Chester (horse)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chester
Sire Yattendon
Grandsire Sir Hercules
Dam Lady Chester
Damsire Stockwell
Sex Stallion
Foaled 1874
Country Australia
Colour Brown
Breeder Edward King Cox
Owner James White
Trainer Etienne L. de Mestre
Record 29: 19-6-1
Earnings Not found
Major Racing Wins, Awards and Honours
Major Racing Wins
Champagne Stakes (1877)
Melbourne Cup (1877)
LKS Mackinnon Stakes (1878, 1880)
Victoria Derby (1878)
Craven Plate (1878)
AJC Queen Elizabeth Stakes (1878, 1879)
Racing Awards
Leading sire in Australia
(1888, 1890, 1892, 1893)
Infobox last updated on: 14:42, Friday June 13, 2008 (UTC).

Chester (1874-1888) was an Australian thoroughbred racehorse and Champion sire.

Contents

[edit] Breeding

Chester was a third generation native-bred Australian stallion. He was out of the Stockwell mare, Lady Chester. Stockwell was out of the breed-shaping broodmare, Pocahontas. Chester's sire was the influential grey stallion Yattendon, who was serving mares as a three year old while still racing.

[edit] Racing career

Chester's illustrious racing career began in the Sydney Tattersall's Two Year Old Stakes, after coming a close second to Viscount. After that, Chester won three consecutive races and was spelled to await his three year old season.

As a flying three year old, Chester won seven of his ten starts, setting three race records. He placed short-head second in the AJC Derby. Two starts after the AJC Derby, he started in the VRC Derby, he won, and claimed a track record - 2:43 - a record that held itself until 1897 by Amberite. His next race, just a tender three days after his Derby triumph, was the gruelling two-mile (3200m) Melbourne Cup over a slippery, muddy track. Chester held on to beat the lightly weighted Savanaka by a half-head in the record time of 3:33-1/2.

He took a long and deserving spell after his spring campaign, and didn't return to racing until the April of 1878. During his return, he won the AJC Autumn Stakes and two days later took second to Savanaka in the two-mile Sydney Cup, giving Savanaka twelve pounds. He won the AJC Cumberland Stakes over two miles, the next day winning the three-mile AJC Plate.

Lame for the majority of his next season, Chester ran twice. He won the AJC Spring Stakes over 12 furlongs, and came third in the AJC Craven Plate. He didn't show himself up until a year later, he ventured out for the VRC Melbourne Stakes, which he won, despite being lame. He was entered in the Melbourne Cup two days later, assigned with top weight of 9st.-6lb., but sore and out of condition for the two-miler, he placed sixth, with yet another Yattendon son, Grand Fleur, taking the money.

[edit] Career at Stud

By the time Chester had retired to stud at Kirkham Stables, near Camden, his owner, James White, had purchased a number of well-bred colonial broodmares. He began to build up a high-quality broodmare band through the 1880s, including Chester's dam, Lady Chester. White had also purchased Martini-Henry, by Musket, as a stallion for Kirkham, and he used as a cross with Chester daughters with some success.

Chester led the sire's list in Australia in 1887-88, 1889-90, 1891-92 and 1892-93, the latter two posthumous placings since Chester died on the 21st of November, 1888, aged seventeen from rupturing his bowels.

[edit] References