This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (February 2022) |
Ascot Racecourse is a dual-purpose British racecourse, located in Ascot, Berkshire, England, about 25 miles west of London. Ascot is used for thoroughbred horse racing, and it hosts 13 of Britain's 36 annual Flat Group 1 horse races and three Grade 1 Jumps races. The current racetrack's grandstand was completed in 2006.
Location | Ascot, Berkshire, England |
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Coordinates | 51°24′58″N 0°40′37″W / 51.41611°N 0.67694°W |
Owned by | Ascot Racecourse Ltd |
Date opened | 11 August 1711 Grandstand builds: 1793 1822 1839 1902 1962 20 June 2006 |
Date closed | 2004-06 |
Capacity | 80,000 |
Course type | Flat National Hunt |
Notable races | The Gold Cup |
Attendance | 600,000 (yearly) |
Official website |
Ascot Racecourse is visited by approximately 600,000 people a year, accounting for 10% of all UK racegoers. The racecourse covers 179 acres (72 ha) leased from the Crown Estate and enjoys close association with the British Royal Family. Ascot was founded in 1711 by Queen Anne and located approximately 6 miles (9.7 km) from Windsor Castle.
Royal stands have been in use at the sports venue since the late 18th century. The main grandstand has been demolished and rebuilt on many occasions. The first public grandstand was built in 1839 and was again redeveloped over the centuries. Her Majesty Elizabeth II used to visit the Ascot Racecourse quite frequently, and the seating area was reconstructed in 1961 and named in her honour, but the stand was demolished and replaced from 2004.
Ascot currently stages 26 days of racing over the course of the year, comprising 18 flat meetings between April and October, and 8 jump meetings between October and March. The Royal Meeting, held in June each year, remains the highlight of the British summer social calendar attracting over 350,000 spectators for the week. The prestigious King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes is run over the course in July.
History
editOver its 300-year history, Ascot has established itself as a national institution, with Royal Ascot being the centerpiece of the British summer social calendar and the ultimate stage for the best racehorses in the world.
The racecourse was founded in 1711 by Queen Anne. When out riding from Windsor Castle, she came upon an area of open heath that looked, in her words, 'ideal for horses to gallop at full stretch'.[1] Her plans for a new race meeting were subsequently announced in The London Gazette of 12 July 1711.
Her Majesty's Plate of 100 guineas will be run for round the new heat on Ascott Common, near Windsor, on Tuesday, 7 August next, by any horse, mare or gelding, being no more than six years old the grass before, as must be certified under the hand of the breeder, carrying 12 St., three heats, to be entered the last day of July, at Mr. Hancock's, at Fern Hill, near the Starting Post.[2]
— Announcement of the first race meeting at Ascot, London Gazette (12 July 1711)
That first meeting was held on 11 August 1711, the original date (and a race scheduled for 6 August) having been postponed for reasons unspecified, although it has been speculated that the course was simply not ready.[3] The Queen and a "brilliant suite"[3] drove from Windsor Castle to witness it, with the first race being a seven horse £50 plate, won by a horse called Doctor owned by the Duke of St Albans.[3] The original racecourse was laid out by William Lowen for the first meet.[1]
Queen Anne's gift to racing, founding the Royal Racecourse, is marked by the tradition of opening Royal Ascot with The Queen Anne Stakes run over the straight mile.
