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James Scobie (horseman)

James Scobie (18 July 1860 – 6 October 1940) was an Australian jockey and racehorse trainer. He was an inaugural inductee to the Australian Racing Hall of Fame in 2001.

James Scobie
James Scobie, 1922
OccupationJockey
Horse trainer
Born(1860-07-18)18 July 1860
Ararat, Victoria, Australia
Died6 October 1940(1940-10-06) (aged 80)
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Career wins4x Melbourne Cup
8x Victoria Derby

History edit

Scobie was born in Ararat, Victoria, or perhaps nearby Moyston,[1] a son of stonemason William Scobie and his wife Marion Scobie, née McVicar.[2] He was educated at Ararat, and at the age of 12 began working with horses. After a few months working for a surveyor, he fell in with Ralph Parkinson, just out of Ararat, working a chestnut gelding Alma (previously named Postboy) that won a lot of races for his owner.

He next worked for George Read, of Strathmore, whose father kept the Ace of Clubs Hotel, and who trained Lord Harry, Whalebone, Black Harry and Sefton for Adam Smith of Naracoorte, South Australia. Read was a fine rider over fences, and it was through emulating his style that Scobie became such an expert cross-country horseman. He began working for Frank Womersley, a blacksmith of Dunkeld as horseboy and jockey, and assisted in training a horse named The Alps, which he rode to victory in the Ararat Maiden. He next joined Thomas Ferguson, at Hamilton and rode many winners for him over several years. After leaving him he rode three years for George Rex (c. 1845–1930), and won numerous country races on Dan Rice, Too Late, Curator, All Serene, Ivanhoe among others. While with Rex he rode Devlin in Belfast. In 1880 he joined Robert "Ballarat Bob" Howie (c. 1842–1910), for whom he won the Australian Cup Hurdle Race on Zephyr, the Maiden Steeplechase, the Melbourne Cup Hurdle on Lothair, Melbourne Cup Steeple on Kanaka, and other big races on Battle Abbey and Collingwood, besides scoring all over the country on Wait-a-While, Battle Abbey, and a host of others.[3]

After three years with Howie, during which time his focus changed from riding to training, and he purchased the business, training horses for such wealthy owners as Andrew Chirnside, Norman Wilson, W. Bailey, R. Orr, Frank Cumming, H. L. Cumming, Martin Loughlin, E. E. D. Clarke, Sir Rupert Clarke, R. G. Casey, M. Gordon, J. V. Smith, J. N. McArthur, S. P. Mackay (of Western Australia) and Cato.[4] He built new stables, and trained such celebrities as Annesley, Blue Mountain, Collingwood, Corythus, Dreamland, Euchre, Insolvent, Irralee, Ringwood, Ruby, St. Louis, Titan, and many others, winning four Grand Nationals, Australian Cup, Caulfield Guineas, Hobart Cup, the Maribyrnong Plate, Ballarat Cup three times, and many other races ; while Titan, who had been written off by others as a failure, won him the Toorak Handicap, Railway Stakes, All-aged Stakes, and Farewell Handicap at Flemington, and the Cumberland Stakes in Sydney. Scobie considered Ringwood the best horse he ever rode or trained, despite the successes he had with Blue Mountain, Bolton, Kanaka, Lothair, Ruby, and Zephyr.[5]

During his remarkable career he won £250,000 in stakes, and the victories of horses under his care included four Melbourne Cups. His most important success in later years was the Australia Day Cup at Williamstown with Lusson, who was trained by him for longtime[6] patron E. E. D. Clarke (1869–1941), son of Sir William John Clarke. Notable among his jockeys were Robert "Bobbie" Lewis (1878–1947) and Michael Carey (c. 1864–1908).

He had a long friendship with rival jumps jockey Tom Corrigan, which turned icy after an incident at Flemington in a steeplechase at the V.R.C. Autumn meeting of 1888 when Corrigan's horse Kangaroo inadvertently "squeezed" Scobie's Ruby. Corrigan was disqualified on protest and Scobie awarded the race.[7]

He had stables at Miner's Rest, owned by E. E. D. Clarke at Dowling Forest, near Ballarat from around 1880 to 1911, though floods in 1909 forced a relocation to Caulfield,[8] and Pytchley Lodge at Ascot Vale, opposite the Ascot racecourse, from 1911.

