THE HOO 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: Saturday 28th April 1821 |
|
This racecourse is covered in Volume 1 of Racecourses Here Today and Gone Tomorrow. Ordering details shown below. | |
Local Patrons | Lord Dacre, Lord Verulam |
Principal Races | Hoo Gold Cup, Hoo County Stakes |
Saturday 28th April 1821 |
The Hoo Sweepstake over ¾ of a mile The Hoo Gold Cup over 2 miles Hoo County Stakes over 2 miles |
Saturday 24th April 1824 |
The Hoo Gold Cup over 2 miles The Hoo County Stakes over a mile and a half The Hoo Club Stakes Handicap over a mile |
Saturday 5th April 1834 |
The Hoo Sweepstakes over 2 miles The Hoo Gold Cup over 2 miles donated by the Ladies of the county |
Saturday 21st April 1838 | The Hoo Hunters Stakes over a mile The Hoo Farmers Purse |
James Whyte’s History of the British Turf notes that racing began at The Hoo in 1821, when the meeting was organised by The Hertfordshire Club on an estate owned by the Right Honorable Lord Dacre, and records the April 1839 races as:- |
|
John Cary (1754-1835) was an English cartographer who published his atlas, The New and Correct English Atlas, in 1787. In 1794 he was commissioned by the Postmaster General to survey all English roads. The map shown below is an extract from his 1794 work. |
|
The final meeting took place on 26th April 1862.
It was in 1732 that the then owner of the Manor of Hoo, Sir Henry Hoo Keate, sold the manor to Margaret Brand. Her son, Tom, employed Lancelot Capability Brown to landscape the park and gardens. When Tom died in 1770 the estate passed to Lord Dacre, who later became Viscount Hampden in 1884. |
|
Course today | On Lord Dacre’s Estate at Kimpton. The Manor house was demolished in 1958 and there is little evidence of where the racecourse once stood, with new houses now built on the site. |
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:- 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 |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|