User:Peaky76/sandbox

Current in progress jockey articles
Charles Spares

Chuck Spares

Rae Johnstone

Sam Day

John Forth

Patrick Conolly

Arthur Pavis Sir Frank Standish John Mangle Tom French Billy Pierse Robert Johnson Ben Smith George Nelson Tommy Lye Thomas Nicholson Bill Pyers

1913 Jockeys Table
https://archive.org/stream/sportingchronic383919lond#page/n57/mode/2up D Maher 115 / 424 F Wootton 81 / 321 A Whalley 86 / 570 E Wheatley 79 / 461 S Donoghue 78 / 597 W Griggs 62 / 435 JH Martin 53 / 378 H Robbins 52 / 514 F Rickaby 49 / 332 J Clark 49 / 388 E Piper 48 / 470 E Huxley 47 / 360 H Jelliss 43 / 417 C Foy 40 / 415 W Huxley 37 / 336 W Saxby 36 / 221 F Templeman 35 / 275 J Prout 31 / 231 Wm Griggs 30 / 260 J Ledson 30 / 315 R Stokes 30 / 319

1911 Jockeys Table
F Wootton - 187 / 745 C Trigg - 111 / 729 D Maher - 99 / 437 F Winter - 75 / 430 Ricakby Jr - 73 / 479 W Huxley - 62 / 463 J Clark - 55 / 305 S Donoghue - 49 / 483 W Higgs - 48 / 273 W Saxby - 43 / 217 E Piper - 43 / 380 C Ringstead - 42 / 446 R Stokes - 41 / 367 J H Martin - 38 / 314 F Templeman - 37 / 357 H Jones - 35 / 217 Walter Griggs - 35 / 271 F Fox - 31 / 419 A Bowley - 30 / 370 Wm Griggs - 28 / 254 W Earl - 24 / 176 R Crisp - 24 / 196 E Calder - 24 / 241

Things to do
Tidy up Track surface table

New articles being worked on
User:Peaky76/Ryan Moore expansion

Fringe 1950

Fringe 1976

Fringe 1981

Fringe 1982

Fringe 1983

Fringe 1986

Fringe 1987

Fringe 2008

EIF 1981

Linksview House

Glossary of British horseracing terms Royal Stud Frank Neale (racehorse trainer)

Boudrow

Carriers' Quarters

Cant's Ordinary

Cygnet Theatre, Edinburgh

Foundation sires

Lockwood and Mawson

Chesterfield Racecourse

Plymouth Racecourse

Whitehaven Racecourse

Saltaire Congregational Church

Mercurius Scoticus

Leith Theatre

Mac an t-Sronaich

AWChamps

1794 Epsom Derby 1844 Epsom Derby 1856 Epsom Derby 1859 Epsom Derby 1861 Epsom Derby 1885 Epsom Derby 1791 St Leger Stakes Markham Arabian

User:Peaky76/Workspace 2

User:Peaky76/Workspace 3

User:Peaky76/Workspace 4

User:Peaky76/Workspace 5

DONE
J. White

William South

Frank Collinson

George Dockeray

DERBY JOCKEYS PROGRESS
Sam Arnull – M / W / TC / T / BNA

Charles Hindley – M / W / TC / T / BNA

John Arnull – M / W / TC / T

J. White – M / W / TC / T / BNA

William South – M / W / TC / T / BNA

Sam Chifney, Sr. – M / W / TC / T

Matt Stephenson – M / W / TC / T

Frank Buckle – M (can add more detail from para 4 on) / TC

Bill Clift – M / W / TC / T

Anthony Wheatley – M / W / TC / T

John Singleton Jr. – M / W / T / TC

John Saunders (jockey) – M / W / TC / T

Bill Arnull

Dennis Fitzpatrick – M / W / TC / T

John Shepherd – M / W / TC / T

Frank Collinson – M / W / TC / T

Tom Goodisson – M / W / TC / T

Will Wheatley – M / W / TC / T

Jem Robinson

Sam Chifney Jr.

Sam Day – M / W / TC / T

George Dockeray – M / W / TC / T

John Forth – M / W / TC / T

Jem Chapple – M / W / TC / T

Patrick Conolly – M / W / TC / T

George Edwards – M / W / TC / T

Sim Templeman – M / W / TC / T

Alfred Day - M / TC Robert Sherwood - M / TC Tom Aldcroft - M / TC John Charlton (jockey) - M / TC William Macdonald – M / W / TC / T

Foster Bell – M / W / TC / T

Charles Marlow

Job Marson

Roger Poincelet – M / W / TC / T

ST LEGER WINNING

Sam Day Jr. – M / W / TC / T

1998 Scottish league.... Taken from "The eight Scottish teams, Whitecraigs, Lomond Valley Raiders, Border Eagles, Edinburgh Eagles, Glasgow North Bulls – tied in with the Bradford Bulls, Linlithgow and Central Centurions – have made a start at the game North of the Border."