Notable horses that passed through his hands include: Alawa, Angelia, Annesley, Annotate, Benbow, Blue Mountain, Bolan, Brookong, Celia, Charles Stuart, Chit-Chat, Cyden, Cyklon, Demas, Deneb, Dreamland, Eleanor, Emir, Epilogue, Eye Glass, F.J.A., Fossil, Glue, Green Cap, Hautvilliers, Hua, Jack Smith, Kallara, Keera, Kildalton, La Carabine, Lothair, Maltster, Maroon, Midilli, Miltiades, Mint Sauce, Moe, Mother Goose, Orvieto, Paravane, Paul Pry, Pillie-winkle, Ranfurly, Recall, Ringwood, Rosanna, Rosina, Ruby, Seabound, Shanks, Shotbolt, Sinnang, Spica, Stageland, Stand By, Star d'Or, Sweet Nell, Sylvanite, Titan, The Bride, Thrice, Trey, Trillion, Uncle Matt, Thrice, United States, Wolowa, Widgiewa, Wycherley, Bitalli, Clean Sweep, King Ingoda and Trivalve; these last four being Melbourne Cup winners.

He set a record, which still stands, for the greatest number of Victoria Derby wins: in 1900, 1901, 1903, 1904, 1908, 1912, 1927, and 1937, "Bobbie" Lewis being the jockey in each year except 1903. Lewis rode four Melbourne Cup winners: The Victory (1902), Patrobas (1915), Artilleryman (1919) and Trivalve (1927), only the last being trained by Scobie. Lewis was later the object of suspicion when he rode the previously unbeaten Phar Lap to third place in the 1929 Melbourne Cup.

Scobie died at a private hospital in Melbourne, and his remains were cremated at Spring Vale; his ashes were interred in the grave of his wife in the Ballarat cemetery.[9]

Family edit

Scobie married Joan Shaw Paterson ( – ) on 2 February 1888. Their family included:

  • Austin James Scobie (c. 1887 – 22 November 1939) married Beryl McLeay Smith on 21 August 1917. He was a trainer in conjunction with his father, and had a separate house on the Pytchley Lodge property.
  • Norman Claude Scobie (9 January 1893 – 1986) married Marguerite Frances "Pearl" Doyle (1891–1945) before 1915. They divorced; he married again, to Gladys Germaine Smith ( – ) in November 1930. He was a trainer in Melbourne and in 1930 for Sir Charles Hyde in England.[10]

They had a home at 140 Ascotvale Road, Flemington

His brother George Scobie, sen., ( – ) was a cross-country rider and trainer[11] and father of George Scobie, a jockey who notably won the 1909 Grand National Hurdle Race on Fossil, and later also a trainer,[12] and W. Scobie, who had some success as a jockey in New Zealand.[13]

Recognition edit

The great jockey universally known as Scobie Breasley was born Arthur Edward Breasley, and gained his nickname as a reference to James Scobie.

Noted trainer Dick Bradfield placed him among the ten best jockeys he had seen.

Scobie Place, Holt, Canberra, was named for him.

Bibliography edit

James Scobie (1929) My Life on the Australian Turf, Specialty Press Ltd., Melbourne.[14]

See also edit

John N. Molony, 'Lewis, Robert (Bob) (1878–1947)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/lewis-robert-bob-7189/text12431, published first in hardcopy 1986, accessed online 27 July 2017.

References edit

  1. ^ "History of Ararat". The Weekly Times. No. 3240. Victoria. 2 November 1929. p. 10. Retrieved 26 July 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  2. ^ S. J. Routh, 'Scobie, James (1860–1940)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, published first in hardcopy 1988, accessed online 25 July 2017
  3. ^ "My Fifty Years on the Australian Turf". Table Talk. No. 3184. Victoria. 16 May 1929. p. 32. Retrieved 26 July 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  4. ^ "World of Sport". Weekly Times. No. 2, 557. Victoria. 10 August 1918. p. 15. Retrieved 27 July 2017 – via National Library of Australia. The first paragraph is fanciful but the article has a nice photo and useful list of winners to 1918.
  5. ^ "Visits to the Stables". The Sportsman (Melbourne). No. 714. Victoria. 23 October 1894. p. 5. Retrieved 26 July 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  6. ^ "Noted Owner Dead". The Argus. No. 29, 466. Melbourne. 30 January 1941. p. 12. Retrieved 27 July 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  7. ^ "The V.R.C. Autumn Meeting". The Argus. No. 13, 018. Melbourne. 12 March 1888. p. 5. Retrieved 25 July 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  8. ^ "Training Tracks at Miner's Rest". Bendigo Advertiser. Vol. LVII, no. 16, 866. Victoria. 26 August 1909. p. 7. Retrieved 27 July 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  9. ^ "Death of "Jim" Scobie". The Age. No. 26, 669. Victoria. 7 October 1940. p. 4. Retrieved 25 July 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  10. ^ "Sporting Notes". The Advocate (Tasmania). Tasmania. 23 December 1930. p. 3. Retrieved 25 July 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  11. ^ "Sporting Topics". The Sportsman (Melbourne). No. 479. Victoria. 23 April 1890. p. 5. Retrieved 27 July 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  12. ^ "Flemington on Monday". The Age. No. 26763. Victoria. 25 January 1941. p. 18. Retrieved 27 July 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  13. ^ "General Gossip". Weekly Times. No. 2, 340. Victoria. 13 June 1914. p. 18. Retrieved 27 July 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  14. ^ "James Scobie". The Brisbane Courier. No. 22, 407. 20 November 1929. p. 6. Retrieved 26 July 2017 – via National Library of Australia.

