Today's Perak Turf Club races on a fine course,
the backdrop for which is Gunong Korbu, one of the highest peaks
in the main range of the Peninsula. The club is the custodian of
a Perak racing tradition that goes back nearly 85 years, the first
meeting having been held at Taiping , then the State capital, in
1886 by the first Perak Turf Club. Its course was the cradle of
racing in the Peninsula. The Kinta Gymkhana Club founded in 1890
and held its first meeting at Batu Gajah, the district centre.
The first Perak Derby, for stakes of RM1,000, over 1½ miles,
was won by T.W. Raymond, a noted amateur rider, on Locky. Ipoh
was a fast-developing town and the Ipoh Gymkhana Club started in
February 1913 on the new course with a meeting open only to amateur
riders. In due time, meetings at Batu Gajah faded out and Ipoh
became the main centre of racing in the state, although the Perak
Gymkhana Club and later the Taiping Turf Club were to carry on
racing at Taiping for many years.
Today's
Perak Turf Club, with headquarters at Ipoh, was formed in 1926.
The first event at the Ipoh Gymkhana Club's meeting was the Miners'
Cup, presented by Kinta miners. It was a distance race for "pony
roadsters" and was won by Gang Robber, owned, trained and
ridden by Dr H. Jacques. Other trophies presented were the Planters'
Cup, the Merchants' Cup and the Bar Cup (by the lawyers). Irishmen
presented the St Patrick's Mug. World War I severely curtailed
racing in the region, but the Ipoh Gymkhana Club at its Spring
Meeting in 1919 ran its first-ever professional meeting. For the
first race, the Opening Stakes (RM400), there were only two starters
and there was an upset, witty, F. O'Connor up, beating the favourite,
Jillawarra, ridden by Rube Billet, later a well-known trainer,
but then at the peak of his riding carrer. The Sultan's Cup, over
I mile and two furlongs, was won by LaGeorge, carrying 9.10, in
a time that stood as a record for many years.
F. Douglas Osborne was first President of the Perak Turf Club,
with C.B. Redway as vice president. Membership was 450. Under the
enthusiastic patronage of Sultan Iskandar Shah (father of the present
Sultan of Perak), who for years owned the largest and one of the
most successful strings of horses racing in the region, the club
made fine progress. The last meeting under the Straits Racing Association
rules before the start of the Pacific War was at Ipoh. There was
however, some racing during the Japanese occupation.
Perak had the same rehabilitation problems as other clubs, but
facilities were back to pre-war standards by 1951. By 1960, the
club has extended its activities into other sports and community
projects at State and national levels. The club can claim a number
of "firsts" for the Malayan turf. It was the first club
to introduce graded stakes for the various classes (July 1950).
This system was generally adopted in 1962. In 1950, the club big
stakes for classics, with RM25,000 for the Perak Derby, over 1½ miles,
won by Indian Heather. In 1959, it ran the first RM1 million sweep,
with a record first prize of RM400,000. In 1960, the club was the
first to introduce the digit forecast pool. In 1961, it experimented
with morning and afternoon racing, with a 12-event card in November
1961.
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