Lanius (7)

Lanius (7) Imp.

Plate 9 in ‘Racehorses in Australia’ (Edited by Dr W H Lang, Ken Austin and Dr Stewart McKay): From a painting of the horse by Martin Stainforth at the age of 8 years in the possession of Mr Ken Austin.

Lanius (7) Imp. Brown Horse, 1911, by Llangibby – Mesange. Winner in England of the Rous Memorial Stakes, Jockey Club Stakes, and £11,406. Imported to Australia in 1917 and won AJC Plate, Cumberland Stakes, etc., before retiring to the stud in 1919. The property of Dr Syme, Victoria.

Wallace (3)

Wallace (3) 1892

Plate 8 in ‘Racehorses in Australia’ (Edited by Dr W H Lang, Ken Austin and Dr Stewart McKay): From a painting of the horse by Martin Stainforth at the age of 12 years in the possession of the artist.

Wallace (3). Brown Horse 1892 by Carbine – Melodious. Winner of £6,116 including the VRC Derby, Sydney Cup etc. Sire of winners of over £250,000 including Trafalgar, Aurous, Emir, Mountain King etc. Died in 1917.

Carbine (2)

Carbine (2)

Plate 3 in ‘Racehorses in Australia’ (Edited by Dr W H Lang, Ken Austin and Dr Stewart McKay): From a painting of the horse (by Martin Stainforth) at the age of 6 years in the possession of Mr F G White.

Carbine (2). Bay Horse by Musket (imp) – Mersey (imp). Winner of £29,626. Sire in Australia of Wallace, La Carabine, etc. Exported to England in 1895, where he sired Spearmint, Greatorex, Fowling Piece etc. Died in 1914 at Welbeck, England.

How Carbine Conquered Sydney

by Mandy Logan | Oct 22, 2021 | 2012-2014

14th January 2005

How Carbine Conquered Sydney

See: https://www.horseinsurance.com.au/how-carbine-conquered-sydney/

The AJC Autumn Carnival is one of the highpoints of the Australian Racing Carnival – Eurythmic, Gloaming, Manfred, Phar Lap, Peter Pan, Tulloch, Galilee, Gunsynd, Kingston Town, to name but a few, and in more recent times Super Impose, Octagonal and Sunline.

But none have come close to emulating the feats of Carbine in his three Sydney campaigns of 1889, 1890 and 1891. Thanks to the research of the AJC racing historian, John Ryan, we now know something of the background to Carbine’s first visit to Sydney.

Carbine travelled to Sydney by train. In 1883 the railway connection between Melbourne and Sydney had been completed with the opening of the railway bridge at Albury. Prior to that time Victorian horses had travelled to Sydney by sea, but in 1889 Carbine, accompanied by trainer Walter Hickenbotham and jockey Mick O’Brien, took the railway route.

On arrival in Sydney they proceeded to the AJC Hotel at Randwick where horse, trainer and jockey had been booked in. At a time when horses were a part of everyday life in Australia, hotels offered accommodation not only to guests but also to their horses.

One of the grandest race meetings ever held in the Colony was anticipated. The racecourse at Randwick was re-opening for the autumn meeting after many alterations and improvements. A new ornamental Clock and Scratchings Tower had been installed and new horse stalls and extensions to the Grand and Leger Stands were in place. The meeting consisted of four days of racing, spread over six days. The cream of Australiasia’s thoroughbreds were engaged – Carbine, The Yeoman and Charmer from Victoria, Abercorn, The Australian Peer and Cardigan from New South Wales, and Locheil, Manton and Cranbrook from New Zealand.

Carbine, a three-year-old, was well regarded for his winning record in New Zealand and in Melbourne, but local sportsmen believed he would meet his match in the Sydney champion Abercorn. And so it proved on the first day, Monday, April 22, 1889. In a fiercely contested finish, Carbine went down by a neck to Abercorn in the Autumn Stakes over one and a half miles (2400m).

From that point on though Carbine was unbeatable. On the Wednesday he contested the two mile (3200m) Sydney Cup. Suffering severe interference near the four furlong (800m) post, Carbine fell back to last and his hopes of winning appeared slight. But under O’Brien’s vigorous riding he gradually made up the lost ground. The Turf Correspondent described the final half furlong when Abercorn and Melos “locked level and raced towards the line, but on the outside Carbine, coming like a locomotive, drew on terms and then like an arrow shot to the front, crossing the other two as he did so. Abercorn was the first of the trio to fall and then the two colts, drawing clear, fought a never to be forgotten batttle in all its bitterness right to the post, Carbine winning in the last stride by a head amidst a scene of excitement that has seldom been witnessed at Randwick”. Carbine’s time of 3.31 was a race record.

The following day, Thursday, Carbine demonstrated his wonderful combination of stamina and brilliance by starting two races – the All-Aged Stakes of a mile (1600m) and the Cumberland Stakes of two miles (3200m) – and winning both convincingly. On the final day, Saturday, he completed a week of unparalleled achievement for a three-year-old by winning the three mile (4800m) AJC Plate.

In the autumn of 1890 Carbine returned to Randwick and again dominated the meeting. He started in the same races as in 1889 – the Autumn Stakes, Sydney Cup, All-Aged Stakes, Cumberland Stakes, AJC Place – and won all five. Altogether he ran nine and a half miles (15,200m) during the week, and in the AJC Plate set an Australasian record time for three miles.

