RACING
The earliest mention of racing in connexion with Middlesex is the statement of
Fitz Stephen, in his description of London,
that horses were then usually exposed for sale
at Smithfield, and that the merits of hackneys
and charging horses were generally tested by
matching them against each other. (fn. 1) In the
opinion of so high an authority as Nimrod,
the monk of Canterbury gives 'a very animated description of the start and finish of a
horse-race.' (fn. 1a) Such matches must have been
common from the earliest times, for 'running
horses' are mentioned as items of the royal
expenditure as early as King John's reign and
in those of the first four Edwards and of
Henry VIII. (fn. 2)
Strutt tells us that in Elizabeth's reign races
were called 'bell courses' because the prize
was a silver bell. In proof that it was then
pursued without any idea of gambling he
quotes a Puritan writer of the period, who,
while denouncing 'cards, dice, vain plays,
interludes, and other idle pastimes,' speaks of
horse-racing as 'yielding goodly exercise.' (fn. 3)
But by the close of the seventeenth century
we find Burton speaking of 'gentlemen galloping out of their fortunes by means of races.' (fn. 4)
During the interval public race meetings were
first established in the reign of James I, and
one of the earliest of these was held at Theobalds in Enfield Chase, the prize being a
golden bell, and it was not till after the
Restoration, when the gambling referred to
by Burton most probably had begun, that
these bells were converted into cups. (fn. 5) In
the following reign, horse-races were run in
the Ring in Hyde Park; (fn. 6) but they appear
from an allusion to them in A Jovial Crew, a
comedy by Richard Broome, written in 1650, (fn. 7)
to have been combined with foot-races, one of
which Pepys witnessed in 1660, (fn. 8) and in the
time of Cromwell and Charles II with coach
races. (fn. 9) At the close of the next century we
also find a description of 'matches' and sweepstakes races in Hyde Park in the Sporting
Magazine for 7 February 1796.
Queen Anne, whom Mr.Hore describes in his
History of the Royal Buckhounds as being 'every
inch a sportsman,' (fn. 9a) encouraged horse-racing (fn. 10)
and ran horses in her own name; (fn. 11) and her
husband, Prince George of Denmark, seems to
have taken interest in the breeding of horses. (fn. 12)
One of the first acts of her reign was to
expend £686 in fencing the meadows adjoining
the barge walk in the Home Park at Hampton
Court in order to preserve 'Her Majesty's
studd there from being killed or drowned.' (fn. 13)
The royal stud here alluded to, the paddocks
of which lay, until its final dispersion a few
years ago, behind the brick walls on either
side of the road separating Bushey Park from
the Home Park, had already existed in the
reign of William III, (fn. 14) and its development
during the reigns of Queen Anne and her
successors may be said to be the most
important event in the history of horse-racing
in Middlesex.
The efficiency of the stud seems to have
been fairly maintained throughout the first
three reigns of the Hanoverian dynasty. (fn. 15)
The Treasury Papers for 1724-5 contain the
statement of the 'case of Richard Marshall,
Esq., Studd Master, in regard to his allowance
for keeping the Studd,' showing the terms on
which he had kept it 'during the time of
King William, the Prince of Denmark, Queen
Anne, and his present Majesty (George I),'
and the loss he had sustained since the grant
by the House of Commons of the park and
meadows to the Duke of Somerset 'by reason
of the great quantity of hay' which he had
been forced to buy instead of that which he
had formerly obtained from the meadows. (fn. 16)
He appears from this to have received eventu
ally a 'reasonable allowance' above 'the
annual allowance of £184 10s. for each
stallion, mare, and colt, and servant;' while
a warrant of 2 July 1730 authorizes the
passing of the accounts of Richard, Earl of
Stafford, manager of the stud, the extraordinary expenses of which appear to have amounted
to £10,000. (fn. 17)
The real founder of the royal stud, however, was George IV, who built the paddocks,
and, while Prince of Wales, had already
established a stud there for breeding ridinghorses of pure blood. This was, however,
sold on his accession to the throne, when the
stables temporarily passed into the hands of
the Duke of York, who kept a stud of his own
there for breeding race-horses. On the sale
of the stock of the latter at Tattersall's on his
death in 1827, George IV retained possession
of the paddocks for breeding his own racehorses. He devoted considerable sums to raising the royal stud to the highest state of efficiency and improving the stabling and paddocks.
These, at the time of their abandonment,
were forty-three in number, varying in size
from three to five acres each, (fn. 18) seventeen
being in the Home and twenty-six in Bushey
Park. The king had as many as thirty-three
brood mares, while particular regard was
always paid, according to Nimrod, in the
Hampton Court stud to what is termed 'stout
blood'; and there were in his stables towards
the end of his reign Waterloo out of a
Trumpeter mare; Tranby out of an Orville;
Ranter out of a Benninborough; and The
Colonel out of a Delpini mare. (fn. 19) The Colonel
won the Champagne Stakes at Doncaster in
1827. Two other good horses that the king
owned were Fleur de Lis and Ziganee. Fleur
de Lis won the Doncaster Cup in 1826, and
the Goodwood Cup in two successive years-
in 1829, carrying 9 st. 3 lb., and in 1830
when he had 6 lb. more.
