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Aug 17 10 tweets 5 min read
1. History of St. Leger, Doncaster.
Established in 1776, the St Leger is the oldest of Britain's five Classics. It is the last of the five to be run each year, and its distance is longer than any of the other four.
2. The St Leger is the final leg of the English Triple Crown, which begins with the 2000 Guineas and continues with the Derby
The event was devised by Anthony St Leger, an army officer and politician who lived near Doncaster.
3. It was initially referred to as "A Sweepstake of 25 Guineas", and its original distance was two miles. The rules stipulated that colts and geldings were to carry 8 st, and fillies would receive an allowance of 2 lb. #doncasterisgreat
4. The inaugural running was held at Cantley Common on 24 September 1776. The first winner was an unnamed filly owned by the event's organiser, the 2nd Marquess of Rockingham. The filly was later named Allabaculia. #doncasterisgreat #doncasterhistory
5. The title St Leger Stakes was decided at a dinner party held in 1778 at the Red Lion Inn located in the Market Place, Doncaster, to discuss the coming year's race. It was suggested that it should be called the Rockingham Stakes in honour of the host, the Marquess of Rockingham
6. but the Marquess proposed that it should be named instead after Anthony St Leger. That year the event was moved to its present location, Town Moor, in 1778. #doncasterisgreat #doncasterhistory
7. The race came to national prominence in 1800, when a horse called Champion registered the first Derby–St Leger double. Its length was cut to 1 mile, 6 furlongs and 193 yards in 1813, and despite some minor alterations has remained much the same ever since. #doncasterisgreat
8. The victory of West Australian in 1853 completed the first success in the Triple Crown.
Post-1900. The St Leger Stakes was closed to geldings in 1906. It was transferred to Newmarket during World War I, and the substitute event was called the September Stakes. #mydoncaster
9. It was cancelled in 1939 because of the outbreak of World War II, and the following year's edition was held at Thirsk in November. For the remainder of this period it was staged at Manchester (1941), Newmarket (1942–44) and York (1945). #doncasterisgreat #doncasterhistory
10. The race was switched to Ayr in 1989 after the scheduled running at Doncaster was abandoned due to subsidence. The 2006 race took place at York because its regular venue was closed for redevelopment. #doncasterisgreat #doncasterhistory

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More from @danddfhs

Aug 18
1. Harriet Maria Vernon (nee Whitehouse). Biography

Harriet Vernon (9 October 1858–11 July 1923) was an English actress and singer of the Victorian era who appeared regularly in music hall, Victorian burlesque and pantomime in the 1880s and 1890s. #doncasterisgreat Image
2. In a career that spanned five decades, her final appearances were in 1923. Vernon also toured internationally, appearing in New York, Johannesburg and Berlin. #doncasterisgreat #doncasterhistory #mydoncaster
3. Life and career
Born in Lambeth in London in 1858 as Harriet Maria Whitehouse, the daughter of George Hickman Whitehouse (1837–1908), a printer, and Caroline (née Newport, 1840–1887), she was one of the leading music hall stars of the 1880s and 1890s. #doncasterisgreat
Read 13 tweets
Jul 29
1. Charlie Williams MBE was born on 23rd September, Royston, a small mining village in Barnsley, West Riding of Yorkshire. His father, also Charles, had come to Britain in 1914 from Barbados, and enlisted in the Royal Engineers.
2. After the First World War, his father settled in Royston, where he sold groceries from a horse and cart, and married a local woman, Frances Cook.
3. His father had been forced to give up his job as a greengrocer as a result of trench foot acquired in France, and depended on National Assistance.
Read 12 tweets

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