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Florence Nagle

Florence Nagle (26 October 1894 – 30 October 1988) was a British trainer and breeder of racehorses, a breeder of pedigree dogs, and an active feminist. Nagle purchased her first Irish Wolfhound in 1913, and went on to own or breed twenty-one United Kingdom Champions. Best in Show at Crufts in 1960 was awarded to Sulhamstead Merman, who was bred, owned and exhibited by Nagle. She also competed successfully in field trials with Irish Setters, from the 1920s until the mid-1960s resulting in eighteen Field Trial Champions. The male dog who was a linchpin in the 1970s revival of the Irish Red and White Setter breed was descended from one of Nagle's Irish Setters.

Florence Nagle c. 1960[a]
Florence Nagle
Born(1894-10-26)26 October 1894
Died30 October 1988(1988-10-30) (aged 94)
Known forbreeder of racehorses, a breeder of pedigree dogs, and an active feminist

Described as "the Mrs. Pankhurst of British horse racing",[2] Nagle trained her first racehorse in 1920, the Irish-bred colt Fernley. At that time women were forced to employ men to hold a Jockey Club trainers licence on their behalf, or to have licences in their husbands' names. Nagle worked peacefully to redress such injustices to her sex. She successfully challenged the well-established leading gentlemen's clubs of the racing and canine worlds over their gender inequality, and in 1966 became one of the first two women in the United Kingdom licensed to train racehorses. The first racehorse officially trained in Nagle's name was Mahwa, registered as being owned by her friend Miss Newton Deakin, with whom she jointly owned some of her dogs.

Dissatisfied with the lack of opportunities for women jockeys, Nagle sponsored the Florence Nagle Girl Apprentices' Handicap first run in 1986 at Kempton Park. She died at her home in West Chiltington, Sussex, two years later at the age of 94, leaving funds in her will for the continuation of the race.

Background and early life

Born in Fallowfield, Manchester, Nagle was the daughter of Sir William George Watson, 1st Baronet of Sulhamstead (1861–1930) and his second wife Bessie (née Atkinson);[3] she was also the elder sister of art connoisseur Peter Watson. Nagle was educated at Wycombe Abbey before studying domestic economy at Evendine Court, from which she was expelled after visiting Worcester Cathedral without permission.[3] Accompanied by the daughter of a canon, Nagle had hired a car for the excursion – she was one of the first women in Berkshire to hold a driving licence, gaining it when she was fifteen years old.[4] Her education was completed at a finishing school after which she spent some time in Paris, where she became friends with Megan Lloyd George.[4]

Sulhamstead Abbots, Nagle's family home in Berkshire, was used as a hospital during the First World War. There she met James Nagle, a native of Ireland who had emigrated to Canada but returned to serve with the King's Royal Rifle Corps and then had been sent to Sulhamstead Abbots to recuperate.[5] Against her parents' wishes the couple were married on 1 July 1916, resulting in them threatening to disinherit her.[6] The early days of Nagle's marriage were hard; she was used to a wealthy lifestyle[4] – her family money came from her father's successful business, Maypole Dairies[3] – but her parents offered the couple no financial assistance.[4] Nagle always worked hard and subsidised their income by making cream teas, cleaning windows and scrubbing toilets.[7] The couple had two children, a son, David, and a daughter, Patricia.[8] The marriage was not a success, and her husband ran off with one of the kennel maids.[8] Obtaining a divorce was not easy in the 1920s; when asked in court for the reason James left, Nagle answered "He must have got bored with me."[8] The divorce took place in 1928, five years before her husband's death.[8] At the time of the divorce she was living on a smallholding near Headley, but returned to Sulhamstead in 1932 after inheriting land and money from Sir William.[9] Ten years later, in 1942, she purchased Westerlands, a farm in Petworth,[10] so she could personally oversee the stables.[11]

Working in Folkestone during the Second World War, Nagle managed a canteen for the ARP. She also donated the full cost of £5,000 to purchase a Spitfire named Sulhamstead for the Royal Air Force.[12]

Dog breeding

 
Sir Michael of Sheppey, Nagle's first Irish Wolfhound, painting by Aldin

As a child, Nagle had a Pomeranian and a Bulldog, but was promised she could have a larger dog once her schooling was completed.[13] In 1913 her dream came to fruition with the purchase of her first Irish Wolfhound, Manin Michael, for £5.[13] James Nagle subsequently registered the dog with the Kennel Club, before it was transferred to the ownership of Mr and Mrs Nagle, and its name changed to Sir Michael of Sheppey in May 1917.[6] Food shortages during the First World War resulted in an official prohibition on dog breeding, but Nagle ignored it and bred her first litter from a bitch called Lady Alma of Sheppey.[13][b]

During her marriage, while residing in Concara, Sulhamstead, near Reading,[14] she began breeding dogs and served as a judge of Irish Wolfhounds[15] and Setters;[16] Great Danes and Deerhounds were other breeds she judged at championship show level.[15] Her dogs were exhibited at shows by her husband, who was also a judge of Wolfhounds, and they were entered in his name until the couple divorced.[9]

A bitch puppy, the runt of the litter, was purchased for £48 in 1923 and she became Nagle's first dog to gain the title of Champion.[9] Named Sulhamstead Thelma, she was declared the best Irish Wolfhound bitch and awarded the Challenge Certificate at three consecutive Crufts, in 1925, 1926 and 1927.[9][c] Her next Champion was Sulhamstead Conncara, a male dog, born in 1925.[19] Conncara was blind, possibly owing to an accident as a young puppy, but Nagle kept that secret until three years after his death, believing that his qualities would have been overlooked by other breeders if they had known.[20] According to Nagle's biographer, Ferelith Somerfield,[d] this dog was "one of the great sires of all time in the breed"[9] and an "outstanding show dog".[9][e] A prepotent sire,[f] he produced several Champions and other top-class show specimens.[20]

Nagle owned or bred forty-five Wolfhounds who were awarded Challenge Certificates, twenty-one of them Champions.[23] She believed dogs should be capable of carrying out the work the breed was developed to do, and she promoted coursing.[24]

Irish Wolfhounds bred by Nagle were also successful in America; she began exporting dogs there in 1933.[24] Best of breed awards at the Irish Wolfhound Club of America speciality shows were secured by Champion Sulhamstead Matador of Killybracken in 1960 and by Sulhamstead Mars of Riverlawn in 1963.[25] She also judged the national speciality there twice[26] and judged Irish Setters and Irish Wolfhounds at Westminster in 1937.[27] Other countries she exported Wolfhounds to included Sweden, Italy and Uruguay.[28] As late as 1960, Sulhamstead Merman, a 150-pound Irish Wolfhound bred, owned and shown by Nagle at "London's big dog show",[29] Crufts, won the Hound Group and went on to be declared Best in Show or "supreme champion";[26][29] the judges were H. S. Lloyd and Fred Cross.[30] She judged the breed twice at Crufts: in 1961,[31] the only time in a nine-year period her dogs were not best of breed there;[32] and in 1970.[31]