The first permanent building was not erected until 1793, and was built by local Windsor builder George Slingsby. Holding 1,650 people, it was used for almost fifty years. In 1813 an Act of Parliament ensured that the Ascot Heath would be kept and used as a racecourse for the public in the future, securing racing at Ascot for future generations. A new grandstand was opened in 1839 at a cost of £10,000.[4][5]
Ascot Authority Act 1913 | |
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Act of Parliament | |
Long title | An Act to constitute the Trustees for the purpose of holding and managing Ascot Race Course and the stands buildings and property held or used in connection therewith and to vest in them all property now held or used for the benefit or purposes of Ascot Races and to confer all necessary powers on the Trustees so constituted and for other purposes. |
Citation | 3 & 4 Geo. 5. c. lxxxiv |
Dates | |
Royal assent | 15 August 1913 |
Text of statute as originally enacted |
Ascot Race Course Act 1948 | |
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Act of Parliament | |
Long title | An Act to provide for the closing of part of Winkfield Road in the rural district of Windsor in the county of Berks during the Ascot races and for diverting a footpath and other purposes. |
Citation | 11 & 12 Geo. 6. c. xvii |
Dates | |
Royal assent | 30 June 1948 |
Text of statute as originally enacted |
The administration of the Royal Racecourse is handled on behalf of the Crown by a representative appointed by the Monarch. Up until 1901, the racecourse was managed by the Master of the Royal Buckhounds. Lord Churchill was appointed His Majesty's Representative in 1901, responsible for running the course and determining entrance to the Royal Enclosure. The Ascot Authority was established in 1913 by a further Act of Parliament, the Ascot Authority Act 1913 (3 & 4 Geo. 5. c. lxxxiv), with His Majesty's Representative becoming Senior Trustee.[6] Today, as Ascot Authority (Holdings) Limited, Ascot has a formal board chaired by Sir Francis Brooke Bt. who also serves as Her Majesty's Representative (Senior Trustee) at Ascot.
Between 1940 and 1943 racing was not run at Ascot. The racecourse was commandeered by the army with the Grandstand providing accommodation for gunners of the Royal Artillery. Racing resumed on 15 May 1943 with an eight-race card. The first post-war fixture was held on 21 May 1945, when the then 19 years old Princess Elizabeth attended Ascot for the first time. The first National Hunt meeting was held at Ascot in 1965, the course having been established using turf from Hurst Park Racecourse, which closed in 1962.[7]
As an owner and breeder of racehorses, Queen Elizabeth II took a keen interest in racing. The jockeys riding the Queen's horses could be identified by her racing colours: purple body with gold braid, scarlet sleeves, and a black velvet cap with gold fringe. The Queen attended the annual Royal Meeting from her Coronation in 1953 to 2021,[8] and traditionally presented The Gold Cup and The Diamond Jubilee Stakes each year. In 2013, The Queen's filly, Estimate, triumphed in Ascot's showpiece race, The Gold Cup – the first time that The Gold Cup has been won by a reigning monarch.
Grandstand redevelopments
edit1793- 1800s
editBefore the public stand for the seating of spectators was built, there was a Royal Stand and betting stand. The Royal Stand was redeveloped from its original foundation in 1793 and subsequently replaced in 1822 when King George IV commissioned a newly built Royal Enclosure with a royal box.[9][10] Then, the first public grandstand at the Ascot Racecourse was erected in 1838, seating about 3,000 spectators. Construction continued, and by 1859, the Iron Stand was built, then the Alexandra Stand extension in 1863, and also there was a colonnade entrance built in 1876. Additionally, in 1896, a clock tower was installed.[1][5][11]
1900s
editDuring the reign of King Edward VII, in the 20th century between 1901-02 the three grandstands were demolished, and the Jockey Club, Royal, and Royal Enclosure Stands were built at a cost £57,636 (equivalent to £7,900,000 in 2023). Also, the Five Shilling Stand was built in 1908 for the public to attend races at a cheaper price, later known as the Silver Ring Stand, it cost £30,000. Then, in 1926, the Iron Stand was rebuilt, and the Tote Stand was built in 1929, which is still in use today.[1][5][11]
Queen Elizabeth Stand
editFrom the 13th of June 1961, the main grandstand consisting of the Victorian Grand, Alexandra and Iron stands were demolished to make way for a new grandstand named the Queen Elizabeth Stand, which could seat 13,000 people. It was completed within the following 11 months at the then cost of £1,000,000 (equivalent to £28,100,000 in 2023). Also, the Members' Stand was built in 1964.[1][5]
2004
editThe Ascot Grandstand was demolished and rebuilt between 2004 – 2006 and was closed for a £220 million redevelopment, the single biggest investment in British Racing. The Racecourse was reopened by the Queen on 20 June 2006.[1] The redevelopment was designed by architect firm HOK (Populous), and was engineered by Buro Happold and built by Laing O'Rourke. The main part of the redevelopment programme was the construction of the 30m x 300m lightweight parasol roof structure of the 480 metre long grandstand for the 30,000 seating arrangement, this was designed and built by Austrian specialist contractor Waagner-Biro. The overall capacity of the grandstand was for 80,000 spectators sitting and standing, and for the racecourse to host over 300,000 attendees during Royal Ascot week.[11][12][13][14] For the 2005 season, the Royal Ascot meet was held as York Racecourse.[1] At the end of 2006, a £10 million programme of further alterations was announced to improve the viewing from lower levels of the grandstand using an innovative steel composite product ("SPS" sandwich plate system) to reprofile the existing concrete terraces.
