Jockey Club

The Jockey Club is the largest commercial horse racing organisation in the United Kingdom. It owns 15 of Britain's famous racecourses, including Aintree, Cheltenham, Epsom Downs and both the Rowley Mile and July Course in Newmarket, amongst other horse racing assets such as the National Stud, and the property and land management company, Jockey Club Estates. The registered charity Racing Welfare is also a company limited by guarantee with the Jockey Club being the sole member. As it is governed by Royal Charter, all profits it makes are reinvested back into the sport.

The Jockey Club
TypePrivate (incorporated by Royal Charter)
IndustryHorse racing, leisure
Founded1750
Headquarters
Area served
United Kingdom
Key people
Sandy Dudgeon (Senior Steward), Nevin Truesdale (CEO)[1]
Revenue£216.5 million (2019)
Number of employees
circa 600 FTE
DivisionsJockey Club Racecourses, Jockey Club Estates, The National Stud, Racing Welfare, Jockey Club Catering, Jockey Club Live, Jockey Club Services
Websitethejockeyclub.co.uk
A view of the Jockey Club Rooms in Newmarket, UK.
The Rowley Mile Racecourse, Newmarket, UK
The Rowley Mile entrance, Newmarket, UK

Formerly the regulator for the sport ("Newmarket Rules"), the Jockey Club's responsibilities were transferred to the Horseracing Regulatory Authority (now the British Horseracing Authority) in 2006.

History

The Jockey Club has long been thought to have been founded in 1750 – a year recognised by the club itself in its own records. Some claim it was created earlier, in the 1720s,[2] while others suggest it may have existed in the first decade of the century.[3] A notice of 1729 records that "The Jockey Club, consisting of several Noblemen and Gentlemen, are to meet one Day next Week at Hackwood, the Duke of Bolton's Seat in Hampshire, to consider of the Methods for the better keeping of their respective Strings of Horses at New Market."[4]

It was founded as one of the most exclusive high society social clubs in the United Kingdom, sharing some of the functions of a gentleman's club such as high-level socialising. It was called 'The Jockey Club' in reference to the late medieval word for 'horsemen', pronounced 'yachey', and spelt 'Eachaidhe' in Gaelic.[5] The club's first meetings were held at the "Star and Garter" tavern in Pall Mall, London, before later moving to Newmarket;[6] a town known in the United Kingdom as "The Home of Racing". It was historically the dominant organisation in British horseracing, and it remained responsible for its day-to-day regulation until April 2006.

It passed its first resolution in 1758, that all riders must weigh in after a race.[7]

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, The Jockey Club had a clubhouse in Pall Mall, where many other gentlemen's clubs were based. The fact that it acquired a governing role in the sport reflected the dominant role of the aristocracy in British horse racing up to the 20th century, and the removal of this role was in part a conscious effect to move the sport away from its patrician image. This can be compared with the way that cricket's Marylebone Cricket Club became the governing body of cricket by default, but later surrendered most of its powers to more representative bodies.

The Jockey Club refused to grant training licences to women trainers until Florence Nagle, supported by the Fawcett Society sought legal redress. Initially she was unsuccessful until her fight finally reached the Court of Appeal in 1966.[8] The Jockey Club used its considerable influence within the Establishment to twice block her appeal[9] but her third appeal was successful, with the verdict of the three presiding law lords, Lord Denning, Lord Justice Dankwerts and Lord Salmon, being that "If she is to carry on her trade without stooping to subterfuge she has to have a training licence."[9][10] Of the Jockey Club itself, the Law Lords pronounced that "The rights of a person to work should not be prevented by the dictatorial powers of a body which holds a monopoly."[9] Faced with the court's ruling,[11] the Jockey Club was forced to capitulate, and on 3 August 1966 Nagle and Norah Wilmot became the first women in Britain to receive licences to train racehorses.[12] On the same day, one of Wilmot's horses won at Brighton Racecourse, making her the first official woman trainer of a winning horse.[8]

The new system

Before 2006, it was one of the three bodies which provided management for horse racing in the United Kingdom in conjunction with the British Horseracing Board (itself an offshoot of The Jockey Club) and the Horserace Betting Levy Board.

These regulatory responsibilities were transferred to a new Horseracing Regulatory Authority (HRA) from 3 April 2006.[13] This major re-organisation did not arise from a fundamental failure of the existing arrangements, but an understanding that the old system might not meet modern conditions. The HRA itself ceased to exist on 31 July 2007 as its regulatory duties were merged with the governing responsibility of the British Horseracing Board to create the new British Horseracing Authority.

In February 2023, the organisation dropped the formal dress code at all its 15 racecourses and 342 fixtures, except for the Queen Elizabeth II Stand at Epsom on Derby Day. The change was implemented as a way to make horse racing events more "accessible and inclusive".[14]

Governance

The Jockey Club is run by executives who report to the Board of Stewards (directors). The chairman of the board is called the Senior Steward. As of December 2017 there were seven Stewards, including the Senior Steward and Deputy Senior Steward.[15] Individuals may be elected as Members, who "are in effect 'trustees'. However, they may not profit from their role, as all profits are invested into British racing." As of December 2017 there were 162 Members, including 24 Honorary Members.[16]

Property

Racecourse ownership

Jockey Club Racecourses was formerly called Racecourse Holdings Trust. The fifteen racecourses owned by Jockey Club Racecourses are:

Large courses:

Smaller courses:

References

  1. "Nevin Truesdale appointed Group CEO of The Jockey Club | Horse Racing News | Racing TV". Racing TV. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  2. Richard Nash, "Sporting with Kings", in Rebecca Cassidy (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Horseracing (Cambridge University Press, 2013; ISBN 1107013852), p. 21.
  3. Donald W. Nichol, "Lost Trousers", The Times Literary Supplement, 26 July 2013, pp. 14-15, citing the frontispiece of a 1709 pamphlet called The History of the London Clubs.
  4. "The Jockey Club". Ipswich Journal. 2 August 1729. Retrieved 2 October 2022.
  5. Dineen's Irish-English Dictionary, 1975, page 383
  6. "Our Heritage". The Jockey Club. Retrieved 2 January 2018.
  7. Barrett, Norman, ed. (1995). The Daily Telegraph Chronicle of Horse Racing. Enfield, Middlesex: Guinness Publishing. p. 9.
  8. B, Lizzie (12 October 2021). "Norah Wilmot (1889-1980)". Women Who Meant Business. Retrieved 31 October 2021.
  9. Curling, Bill (April 1971). "Florence Nagle: the 'Mrs Pankhurst' of Racing". Stud and Stable. 10 (4): 29.
  10. "Nagle v Feilden". vLex. Retrieved 31 October 2021.
  11. "70-Year-Old Woman Becomes Horse Trainer". The Kokomo Tribune. 30 July 1966. p. 9. Retrieved 11 October 2014 via Newspapers.com. open access
  12. Wray, Vamplew (2004). "Nagle , Florence (1894–1988)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/62668. Retrieved 10 October 2014. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  13. Wood, Greg (3 April 2006). "End of an era as Jockey Club falls on own sword". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 31 August 2006. Retrieved 17 April 2006.
  14. "Dress code dropped at Jockey Club racecourses including Aintree and Cheltenham". BBC Sport. 2 February 2023. Retrieved 2 February 2023.
  15. "Our Board". The Jockey Club.
  16. "Our Members". The Jockey Club.
  17. http://www.tjcannualreview.co.uk/assets/Files/TJC_AR_Online_2013.pdf%5B%5D
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