Archer (horse)

Archer
Sire William Tell (GB)
Grandsire Touchstone
Dam Maid Of The Oaks
Damsire Vagabond (GB)
Sex Stallion
Foaled 1856
Exeter Farm
Jembaicumbene near Braidwood,
New South Wales, Australia
Country Australia
Colour Bay
Breeder Thomas John Roberts
& Rowland H. Hassall
Owner

Thomas John Roberts (1831-1899),
Rowland H. Hassall (1820-1904),
& the Estate of Thomas Molyneux Royds (1824-1852) whose beneficiaries were
Edmund Molyneux Royds (1847-1912),
& William Edward Royds (1849-1910)


Lessee for racing purposes
Etienne de Mestre (1832-1916)
Trainer Etienne de Mestre
Major wins

Randwick Plate (1860)
Stewards Purse (1860)
Australian Plate (1861)
Randwick Plate (1861)
Maitland Town Plate (1861)
Melbourne Cup (1861 & 1862)
Melbourne Town Plate (1861)
AJC Queens Plate (1862)

All-Aged Stakes (1862)

Archer (1856–1872) was an Australian Thoroughbred racehorse who won the first and the second Melbourne Cups in 1861 and 1862. He won both Cups easily, and is one of only five horses to win the Melbourne Cup twice or more; he is one of only four horses to win two successive Cups.

Breeding

Archer was sired by the successful imported sire William Tell (GB) (1843, by Touchstone); his dam, Maid of the Oaks (dam of Mariner and William Tell (1855)) was by Vagabond (GB) (by Cain).[1] Archer's sire and dam had been owned by Thomas Molyneux "Tom" Royds (1824–1852) of Ballalaba, Jembaicumbene, New South Wales. Royds formed a breeding partnership with his uncle-in-law Andrew Badgery (c.1804–1857), keeping their many horses on the Andrew Badgery managed Exeter Farm in Jembaicumbene. For £51,[2] Royds purchased the mare Maid Of The Oaks at the dispersal of Charles Smith's Clifton Stud in 1845. Royds also imported the stallion Sailor By The Sea, and in February 1847 the stallion William Tell. Archer’s full-sister, Our Nell, won three races in four days at the Goulburn races (1855) and other races at city tracks.

Early life

Archer was probably foaled in 1856 at Exeter Farm in Jembaicumbene, near Braidwood in New South Wales. In recent years evidence has been discovered that Archer may not have been foaled on the Exeter Farm owned by Roberts but on Royd's previous cattle farm Ballabala, owned by Hassall. This is supported by Richard William Royds' (1922-?) (one of William Edward Royd's grandsons) writing in 1983 that Archer was foaled at Ballabala;[3] this view is supported by his widow and adopted son.[4] All other references state that Archer was foaled at Exeter Farm, including Richard's older brother John Patrick Molyneux Royds (1920-?) in an interview published in 1969.[5] It is also on Exeter Farm that other horses from the breeding partnership of Hassall and Roberts were foaled, including Archer's half-brother Mariner in 1854 (by Sailor By The Sea out of Maid Of The Oaks) and his full-brother William Tell in 1855 (by William Tell (GB) out of Maid Of The Oaks.

Royds died at age 27 in an accident in early 1852. Two years later, his widow Elizabeth Jane "Betsy" Royds (née Roberts) (1824–1875) married Rowland H. Hassall (1820–1904) of Durham Hall in Jembaicumben who, under the laws of the time, obtained all of Betsy's possessions at their marriage. Even though Royds' will gave him no right to do so, Hassall began selling off the Royds horses at Exeter Farm. Betsy persuaded Hassell to keep the imported stallion William Tell and six broodmares (one of which was Maid Of The Oaks). Her brother Thomas John "Tom" Roberts (1831–1899) had inherited Exeter Farm, and as executor of Royds' estate[5][6] was trying to protect the interests of his nephews; he would care for the horses. As part of the agreement, the progeny (including Archer) from the breeding program using the six mares bred to William Tell and other stallions were recorded in the stud books under the breeding partnership name of (RH) Hassell and (TJ) Roberts. The names of the two boys to whom the horses had been bequeathed, Edmund Molyneux Royds (1847–1912) (no issue) and William Edward Royds (1849–1910), were not mentioned. When the boys sued their stepfather in the 1870s their interests were finally recognised, and the breeding partnership was renamed Hassell, Roberts and Royds.