Things to do

 * Expand St George's Hall, Bradford with architectural info from James
 * Check Geno Washington – 3rd biggest album of 1966?!?!?!?!

To do
Add details from NZ papers for Nat Flatman

General Stud Book
1913 Jockey Club Senior Steward, Lord Villiers, proposed admission to the General Stud Book be limited to progeny of horses already accepted in earlier volumes. Dubbed “The Jersey Act” this proposal was adopted and featured in Volume 22 of the GSB. (Named the Jersey Act as Lord Villiers was in line to be the Earl of Jersey). 1949 “Jersey Act” abolished following consultation with other countries who the act impacted on – and application from the Thoroughbred Breeders’ Association. 1969 Volume 36 of the GSB contained wording to reserve the right to exclude and include horses and saw the introduction of the “blue pages” featuring Vehicle mares whose progeny were considered Thoroughbred. 1973 Weatherbys took over the Non-Thoroughbred Register (NTR) from Miss Prior the compiler of the Half-Bred Stud Book for the breeding of horses for racing who were not full Thoroughbred (published 1914–1972). 1974 First NTR publication, “The Register for Non-Thoroughbred Mares” was published. 1976 Weatherbys were appointed Secretariat to the International Stud Book Committee. 1986 Parentage verification for all Weatherbys registered foals through blood typing was introduced (blood typing technology was first trialled by the Stud Book in the 1970s). 1988 (GB) and (IRE) country suffixes were introduced behind a horse’s name to indicate country of foaling e.g. Sea The Stars (IRE). 1991 Foal Passports were introduced – prior to that Foal Identification Certificates were issued. Passports were issued for breeding and racing stock prior to 1991. 1994 Return Of Mares Annual included an NTR section, replacing the “Register for Non-Thoroughbred Mares” publication. 1996 The age limit for late returns for horses over three years of age was relaxed. A late return can now be of any age, but must meet the late return registration criteria including proof of age. 1998 Passport life numbers were introduced. 1999 From 1999, all foals in GB and Ireland registered with Weatherbys were microchipped. 2001 DNA parentage verification was introduced – replacing Blood typing. 2006 In response to a request from the Irish Thoroughbred Breeders Association, Volume 45 of the General Stud Book was split into GB and Irish sections. All mares continue to be sourced through the Index (Volumes 1 to 19 of the General Stud Book (1793–1901) contained an Irish mares section). 2008 First Stud Book Fact Book published featuring statistics not previously available to the industry.

For over 200 years the Stud Book Department has been dedicated to providing services to breeders in Britain and Ireland. We undertake the formal registration of mares, foals and stallions, both Thoroughbred and Non-Thoroughbred, to ensure the integrity of bloodlines upon which breeding and racing industries worldwide depend. The definitive ancestry record for Thoroughbreds is The General Stud Book (GSB). Published by Weatherbys every four years since 1793, it records in 4-yearly installments all Thoroughbred matings and births in Britain and Ireland. All Thoroughbred Stud Books around the world are based on the General Stud Book and all Thoroughbreds trace back to the very first volume of the GSB. An annual update for the Thoroughbred and Non-Thoroughbred Register is published as the “Return of Mares”. In contrast to its historical perspective, the Stud Book Department has been instrumental in securing notable scientific advances in the integrity of the Stud Book information, including the introduction of bloodtyping, and later, DNA testing for parentage verification and since 1999, the microchipping of all foals to assist with identification. Weatherbys organises and hosts the International Stud Book Committee – a body representing 69 countries whose objectives are to ensure that horses are accurately and consistently identified and to ease the movement of racehorses and breeding stock between countries.

First published by Weatherbys in 1791, the General Stud Book has meticulously recorded the evolution of the British Thoroughbred and has acted as a blueprint of all other stud books worldwide. The most recent edition – Volume 44 – features the foaling results for Thoroughbreds from 1997 to 2000 in Great Britain and Ireland. Inclusion in this massive volume is dependent on being able to trace a Thoroughbred's pedigree lines in the General Stud Book or another 'approved' foreign Stud Book. Since 1986 all registered Thoroughbreds have also been parentage-tested through bloodtyping and from 2001, DNA has been introduced to further enhance the parentage test procedure. Horses are only eligible to race if they are recorded in the General Stud Book or non-thoroughbred register, or their equivalents overseas.

