OSWESTRY RACECOURSE |
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Earliest meeting: July 1680 |
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This racecourse is covered in Volume 1 of Racecourses Here Today and Gone Tomorrow. Ordering details shown below. | |
Local Patrons | Sir W W Wynn, Lord Derby, Lord Grosvenor, Sir T Stanley, Sir Roland Hill, Mad Jack Mytton |
Principal Races | Wynne Silver Cup, Stewards Cup, Gold Cup, Silver Hunters Cup, Foal Stakes, Produce Stakes |
Friday 9th to Saturday 10th July 1728 |
Oswestry 30 Guineas Plate Oswestry Second 30 Guineas Plate |
Friday 10th to Sunday 12th June 1729 |
Oswestry Free Purse of 20 Guineas Oswestry Purse of 10 Guineas Oswestry Free Purse of 30 Guineas |
One keen local racing enthusiast was Mad Jack Mytton who first attended Oswestry Racecourse in September 1817. His green and white colours with black cap were seen to good effect when he won the Silver Cup just once, in 1822 with his unnamed mare by Milo. He was appointed a Steward in 1818 and again in 1830. | Another of the key families who ensured that Oswestry races thrived and developed was the Watkin Williams Wynn family. They owned the country house of Wynnstay and its estate. The Fourth Baronet Sir Watkin was a keen racing enthusiast, a Jockey Club Member and Steward at Oswestry. His racing colours of crimson and white quartered with a white cap won many of the prestigious races at his local course, and he donated a Silver Cup to be contested annually from 1776 through to the final meeting held at the track in 1848. Winners of the Silver Cup are shown below. |
WYNN’S SILVER CUP WINNERS |
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I am grateful to Ordnance Survey (© Crown Copyright) for permission to use the map shown below. |
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In the 1800’s the course was re-laid with new turf by French Napoleonic War prisoners, with a grandstand built to house the rich nobility. |
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Monday 27th September to Wednesday 29th September 1824 |
Oswestry Stewards Cup over 2 miles Oswestry Silver Hunters Cup over 2 miles Oswestry Gold Cup over 3 amd a half miles Oswestry Produce Stakes over 1 mile Oswestry Town Plate over 3 and a half miles The Foal Stakes over a mile and a half |
James Whyte’s History of the British Turf notes that racing took place at the Shropshire town of Oswestry in September 1839 and the races were:- |
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By the mid 1840’s the increased use of the railways provided new opportunities for punters and horses to travel greater distances than had previously been possible. Oswestry suffered as a consequence because punters and owners chose to travel on the railway to Shrewsbury or Chester, when the line opened in 1848, rather than their ‘local’ course. It also meant that winners at Oswestry were no longer contained to the landed gentry and rich owners, and they were not keen on their prizes being won by the hoi polloi. The popular Ordinaries often held at the Queens Head or Wynnstay, and the Assemblies held at the Wynnstay Arms, no longer welcomed the crowd sizes needed to make them viable, and Oswestry races sank into oblivion. | |
The final meeting, a two day meeting, was held in September 1848. The last days racing was on Saturday 23rd September 1848, although a one off one day meeting apparently was held some 20 years later on Friday 18th September 1868. |
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Course today | Significant evidence of the old racecourse remains. It is possible to walk around the figure of 8 course on racecourse common, a walk of about 3 ½ miles. The remains of the old grandstand can still be seen, and the Chains Cottage, the Wynnstay Arms and Wynnstay Hotel can still visited. |
For those wishing to carry out further research, I can fully recommend ‘Oswestry Racecourse’ by Harry Ruckley ISBN 0-903802-41-4 |
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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 | |
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:- London Illustrated News Racing Illustrated 1895-1899 The Sporting & Dramatic Illustrated 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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