Newspaper archives of the day state that Archer travelled south from Sydney to Port Melbourne on the steamboat the City of Sydney with two of his trainer Etienne de Mestre’s other horses Exeter and Inheritor, leaving on 18 September 1861 and arriving at Port Melbourne on 21 September. Prior to the Melbourne trip, the horses had arrived in Sydney by steamer from Greenwell Point (near Nowra) on 9 September. Passengers on the City of Sydney included de Mestre and Archer's jockey, John Cutts. Archer travelled by steamboat from Sydney to Melbourne all three times that he raced in Victoria (in 1861, 1862 and 1863). Before railway facilities linked Melbourne to the other states, the only way to transport horses from state to state was by boat. In 1876 de Mestre's entry in the Melbourne Cup, Robin Hood, and ten other horses were lost at sea when the City Of Melbourne was struck by a severe storm off the coast at Jervis Bay.[7]

A steamboat was also the vehicle that de Mestre used to get his horses (including Archer) to Sydney. His horses usually boarded a steamer at Adam's Whalf {near Terara) but due to floods in early 1860 impeding navigation, from 1860 to 1863 the horses walked eight miles (13 km) to Berry's Whalf at Greenwell Point. When horses could not be transported by steamboat, and where railway lines did not exist, trainers needed to have their horses walked and/or ridden to their destinations. In order to race at Windsor Archer would have been sent by steamship or rail from Sydney to Parramatta and overland the last 21 miles (34 km), and in order to race at Maitland Archer would have been sent by steamship to Newcastle and overland the last 20 miles (32 km). The longest distance that Archer would have walked or been ridden was 155 miles (250 km) from the end of the railway line in Campbelltown to Jembaicumbene when he retired from racing in 1864.

Another Archer story is that his jockey for the first two Melbourne Cups, John Cutts (c. 1829–1872), was an Aborigine. Johnny Cutts was (according to legend) born in the area around Nowra, and one of many Aboriginal men who replaced white stockmen who walked off the land to join the gold rush. In truth Johnny Cutts rode for many trainers in his long career as a jockey, was not from the Nowra area, and was never based there. Cutts' brother-in-law Walter Bradbury, however, lived at Terara (since he worked for de Mestre) and helped to train Archer. John Cutts Dillon was the son of a Sydney clerk and one of the best-known, best-liked and most-respected jockeys in New South Wales.

Racing career

In 1860 Archer was bought and trained by business associate and school friend of Tom Roberts Etienne de Mestre (1832–1916), from Terara near Nowra, New South Wales. De Mestre (who would go on to train four Melbourne Cup winners and win five Melbourne Cups) was the son of Sydney businessman Prosper de Mestre (1789–1844). Although Archer raced in Etienne de Mestre's name, Archer was not legally owned by de Mestre. De Mestre leased some of his horses from Hassall and Roberts for training and racing purposes including Mariner (Archer's older half-brother), Archer and Tim Whiffler (with whom he won the 1867 Melbourne Cup). As a lessee, de Mestre "owned" (was fully responsible for) the horses during their leases.

Archer was three years old when de Mestre began his training at Terara (near Nowra) in May 1860. Nicknamed "The Bull" by locals,[8] Archer was considered large for a three-year-old; he stood 16.3 hands with powerful hindquarters, a deep girth, well-sprung ribs and a good head and neck. His idiosyncrasies included his curious rolling gait when galloping, and the fact that he galloped with his tongue lolling out of his mouth. He was a long-striding horse, who could cover 140 feet (43 m) in 16 strides. Archer’s large frame told on his legs, and he was frequently lame. Archer was lightly regarded after he ran badly in his first two races at Randwick in late May 1860. However, at the spring meeting later that year and the autumn meeting of 1861 he was undefeated in seven New South Wales races.

