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The Royal Ascot Collection
There are few sporting venues that can match
the rich heritage and history of Ascot Racecourse. Over the past 300 years Royal
Ascot has established itself as a national institution and the centerpiece of
the British social calendar as well as being the ultimate stage for the best
racehorses in the world.
It was Queen Anne who first saw the potential for a racecourse at Ascot, which
in those days was called East Cote. Whilst out riding in 1711, she came upon an
area of open heath, not far from Windsor Castle, that looked an ideal place for
“horses to gallop at full stretch.”
The first race meeting ever held at Ascot took place on Saturday 11 August 1711.
Her Majesty’s Plate, worth 100 guineas and open to any horse, mare or gelding
over the age of six, was the inaugural event. Each horse was required to carry a
weight of 12st and seven runners took part.
This contest bore little resemblance to racing seen at Ascot today. The seven
horses were all English Hunters, quite different to the speedy thoroughbreds
that race on the flat now. The race consisted of three separate heats which were
four miles long (each heat was about the length of the Grand National course),
so the winner would have been a horse with tremendous stamina. Sadly, there is
no record of the winner of the first Plate.
Today the tradition does not change – the Queen Anne Stakes continues to be run
in memory of the monarch who founded the course nearly three centuries ago.
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