In his third and final visti to the AJC’s autumn meeting, in 1891, Carbine opened his campaign by winning the Autumn Stakes. It was his fifeenth consecutive win, and it was becoming unthinkable that he could be defeated. The third day of the meeting, however, was extremely wet and his trainer, HIckenbotham, decided to run Carbine unshod in the All-Aged Stakes. His one rival, Marvel, was a superb miler and handled the wet track effortlessly. Carbine slipped and slithered on the wet grass and could not get a grip. Before a shocked and disbelieving crowd, Marvel ran to a four length victory.

But the day was not yet over. Some hours later Carbine and Marvel lined up fo the two mile Cumberland Stakes, and this time Carbine was plated. Marvel led for most of the race, and on entering the straight the two horses were on level terms. Marvel made one last move, but Carbine lengthened stride and went away to win easily by seven lengths. As The Australasian newspaper reported: “Carbine routed the usurper, and reasserted in a very decisive way his right to reign as the equine monarch of Australia. And what rejoicings there were! The scene will long live in the memories of those who were fortunate to witness it”. On the final day of the meeting, Carbine added a third AJC Plate to his trophies.

Looking back on these splendid achievements, it is fitting that the Carbine exhibit should hold pride of place at the Australian Racing Museum. His skeleton and the wonderful animation displays which accompany it, the trophies, paintings and memorabilia of his racing career, all remind us of his status as one of Australia’s true wonder horses.

From the Australian Racing Museum and Hall of Fame, Melbourne.
Champions Newsletter Vol 1 2005 pg 11

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Musket (3) Imp.

Musket (3) (imp) 1867

Plate 2 in ‘Racehorses in Australia’ (Edited by Dr W H Lang, Ken Austin and Dr Stewart McKay): From a painting of the horse at the age of 18 years by Martin Stainforth, in the possession of the artist.

Brown Horse, 1867, by Toxophilite, a half-sister to General Peel’s dam. Winner of the Ascot Stakes and 9 of his 11 last races. Imported to New Zealand in 1878. Sire of Carbine, Trenton, Hotchkiss, Nordenfeldt, Maxim, Martini-Henry, etc. Died 1885. From a painting of the horse, at the age of 18 years, in the possession of the artist.

Trenton

Trenton (NZ) (18) 1881

Brown horse by Musket (GB) out of Frailty (AUS) by Goldsborough (AUS)

Epitomises the Australasian Racehorse – out of a mare tracing back to Rous’ Emigrant (GB) Champion  Australasian stakes winner and sire in Australia. In 1895 exported to England as a sire.

Winner of good races in NZ and Australia and sire of Wakeful, Aurum, Revenue, Auraria, etc

In England he sired Torpoint etc.

Oli painting of Trenton by Martin Stainforth when the sire was 14 years of age

Courtesy of the Australian Jockey Club: originally presented by Sir William Cooper

Sydney Cup 1889

Sydney Cup 1889

The featured Image shows the “Line Up” for the Sydney Cup 1889. It was a stellar cast.

L to R: Keith (4th); Abercorn* (3rd); Melos (2nd); Carbine* (1st)

* = Exported to England as sires.

Oil Painting by W McSherry: Courtesy Australian Jockey Club.

The Hon James White originally from ‘Belltrees’, Scone had a vested interest in the outcome as the owner/breeder of ‘Abercorn’. He was perhaps the most dominant of the early thoroughbred owners and breeders to emerge from the Hunter Valley. He certainly achieved legendary status as a leviathan major player.

Fisherman

Fisherman

Fisherman: Brown Horse (1853) by Heron from Mainbrace. Fisherman was one of the greatest stayers of the English Turf, and won sixty-nine races including the Ascot Gold Cup twice. In a comparatively short stud career in Australia he proved an outstanding sire.

Over 150 years on it’s interesting to speculate how much interest a similar staying stallion would attract in the new ‘speed age’ thoroughbred breeding industry? Have we eschewed ‘stoutness’ in our stock in the hell bent ‘race for pace’?

Archer

Archer

Bay Horse (1856) by William Tell (imp.) from Maid of the Oaks. Archer was a representative of the Cutty Sark (imp.) family, and his wins included the first and second VRC Melbourne Cups in 1861 and 1862.

The Barb

The Barb & Honest John Tait

The Barb was an Australian bred Thoroughbred racehorse, famed for winning the 1866 Melbourne Cup, the Sydney Cup twice, and other quality races. He was bred by George Lee and foaled in 1863 at Leeholme, near Bathurst, New South Wales.

Featured Image: Acknowledge Volume Two of ‘The History of Australian Thoroughbred Racing’ by Harold Freedman (Artist) and Andrew Lemon (Author; ISBN 0-949318-06-x (Volume Two); ‘The Golden Years – from 1862 to 1939’; Southbank Communications Group, Melbourne pp 274 – 276

The Barb inducted into the Australian Horse Racing Hall of Fame in 2004.

See also: https://kingsoftheturf.com/1866-the-story-of-the-black-demon/

Thousands of Thoroughbreds have competed in Australia, but fewer than 50 have been successful enough to merit induction into the Australian Horse Racing Hall of Fame.

Some of these are fresh in the minds of punters, having achieved Hall of Fame worthy results in recent times. Others, however, date to earlier times.

Their exploits were equally remarkable and to prove this we need look no further than a black stallion known as The Barb.

It’s not certain if his name was meant to invoke the spirit of the Arab-Berber cavalry horses of that name which were so effective during the eighth century and were reputed to relish fighting, but The Barb seemed to possess enough of that nature to earn him the nickname, ” Black Demon.

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