Nagle acquired her first Irish Setter, whom she named Sulhamstead D'Or, in 1924 to keep a wolfhound puppy company.[33] In April 1930 she entered him into the All-Aged Stakes at the Kennel Club field trials.[34] In August 1932 she entered a dog named Sulhamstead Token D'Or into the Scottish Field Trials in the same category.[35] At the Kennel Club field trials of April 1933, Nagle entered Sulhamstead Bob D'Or into the All-Aged Stakes and the judge awarded her the prize presented by the Irish Setter Association of England.[36] In September 1934, she entered her Irish Setter Sulhamstead Snip D'Or into the Novice Stake of the Devon and Cornwall Pointer and Setter Society's 12th working trials at Pynes, near Exeter.[37]

In July 1935 Nagle entered the field trials of the Irish Setter Association near Ruabon in North Wales, competing in the Open Stake for Irish Setters and the Puppy Stake for Irish Setters, for puppies which were born the previous year.[38] At the 35th International Gun Dog League trials held at Douglas Castle in August 1935, she was awarded a diploma in the Champion Stakes for Pointers and Setters.[39] The following month, Nagle took the silver perpetual challenge trophy in the Open Stake of the field trials of the Devon and Cornwall Pointer and Setter Society at Newlyn, near Newquay, competing with her Irish Setter Sulhamstead Baffle D'Or.[40] At the Kennel Club field trials for pointers and setters in April 1936, she entered Sulhamstead Bluff D'Or into the All-Aged Stake and was awarded the Penheale Challenge Cup by Captain N. R. Colville for the "best constitutioned dog or bitch, displaying the greatest game-finding ability".[41] At the 18th annual Scottish Field Trial Association's field trials for pointers and setters at Yester estate in Gifford, East Lothian, Scotland in August 1936, Nagle won first prize in the Brace Stake with Sulhamstead Bluff D'Or.[42] The Kennel Club own a pastel painting by Cecil Aldin of two of Nagle's Irish Setters, the Field Trial Champions Sulhamstead Sheilin D'Or and Sulhamstead Valla D'Or.[43] Field trials saw a general downturn in popularity of Irish Setters competing in the 1930s; during the following decade the breed was principally represented by Nagle's dogs.[44] Nagle had eighteen Irish Setter field trial champions during the period she was active in the breed from the 1920s to the mid-1960s.[45] The male dog Harlequin of Knockalla was pivotal in the revival of the Irish Red and White Setter breed in the 1970s; he was a descendant of Nagle's Irish Setter Sulhamstead Natty D'Or, so the Sulhamstead bloodline is behind most modern day red and whites.[46] Nagle withdrew from the field-trial scene in the mid-1960s following the retirement of her handler, George Abbott.[45]

Other breeds she owned included Golden Retrievers[47] and Pointers.[48] Nagle's activities were not confined to dogs and horses. A Berkshire boar named Pamber Ugly Duckling was champion at the Royal Show in 1921. Later he was exported to Argentina, after the purchaser paid what at the time was a record price of £750.[49] During the 1930s she owned Prince Everett of Auchterarder, a prize-winning Aberdeen Angus.[50]

Racehorse training and breeding

 
Sandsprite, owned and unofficially trained by Nagle, achieved second place in the 1937 Epsom Derby.

According to the Encyclopedia of British Horseracing, Nagle trained her first racehorse in 1920,[51] the Irish-bred colt Fernley.[52] Her fascination with the sport stemmed from a much earlier time pre-dating her decision to concentrate on breeding dogs but it was particularly the breeding aspect of racehorses she was drawn to.[53] Nagle owned the winner of the Newport Nursery Handicap in 1932, a horse named Solano, and a reporter recorded that "While Solano is not Mrs Nagle's first winner, it is some years since the 'rifle green, red cross-belts' caught the judge's eye".[53] On 5 July 1935, she entered her racehorse Comanche at Newmarket.[54]

Nagle entered The Derby in 1937; that horse, Sandsprite, ridden by John Crouch[53] at odds of 100–1, finished second to Mid-day Sun, owned by Mrs Lettice Miller, the first woman owner ever to win the Derby.[55][56][57] This was the first horse Nagle bred herself and reactions from commentators were mixed. One report described the horse as a "commanding individual",[53] whereas another reporter's opposing opinion was revealed by Nagle when after Sandsprite's success at Epsom she stated "Not bad for a horse which one newspaper said was only good enough to give rides at the seaside".[53] Sandsprite's dam was Wood Nymph, a mare purchased by Nagle for 240 guineas. She wanted to have her mated by the stallion Sansovino but had to settle for using his son, Sandwich, as she could not afford his stud fee.[11] Sandsprite had several other outings in which he gained second or third placings, but was put down at the onset of his stud career after breaking a leg.[11]

One of Nagle's early equine purchases was 15-year-old Rose of England, the winner of the 1930 Oaks, for 3,500 guineas.[11] The mare had already produced the 1937 St. Leger winner, Chulmleigh, and the 1939 top winning two-year-old, British Empire.[11] In Nagle's ownership she foaled Westerlands Rose, by the stallion Colombo[58] who produced several winners.[11] These included Westerlands Chalice, by Chamossaire, who won three races in 1957;[59] and Game Rose, by Big Game, another winner during the 1950s.[59] Other winning progeny from Westerlands Rose were Westerlands Champagne, Westerlands Prince and Westerlands Rosebud. These five horses accounted for ten race wins between them.[11]

At the December Newmarket sales in 1944 Nagle bought the two-year-old Carpatica, by the Epsom Derby winner, Hyperion out of Campanula, the 1,000 Guineas Stakes winner, for a record 15,000 guineas with the intention of looking after the filly's training at her stables in Petworth.[60] She also bought a five-year-old mare in foal, Hay Harvest, for 5,500 guineas.[61] When bred to Sayajirao, Carpatica produced the 1950s winner, Cavina.[62]

One of the main winners in the Nagle stables in the early 1960s was Gelert, trained by Nagle and owned by Miss Newton Deakin. Sired by Owen Tudor out of Westerlands Rosebud, he won a race at Ascot.[63] His dam had been successfully raced in the early 1950s and then proved herself as a useful brood.[64]

