Tom Dreaper

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Tom Dreaper
Born (1898-09-26)26 September 1898
Donaghmore, Co Meath, Ireland
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Nationality Irish
Occupation Racehorse Trainer
Children Jim Dreaper

Thomas William (Tom) Dreaper was a successful Irish steeplechase racehorse trainer.[1] He is best known for being the trainer of Arkle and Flyingbolt.

Tom was born into a farming family in Donaghmore near Ashbourne on the County Meath-County Dublin border, and educated at St. Andrew's College, Dublin.[2] In 1916, he left school to work on the family farm with his father and elder brother. However, the lure of steeplechasing proved irresistible and by the 1920s he was a successful point-to-point jockey. In 1930, his parents bought Greenogue, a 300-acre farm a few miles from Donaghmore, which Tom farmed himself, and in 1931 he took out a public licence.[3] His serious amateur career came to an end with a fall at Naas 1938, which left him in hospital for eight weeks, unconscious for two of them.

Since he viewed himself primarily as a cattle-farmer, his training career was slow to take off. His first major success was with Prince Regent, who won the Irish Grand National in the winter of 1942, won the Cheltenham Gold Cup and was third in the Grand National in 1945 and fourth in the Grand National in 1946.[4] In the following years, he cemented his reputation as Ireland's leading trainer with horses such as Storm Head, Hasty Bits, Shagreen and the great Fortria.

However, his greatest successes came with the horses owned by Anne, Duchess of Westminster, a partnership which produced 97 wins, 43 second place and 33 third place finishes by horses such as Cashel View, Ben Stack, Sea Brief and the greatest of them all—Arkle. At one time he had in his stables both Arkle and Flyingbolt, the two highest-rated steeplechasers of all time.

In all, he trained 26 winners at the Cheltenham Festival including the Cheltenham Gold Cup and the Arkle Challenge Trophy five times each and the Champion Chase six times. He won the Irish Grand National ten times, seven times consecutively (from 1960 to 1966). The only major race that he never won was the Grand National, coming second in 1970 with Vulture and in 1971 with Black Secret, ridden by his son Jim.

He married Betty Russell in St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, in 1945, and had a son and two daughters. His son, Jim Dreaper, took over his stables on his retirement in 1971.

References

  1. LEADING JUMP TRAINERS DOWN THE YEARS
  2. Fuller, Bryony (1991) Tom Dreaper & His Horses, Punchestown/Marlborough
  3. A licence to train racehorses, at that time issued by the Jockey Club
  4. Dreaper Racing: History