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James Scobie 18 July 1860 6 October 1940 was an Australian jockey and racehorse trainer He was an inaugural inductee to the Australian Racing Hall of Fame in 2001 James ScobieJames Scobie 1922OccupationJockeyHorse trainerBorn 1860 07 18 18 July 1860Ararat Victoria AustraliaDied6 October 1940 1940 10 06 aged 80 Melbourne Victoria AustraliaCareer wins4x Melbourne Cup8x Victoria Derby Contents 1 History 2 Family 3 Recognition 4 Bibliography 5 See also 6 ReferencesHistory editScobie was born in Ararat Victoria or perhaps nearby Moyston 1 a son of stonemason William Scobie and his wife Marion Scobie nee McVicar 2 He was educated at Ararat and at the age of 12 began working with horses After a few months working for a surveyor he fell in with Ralph Parkinson just out of Ararat working a chestnut gelding Alma previously named Postboy that won a lot of races for his owner He next worked for George Read of Strathmore whose father kept the Ace of Clubs Hotel and who trained Lord Harry Whalebone Black Harry and Sefton for Adam Smith of Naracoorte South Australia Read was a fine rider over fences and it was through emulating his style that Scobie became such an expert cross country horseman He began working for Frank Womersley a blacksmith of Dunkeld as horseboy and jockey and assisted in training a horse named The Alps which he rode to victory in the Ararat Maiden He next joined Thomas Ferguson at Hamilton and rode many winners for him over several years After leaving him he rode three years for George Rex c 1845 1930 and won numerous country races on Dan Rice Too Late Curator All Serene Ivanhoe among others While with Rex he rode Devlin in Belfast In 1880 he joined Robert Ballarat Bob Howie c 1842 1910 for whom he won the Australian Cup Hurdle Race on Zephyr the Maiden Steeplechase the Melbourne Cup Hurdle on Lothair Melbourne Cup Steeple on Kanaka and other big races on Battle Abbey and Collingwood besides scoring all over the country on Wait a While Battle Abbey and a host of others 3 After three years with Howie during which time his focus changed from riding to training and he purchased the business training horses for such wealthy owners as Andrew Chirnside Norman Wilson W Bailey R Orr Frank Cumming H L Cumming Martin Loughlin E E D Clarke Sir Rupert Clarke R G Casey M Gordon J V Smith J N McArthur S P Mackay of Western Australia and Cato 4 He built new stables and trained such celebrities as Annesley Blue Mountain Collingwood Corythus Dreamland Euchre Insolvent Irralee Ringwood Ruby St Louis Titan and many others winning four Grand Nationals Australian Cup Caulfield Guineas Hobart Cup the Maribyrnong Plate Ballarat Cup three times and many other races while Titan who had been written off by others as a failure won him the Toorak Handicap Railway Stakes All aged Stakes and Farewell Handicap at Flemington and the Cumberland Stakes in Sydney Scobie considered Ringwood the best horse he ever rode or trained despite the successes he had with Blue Mountain Bolton Kanaka Lothair Ruby and Zephyr 5 During his remarkable career he won 250 000 in stakes and the victories of horses under his care included four Melbourne Cups His most important success in later years was the Australia Day Cup at Williamstown with Lusson who was trained by him for longtime 6 patron E E D Clarke 1869 1941 son of Sir William John Clarke Notable among his jockeys were Robert Bobbie Lewis 1878 1947 and Michael Carey c 1864 1908 He had a long friendship with rival jumps jockey Tom Corrigan which turned icy after an incident at Flemington in a steeplechase at the V R C Autumn meeting of 1888 when Corrigan s horse Kangaroo inadvertently squeezed Scobie s Ruby Corrigan was disqualified on protest and Scobie awarded the race 7 He had stables at Miner s Rest owned by E E D Clarke at Dowling Forest near Ballarat from around 1880 to 1911 though floods in 1909 forced a relocation to Caulfield 8 and Pytchley Lodge at Ascot Vale opposite the Ascot racecourse from 1911 Notable horses that passed through his hands include Alawa Angelia Annesley Annotate Benbow Blue Mountain Bolan Brookong Celia Charles Stuart Chit Chat Cyden Cyklon Demas Deneb Dreamland Eleanor Emir Epilogue Eye Glass F J A Fossil Glue Green Cap Hautvilliers Hua Jack Smith Kallara Keera Kildalton La Carabine Lothair Maltster Maroon Midilli Miltiades Mint Sauce Moe Mother Goose Orvieto Paravane Paul Pry Pillie winkle Ranfurly Recall Ringwood Rosanna Rosina Ruby Seabound