Shipley
Other prominent estate-owning families of this time include the Fields and the Hawsons, who lived at Lower Hall (1620), now the local Conservative Club and renamed Shipley Old Hall (not to be confused with another earlier hall of the same name). This was sold in 1846 to the Midland Railway for £24,000.

The Rawsons enforced medieval food rents and services over their tenant farmers until the 1740s. A Manor House was built here in 1673.

An extract from a survey of land held by Theobald le Botiler when he died in 1286:

''Scheple. A messuage, 24 bovates of land in demesne, let to farm at the lord's will, a plot of meadow, a corn mill and a fulling mill, 4 bovates of land held by Alice de Scheple by feoffment, doing 20s yearly for all service and 6 cottages and 5a of land hled by service of 8/9d yearly, out of which 18d are paid yearly for the use of two ponds...''

Equates to 285 acres of arable land.

By the end of Elizabeth I's reign, there were between 30 and 50 families in Shipley, of which at least 12 were employed in the clothing industry.

By the 1850s there were 17 farms in Shipley and a number of smallholdings. Many dated back to the 17th Century. Gradually the old farmhouses became surrounded by mills, although remained inhabited. Outlying farms including Heaton Royds, Hirst Farm, New Close, Moorhead Farm and the Branch Farm (on the site of the present Branch pub) survived until the 20th Century.

A Bill for the enclosure of Shipley mooors was presented to Parliament in 1815. {sfn|Watson|1989|p=1}} The procedure was completed in june 1825.{sfn|Watson|1989|p=1}}

The Rev Cyril Jackson was lord of the manor in 1820s {sfn|Watson|1989|p=2}}

By the 1870s houses began to spread along the roads out of the town.

Odd Fellows Hall on Otley Road was built in 1840.

Another wave of development in the 1930s brought jam makers, sauce makers, Sharps greeting card manufacturers.

Iron was once produced in Shipley although there are no records after 1592. And coal was mined from at least 1681. By 1777 there were two main collieries – one on the common between Stoney Ridge Lane and Cottingley Moor Road, and one at the far end of Northcliff near High Bank Lane. Although mining records cease after 1800, the remains of the workings are still visible today. A sandstone quarry existed at New York Delf on the south side of the present Saltaire Road.

By the early 18th century the population was somewhere between 200 and 350 people, spread across a block of around 30 or 40 houses or cottages in the town centre, with others at Moorhead, Shipley Fields and Hirst Wood.

An inquiry into the state of public health in Shipley in 1852 stated that Shipley 'has in the course of a few years, grown from a village into a place of considerable manufacturing importance'.. Conditions ere overcrowded and death rate from scarlet fever small poix and cholera was v high.

In 1841, 211 people lived in 42 dwellings in Chapel Lane. In 1851, 300 lived in 43. In 1851 the population was 3,272. In 1900, the population was 25,600.

The growth was accelearted when the Lord of the Manor obtained a special act of Parliament in 1856 allowing him to sell his estate for building purposes.

The population boom was accommodated by in-filling of the yards – notably Spurr's Yard and Hudson Fold - of the central town and by tenementing. The main area of working class homes was along Low Lane (Commercial Street and Briggate) and the fields by the canal, with another centre around the market place. Some of the big houses, including the Manor House were converted to multiple dwellings.

The original market was at the junction of Westgate, Kirkgate and Otley Road, next to where the Sun Hotel is. an area known as Stocks Hill owing to the siting of ancient stocks. These were removef to Roberts Park Saltaire and replaced by a fountain in the late 19th centurt.

6 blacksmiths in 1850 Building Shipley's second most important industry.

A gasworks was built in 1846.

Three sewers drained the whole town and emptied into Bradford Beck and a slough near Crowghyll.

Education
Following the Education Act of 1870, a School Board was elected in Shipley in 1874. Between then and 1900, three schools were built by Shipley School Board on Saltaire Road, Albert Road and Otley Road.

Leisure
1937 new King and Queen visited and Princess Royal.

Briggate was formerly Low Lane.

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Glossary of bets offered by UK bookmakers betting Tote betting Full cover bet Each way Betting pool Pick 6 (horse racing) Superfecta

When was "Classic" first used? Definitely by 1867 - http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/71682713