In the first half of the 20th century women trainers were not unknown – Norah Wilmot was training horses for The Queen. But women trained in an unofficial capacity, and were forced to employ men to hold the training licence on their behalf, or to have licences in their husbands' names. Thus, beginning in 1932, the divorced Nagle employed Alfred Stickley, a licensed trainer, to work at her stables in the capacity of head lad.[65] Mahwa, by Match III out of Media, was owned by Newton Deakin and was the first winning horse to be officially listed as trained by Nagle.[66][g] As late as 1975, she trained twelve horses and recommended feeding them some seaweed to provide iodine.[67] She was also a great believer in the beneficial effects of fresh air, insisting that her horses' top stable doors were permanently left open.[65] She was vehemently opposed to the vaccination of horses against equine influenza, and challenged a Jockey Club decision to make vaccination compulsory.[65] She thought the hardest part of animal breeding was "to breed for 'guts'. You can produce lovely looking animals that go well – till they are on a race course with a stiff race to win."[68]

Activism

For twenty years Nagle worked to end the Jockey Club's ban on licensing women as race horse trainers,[69] which she saw as an injustice: eventually, frustrated by the Jockey Club's persistent refusal to grant training licences to women, Nagle sought legal redress. It has been suggested that the club used its considerable influence within the Establishment to have her claim blocked twice.[2] Her fight finally reached the Court of Appeal in 1966.[70] Following her third appearance in court, Nagle emerged victorious. The verdict of the three presiding judges, Lord Denning, Lord Justice Dankwerts and Lord Justice Salmon, was, in the words of Lord Denning, that "If she is to carry on her trade without stooping to subterfuge she has to have a licence."[70] Lord Denning went on to describe the refusal to grant Nagle a training licence as "arbitrary and capricious",[70] and Lord Justice Danckwerts called it "restrictive and nonsensical".[70] Of the Jockey Club itself, Lord Justice Danckwerts went on to pronounce that "The courts have the right to protect the right of a person to work when it is being prevented by the dictatorial powers of a body which holds a monopoly."[70] All three judges also referred to the Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act 1919. Faced with the court's damning and embarrassing decision,[71] the Jockey Club capitulated, and on 3 August 1966 Florence Nagle and Norah Wilmot became the first women in Britain to receive licences to train racehorses.[5]

Nagle credited herself with "dragging the Jockey Club into the twentieth century".[5] She said: "This was a matter of principle. I am a feminist. I believe in equal rights for women. Things should be decided by ability, not sex".[69] At odds with Nagle's view, in her court case Lord Justice Salmon commented that "No doubt there are occupations, such as boxing, which may be reasonably regarded inherently unsuitable for women",[70] and Lord Denning had gone on to say that "It is not as if the training of horses could be regarded as an unsuitable occupation for a woman, like that of a jockey or speedway-rider";[70] it was another eight years before Jockey Club rules permitted women jockeys in 1972.[2] When asked by a journalist in the late 1970s if she thought women could ever match men on the racecourse, Nagle replied: "My dear man, it used to be said women couldn't stand up to three-day-eventing. Now they're beating the men regularly – and the same will happen in racing. Give them time."[72] Her endeavours led to her being described as "the Mrs Pankhurst of British horse racing"[2] in Stud & Stable Magazine and "Racing's Emily Pankhurst".[73]

At the age of 83 Nagle was still pursuing gender equality, accusing the Kennel Club of sexual discrimination in their insistence on male-only membership and taking them to court over the matter.[74] After the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 was enacted, Nagle was proposed as a member of the Kennel Club at the end of September 1977; the nomination was refused in January 1978 because the Kennel Club's constitution restricted membership to men only. Nagle referred the matter to an Industrial Tribunal five months later.[75] She was Chairwoman of the Ladies Joint Committee, a group set up in 1975 as a part of the Kennel Club hierarchy,[75] but the committee was not allowed any input into general club decisions.[26] Her actions against the club were fully supported by the other members of the Ladies Committee.[75] Legal technicalities caused the tribunal to reject the case, but it recommended that the Equal Opportunities Commission should be approached as discrimination was clearly demonstrated. Nagle was determined and stated her intention to appeal the decision.[75] Leonard Pagliero was Chairman of the Kennel Club at the time, and before Nagle was able to complete the appeal he contacted the canine press, Dog World and Our Dogs, on 8 September 1978 announcing that the Club's General Committee was recommending that the club's constitution be changed to allow women members.[75] The proposal was carried unanimously at a meeting held on 23 November 1978.[75] The result was that Nagle and many other ladies were accepted as members of the Kennel Club at a formal meeting held on 10 April 1979.[75] The total number of women approved for membership at the landmark meeting was 80; the costs of the campaign were funded by Nagle.[76]

Later life

In the 1980s, still dissatisfied with the lack of opportunities for women jockeys, Nagle sponsored a race at Kempton Park, The Florence Nagle Girl Apprentices' Handicap. The first event took place in 1986; after the race John Oaksey wrote in the Daily Telegraph that Nagle was no doubt looking down from her celestial cloud with approval. She subsequently wrote to inform him that she was still alive, but that when the time came she expected to end up in a hotter place – "and there to meet most of her racing friends".[77] Nagle left a bequest in her will to ensure the race's survival.[78]

Nagle died at her home, Little Mayfield in West Chiltington, Sussex, at the age of 94.[5]

References

Notes

  1. ^ Photo taken around the time she was pursuing action against the Jockey Club; the diamond brooch was described by the author of her biography as "one of her [Nagle] favourite pieces of jewellery".[1]
  2. ^ Nagle's dog were originally registered with the affix Sheppey.[8]
  3. ^ A hound has to win three Challenge Certificates from three different judges (one must be won after the dog is a year old) to be a Champion.[17] A Challenge Certificate is awarded to the best male and the best female in breeds at championship shows where the Kennel Club has allowed an allocation of CCs for that breed.[18]
  4. ^ Ferelith Somerfield is an international dog judge, breeder and wife of Stafford Somerfield.[21]
  5. ^ The Kennel Club introduced a rule prohibiting the showing of blind dogs when they discovered one had been exhibited by Nagle.[20]
  6. ^ A prepotent sire is a stud dog that passes on certain of his traits to an especially large number of his offspring so that they resemble each other more closely than usual.[22]
  7. ^ Nagle and Newton Deakin also jointly owned some of the gundogs.[6]