Shanks Shotbolt Sinnang Spica Stageland Stand By Star d Or Sweet Nell Sylvanite Titan The Bride Thrice Trey Trillion Uncle Matt Thrice United States Wolowa Widgiewa Wycherley Bitalli Clean Sweep King Ingoda and Trivalve these last four being Melbourne Cup winners He set a record which still stands for the greatest number of Victoria Derby wins in 1900 1901 1903 1904 1908 1912 1927 and 1937 Bobbie Lewis being the jockey in each year except 1903 Lewis rode four Melbourne Cup winners The Victory 1902 Patrobas 1915 Artilleryman 1919 and Trivalve 1927 only the last being trained by Scobie Lewis was later the object of suspicion when he rode the previously unbeaten Phar Lap to third place in the 1929 Melbourne Cup Scobie died at a private hospital in Melbourne and his remains were cremated at Spring Vale his ashes were interred in the grave of his wife in the Ballarat cemetery 9 Family editScobie married Joan Shaw Paterson on 2 February 1888 Their family included Austin James Scobie c 1887 22 November 1939 married Beryl McLeay Smith on 21 August 1917 He was a trainer in conjunction with his father and had a separate house on the Pytchley Lodge property Norman Claude Scobie 9 January 1893 1986 married Marguerite Frances Pearl Doyle 1891 1945 before 1915 They divorced he married again to Gladys Germaine Smith in November 1930 He was a trainer in Melbourne and in 1930 for Sir Charles Hyde in England 10 They had a home at 140 Ascotvale Road FlemingtonHis brother George Scobie sen was a cross country rider and trainer 11 and father of George Scobie a jockey who notably won the 1909 Grand National Hurdle Race on Fossil and later also a trainer 12 and W Scobie who had some success as a jockey in New Zealand 13 Recognition editThe great jockey universally known as Scobie Breasley was born Arthur Edward Breasley and gained his nickname as a reference to James Scobie Noted trainer Dick Bradfield placed him among the ten best jockeys he had seen Scobie Place Holt Canberra was named for him Bibliography editJames Scobie 1929 My Life on the Australian Turf Specialty Press Ltd Melbourne 14 See also editJohn N Molony Lewis Robert Bob 1878 1947 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University http adb anu edu au biography lewis robert bob 7189 text12431 published first in hardcopy 1986 accessed online 27 July 2017 References edit History of Ararat The Weekly Times No 3240 Victoria 2 November 1929 p 10 Retrieved 26 July 2017 via National Library of Australia S J Routh Scobie James 1860 1940 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University published first in hardcopy 1988 accessed online 25 July 2017 My Fifty Years on the Australian Turf Table Talk No 3184 Victoria 16 May 1929 p 32 Retrieved 26 July 2017 via National Library of Australia World of Sport Weekly Times No 2 557 Victoria 10 August 1918 p 15 Retrieved 27 July 2017 via National Library of Australia The first paragraph is fanciful but the article has a nice photo and useful list of winners to 1918 Visits to the Stables The Sportsman Melbourne No 714 Victoria 23 October 1894 p 5 Retrieved 26 July 2017 via National Library of Australia Noted Owner Dead The Argus No 29 466 Melbourne 30 January 1941 p 12 Retrieved 27 July 2017 via National Library of Australia The V R C Autumn Meeting The Argus No 13 018 Melbourne 12 March 1888 p 5 Retrieved 25 July 2017 via National Library of Australia Training Tracks at Miner s Rest Bendigo Advertiser Vol LVII no 16 866 Victoria 26 August 1909 p 7 Retrieved 27 July 2017 via National Library of Australia Death of Jim Scobie The Age No 26 669 Victoria 7 October 1940 p 4 Retrieved 25 July 2017 via National Library of Australia Sporting Notes The Advocate Tasmania Tasmania 23 December 1930 p 3 Retrieved 25 July 2017 via National Library of Australia Sporting Topics The Sportsman Melbourne No 479 Victoria 23 April 1890 p 5 Retrieved 27 July 2017 via National Library of Australia Flemington on Monday The Age No 26763 Victoria 25 January 1941 p 18 Retrieved 27 July 2017 via National Library of Australia General Gossip Weekly Times No 2 340 Victoria 13 June 1914 p 18 Retrieved 27 July 2017 via National Library of Australia James Scobie The Brisbane Courier No 22 407 20 November 1929 p 6 Retrieved 26 July 2017 via National Library of Australia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James Scobie horseman amp oldid 1197853415, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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