Colonel Hall-Walker, (later Lord Wavertree),
a Liverpool businessman who had established his stud at Tully
in County Kildare, bred the winners of seven English Classics
and, by gifting his bloodstock during World War I, provided
the genesis for two National Studs. Yet his greatest contribution
to upgrading the thoroughbred was to introduce at the turn
of the century a young Indian Prince, the late Aga Khan
III, to English racing.

The Late Aga Khan III. |
|
In Memoirs of a Racing Journalist,
author Sidney Galtrey quotes from a letter in which the Aga
Khan wrote "It was entirely due to Lord Wavertree and
my personal friendship for him that I started to race on the
English Turf. I would probably never have been known as an
owner west of Suez had he not, during and after my visit to
Tully in 1904, urged me to take up racing in England."
Despite his relative unfamiliarity with the
English racing scene, the late Aga Khan III was
no stranger to thoroughbreds. His family had been associated
with horses since 6th century Arabia, and his grandfather
established a stud and stable in India in the nineteenth century.
Two centuries before Volume 1 of the General
Stud Book, Gervase Markham had recognised the merits of
the Arabian horse. An English cavalry officer in the reign
of Queen Elizabeth I, Markham was the author of the earliest
book on racehorse training "How to chuse, ride, trayne, and
dyet both hunting horses and running horses: With all the
secrets thereto discovered." Here, with the spelling modernised
is how Markham divined the qualities of a true Arabian: "
One whose wonderful speed both in short and long courses may
make our English prickers hold their best runners ... him
I hold a fit stallion to breed on, and a fit beast for his
master to hazard his life on ... he hath in him the purity
and virtue of all other horses."
Another attribute of the Arabian horse is
and was his ability to perform well under highly variable
conditions. On this subject Markham wrote: "They are so excellent
for travel that my horse being traveled from a part of Arabia
called Angelica to Constantinople, and from there to the hithermost
parts of Germany by land and so by sea to England; yet was
he so courageous and lively ... that by no means could he
be ruled." To this the present Aga Khan can personally
attest based on the globetrotting achievements of his splendid
stallion Daylami
during the 1997 - 1999 seasons.
Returning now to Colonel Hall-Walker and
the late Aga Khan III, it is clear that the Colonel
may have been instrumental in introducing the Aga Khan
to English racing, but unbeknownst to either of them, an event
of equal importance was about to occur that would in time
seal the Aga Khan's influence on horse-breeding.
An American-bred stallion named Americus and a mare Rhoda
B, in foal to Orme, would soon arrive in Ireland thanks to
the actions of a very improbable pair of allies, the electorate
of New York City and the English Jockey Club. The response
of Richard Croker, the notorious "Boss" of Tammany Hall, to
the election of a "reform ticket" mayor, was to move with
his horses to England. However, following a barring order
from Newmarket Heath imposed by the Jockey Club, the county
Limerick native returned to the land of his birth.
Croker's batch of stock was destined to change
thoroughbred history. The foal Rhoda B was carrying was Orby,
the first Irish-trained horse ever to win the English Derby,
and arguably the greatest influence for speed of any 20th
century winner of that race.
The following spring Americus covered Palotta
and the outcome was the flying Americus Girl. Orby became
the grandsire of Cos, and Americus Girl the grand-dam of Mumtaz
Mahal. And with that end result you have the names of
two of the most influential mares ever to grace an Aga
Khan paddock.

"The Aviary at Newmarket",
by Peter Ronald Buchanan. The caricatures include: Lord
Lonsdale, the Aga Khan, Lord Derby, Lord
Londonderry, Lord Milford, Lord Allandale, Lord Carnarvon,
Lord Zetland, Lord Roseberry, Sir E. Tate, Major Featherstonhaugh,
M. Whittouck, Summy Tattersall, B. Cardeslake, Dick Dawson
and Jim Santry. |
Almost twenty years elapsed before the Aga
Khan had the means and the time to enter into the English
bloodstock market in a manner that would suit his taste for
doing things well or not at all. In those intervening years
he developed a keen appreciation for what was happening both
on the racetrack and at stud. He wrote to Galtrey, "those
who pooh-pooh science, knowledge and study in connection with
racing do not know what they are talking about."
The thoroughbred offers a unique field for
genetic research. Using the multiple volumes of the General
Stud Book and the Racing Calendar, first published, respectively,
in 1791 and 1727, one can determine the pedigree and performance
of all recorded thoroughbreds over more then two centuries
- from the fastest to the slowest, from the strongest to the
weakest.
Such study underlines the role of the owner-breeder
in upgrading bloodstock. The average winning time of Derby
winners in the period 1851-1860, was 2 minutes 55 seconds,
fifty years later (1901 - 1910) fourteen seconds had been
clipped off that average. In that period splendid foundation
mares acquired by Lord Derby (Canterbury Pilgrim) and Lord
Astor (Conjure) had ensured that their stables would remain
pre-eminent. This was a lesson not lost on the Aga Khan
who also recognized that top trainers, top jockeys, and top
stud managers were all of equal importance.
( Continue )
|
 |