The inaugural two-mile Melbourne Cup on 7 November 1861 at Flemington was an eventful affair. Three of the seventeen starters fell during the race (two of them died); two jockeys sustained broken bones; one horse bolted off the course, but the race continued. At the final turn the favourite, Mormon, made his run but Archer caught and passed him. Before a crowd[9] of about 4,000, Archer (a Sydney outsider, who was injured during training a few days before the race and attracted slight betting interest) defeated Mormon by six lengths in a time of 3:52.0 – the slowest time in Melbourne Cup history. Archer also defeated Mormon at Randwick in May over 2½ miles in the Australia Plate. In the first Melbourne Cup Archer won for de Mestre his prize was the sweepstake, 710 gold sovereigns (1 sovereign = £1), and a trophy (a hand-beaten gold watch). Before the race Archer was dismissed by the bookies, but after de Mestre of Terara made his wager Archer’s odds shortened and he started as the 6-1 second favourite. The winning bets on Archer took money from Melbourne, "refuelling interstate rivalry" and adding to the excitement of the Cup.[10] The next day, Archer won another two-mile race at Flemington (the Melbourne Town Plate) with the same time. In May 1862 Archer won the three-mile AJC Queen's Plate, and on 7 June 1862 Archer and Exeter were shipped back to Melbourne for the second Melbourne Cup. Archer was the Cup favourite; to prepare for the race, he was sent by railway from Melbourne to Geelong. In his first race in five months, Archer ran third on 1 October in the fifth three-mile Champion Sweepstakes.

Six weeks later (on 13 November 1862) Archer won his second Melbourne Cup carrying 10 st 2 lb142 pounds (64 kg) – at 2–1 odds in a time of 3:47.0. The race, held before a crowd of about 7,000[11] (nearly double the previous year's crowd), had 20 starters – the largest field of horses ever to start in Australia at that time. Again it was an exciting race; Cutts initially reined Archer back so that he was running last by several lengths, and appeared to be out of the running. He then gradually passed his opponents until reaching the leaders, when the long-striding horse galloped into first place. Archer won by eight lengths, with Mormon again running second. His winning margin is the Melbourne Cup record, unmatched until 1969 by Rain Lover. With a larger field meaning a larger sweepstake, Archer won 810 gold sovereigns and a trophy (a hand-beaten gold watch). Winning the Melbourne Cup two years in a row was a feat not repeated until Peter Pan won the race twice more than 70 years later. Two days later, Archer won the one-mile All-Aged Stakes at Flemington. Archer, Exeter and de Mestre arrived back in Sydney on the steamer Wonga Wonga on 29 November. The following week they caught another steamer to Wollongong, and traveled overland the 50 miles (80 km) to Terara.

A technicality resulted in Archer's being denied a third try at the Melbourne Cup. His telegraphed acceptance to race failed to arrive in time (delivery was delayed due to a public holiday in Melbourne), and Archer was refused permission to enter the race. Nominations for the 1863 Melbourne Cup had to be lodged with the Victorian Turf Club by Wednesday, 29 April, accompanied by five gold sovereigns. De Mestre had nominated two of his horses, Archer and Haidee. Weights were declared and published in Bell's Life in Sydney on Saturday, 9 May. Archer was to carry 11 st 4 lb (71.82 kg, or 158 lb) - which, if he had raced, would have been the heaviest handicap in the history of the Melbourne Cup. Under the care of groom and trainer Tom Lamond Archer and Haidee steamed to Melbourne, leaving Sydney on the City Of Melbourne Tuesday, 16 June. Acceptance, with an additional five-sovereign payment, had to be lodged with the VTC by 8pm Wednesday, 1 July; de Mestre (still in Sydney) had overlooked the deadline. Reminded on the morning of 1 July by Sam Jenner of George Kirk & Co. of the deadline, de Mestre requested a telegram be sent to the Melbourne office of George Kirk & Co. asking them to accept on his behalf. De Mestre took the telegram to the telegraph office himself, and it was received in the Melbourne Telegraph Office at 1 pm. Wednesday, 1 July was a public holiday in Melbourne, and the telegram was not delivered to the George Kirk & Co. offices until 7:30 pm. The next morning George Kirk handed the telegram to the stewards at the Turf Club, who decided it was too late. This decision caused controversy amongst Archer's Sydney supporters, who had expected him to win. Pressure by Victorian owners made no difference to the VTC, which stood its ground. To protest this decision and show solidarity, the interstate entrants boycotted the third Cup.[12] Unknown at the time, however, was that due to injury Archer would have been unlikely to race. The third Melbourne Cup ran with only seven Victoria horses, the smallest number in its history.

