Aborigines and the 'Sport of Kings' : Aboriginal Jockeys in Australian Racing History
Aborigines and the 'Sport of Kings' : Aboriginal Jockeys in Australian Racing History
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Author(s): Maynard, John
ISBN No.: 9781922059543
Pages: 128
Year: 201312
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 34.43
Status: Out Of Print

Aborigines and the 'Sport of Kings' celebrates the significant and exciting Aboriginal involvement in Australian racing history. A remarkable history considering that Australian Aboriginal people's first contact with the European animals caused them bewilderment and terror because violent massacres and unprovoked vicious attacks were conducted from horseback. However, within a short period they adapted and shed their fears. Over time they caught horses and taught themselves to ride, using sheets of bark as makeshift saddles. Settler accounts record Aboriginal people's uncanny affinity with horses; their excellence in caring for them and in riding. So, moving from the skilled workers who were the backbone of the Australian pastoral industries to racing horses was an obvious step. Amongst the many Aboriginal jockeys highlighted in the book are Merv Maynard, Norm Rose, Frank Reys, Richard Lawrence 'Darby' McCarthy and Leigh-Anne Goodwin, Australia's first female Aboriginal jockey to ride a winner at a metropolitan track.Coming from a proud Aboriginal family and a racing background, John Maynard knows first-hand that there have always been more Aboriginal jockeys than is usually admitted.



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