The seasons – flat and jumps
editThe first major redevelopment of the racecourse came in 1954, when the straight mile was moved to make more room for spectators.[1] The flat season at Ascot is run from April to October, beginning with Royal Ascot Trials Day and finishing with QIPCO British Champions Day. In all, Ascot hosts 18 days of flat racing each year, totalling roughly 115 flat races each summer. Grass is cut to a regulation 4 inches exactly for flat racing. Ascot hosts 13 Group 1 Flat races each year including The Gold Cup, St James's Palace Stakes, King's Stand Stakes, Commonwealth Cup and The King George VI and Queen Elizabeth QIPCO Stakes. QIPCO British Champions Day holds the greatest number of Group 1 races of any raceday at Ascot with four races at the top level. Ascot has hosted many of the world's most famous flat horses including Frankel, Nijinsky, Sagaro, Yeats, Mill Reef, Grundy, Dancing Brave, Swain, Galileo and Enable.
The first jumps fixture was held at Ascot in 1965.[7] The national hunt course, a right handed triangular shaped course like the flat course, is laid out inside the flat track, and is about 1m 5f round, with ten fences, including two in the straight, and six flights of hurdles. The track is famed for being one of the toughest courses with a 73-foot climb from the lowest point, Swinley Bottom, to the highest point, the Winning Post. Ascot hosts 8 days of jumps racing between October and March, starting with the Fireworks Spectacular Family Raceday and finishing with the Spring Family Raceday. Included are both steeplechase and hurdle races, with around 50 jumps races in all being held at Ascot each season. Grass is cut to a regulation 5 inches exactly for jumps racing. Notable jumps races held at Ascot are The Clarence House Chase, The Ascot Chase and The Long Walk Hurdle, all Grade 1 contests. Ascot has hosted many of the world's most famous jumps horses including Arkle,[a] Desert Orchid, Sprinter Sacre, Sire De Grugy, Kauto Star, Cue Card, Baracouda, Thistlecrack, Cyrname and Altior.
Royal Ascot
editThis section contains promotional content. (March 2022) |
Royal Ascot evolved from the first four-day race meeting held at Ascot in 1768, although the meeting as it is known today only really started to take shape with the introduction of The Gold Cup in 1807.[16] Until 1939, Royal Ascot was the only race meeting held at the racecourse. The Gold Cup remains the feature race of the third day of Royal Ascot, traditionally the busiest day of the week, when high fashion and exquisite millinery take centre stage alongside flat racing's most elite stayers. During the racecourse's redevelopment in 2005, the Royal Meeting was held at York Racecourse.
Each of the five days of Royal Ascot begins with the Royal Procession at 2pm, when the monarch and other members of the royal family arrive down the straight mile in the Royal Landaus, accompanied by the playing of the National Anthem and the raising of the Royal Standard. This tradition was started in 1825 by King George IV.
Royal Ascot is Britain's most valuable race meeting, attracting many of the world's finest racehorses to compete for millions of pounds in prize money (just over £7.3million in 2019[17]). Approximately 500 horses race across the five days. Eighteen Group races, eight of them Group 1, are staged each year and are broadcast to audiences in almost 200 territories around the world.
Ascot employees increase by more than 6,500 temporary staff, with over 33,500 items of temporary furniture and 20,000 flowers and shrubs grown especially for the Royal Meeting.
There are four enclosures in total at Royal Ascot, three of them open to the public. The Royal Enclosure is the most prestigious, with access strictly limited. First-time applicants must apply to the Royal Enclosure Office and gain sponsorship from someone who has attended the Royal Enclosure for at least four years. Existing members are sent invitations by His Majesty's Representative to request badges each year. Badges are hand written and can only be worn by the named person.[6] Colours of badges vary for each day of the Royal Meeting.