On 21 July de Mestre took the steamer City of Melbourne to Melbourne to oversee the training of his horses for the seventh Champion Sweepstakes at Ballarat on 1 October. Once again John Cutts was engaged to ride Archer, and he steamed to Melbourne on 4 August aboard the Rangatira. De Mestre's horses were sent from Melbourne to Ballarat by railway. During his training Archer was ill, lame and required veterinary care, and did not race well. His supporters angrily asked why de Mestre had not scratched him from the race. In reply, Rowland Hassall issued a statement that none of de Mestre's horses were public property. On 10 October, it was announced that Archer had "gone in one of his legs" after the race; the next day, he was scratched from all his Victoria engagements.

Brought to Sydney to prepare for the September Metropolitan Cup at Randwick Racecourse, Archer was seriously injured a month before the race during a veterinary treatment on 10 August 1864. He survived, and resumed training as soon as possible; however, he was ultimately scratched from the race. At the conclusion of the Randwick meeting, Archer was retired and returned to his owners Hassell and Roberts on Exeter Farm at Jembaicumbene, near where he had been foaled. This involved a rail trip from Sydney to Campbelltown, and an overland trip of 155 miles (250 km).

Archer’s Melbourne Cup record

Race record

u/k = unknown
s = gold sovereign
1s = £1
1 mile = 1.6 km

Age Date Track Race Distance
(miles)
Jockey Handicap Field
(No.
horses)
Place Time Prize
Money
+ Sweepstake Archer’s
winnings
3 29 May 1860 Randwick Tattersall’s
Free Handicap[13]
1 ½ John Cutts 7 st 5 lb
(46.82 kg)
14 Unplaced u/k 150s 5s Nil
3 31 May 1860 Randwick Randwick Plate[14] 1 ½ John Cutts 7 st 11 lb 7 Unplaced 3:04 120s 5s Nil
4 6 September 1860 Randwick Metropolitan
Maiden Plate
1 ¾ John Cutts u/k 6 1st u/k 150s 5s x ? nominations
?s x ? acceptances
?s x ? starters
u/k
4 8 September 1860 Randwick Randwick Plate 1 ½ John Cutts 9 st 5 lb
(59.55 kg)
2 1st u/k 100s u/k u/k
4 25 September 1860 Windsor Hawkesbury
Maiden Plate
1 ¾ John Cutts u/k 5 1st u/k u/k u/k u/k
4 27 September 1860 Windsor Stewards Purse 1 ¼ John Cutts 9 st 4 lb
(59.09 kg)
2 1st u/k u/k u/k u/k
4 2 May 1861 Randwick Australian Plate 2 ½ John Cutts u/k u/k 1st u/k u/k u/k u/k
4 4 May 1861 Randwick Randwick Plate[15] 1 ½ John Cutts 8 st 12 lb 6 1st u/k 100s u/k u/k
4 4 June 1861 Maitland Maitland
Town Plate
2 ½ Etienne
de Mestre[16]
u/k 2 1st u/k u/k u/k u/k
5 7 November 1861 Flemington Melbourne Cup 2 John Cutts 9 st 7 lb
(60.45 kg)
17 1st 3.52.0 200s[17] 5s x 57 nominations

+5s x ? acceptances
+10s x 17 starters

710s
+ gold watch
5 8 November 1861 Flemington Melbourne
Town Plate
2 John Cutts 9 st 13 lb
(63.18 kg)
5 1st 3.52.0 100s u/k u/k
5 26 April 1862 Randwick Randwick
Grand Handicap
2 ½ John Cutts u/k 13 3rd u/k 250s 5s x ? nominations

+ 5s x ? acceptances
+ 10s x 13 starters

u/k
5 3 May 1862 Randwick AJC Queen’s Plate[18] 3 John Cutts 10 st
(63.64 kg)
6 1st 6:02 200s 5s u/k
6 1 October 1862 Geelong Fifth Champion
Sweepstakes
3 John Cutts 10 st 1 lb
(64.09 kg)
9 3rd u/k u/k u/k u/k
6 13 November 1862 Flemington Melbourne Cup 2 John Cutts 10 st 2 lb
(64.55 kg)
20 1st 3.47.0 200s 5s x ? nominations

