IPSWICH RACECOURSE |
Aintree racecourse;Ascot;Ayr;Bangor;Bath;Beverley;Brighton;Carlisle;Cartmel;Catterick;Cheltenham Festival;Chepstow;Chester;Doncaster St Leger;Epsom Derby;Exeter racecourse;Fakenham;Folkestone;Fontwell Park;Glorious Goodwood;Hamilton Park;Haydock Park;Hereford Racecourse;Hexham;Huntingdon;Kelso;Kempton Park;Leicester;Lingfield;Ludlow;Market Rasen;Musselburgh;Newbury Racecourse;Newcastle;Newmarket;Newton Abbot;Nottingham;Perth;Plumpton;Pontefract Racecourse;Redcar;Ripon;Salisbury;Sandown Park;Sedgefield;Southwell;Stratford;Taunton;Thirsk;Towcester;Uttoxeter;Warwick;Wetherby;Wincanton;Windsor;Wolverhampton;Worcester;Yarmouth;York Ebor
Earliest meeting: 1710 |
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This racecourse is covered in Volume 1 of Racecourses Here Today and Gone Tomorrow. Ordering details shown below. | |
Local Patrons | Duke of Queensberry, Duke of Grafton, Duke of Somerset, Lord Hamilton, Sir Charles Bunbury, Colonel Wilson, Lord Tankerville |
Principal Races | Her Majesty's 100 Guineas Plate, His Majesty's Purse |
The newspaper extract below is shown courtesy of the Ipswich Journal and British Newspaper Online. |
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Friday 6th June 1727 |
His Majesty’s Plate for 100 Guineas over 2 miles |
The King’s Plates, valued at 100 guineas, were a series of annual races which date from the time of Charles II and continued in some form or other up to 1887. From the publication of the first Racing Calendar in 1727 by John Cheny, up to 1751, the Plates were restricted to 6 year olds each carrying 12 stone and were run over three 4 mile heats. In 1751 they were staged at Guildford, Hambleton, Ipswich, Lewes, Lincoln, 3 at Newmarket, Nottingham, Winchester and York. After 1751 younger horses were permitted to run in King’s Plates, with 5 year olds allocated 10 stone and four year olds 9 stone. |
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20th to 22nd July 1762 |
Ipswich 2 and a quarter mile Purse |
Monday 1st to Wednesday 3rd July 1782 |
His Majesty’s Purse run over 2 and a quarter miles Ipswich Gentlemens’ Purse over 4 miles |
The history of steeplechasing in the town dates back to 1805 when between 8,000 and 10,000 soldiers were quartered in Ipswich Barracks, located on the right hand and left hand sides of the Woodbridge Road, adjacent to the Duke of York public house. A course, marked out by 4 large metal plates produced by Ackermann of The Strand, stretched from the Barracks to Nacton church steeple, across country fields, crossing the main road, over ditches and hedges. The jockeys provided a wonderful spectacle, dressed in white night shirts and white tasselled caps. |
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Tuesday 6th to Thursday 8th July 1824 |
Ipswich Majesty’s Plate over 4 miles Ipswich Plate over 2 and a quarter miles |
Course today | Initially on the eastern side of the town on Nacton Heath, and then adjacent to the Cobham Road and Lindberg Road. Up to 2009 the Racecourse Pub was still operating. |
I am grateful to Ordnance Survey (© Crown Copyright) for permission to use the map shown below. |
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If you have photos, postcards, racecards. badges, newspaper cuttings or book references about the old course, or can provide a photo of how the ground on which the old racecourse stood looks today, then email johnwslusar@gmail.com |
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Much of the information about this course has been found using internet research and is in the public domain. However, useful research sources have been:- Northern Turf History Volumes 1-4 by J.Fairfax-Blakeborough The Sporting Magazine A Long Time Gone by Chris Pitt first published in 1996 ISBN 0 900599 89 8 Racing Calendars which were first published in 1727 |
ISBN 978-0-9957632-0-3 652 pages 774 former courses |
ISBN 978-0-9957632-1-0 352 pages 400 former courses |
ISBN 978-0-9957632-2-7 180 pages 140 former courses |
ISBN 978-0-9957632-3-4 264 pages 235 former courses |
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Copies of the above books are only available by emailing johnwslusar@gmail.com stating your requirements, method of payment (cheque payable to W.Slusar) or Bank transfer, and the address where the book(s) should be sent. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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