The Royal Enclosure has a very strict dress code, with men wearing grey, navy or black morning dress and top hat, and women wearing formal daywear and a hat with a solid base of 4 inches or more in diameter. The origins of the Royal Ascot dress code can be traced back to the early 19th century when Beau Brummel, a close friend of the Prince Regent, decreed that men of elegance should wear waisted black coats and white cravats with pantaloons to the Royal Meeting.
The Queen Anne Enclosure is Royal Ascot's premier public enclosure, granting guests access to the parade ring, grandstand and trackside lawns. Guests in the Queen Anne Enclosure are also invited to participate in the daily tradition of singing around the bandstand after racing. The dress code in the Queen Anne Enclosure is still formal, but more relaxed than that of the Royal Enclosure. Women must dress in a manner that befits a formal occasion and must wear a hat or fascinator at all times. Gentlemen are required to wear a full-length suit with a collared shirt, tie and socks covering the ankle.
The Windsor Enclosure offers a more informal and relaxed atmosphere. There is no formal dress code, but guests are encouraged to wear "smart daywear"—collared shirts and jackets for men, hats or fascinators for women. Guests in the Windsor Enclosure are the first to view the Royal Procession as the enclosure is positioned to the east of the Grandstand along the Straight Mile. The Village Enclosure has been a successful addition since 2017 and is located on the Heath, in the middle of the racecourse. This enclosure, open from the Thursday to Saturday of the Royal Meeting, offers a combination of exciting street food, al fresco dining, live music and unique views of the track and famous Ascot grandstand.
The dress code in the Village Enclosure is similar, but slightly less formal to that of the Queen Anne Enclosure, with women wearing formal daywear and a hat and men wearing jackets, full-length trousers, a tie and socks covering the ankle.
The annual Royal Meeting takes place over five days, each with a unique offering of racing and atmosphere. The week begins on a Tuesday, with the first race traditionally being the Queen Anne Stakes. Two further Group 1 contests normally take place on this day, the King Charles III Stakes and the St James' Palace Stakes round off the feature races on the card.
The highlight of Wednesday's racing is the Group 1 Prince of Wales's Stakes, won in 2019 by superstars Crystal Ocean and Frankie Dettori.
On Thursday, the oldest and most prestigious race takes place – the Gold Cup staged over two-and-a-half miles, making it a stiff test for even the world's most elite long-distance horses. In 2020, this historic race was taken by reigning champion, Stradivarius, with jockey Frankie Dettori on board, for a third consecutive year. It is also the day where high fashion and millinery masterpieces take centre stage, and has been colloquially termed "Ladies Day".
The fourth day of the Royal Meeting features two Group 1 races in the Coronation Stakes and the Commonwealth Cup, whilst the final day, Saturday, offers a relaxed and social atmosphere. The quality of racing is no less top-notch, with the Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes being the feature race, won in 2019 by Blue Point, who became the first horse since Choisir to win the Diamond Jubilee and King's Stand in the same year.
The 2020 meeting was held behind closed doors due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[18]
Month | DOW | Race | Grade | Distance | Age/sex |
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June | Tuesday | Queen Anne Stakes | Group 1 | 1m | 4yo |
June | Tuesday | Coventry Stakes | Group 2 | 6f | 2yo only |
June | Tuesday | King Charles III Stakes | Group 1 | 5f | 3yo |
June | Tuesday | St James's Palace Stakes | Group 1 | 1m | 3yo C only |
June | Tuesday | Ascot Stakes | Handicap | 2m 4f | 4yo |
June | Tuesday | Wolferton Stakes | Listed | 1m 2f | 4yo |