William IV, who, though anxious to maintain and improve the stud, was absolutely ignorant of the subject, left its management entirely
in the hands of Colonel Wemyss and his stud
groom. It was supplemented during his reign
by four Arabian stallions-two of which were
presented to him by the king of Oude and two
by the Imaum of Muscat-and by the following English stallions:-Actaeon by Scud out
of Diana by Stamford, Cain by Paulowitz,
and Rubric by St. Patrick out of Slight
by Selim, the two latter being hired for the
use of the stud. On King William's death
in 1837 the entire stud, consisting of 43
brood mares, 5 stallions, and 31 foals, was sold
under the hammer for 15,692 guineas-a
proceeding much resented in sporting circles
on account of the opportunity it afforded to
foreigners of making valuable purchases of
thoroughbred stock. The objectors, were,
however, somewhat appeased by the giving of
additional King's Plates. After an interval,
during which Mr. Charles Greville and
General, then Colonel, Peel-who enjoyed
the privilege until he sold off all his stock except the stallion Orlando, winner of the Derby
of 1844, were permitted to occupy the paddocks
with their breeding stocks, her late Majesty,
Queen Victoria, consented on the advice of
the Prince Consort to the formation of the
nucleus of the present royal stud in 1851.
Mr. Greville was allowed to remain in part
possession of the paddocks, while the queen's
managers were Major Groves and Mr. Lewis,
assisted by Mr. W. Goodman as veterinary
surgeon. (fn. 20) In the days of George IV and
William IV the yearlings in the royal stud
were sold at Tattersall's on the Monday in
Epsom week and generally realized an average of from £150 to £200. (fn. 21) During the
reign of her late Majesty, Queen Victoria,
these prices steadily rose. The sales of the
queen's yearlings were held in the week after
Ascot week in one of the paddocks in Bushey
Park, and always attracted large numbers
of gentlemen interested in horse-breeding
and most of the celebrities of the racing world.
The prices obtained indicate that the royal
stud at Hampton Court has produced some of
the most valuable race-horses in the world.
In the sale of 1889 28 yearlings realized
11,745 guineas, an average of 430 guineas
apiece, Sainfoin (by Springfield out of Landon),
winner of the Derby of 1890, being sold for
550 guineas to Mr. John Porter, the Kingsclere
trainer, while a bay colt by Hampton fetched
3,000 guineas. At the sale on 20 June 1890,
12 fillies and 8 colts were sold for a little over
14,000 guineas, an average of 700 guineas
each, while the Duke of Westminster gave
1,350 guineas for a bay filly by Hampshire
out of Gallantry; Lord Randolph Churchill
gave 1,750 guineas for a bay colt by Springfield out of Lady Binks; and a sister of
Memoir (winner of the Oaks and a Hampton Court yearling) was sold to Lord Marcus
Beresford, for Baron Hirsch, for 5,500 guineas,
the largest price ever given for a yearling. (fn. 22)
The first race meeting under modern conditions held in Middlesex appears to be the
Enfield Races, established in 1788, and held
on the marshes at the bottom of Green Street,
when two £50 plates were run for on 23 and
24 September. (fn. 23) There are notices of these
meetings in the October numbers of the
Sporting Magazine for 1794-5, and also
in the September number for 1796, and one
with respect to them is given as late as 1822
in Bell's Life, (fn. 24) when the date had been changed
to 9 and 10 October. 'The company' is
there described as being 'by no means so
numerous or fashionable as we could have desired,' and this seems to have been almost
the last of the meetings which, after several
attempts to continue them, were eventually
discontinued on account of the decline of local
interest. (fn. 25) The second of these meetings
(1 September 1790) is noteworthy on account
of the arrest during the races of the notorious
pickpocket, George Borough, who after undergoing seven years' transportation became chief
of the police at Paramatta in Australia, and
composed, for the opening of one of the Sydney
theatres, the well known lines:
True patriots all, for, be it understood, We left our country for our country's good. (fn. 26)
Among the meetings enumerated in Baily's
Turf Guide for 1864 is one at Harrow, but
this seems to be the only record of its existence.
There appear to have been also races at Ealing,
the course being a piece of rough common, now
converted into an allotment ground. Ealing
races are described in the Annals of Ealing as
having been 'always of a simple character and
anything but popular with the majority of the
inhabitants.'
There are at present two race meetings held
in Middlesex.
Of these the older and more important is
that of Kempton Park, established in 1889,
when the value of the Royal Stakes was
£9,500.
The fixtures for 1910 are:-
Spring Meeting in March, one day; Jubilee
Meeting in May, two days; First Summer
Meeting in June, one day; Second Summer
Meeting in August, two days; September
Meeting, one day; and October Meeting,
two days.
The winners of the most important race,
the Kempton Jubilee Handicap, during the last
eight years have been:
|
|
|
|
|
1902, Royal George |
4 yrs. |
6 st. |
9 lb. |
| 1903, Ypsilanti |
5 yrs. |
8 st. |
1 lb. |
| 1904, Ypsilanti |
6 yrs. |
9 st. |
5 lb. |
| 1905, Ambition |
4 yrs. |
7 st. |
1 lb. |
| 1906, Donnetta |
6 yrs. |
8 st. |
1 lb. |
| 1907, Polar Star |
3 yrs. |
7 st. |
12 lb. |
| 1908, Hayden |
4 yrs. |
6 st. |
12 lb. |
| 1909, Ebor |
4 yrs. |
7 st. |
7 lb. |
In 1910 the important Jubilee meeting
was abandoned on account of the death of
his late Majesty, King Edward VII.
The other is that at Alexandra Park, the
first meeting at which was held on 30 June
1888. The meeting is now under the
management of the Middlesex County Racing
Club, which was established in 1897, and
the Committee of Election and Stewards are
Lord Alington, Captain J. G. R. Homfray,
Lord Lurgan, and F. Luscombe, esq.
The fixtures for 1910 are:
April, two days; Saturday after Newmarket, 1 July; Saturday after Goodwood;
Saturday after Doncaster, September; Saturday after Newmarket, 1 October.