+ 5s x ? acceptances
+ 10s x 20 starters

810s
+ gold watch
6 15 November 1862 Flemington All-Aged Stakes 1 John Cutts 10 st 4 lb
(65.45 kg)
u/k 1st 1.50.0 u/k u/k u/k
7 1 October 1863 Ballarat Seventh Champion
Sweepstakes
3 John Cutts u/k 5 3rd u/k 1000s 20s x 5 starters
+ ? nominations
& acceptances
u/k
7 3 November 1863 Flemington Melbourne Cup 2 11 st 4 lb
(71.82 kg)
Scratched

Stud record

Archer was retired to stud at a fee of 10 guineas per mare (one of the highest stud fees of the time), but his progeny did not win a stakes race. He remained at Exeter Farm until his death at age 16 on 22 December 1872. He had wandered into a field of green barley, the consumption of which gave him a fatal inflammation of the lungs. Archer's jockey, John Cutts, had died three months earlier in September 1872.

Victorian craftswoman Therese Haynes was so enamoured of Archer that late in his life, she made a horseshoe ornament from his tail hair. She coiled the hair to create a horseshoe-shaped plaque, placed it in a silver setting and mounted it on red satin. Preserving relics from celebrities – a category that in Australia has often included horses – was a strong Victorian-era pastime. Today this piece of memorabilia can be found at the Australian Racing Museum in Melbourne.[19][20]

Notes

  1. Barrie, Douglas M., The Australian Bloodhorse, Angus & Robertson, Sydney, 1956
  2. First Tuesday in November: the story of the Melbourne Cup by D.L.Bernstein, Heinemann [Melbourne] (1969)
  3. The Land, 8 December 1983, Letter from Richard William Royds, Durham Hall
  4. Sydney Morning Herald 2008 - Archer took the boat
  5. 1 2 Interview with John Patrick Molyneux Royds in First Tuesday in November: the story of the Melbourne Cup by D.L.Bernstein, Heinemann [Melbourne] (1969)
  6. Also records in the Mitchell Library in Sydney.
  7. Newspaper report on the horses lost on the SS City of Melbourne
  8. Ode to Archer Archived 29 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine.
  9. The attendance was the largest at Flemington on any day for the past two years, with the exception of the recently run Two Thousand Guinea Stakes.
  10. Australian Government - Culture and recreation - Melbourne Cup
  11. On This Day In Shoalhaven Archived 17 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  12. Australian Racing Museum - E de Mestre
  13. "RANDWICK METROPOLITAN AUTUMN MEETING. (Official 1860 results and commentary)". The Sydney Morning Herald. Trove (Digitize newspaper). 30 May 1860. p. 4 (column 5–6). Retrieved 19 April 2013.
  14. "RANDWICK METROPOLITAN AUTUMN MEETING. (Official 1860 results and commentary)". The Sydney Morning Herald. Trove (Digitize newspaper). 1 June 1860. p. 4 (column 5–6). Retrieved 19 April 2013.
  15. "RANDWICK AUTUMN MEETING. (Official 1861 results and commentary)". The Sydney Morning Herald. Trove (Digitize newspaper). 11 May 1861. p. 4 (column 4–6). Retrieved 19 April 2013.
  16. John Cutts was on the other de Mestre horse in this two horse race.
  17. "The history of the Cup dates back to 1861, the resultant brain child of Captain Frederick Standish, one time VRC Chairman and former Chief Commissioner of Police in Victoria. As a former member of the Victoria Turf Club he conceptually founded the great race with the club committed to offering modest prize-money and a hand beaten gold watch. The conditions for the race would state "a sweepstakes of 20 sovereigns" (starters)", 10 sovereigns forfeit” (acceptance) “or 5 sovereigns if declared" (nominated)", with 200 sovereigns added money." Flemington Racetrack Archived 21 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  18. "TURF. RANDWICK METROPOLITAN MEETING. THIRD DAY, SATURDAY (Official 1862 results and commentary)". Bell’s Life in Sydney and Sporting Chronicle, Sydney. Trove (Digitize newspaper). 10 May 1862. p. 4 (column 3–4). Retrieved 19 April 2013.
  19. The Age: From the horse's mouth
  20. Race against uneven odds

Major Reference

Other references

External links

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