Citations

  1. ^ Somerfield (1999), p. 114
  2. ^ a b c d Curling (1971), p. 29
  3. ^ a b c Somerfield (1999), p. 16
  4. ^ a b c d Somerfield (1999), p. 17
  5. ^ a b c d 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.)
  6. ^ a b c Jupp, Hilary, "Irish Wolfhound History: The Sulhamstead Kennel", irishwolfhound.org, from the original on 25 January 2016, retrieved 11 October 2014
  7. ^ Somerfield (1999), pp. 17–18
  8. ^ a b c d e Somerfield (1999), p. 18
  9. ^ a b c d e f Somerfield (1999), p. 20
  10. ^ Somerfield (1999), p. 111
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Somerfield (1999), p. 87
  12. ^ Somerfield (1999), p. 27
  13. ^ a b c Somerfield (1999), p. 19
  14. ^ "English Setter Club", The Times, 19 April 1933, p. 14
  15. ^ a b Somerfield (1999), p. 178
  16. ^ Somerfield (1999), p. 177
  17. ^ (PDF), The Kennel Club, archived from the original (PDF) on 28 December 2013, retrieved 19 October 2014
  18. ^ Simon, Parsons, , Dog World, archived from the original on 23 September 2015, retrieved 27 April 2015
  19. ^ Somerfield (1999), pp. 20–21
  20. ^ a b c Somerfield (1999), p. 21
  21. ^ "Diana Hamilton, Oudenarde", Cairn Terrier Club, from the original on 26 May 2007, retrieved 19 October 2014
  22. ^ Beuchat, Carol, "The Costs and Benefits of Inbreeding", The Institute of Canine Biology, from the original on 17 May 2015, retrieved 9 May 2015
  23. ^ Somerfield (1999), pp. 175–176
  24. ^ a b Somerfield (1999), p. 25
  25. ^ "1960–1969 Specialties", Irish Wolfhound Club of America, from the original on 19 October 2014, retrieved 12 October 2014
  26. ^ a b c Bengtson (2008), p. 270
  27. ^ Somerfield (1999), p. 132
  28. ^ Somerfield (1999), p. 35
  29. ^ a b "A 150-pound Irish wolfhound", Alton Evening Telegraph, 11 May 1966, p. 9, retrieved 11 October 2014 – via Newspapers.com  
  30. ^ "The Crufts Immortals", Dog World, 5 March 2010, p. 80, retrieved 12 October 2014
  31. ^ a b Somerfield (1999), p. 179
  32. ^ Somerfield (1999), p. 39
  33. ^ Ingle Bepler & Ryan (1937), p. 50
  34. ^ "Kennel Club Field Trials", The Times, 28 April 1930, p. 5
  35. ^ "Scottish Field Trials", The Times, 8 August 1932, p. 15
  36. ^ "British Bulldogs", The Times, 17 April 1933, p. 15
  37. ^ "News in Brief", The Times, 24 September 1934, p. 20
  38. ^ "Field Trials", The Times, 22 July 1935, p. 10
  39. ^ "Field Trials", The Times, 16 August 1935, p. 8
  40. ^ "Field Trials", The Times, 16 September 1935, p. 10
  41. ^ "Field Trials", The Times, 27 April 1936, p. 21
  42. ^ "Field Trials", The Times, 10 August 1936, p. 8
  43. ^ Waters, Nick (29 February 2008), , Dog World, archived from the original on 18 October 2014, retrieved 12 October 2014
  44. ^ Leighton-Boyce (1973), p. 104
  45. ^ a b Roberts (1978), p. 25
  46. ^ Somerfield (1999), pp. 167–168
  47. ^ Somerfield (1999), p. 162
  48. ^ Somerfield (1999), p. 163
  49. ^ Somerfield (1999), p. 15
  50. ^ Somerfield (1999), p. 14
  51. ^ Vamplew (2005), p. 343
  52. ^ Staff (22 April 1920), "Racing at Epsom", The Times, no. 42391, p. 7
  53. ^ a b c d e Somerfield (1999), p. 86
  54. ^ "Racing", The Times, 5 July 1935, p. 5
  55. ^ Clark, Neil (30 May 2007), "Memories of a golden day in 1937", The Telegraph, retrieved 11 October 2014
  56. ^ Lambie (2010), p. 479
  57. ^ Pathe Gazette Presents: the Derby 1937 (Motion picture), British-Pathé, 1937, archived from the original on 14 November 2021
  58. ^ "Westerlands Rose", allbreedpedigree.com, from the original on 26 October 2014, retrieved 26 October 2014
  59. ^ a b Somerfield (1999), p. 94
  60. ^ "15,000gns. for two-year old filly.", Dundee Courier, 6 December 1944, p. 4  – via British Newspaper Archive (subscription required)
  61. ^ "Newmarket sales", Western Morning News, 8 December 1944, p. 4  – via British Newspaper Archive (subscription required)
  62. ^ Somerfield (1999), p. 99
  63. ^ Somerfield (1999), p. 103
  64. ^ Somerfield (1999), p. 98
  65. ^ a b c Curling (1971), p. 31
  66. ^ Somerfield (1999), p. 102
  67. ^ "Successful Formula", The Kansas City Times, 11 September 1975, p. 37, retrieved 11 October 2014 – via Newspapers.com  
  68. ^ "Prominent Horse owner Bets Only Shillings", The Evening Independent, 5 January 1945, p. 12, retrieved 7 March 2015 – via Newspapers.com  
  69. ^ a b Hargreaves (2002), p. 276
  70. ^ a b c d e f g Reported as Nagle v Feilden [1966] 2 QB 633, [1966] 2 WLR 1027, [1966] 1 All ER 689; see Extract from online casebook, Oxford Centre for Higher Education Policy Studies
  71. ^ "70-Year-Old Woman Becomes Horse Trainer", The Kokomo Tribune, 30 July 1966, p. 9, retrieved 11 October 2014 – via Newspapers.com  
  72. ^ Barret, Tamsin (22 November 1999), "Woman's place is now in the home straight thanks to suffragette's legacy", The Independent, retrieved 11 October 2014
  73. ^ Lambie (2010), p. 480
  74. ^ Wojtczak (2008), p. 114
  75. ^ a b c d e f g Sutton (1980), p. 9
  76. ^ Sutton (1980), p. 25
  77. ^ Oakley, Robin (22 May 1999), "The whip hand", The Spectator[dead link]
  78. ^ Oakley (2013), p. 317

