Adelaide Hunt Club

Last updated
Adelaide Hunt Club
Adelaide Hunt Club at 'The Brocas', Woodville.jpg
Adelaide Hunt Club in 1870
Hunt type Fox hunting
CountryFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia
History
Founded1840s
Historical quarry Dingo, Kangaroo and Emu
Hunt information
Hound breed Foxhound
Hunt country South Australia
Master(s)Andrew Gray
HuntsmanAndrew Gray
Quarry Fox
Kennelled Woodside, South Australia
Website www.adelaidehuntclub.com.au

The Adelaide Hunt Club is an Australian fox hunting club founded in the 1840s.

Contents

History

Originally called The Adelaide Hounds, the club was founded in Adelaide in the early 1840s. [1] As early as 3 July 1841, the Governor of South Australia Sir George Grey KCB along with about 25 horsemen, hounds and ladies in carriages met for a day’s hunting, on this day a wild dog was the quarry. Without foxes to hunt, wild dogs, kangaroos and emus were the early quarry. [2]

Due to lack of support, hunting declined in Adelaide and the pack was dispersed in the 1850s but was revived in 1869 by a group of wealthy sportsmen led by William Blackler, who imported sufficient hounds to form a pack. The first hunt with his pack was held on 24 May of that year and attracted many interested huntsmen and spectators. In 1871, after a dispute with the Club, Blackler withdrew his support, and at the instigation of James A. Ellery passed his pack to the newly-formed South-East (later Mount Gambier) Hunt Club. [3]

Deer hunting was attempted on several occasions, but provided rather pedestrian sport [4] and the most interesting riding was provided by drag hunting, where an aniseed scent trail was dragged over a course guaranteed to present challenges to the abilities of horse and rider. [5]

The club is very closely linked with the city’s history with events such as the annual ball and steeplechase being social highlights of the new colony. The pack was originally kennelled at various locations on the Adelaide Plains although urban expansion meant they had to move in the late-1900s. The club's current kennels are located at Woodside in the Adelaide Hills. [1]

In 1901 Simpson Newland was president of the club, which at that time held regular meets in the Erindale area. [2]

Officials

Masters (full title: Master of the Foxhounds, MFH) of the Adelaide Hounds included:

Masters of the Adelaide Hunt Club include: [7]

(Elections were held around April of each year)
Recess during WWII

Race meetings

The first Hunt Club race meeting was held at the Thebarton Course on 2 October 1869. Races held were: Hunt Club Cup, Amateur Flat Race, Hunters' Stakes and Hurry Skurry. [9] The meeting was held at the Adelaide Old Racecourse from 1870 [10] to 1874, then Morphettville from 1875 [11] to 1884; then the S.A.J.C. became insolvent and Morphettville was mortgaged and the Hunt Club held its meetings at the Old Course 1885 then back to Morphettville 1886 to 1914, [12] Victoria Park in 1915, [13] then a break until 1919. [14]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Downer</span> Australian politician

Sir John William Downer, KCMG, KC was an Australian politician who served two terms as Premier of South Australia, from 1885 to 1887 and again from 1892 to 1893. He later entered federal politics and served as a Senator for South Australia from 1901 to 1903. He was the first of four Australian politicians from the Downer family dynasty.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Morphettville Racecourse</span> Horse racing race track in Adelaide, South Australia

Morphettville Racecourse is the main horse racing course for the Australian state of South Australia, incorporating two separate tracks. It is situated in the Adelaide suburb of Morphettville, and is about 10 km from the Adelaide city centre, and is home to the South Australian Jockey Club.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Colton (politician)</span> Australian politician

Sir John Blackler Colton, was an Australian politician, Premier of South Australia and philanthropist. His middle name, Blackler, was used only rarely, as on the birth certificate of his first son.

South Australian Jockey Club is the principal race club in South Australia.

Edward Meade "Ned" Bagot, was a pastoralist and developer who held large properties in Central Australia.

Adelaide Racing Club was a horse racing club which had its origins around 1870 but founded in 1879 in competition with the South Australian Jockey Club. The A.R.C. held their race meetings on the "Old Adelaide Racecourse" which they rented from the Adelaide City Council, while the S.A.J.C. owned Morphettville Racecourse freehold.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">William Knox Simms</span> Australian brewer and politician

William Knox Simms was a brewer, businessman and politician in the early days of South Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Lewis (Australian politician)</span>

John Lewis was an Australian pastoralist and politician. He was a member of the South Australian Legislative Council from 1898 to 1923, representing the Northern District (1898-1902) and North-Eastern District (1902-1923). He was the father of Essington Lewis.