June | Tuesday | Buckingham Palace Stakes | Handicap | 7f | 3yo |
June | Wednesday | Jersey Stakes | Group 3 | 7f | 3yo only |
June | Wednesday | Queen Mary Stakes | Group 2 | 5f | 2yo F only |
June | Wednesday | Duke of Cambridge Stakes | Group 2 | 1m | 4yo FM |
June | Wednesday | Prince of Wales's Stakes | Group 1 | 1m 2f | 4yo |
June | Wednesday | Royal Hunt Cup | Handicap | 1m | 3yo |
June | Wednesday | Sandringham Stakes | Handicap | 1m | 3yo F only |
June | Thursday | Norfolk Stakes | Group 2 | 5f | 2yo only |
June | Thursday | Hampton Court Stakes | Group 3 | 1m 2f | 3yo only |
June | Thursday | Ribblesdale Stakes | Group 2 | 1m 4f | 3yo F only |
June | Thursday | Gold Cup | Group 1 | 2m 4f | 4yo |
June | Thursday | Britannia Stakes | Handicap | 1m | 3yo CG only |
June | Thursday | King George V Stakes | Handicap | 1m 4f | 3yo only |
June | Friday | Albany Stakes | Group 3 | 6f | 2yo F only |
June | Friday | King Edward VII Stakes | Group 2 | 1m 4f | 3yo CG only |
June | Friday | Commonwealth Cup | Group 1 | 6f | 3yo only |
June | Friday | Coronation Stakes | Group 1 | 1m | 3yo F only |
June | Friday | Duke of Edinburgh Stakes | Handicap | 1m 4f | 3yo |
June | Friday | Queen's Vase | Group 2 | 1m 6f | 3yo only |
June | Saturday | Chesham Stakes | Listed | 7f | 2yo only |
June | Saturday | Windsor Castle Stakes | Listed | 5f | 2yo only |
June | Saturday | Hardwicke Stakes | Group 2 | 1m 4f | 4yo |
June | Saturday | Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes | Group 1 | 6f | 4yo |
June | Saturday | Wokingham Stakes | Handicap | 6f | 3yo |
June | Saturday | Queen Alexandra Stakes | Conditions | 2m 5f 159y | 4yo |
QIPCO King George Diamond Weekend
editWhile the grandeur of Royal Ascot takes centre stage in June, Ascot's premier summer race actually takes place in July. As Europe's midsummer middle-distance showpiece, The King George VI and Queen Elizabeth QIPCO Stakes has seen many champions crowned including legends such as Mill Reef, Dancing Brave, Nashwan, Galileo and Enable. In 2020 Enable made history by becoming the first triple winner of the race having also landed the crown in 2019 following an epic duel with Crystal Ocean and as a three-year-old in 2017. There are also two dual winners to date – Dahlia and Swain.
British Champions Day
editSince 2011 Ascot has staged QIPCO British Champions Day annually in October, now the culmination of the European elite flat racing season.[19] The great Frankel won The Queen Elizabeth II Stakes on Champions Day 2011, and the curtain came down on the career of officially the best horse of all time when he won The Champion Stakes a year later. Sir Henry Cecil's pride and joy won five of his 14 races at Ascot in all.
The culmination of the British Champions Series, QIPCO British Champions Day sees the crowning of the Champion Jockey, Champion Apprentice, Champion Trainer and Champion Owner of each year. The day hosts five Group races, four of them being Group 1, providing a truly unique day of quality racing. The meeting also has a strong social atmosphere, with a post-racing after party seeing off the flat season in style.
Month | DOW | Race | Grade | Distance | Age/sex |
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October | Saturday | British Champions Sprint Stakes | Group 1 | 6f | 3yo |
October | Saturday | British Champions Long Distance Cup | Group 2 | 2m | 3yo |
October | Saturday | British Champions Fillies' and Mares' Stakes | Group 1 | 1m 4f | 3yo fm |
October | Saturday | Queen Elizabeth II Stakes | Group 1 | 1m | 3yo |
October | Saturday | Champion Stakes | Group 1 | 1m 2f | 3yo |
Notable races
editMonth | DOW | Race | Type | Grade | Distance | Age/sex |
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January | Saturday | Holloway's Hurdle | Hurdle | Grade 2 | 2m 3f 110y | 4yo |
January | Saturday | Clarence House Chase | Chase | Grade 1 | 2m 1f | 5yo |
January | Saturday | Warfield Mares' Hurdle | Hurdle | Grade 2 | 3m | 4yo m |