Bibliography

  • Bengtson, Bo (2008), Best in Show: The World of Show Dogs and Dog Shows, BowTie Press, ISBN 978-1-931993-85-2
  • Curling, Bill (April 1971), "Florence Nagle: the 'Mrs Pankhurst' of Racing", Stud and Stable, 10 (4)
  • Hargreaves, Jennifer (2002), Sporting Females: Critical Issues in the History and Sociology of Women's Sport, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-134-91277-3
  • Ingle Bepler, M.; Ryan, C. W. (1937), Setters, Irish, English and Gordon, Our Dogs
  • Lambie, James (2010), The Story of Your Life: A History of the Sporting Life Newspaper (1859–1998), Matador, ISBN 978-1-84876-291-6
  • Leighton-Boyce, Gilbert (1973), Irish Setters, Barker, ISBN 978-0-213-16414-0
  • Oakley, Robin (2013), Tales From the Turf: Reflections from a Life in Horseracing, Corinthian, ISBN 978-1-906850-68-5
  • Roberts, Janice (1978), The Irish Setter, Popular Dogs, ISBN 978-0-09-129700-8
  • Somerfield, Ferelith (1999), Mission Accomplished: The Life and Times of Florence Nagle, 1894–1988: the Woman who Took on Both the Jockey Club and the Kennel Club, and Won, Dog World Publications, ISBN 978-0-9500418-9-6
  • Sutton, Catherine G. (1980), Pryde, William (ed.), Dog shows and show dogs, K & R Books, ISBN 978-0-903264-41-9
  • Vamplew, Wray (2005), Encyclopedia of British Horseracing, Psychology Press, ISBN 978-0-7146-8292-1
  • Wojtczak, Helena (2008), Notable Sussex Women: 580 Biographical Sketches, Hastings Press, ISBN 978-1-904109-15-0

