to take his first ever win on only his third attempt of the tough one day trial in 2011 and became one of the youngest riders to ever win the Trial at just 19-years-old.

210 riders started the race, including Leon Haslam - only 85 finished, not including Leon Haslam.

The Scott Trial is a British motorcycle trials competition that began in 1914 when Alfred Angas Scott, inventor and founder of the Scott Motorcycle Company challenged the workers at his factory to ride from the factory in Shipley through the Yorkshire Dales to Burnsall, a riverside village near Grassington. Of the 14 starters only 9 finished. The event was reintroduced after the First World War in 1919 and, although Alfred Scott died in 1923, the event continued to be run by the Scott workers until 1926.

The Bradford and District Motor Club took over the management of the event and moved the start and finish to Blubberhouses, a small village in the borough of Harrogate in North Yorkshire. In 1938 the land was owned by the Leeds Waterworks Authority, which decided not to allow motorcycle trials on their property, so the trial was moved again to Swainby, on the north western corner of the North York Moors National Park in Cleveland and control was taken over by the Middlesbrough and Stockton Motor Clubs.

In 1950 the Auto-Cycle Union, the governing body of motorcycle sport in Great Britain, divided the area into the North Eastern Centre and the Yorkshire Centre and the Scott Trial was moved to Swaledale, one of the northernmost dales in the Yorkshire Dales National Park, where it has remained to this day.

The Darlington and District Motor Club took over the organisation until 1990, when the Richmond Motor Club took over.

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