Yorkshire Post

How Royal Ascot has beaten the odds at times of strife

Royal Ascot begins today with no crowds presents due to the Covid-19 lockdown. This is not its first time it has been run at a time of national crisis. Tom Richmond reports

- ■ Email: tom.richmond@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: OpinionYP

THIS WILL be a Royal Ascot like no other when horses enter the starting stalls at 1.15pm today – the first race of the five-day flagship fixture.

No Royals – the Queen will be watching from near Windsor Castle. No crowds in their fashion finery – owners have been forbidden. And no Frankie Dettori flying dismounts – not even if his Stradivari­us wins a third Gold Cup.

Yet, first run in 1711 when Queen Anne decreed that Windsor Forest was ideally suited for horse racing, this is not the first time that the meeting has taken place at a time of national uncertaint­y.

The ‘Black’ Royal Ascots: Queen Victoria died aged 81 on January 22, 1901, bringing her then record 63-year reign to a close. Royal Ascot was held in a sombre mood with the Royal Stand closed and the racecard featuring a black border.

The new Sovereign, King Edward VII, was also absent from the Royal meeting in 1901, although this was on account of appendicit­is which resulted in his coronation being postponed.

King Edward VII, a great devotee of the turf, himself died on May 6, 1910. Royal Ascot again saw a dominance of black attire, with no royalty present.

Ascot at War: In the First World War, the racecourse became a base for the Royal Flying Corps. A cinema for servicemen was opened and made available to the public.

Similarly, the Second World

War resulted in Royal Ascot being suspended, with the Grandstand providing accommodat­ion for gunners of the Royal Artillery.

When Royal Ascot did return in 1946, austerity and rationing meant that the dress code switched from morning dress to lounge suits and service dress.

Industrial strife: The weeks leading up to the 1955 meeting were dominated by a national rail strike.

With police deployed on the streets of London, and unable to be spared at race meetings, the 16th Duke of Norfolk – the Queen’s Representa­tive at Ascot – became an unlikely saviour.

He went to see Her Majesty where she consented to attending Royal Ascot if it was delayed and diary commitment­s permitted.

As a result of this shuttle diplomacy, the meeting began on July 12 – a month later than usual – with the Queen in attendance.

As for the strike, it was called off on June 14 – the day Royal Ascot had been due to begin in 1955 as Sir Peter O’Sullevan, the peerless commentato­r, mused that Aslef, the rail union, stood for ‘Awfully Sorry, Lost Every Farthing’.

Meanwhile racing was not immune from the industrial unrest of the 1970s, with the bitter Stable Lads Strike taking place over 10 weeks between the April and July of 1975.

There was a march by stable lads on the course itself and BBC outside broadcast staff declined to cross a picket line outside the course, meaning there was no TV coverage.

The racing itself was unaffected as Lester Piggott teamed up with the great Sagaro for the first of the horse’s three Gold Cup victories.

Resolution came in time for TV coverage of the King George VI & Queen

Elizabeth Stakes on July 26, which saw the “Race of the Century” between Grundy and Bustino.

Foot-and-mouth: The UK’s first outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease since 1967 hit racing, with the Cheltenham Festival cancelled.

Racing had returned to normal by the Royal meeting, but spectators still had to walk over mats soaked with disinfecta­nt.

Royal Ascot comes to York:

The constructi­on of a new £220m grandstand saw the meeting move to York in 2015 when Shamardal, who went on to become one of racing’s greatest sires, won the St James’s Palace Stakes. A very different atmosphere to Ascot, what was so memorable was the extent to which those present embraced the racing.

 ??  ?? TAKING TO THE TURF: This year’s Royal Ascot meeting will take place without crowds or Royal visitors.
TAKING TO THE TURF: This year’s Royal Ascot meeting will take place without crowds or Royal visitors.

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