External links

florence, nagle, october, 1894, october, 1988, british, trainer, breeder, racehorses, breeder, pedigree, dogs, active, feminist, nagle, purchased, first, irish, wolfhound, 1913, went, breed, twenty, united, kingdom, champions, best, show, crufts, 1960, awarded. Florence Nagle 26 October 1894 30 October 1988 was a British trainer and breeder of racehorses a breeder of pedigree dogs and an active feminist Nagle purchased her first Irish Wolfhound in 1913 and went on to own or breed twenty one United Kingdom Champions Best in Show at Crufts in 1960 was awarded to Sulhamstead Merman who was bred owned and exhibited by Nagle She also competed successfully in field trials with Irish Setters from the 1920s until the mid 1960s resulting in eighteen Field Trial Champions The male dog who was a linchpin in the 1970s revival of the Irish Red and White Setter breed was descended from one of Nagle s Irish Setters Florence Nagle c 1960 a Florence NagleBorn 1894 10 26 26 October 1894Died30 October 1988 1988 10 30 aged 94 Known forbreeder of racehorses a breeder of pedigree dogs and an active feministDescribed as the Mrs Pankhurst of British horse racing 2 Nagle trained her first racehorse in 1920 the Irish bred colt Fernley At that time women were forced to employ men to hold a Jockey Club trainers licence on their behalf or to have licences in their husbands names Nagle worked peacefully to redress such injustices to her sex She successfully challenged the well established leading gentlemen s clubs of the racing and canine worlds over their gender inequality and in 1966 became one of the first two women in the United Kingdom licensed to train racehorses The first racehorse officially trained in Nagle s name was Mahwa registered as being owned by her friend Miss Newton Deakin with whom she jointly owned some of her dogs Dissatisfied with the lack of opportunities for women jockeys Nagle sponsored the Florence Nagle Girl Apprentices Handicap first run in 1986 at Kempton Park She died at her home in West Chiltington Sussex two years later at the age of 94 leaving funds in her will for the continuation of the race Contents 1 Background and early life 2 Dog breeding 3 Racehorse training and breeding 4 Activism 5 Later life 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 6 3 Bibliography 7 External linksBackground and early life EditBorn in Fallowfield Manchester Nagle was the daughter of Sir William George Watson 1st Baronet of Sulhamstead 1861 1930 and his second wife Bessie nee Atkinson 3 she was also the elder sister of art connoisseur Peter Watson Nagle was educated at Wycombe Abbey before studying domestic economy at Evendine Court from which she was expelled after visiting Worcester Cathedral without permission 3 Accompanied by the daughter of a canon Nagle had hired a car for the excursion she was one of the first women in Berkshire to hold a driving licence gaining it when she was fifteen years old 4 Her education was completed at a finishing school after which she spent some time in Paris where she became friends with Megan Lloyd George 4 Sulhamstead Abbots Nagle s family home in Berkshire was used as a hospital during the First World War There she met James Nagle a native of Ireland who had emigrated to Canada but returned to serve with the King s Royal Rifle Corps and then had been sent to Sulhamstead Abbots to recuperate 5 Against her parents wishes the couple were married on 1 July 1916 resulting in them threatening to disinherit her 6 The early days of Nagle s marriage were hard she was used to a wealthy lifestyle 4 her family money came from her father s successful business Maypole Dairies 3 but her parents offered the couple no financial assistance 4 Nagle always worked hard and subsidised their income by making cream teas cleaning windows and scrubbing toilets 7 The couple had two children a son David and a daughter Patricia 8 The marriage was not a success and her husband ran off with one of the kennel maids 8 Obtaining a divorce was not easy in the 1920s when asked in court for the reason James left Nagle answered He must have got bored with me 8 The divorce took place in 1928 five years before her husband s death 8 At the time of the divorce she was living on a smallholding near Headley but returned to Sulhamstead in 1932 after inheriting land and money from Sir William 9 Ten years later in 1942 she purchased Westerlands a farm in Petworth 10 so she could personally oversee the stables 11 Working in Folkestone during the Second World War Nagle managed a canteen for the ARP She also donated the full cost of 5 000 to purchase a Spitfire named Sulhamstead for the Royal Air Force 12 Dog breeding Edit Sir Michael of Sheppey Nagle s first Irish Wolfhound painting by Aldin As a child Nagle had a Pomeranian and a Bulldog but was promised she could have a larger dog once her schooling was completed 13 In 1913 her dream came to fruition with the purchase of her first Irish Wolfhound Manin Michael for 5 13 James Nagle subsequently registered the dog with the Kennel Club before it was transferred to the ownership of Mr and Mrs Nagle and its name changed to Sir Michael of Sheppey in May 1917 6 Food shortages during the First World War resulted in an official prohibition on dog breeding but Nagle ignored it and bred her first litter from a bitch called Lady Alma of Sheppey 13 b During her marriage while residing in Concara Sulhamstead near Reading 14 she began breeding dogs and served as a judge of Irish Wolfhounds 15 and Setters 16 Great Danes and Deerhounds were other breeds she judged at championship show level 15 Her dogs were exhibited at shows by her husband who was also a judge of Wolfhounds and they were entered in his name until the couple divorced 9 A bitch puppy the runt of the litter was purchased for 48 in 1923 and she became Nagle s first dog to gain the title of Champion 9 Named Sulhamstead Thelma she was declared the best Irish Wolfhound bitch and awarded the Challenge Certificate at three consecutive Crufts in 1925 1926 and 1927 9 c Her next Champion was Sulhamstead Conncara a male dog born in 1925 19 Conncara was blind possibly owing to an accident as a young puppy but Nagle kept that secret until three years after his death believing that his qualities would have been overlooked by other breeders if they had known 20 According to Nagle s biographer Ferelith Somerfield d this dog was one of the great sires of all time in the breed 9 and an outstanding show dog 9 e A prepotent sire f he produced several Champions and other top class show specimens 20 Nagle owned or bred forty five Wolfhounds who were awarded Challenge Certificates twenty one of them Champions 23 She believed dogs should be capable of carrying out the work the breed was developed to do and she promoted coursing 24 Irish Wolfhounds bred by Nagle were also successful in America she began exporting dogs there in 1933 24 Best of breed awards at the Irish Wolfhound Club of America speciality shows were secured by Champion Sulhamstead Matador of Killybracken in 1960 and by Sulhamstead Mars of Riverlawn in 1963 25 She also judged the national speciality there twice 26 and judged Irish Setters and Irish Wolfhounds at Westminster in 1937 27 Other countries she exported Wolfhounds to included Sweden Italy and Uruguay 28 As late as 1960 Sulhamstead Merman a 150 pound Irish Wolfhound bred owned and shown by Nagle at London s big dog show 29 Crufts won the Hound Group and went on to be declared Best in Show or supreme champion 26 29 the judges were H S Lloyd and Fred Cross 30 She judged the breed twice at Crufts in 1961 31 the only time in a nine year period her dogs were not best of breed there 32 and in 1970 31 Nagle acquired her first Irish Setter whom she named Sulhamstead D Or in 1924 to keep a wolfhound puppy company 33 In April 1930 she entered him into the All Aged Stakes at the Kennel Club field trials 34 In August 1932 she entered a dog named Sulhamstead Token D Or into the Scottish Field Trials in the same category 35 At the Kennel Club field trials of April 1933 Nagle entered Sulhamstead Bob D Or into the All Aged Stakes and the judge awarded her the prize presented by the Irish Setter Association of England 36 In September 1934 she entered her Irish Setter Sulhamstead Snip D Or into the Novice Stake of the Devon and Cornwall Pointer and Setter Society s 12th working trials at Pynes near Exeter 37 In July 1935 Nagle entered the field trials of the Irish Setter Association near Ruabon in North Wales competing in the Open Stake for Irish Setters and the Puppy Stake for Irish Setters for puppies which were born the previous year 38 At the 35th International Gun Dog League trials held at Douglas Castle in August 1935 she was awarded a diploma in the Champion Stakes for Pointers and Setters 39 The following month Nagle took the silver perpetual challenge trophy in the Open Stake of the field trials of the Devon and Cornwall Pointer and Setter Society