February | Saturday | Reynoldstown Novices' Chase | Chase | Grade 2 | 3m | 5yo |
February | Saturday | Ascot Chase | Chase | Grade 1 | 2m 5f 110y | 5yo |
February | Saturday | Weatherbys Chase | Chase | Handicap | 3m | 5yo |
Apr / May | Wednesday | Sagaro Stakes | Flat | Group 3 | 2m | 4yo |
Apr / May | Wednesday | Pavilion Stakes | Flat | Group 3 | 6f | 3yo only |
Apr / May | Wednesday | Paradise Stakes | Flat | Listed | 1m | 4yo |
May | Saturday | Victoria Cup | Flat | Handicap | 7f | 4yo |
July | Saturday | Summer Mile Stakes | Flat | Group 2 | 1m | 4yo |
July | Saturday | Princess Margaret Stakes | Flat | Group 3 | 6f | 2yo only f |
July | Saturday | King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes | Flat | Group 1 | 1m 4f | 3yo |
July | Saturday | Pat Eddery Stakes | Flat | Listed | 7f | 2yo only |
October | Friday | Noel Murless Stakes | Flat | Listed | 1m 6f | 3yo |
October | Saturday | Bengough Stakes | Flat | Group 3 | 6f | 3yo |
October | Saturday | Cumberland Lodge Stakes | Flat | Group 3 | 1m 4f | 3yo |
October | Saturday | Cornwallis Stakes | Flat | Group 3 | 5f | 2yo only |
Oct / Nov | Saturday | Sodexo Live! Gold Cup | Chase | Premier Handicap | 3m | 4yo |
November | Saturday | Ascot Hurdle | Hurdle | Grade 2 | 2m 3½f | 4yo |
November | Saturday | 1965 Chase | Chase | Grade 2 | 2m 5f | 4yo |
December | Friday | Thomas Materials Open NH Flat Race | National Hunt flat | Listed | 2m | 4yo-5yo |
December | Friday | Noel Novices' Chase | Chase | Grade 2 | 2m 3f | 4yo |
December | Saturday | Ladbrokes Handicap Hurdle | Hurdle | Grade 3 | 1m 7½f | 4yo |
December | Saturday | Ascot Silver Cup | Chase | Handicap | 2m | 4yo |
December | Saturday | Long Walk Hurdle | Hurdle | Grade 1 | 3m ½f | 4yo |
Shergar Cup
editThe Shergar Cup is an annual event, taking place in August, at Ascot since 2000. Named in honour of Shergar, who won the 1981 Epsom Derby, the day was originally sponsored by Shergar's owner, the Aga Khan. Now sponsored by Dubai Duty Free, the event attracts approximately 30,000 spectators each year.
The world's premier international jockeys competition has four teams: Great Britain and Ireland, Europe, The Rest of The World and The Girls. Teams compete for points in each of the six races in an attempt to win the Shergar Cup, presented to the winning team at the closing ceremony. The Alistair Haggis Silver Saddle is also awarded to the jockey with the most points at the end of the day, with previous winners including Kieren Fallon, Ryan Moore, Sammy Jo Bell and Hayley Turner.
A post racing concert is also held at the Dubai Duty Free Shergar Cup, with previous acts including Rita Ora, Craig David and All Saints.
Family racedays at Ascot
editAscot Racecourse holds four annual family racedays:
- The Spring Family Raceday in March
- The Summer Mile Family Raceday in July
- The Fireworks Spectacular Family Raceday in October or November
- The Christmas Family Raceday in December
Each day hosts a plethora of additional activities for children and aims to promote a love of racing in younger generations.
Ascot Racecourse launched the Colts and Fillies club, a free club for children aged 17 and under, in 2002. It has 20,000 members and promotes making racing more accessible for younger audiences. The club owns a racehorse and organises trips, competitions, days out and special activities on Family Racedays.[20]
Events outside of horse racing
editAscot Racecourse has become a popular venue for events, with 300 meeting and conference rooms as well as the Grandstand Atrium, with over 4,000 square meters of exhibition space.[21] Many parties and weddings are held at the racecourse every year, including large Asian weddings of up to 1,000 guests.
Royal Ascot Cricket Club and Ascot United
editThe racecourse is also home to Royal Ascot Cricket Club, which was founded in 1883. The club's ground is situated in the middle of the racecourse. Ascot United F.C. is located towards the eastern side of the site.[22] A new clubhouse, stand and floodlighting have recently been erected.