William Moxon Cook invariably known as Moxon or W. Moxon Cook, was an Australian sports journalist who wrote as "Trumpator" for the Register and "Terlinga" for The Australasian.

Gabriel Bennett was an auctioneer, stock and cattle salesman and horse breeder in South Australia. He was a founder of the stock and station agents Bennett and Fisher.

William Blackler was a noted horse breeder and sportsman in the early days of the British colony of South Australia.

William "Bill" Sheppard was a veteran racehorse trainer in the Colony and State of South Australia.

The first Tattersall's Club in Adelaide was founded in 1879 and folded in 1886. It was revived as the South Australian Tattersalls Club in 1888 and prospered as a gentlemen's club, whose membership was chiefly composed of men who enjoyed gambling on horse races.

Seth "The Master" Ferry was a prominent rider, dealer, owner and trainer of racehorses in South Australia.

James Pile was a South Australian pastoralist who had extensive holdings on the Darling River in New South Wales, and succeeded by his sons William, John and Charles, collectively known as the Pile brothers.

John Eden Savill, generally known as J. E. Savill or J. Eden Savill, was an Englishman who had a short but successful career in South Australia as a racehorse owner and trainer, culminating in his horse winning the 1882 Melbourne Cup.

Simeon Barnard was a horse racing official in South Australia, one of the founders of the South Australian Jockey Club and its secretary from 1874 to 1884, and acted in an honorary capacity for four years while the Club was in recess.

John Primrose was a Scottish distiller and brewer who had a substantial career in the colony of South Australia. He was the founder of the Union Brewery, also known as Primrose's Brewery, in Rundle Street, Adelaide, the colony's first successful brewery.

Thomas Francis Wigley was a lawyer and horse racing official in South Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Queen's Cup (horse race)</span> Australian horse race

The Queen's Cup, formerly King's Cup, is a horse race run in different locations across Australia from 1927 in most years until the present day. It was originally held in each of the six states of Australia in rotation each year, but has not been held in strict rotation in recent decades. The length of the race is 2,400 m (1.5 mi), and since the 1990s it has been a Group 3 race. As of 2022, the most recent race was run in March 2022 at Rosehill Gardens Racecourse in Sydney.

References

  1. 1 2 Adelaide Hunt Club.
  2. 1 2 Brown.
  3. "Sporting". Evening Journal (Adelaide) . Vol. XXX, no. 8630. South Australia. 25 July 1898. p. 3. Retrieved 7 September 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  4. "Fifty Years of Racing (31)". The Daily Herald (Adelaide) . Vol. 9, no. 2666. South Australia. 5 October 1918. p. 7. Retrieved 5 August 2017 via National Library of Australia. Some interesting details, particulaarly of the Downers.
  5. 1 2 "Fifty Years of Racing XV". The Daily Herald (Adelaide) . Vol. 9, no. 2570. South Australia. 15 June 1918. p. 7. Retrieved 28 July 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  6. "The Adelaide Hunt". South Australian Gazette And Colonial Register . Vol. II, no. 100. South Australia. 29 May 1847. p. 3. Retrieved 18 August 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  7. Officers of the Adelaide Hunt Club, 1913, retrieved 27 July 2017
  8. "Yoicks—Ho Forrard!—And The Hunt Is Up". The News (Adelaide) . Vol. 48, no. 7, 433. South Australia. 31 May 1947. p. 2. Retrieved 28 July 2017 via National Library of Australia. This article contains much interesting information.
  9. "Advertising". The Express and Telegraph . Vol. VI, no. 1, 759. South Australia. 30 September 1869. p. 1. Retrieved 18 August 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  10. "Advertising". South Australian Register . Vol. XXXV, no. 7464. South Australia. 15 October 1870. p. 1. Retrieved 18 August 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  11. "Sporting". South Australian Register . Vol. XL, no. 9007. South Australia. 27 September 1875. p. 5. Retrieved 18 August 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  12. "Sports and Pastimes". The Express and Telegraph . Vol. LI, no. 15, 338. South Australia. 1 October 1914. p. 8. Retrieved 18 August 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  13. "Adelaide Hunt Club Meeting". Petersburg Times . Vol. XXIX, no. 1439. South Australia. 1 October 1915. p. 3. Retrieved 18 August 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  14. "Hunt Club Races". The Journal . Vol. LIV, no. 15034. South Australia. 27 September 1919. p. 24. Retrieved 18 August 2017 via National Library of Australia.

Bibliography