at Newlyn near Newquay competing with her Irish Setter Sulhamstead Baffle D Or 40 At the Kennel Club field trials for pointers and setters in April 1936 she entered Sulhamstead Bluff D Or into the All Aged Stake and was awarded the Penheale Challenge Cup by Captain N R Colville for the best constitutioned dog or bitch displaying the greatest game finding ability 41 At the 18th annual Scottish Field Trial Association s field trials for pointers and setters at Yester estate in Gifford East Lothian Scotland in August 1936 Nagle won first prize in the Brace Stake with Sulhamstead Bluff D Or 42 The Kennel Club own a pastel painting by Cecil Aldin of two of Nagle s Irish Setters the Field Trial Champions Sulhamstead Sheilin D Or and Sulhamstead Valla D Or 43 Field trials saw a general downturn in popularity of Irish Setters competing in the 1930s during the following decade the breed was principally represented by Nagle s dogs 44 Nagle had eighteen Irish Setter field trial champions during the period she was active in the breed from the 1920s to the mid 1960s 45 The male dog Harlequin of Knockalla was pivotal in the revival of the Irish Red and White Setter breed in the 1970s he was a descendant of Nagle s Irish Setter Sulhamstead Natty D Or so the Sulhamstead bloodline is behind most modern day red and whites 46 Nagle withdrew from the field trial scene in the mid 1960s following the retirement of her handler George Abbott 45 Other breeds she owned included Golden Retrievers 47 and Pointers 48 Nagle s activities were not confined to dogs and horses A Berkshire boar named Pamber Ugly Duckling was champion at the Royal Show in 1921 Later he was exported to Argentina after the purchaser paid what at the time was a record price of 750 49 During the 1930s she owned Prince Everett of Auchterarder a prize winning Aberdeen Angus 50 Racehorse training and breeding Edit Sandsprite owned and unofficially trained by Nagle achieved second place in the 1937 Epsom Derby According to the Encyclopedia of British Horseracing Nagle trained her first racehorse in 1920 51 the Irish bred colt Fernley 52 Her fascination with the sport stemmed from a much earlier time pre dating her decision to concentrate on breeding dogs but it was particularly the breeding aspect of racehorses she was drawn to 53 Nagle owned the winner of the Newport Nursery Handicap in 1932 a horse named Solano and a reporter recorded that While Solano is not Mrs Nagle s first winner it is some years since the rifle green red cross belts caught the judge s eye 53 On 5 July 1935 she entered her racehorse Comanche at Newmarket 54 Nagle entered The Derby in 1937 that horse Sandsprite ridden by John Crouch 53 at odds of 100 1 finished second to Mid day Sun owned by Mrs Lettice Miller the first woman owner ever to win the Derby 55 56 57 This was the first horse Nagle bred herself and reactions from commentators were mixed One report described the horse as a commanding individual 53 whereas another reporter s opposing opinion was revealed by Nagle when after Sandsprite s success at Epsom she stated Not bad for a horse which one newspaper said was only good enough to give rides at the seaside 53 Sandsprite s dam was Wood Nymph a mare purchased by Nagle for 240 guineas She wanted to have her mated by the stallion Sansovino but had to settle for using his son Sandwich as she could not afford his stud fee 11 Sandsprite had several other outings in which he gained second or third placings but was put down at the onset of his stud career after breaking a leg 11 One of Nagle s early equine purchases was 15 year old Rose of England the winner of the 1930 Oaks for 3 500 guineas 11 The mare had already produced the 1937 St Leger winner Chulmleigh and the 1939 top winning two year old British Empire 11 In Nagle s ownership she foaled Westerlands Rose by the stallion Colombo 58 who produced several winners 11 These included Westerlands Chalice by Chamossaire who won three races in 1957 59 and Game Rose by Big Game another winner during the 1950s 59 Other winning progeny from Westerlands Rose were Westerlands Champagne Westerlands Prince and Westerlands Rosebud These five horses accounted for ten race wins between them 11 At the December Newmarket sales in 1944 Nagle bought the two year old Carpatica by the Epsom Derby winner Hyperion out of Campanula the 1 000 Guineas Stakes winner for a record 15 000 guineas with the intention of looking after the filly s training at her stables in Petworth 60 She also bought a five year old mare in foal Hay Harvest for 5 500 guineas 61 When bred to Sayajirao Carpatica produced the 1950s winner Cavina 62 One of the main winners in the Nagle stables in the early 1960s was Gelert trained by Nagle and owned by Miss Newton Deakin Sired by Owen Tudor out of Westerlands Rosebud he won a race at Ascot 63 His dam had been successfully raced in the early 1950s and then proved herself as a useful brood 64 In the first half of the 20th century women trainers were not unknown Norah Wilmot was training horses for The Queen But women trained in an unofficial capacity and were forced to employ men to hold the training licence on their behalf or to have licences in their husbands names Thus beginning in 1932 the divorced Nagle employed Alfred Stickley a licensed trainer to work at her stables in the capacity of head lad 65 Mahwa by Match III out of Media was owned by Newton Deakin and was the first winning horse to be officially listed as trained by Nagle 66 g As late as 1975 she trained twelve horses and recommended feeding them some seaweed to provide iodine 67 She was also a great believer in the beneficial effects of fresh air insisting that her horses top stable doors were permanently left open 65 She was vehemently opposed to the vaccination of horses against equine influenza and challenged a Jockey Club decision to make vaccination compulsory 65 She thought the hardest part of animal breeding was to breed for guts You can produce lovely looking animals that go well till they are on a race course with a stiff race to win 68 Activism EditFor twenty years Nagle worked to end the Jockey Club s ban on licensing women as race horse trainers 69 which she saw as an injustice eventually frustrated by the Jockey Club s persistent refusal to grant training licences to women Nagle sought legal redress It has been suggested that the club used its considerable influence within the Establishment to have her claim blocked twice 2 Her fight finally reached the Court of Appeal in 1966 70 Following her third appearance in court Nagle emerged victorious The verdict of the three presiding judges Lord Denning Lord Justice Dankwerts and Lord Justice Salmon was in the words of Lord Denning that If she is to carry on her trade without stooping to subterfuge she has to have a licence 70 Lord Denning went on to describe the refusal to grant Nagle a training licence as arbitrary and capricious 70 and Lord Justice Danckwerts called it restrictive and nonsensical 70 Of the Jockey Club itself Lord Justice Danckwerts went on to pronounce that The courts have the right to protect the right of a person to work when it is being prevented by the dictatorial powers of a body which holds a monopoly 70 All three judges also referred to the Sex Disqualification Removal Act 1919 Faced with the court s damning and embarrassing decision 71 the Jockey Club capitulated and on 3 August 1966 Florence Nagle and Norah Wilmot became the first women in Britain to receive licences to train racehorses 5 Nagle credited herself with dragging the Jockey Club into the twentieth century 5 She said This was a matter of principle I am a feminist I believe in equal rights for women Things should be decided by ability not sex 69 At odds with Nagle s view in her court case Lord Justice Salmon commented that No doubt there are occupations such as boxing which may be reasonably regarded inherently unsuitable for women 70 and Lord Denning had gone on to say that It is not as if the training of horses could be regarded as an unsuitable occupation for a woman like that of a jockey or speedway rider 70 it was another eight years before Jockey Club rules permitted women jockeys in 1972 2 When asked by a journalist in the late 1970s if she thought women could ever match men on the racecourse Nagle replied My dear man it used to be said women couldn t stand up to three day eventing Now they re beating the men regularly and the same will happen in racing Give them time 72 Her endeavours led to her being described as the Mrs Pankhurst of British horse racing 2 in Stud amp Stable Magazine and Racing s Emily Pankhurst 73 At the age of 83 Nagle was still pursuing gender equality accusing the Kennel Club of sexual discrimination in their insistence on male only membership and taking them to court over the matter 74 After the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 was enacted Nagle was proposed as a member of the Kennel Club at the end of September 