In popular culture
editThe 1910 Royal Meeting was the inspiration for Cecil Beaton's Ascot Gavotte scene in My Fair Lady (1964), as, following the death of King Edward VII, Royal Ascot became "Black Ascot" with all occupants of the Royal Enclosure 'dressing in black, save for white flowers or strings of pearls'.
The racecourse has been used for filming many times – most notably three times in James Bond productions, the first being in A View to a Kill (1985), where Bond (played for the last time by Roger Moore) was beginning his mission to defeat Max Zorin (Christopher Walken), whose horse was racing there. The racecourse was used again in Skyfall (2012) where it stood in for Shanghai Pudong International Airport.[23]
Gallery
edit-
Main straight
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Front entrance to the 2006 Ascot Stands
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The redeveloped stand
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The redeveloped stand from inside
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Dress and conduct rules for racegoers at Ascot – see at full size.
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AscotStand from north west
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h "A Brief History". Royal Ascot Program. Fourth day (2017): 4–5. 23 June 2017.4-5&rft.date=2017-06-23&rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Ascot Racecourse" class="Z3988">
- ^ Cawthorne & Herod 1902, p. 15-16.
- ^ a b c Cawthorne & Herod 1902, p. 16.
- ^ Whyte, James Christie (1840). History of the British turf, from the earliest period to the present day, Volume I. London: H. Colburn. pp. 199–200. OL 6544990M.199-200&rft.pub=H. Colburn&rft.date=1840&rft_id=https://openlibrary.org/books/OL6544990M#id-name=OL&rft.aulast=Whyte&rft.aufirst=James Christie&rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Ascot Racecourse" class="Z3988">
- ^ a b c d "Ascot Racecourse Key Dates". issuu.com. Retrieved 10 October 2024.
- ^ a b Mosley, Charles, ed. (2003). Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 107th edn. London: Burke's Peerage & Gentry Ltd. p. 1332 (ERNE, E). ISBN 0-9711966-2-1.
- ^ a b Dennis, Steve (24 November 2017). "Desert Orchid thriller the highlight of 50 years of jump racing at Ascot". Racing Post. Archived from the original on 5 July 2018. Retrieved 5 July 2018.
- ^ "Queen misses Royal Ascot for first time since her coronation". Archived from the original on 11 January 2023. Retrieved 11 January 2023.
- ^ "History Of Ascot". ascot.com. Retrieved 11 October 2024.
- ^ "Party like it's 1822!". debretts.com. 5 May 2022. Retrieved 11 October 2024.
- ^ a b c "Ascot Racecourse: Modernity out of a treasured past". thoroughbredracing.com. 13 June 2014. Retrieved 11 October 2024.
- ^ "Royal Ascot – Waagner Biro / Steel and Glass facades". Archived from the original on 26 October 2020. Retrieved 22 October 2020.
- ^ "Ascot Racecourse Redevelopment". burohappold.com. Retrieved 10 October 2024.
- ^ "Ascot Racecourse". populous.com. Retrieved 10 October 2024.
- ^ Gill, James (1975). Racecourses of Great Britain. London: Barrie & Jenkins. p. 20. ISBN 0214200906.
- ^ "Ascot". ascot.co.uk. Archived from the original on 18 June 2021. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
- ^ "Ascot". ascot.co.uk. Archived from the original on 14 August 2020. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
- ^ "Royal Ascot 2020: Meeting ready to start without the Queen and spectators". BBC Sport. 15 June 2020. Archived from the original on 3 September 2020. Retrieved 16 June 2020.
- ^ "2011 British Champions Series unveiled". Jockey Club. Archived from the original on 19 August 2016. Retrieved 18 July 2016.
- ^ "Welcome to Ascot Colts & Fillies". coltsandfillies.co.uk. Archived from the original on 5 August 2020. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
- ^ "Ascot". ascot.co.uk. Archived from the original on 20 September 2020. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
- ^ "Ascot United". Archived from the original on 16 September 2011. Retrieved 23 September 2011.
- ^ Mathieson, Amy. "Ascot racecourse to star in James Bond film". Horse and Hound. Archived from the original on 12 October 2012. Retrieved 30 November 2012.
Notes
editBibliography
edit- Cawthorne, George James; Herod, Richard S. (1902). Royal Ascot, Its History & Its Associations (PDF). London: A Treherne & Co. Retrieved 31 January 2022.