Sydney's Pony Racecourses - An Alternative
Racing History
Book Details
Wayne Peake
Paperback,
240 pp.
Walla
Walla Press Sports History Dissertation Series No. 2
Walla
Walla Press
ISBN-10 1-876718-02-1
ISBN-13
978-1-876718-02-2
$39.95
Publication December
2006
Contrary to the name
of the sport, which may evoke memories of children riding Shetland ponies at
agricultural shows, most pony races were contested by fully-grown
thoroughbreds. Many writers have perpetuated myths about pony racing depicting
the sport as a rough-and-ready, corrupt form of weekday racing, featuring
midget horses on miniature racecourses, run during the Great Depression. It has
been suggested that pony racing appealed to desperate, the 'needy and greedy'
elements of the working class only. Sydney's Pony Racecourses demonstrates
that such assertions are without basis. The sport was one of the country's
biggest industries with the prize money for its cup-races matching the Cox
Plate. Some of its Sydney racecourses were rated second
only to Randwick, and that for a time it was more
popular on Saturdays than Australian Jockey Club racing. The four pony
racecourses between the city and Botany Bay were an integral part of Sydney life during the first half of the
20th century. Existing histories of horse racing fail to acknowledge the
contemporary importance and popularity of pony racing. This alternative history
of horseracing enables pony racing 'to claim [its] fair share in the past'.
Author Born in Sydney in 1960, Wayne Peake's earliest
memories are of Light Fingers winning the 1965 Melbourne Cup. Fired by his grandfather's
winning streak on the racehorse Tails in the Spring of 1969, he became addicted
to the sport and soon after became a fixture at Sydney's racecourses on
Saturdays (and Wednesdays as well when he could sneak away from school sport).
By his own (possibly unreliable) reckoning he was a successful racecourse
gambler until about the time he met his future wife. Peake is a graduate of the
University of Sydney and recently completed a doctoral
thesis on pony racing at the University of Western Sydney. He has written on horse racing
and harness racing, and was a writer and editor on the official report of the
Sydney 2000 Olympic Games. He is a research administrator at the Institute for
International Studies, University of Technology, Sydney.