1977 the nomination was refused in January 1978 because the Kennel Club s constitution restricted membership to men only Nagle referred the matter to an Industrial Tribunal five months later 75 She was Chairwoman of the Ladies Joint Committee a group set up in 1975 as a part of the Kennel Club hierarchy 75 but the committee was not allowed any input into general club decisions 26 Her actions against the club were fully supported by the other members of the Ladies Committee 75 Legal technicalities caused the tribunal to reject the case but it recommended that the Equal Opportunities Commission should be approached as discrimination was clearly demonstrated Nagle was determined and stated her intention to appeal the decision 75 Leonard Pagliero was Chairman of the Kennel Club at the time and before Nagle was able to complete the appeal he contacted the canine press Dog World and Our Dogs on 8 September 1978 announcing that the Club s General Committee was recommending that the club s constitution be changed to allow women members 75 The proposal was carried unanimously at a meeting held on 23 November 1978 75 The result was that Nagle and many other ladies were accepted as members of the Kennel Club at a formal meeting held on 10 April 1979 75 The total number of women approved for membership at the landmark meeting was 80 the costs of the campaign were funded by Nagle 76 Later life EditIn the 1980s still dissatisfied with the lack of opportunities for women jockeys Nagle sponsored a race at Kempton Park The Florence Nagle Girl Apprentices Handicap The first event took place in 1986 after the race John Oaksey wrote in the Daily Telegraph that Nagle was no doubt looking down from her celestial cloud with approval She subsequently wrote to inform him that she was still alive but that when the time came she expected to end up in a hotter place and there to meet most of her racing friends 77 Nagle left a bequest in her will to ensure the race s survival 78 Nagle died at her home Little Mayfield in West Chiltington Sussex at the age of 94 5 References EditNotes Edit Photo taken around the time she was pursuing action against the Jockey Club the diamond brooch was described by the author of her biography as one of her Nagle favourite pieces of jewellery 1 Nagle s dog were originally registered with the affix Sheppey 8 A hound has to win three Challenge Certificates from three different judges one must be won after the dog is a year old to be a Champion 17 A Challenge Certificate is awarded to the best male and the best female in breeds at championship shows where the Kennel Club has allowed an allocation of CCs for that breed 18 Ferelith Somerfield is an international dog judge breeder and wife of Stafford Somerfield 21 The Kennel Club introduced a rule prohibiting the showing of blind dogs when they discovered one had been exhibited by Nagle 20 A prepotent sire is a stud dog that passes on certain of his traits to an especially large number of his offspring so that they resemble each other more closely than usual 22 Nagle and Newton Deakin also jointly owned some of the gundogs 6 Citations Edit Somerfield 1999 p 114 a b c d Curling 1971 p 29 a b c Somerfield 1999 p 16 a b c d Somerfield 1999 p 17 a b c d 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 a b c Jupp Hilary Irish Wolfhound History The Sulhamstead Kennel irishwolfhound org archived from the original on 25 January 2016 retrieved 11 October 2014 Somerfield 1999 pp 17 18 a b c d e Somerfield 1999 p 18 a b c d e f Somerfield 1999 p 20 Somerfield 1999 p 111 a b c d e f g Somerfield 1999 p 87 Somerfield 1999 p 27 a b c Somerfield 1999 p 19 English Setter Club The Times 19 April 1933 p 14 a b Somerfield 1999 p 178 Somerfield 1999 p 177 Regulations for Entries in the Stud Book Champions and Warrants PDF The Kennel Club archived from the original PDF on 28 December 2013 retrieved 19 October 2014 Simon Parsons What s it all about Dog World archived from the original on 23 September 2015 retrieved 27 April 2015 Somerfield 1999 pp 20 21 a b c Somerfield 1999 p 21 Diana Hamilton Oudenarde Cairn Terrier Club archived from the original on 26 May 2007 retrieved 19 October 2014 Beuchat Carol The Costs and Benefits of Inbreeding The Institute of Canine Biology archived from the original on 17 May 2015 retrieved 9 May 2015 Somerfield 1999 pp 175 176 a b Somerfield 1999 p 25 1960 1969 Specialties Irish Wolfhound Club of America archived from the original on 19 October 2014 retrieved 12 October 2014 a b c Bengtson 2008 p 270 Somerfield 1999 p 132 Somerfield 1999 p 35 a b A 150 pound Irish wolfhound Alton Evening Telegraph 11 May 1966 p 9 retrieved 11 October 2014 via Newspapers com The Crufts Immortals Dog World 5 March 2010 p 80 retrieved 12 October 2014 a b Somerfield 1999 p 179 Somerfield 1999 p 39 Ingle Bepler amp Ryan 1937 p 50 Kennel Club Field Trials The Times 28 April 1930 p 5 Scottish Field Trials The Times 8 August 1932 p 15 British Bulldogs The Times 17 April 1933 p 15 News in Brief The Times 24 September 1934 p 20 Field Trials The Times 22 July 1935 p 10 Field Trials The Times 16 August 1935 p 8 Field Trials The Times 16 September 1935 p 10 Field Trials The Times 27 April 1936 p 21 Field Trials The Times 10 August 1936 p 8 Waters Nick 29 February 2008 The dog in art Irish Setters at the Kennel Club Dog World archived from the original on 18 October 2014 retrieved 12 October 2014 Leighton Boyce 1973 p 104 a b Roberts 1978 p 25 Somerfield 1999 pp 167 168 Somerfield 1999 p 162 Somerfield 1999 p 163 Somerfield 1999 p 15 Somerfield 1999 p 14 Vamplew 2005 p 343 Staff 22 April 1920 Racing at Epsom The Times no 42391 p 7 a b c d e Somerfield 1999 p 86 Racing The Times 5 July 1935 p 5 Clark Neil 30 May 2007 Memories of a golden day in 1937 The Telegraph retrieved 11 October 2014 Lambie 2010 p 479 Pathe Gazette Presents the Derby 1937 Motion picture British Pathe 1937 archived from the original on 14 November 2021 Westerlands Rose allbreedpedigree com archived from the original on 26 October 2014 retrieved 26 October 2014 a b Somerfield 1999 p 94 15 000gns for two year old filly Dundee Courier 6 December 1944 p 4 via British Newspaper Archive subscription required Newmarket sales Western Morning News 8 December 1944 p 4 via British Newspaper Archive subscription required Somerfield 1999 p 99 Somerfield 1999 p 103 Somerfield 1999 p 98 a b c Curling 1971 p 31 Somerfield 1999 p 102 Successful Formula The Kansas City Times 11 September 1975 p 37 retrieved 11 October 2014 via Newspapers com Prominent Horse owner Bets Only Shillings The Evening Independent 5 January 1945 p 12 retrieved 7 March 2015 via Newspapers com a b Hargreaves 2002 p 276 a b c d e f g Reported as Nagle v Feilden 1966 2 QB 633 1966 2 WLR 1027 1966 1 All ER 689 see Extract from online casebook Oxford Centre for Higher Education Policy Studies 70 Year Old Woman Becomes Horse Trainer The Kokomo Tribune 30 July 1966 p 9 retrieved 11 October 2014 via Newspapers com Barret Tamsin 22 November 1999 Woman s place is now in the home straight thanks to suffragette s legacy The Independent retrieved 11 October 2014 Lambie 2010 p 480 Wojtczak 2008 p 114 a b c d e f g Sutton 1980 p 9 Sutton 1980 p 25 Oakley Robin 22 May 1999 The whip hand The Spectator dead link Oakley 2013 p 317 Bibliography Edit Bengtson Bo 2008 Best in Show The World of Show Dogs and Dog Shows BowTie Press ISBN 978 1 931993 85 2 Curling Bill April 1971 Florence Nagle the Mrs Pankhurst of Racing Stud and Stable 10 4 Hargreaves Jennifer 2002 Sporting Females Critical Issues in the History and Sociology of Women s Sport Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 91277 3 Ingle Bepler M Ryan C W 1937 Setters Irish English and Gordon Our Dogs Lambie James 2010 The Story of Your Life A History of the Sporting Life Newspaper 1859 1998 Matador ISBN 978 1 84876 291 6 Leighton Boyce Gilbert 1973 Irish Setters Barker ISBN 978 0 213 16414 0 Oakley Robin 2013 Tales From the Turf Reflections from a Life in Horseracing Corinthian ISBN 978 1 906850 68 5 Roberts Janice 1978 The Irish Setter Popular Dogs ISBN 978 0 09 129700 8 Somerfield Ferelith 1999 Mission Accomplished The Life and Times of Florence Nagle 1894 1988 the Woman who Took on Both the Jockey Club and the Kennel Club and Won Dog World Publications ISBN 978 0 9500418 9 6 Sutton Catherine G 1980 Pryde William ed Dog shows and show dogs K amp R Books ISBN 978 0 903264 41 9 Vamplew Wray 2005 Encyclopedia of British Horseracing Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 7146 8292 1 Wojtczak Helena 2008 Notable Sussex Women 580 Biographical Sketches Hastings Press ISBN 978 1 904109 15 0External links EditWoman wins training rights Florence Nagle on British Pathe NewsPortals Biography Dogs Feminism Horses Sports United Kingdom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Florence Nagle amp oldid 1121465073, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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