Remembering Comic Court

Description

The record-breaking 1950 Melbourne Cup winning horse, Comic Court, and legendary trainer, the late Bart Cummings, are to be remembered in a museum proposed to be established at Normanville, where Comic Court was born.

Comic Court spent his first couple of formative years at the Bowyer brothers’ Beau Neire Stud at Normanville. He was stabled, along with other horses, in a building which forms part of the heritage-listed Fergusson’s Mill / Cornish’s Mill / Gorge Mill, a steam-powered flour mill originally built in 1856. Albert Bowyer, a champion hay stacker and thatcher, bought the property in 1918 where he ran a dairy farm.

Three of his sons Hiram, Melville and David, established Beau Neire Stud, from where they bred, trained and raced horses.

Rememering Comic Court is a compilation of the history of Beau Neire Stud / Comic Court Lodge where the legendary racehorse was born and spent his formative first couple of years before joining the stables of Jim Cummings.

Note: $5 from the sale of every booklet will be donated to a special fund for the establishment of the Comic Court Lodge Racing and Equine Museum in part of the former Fergusson’s Mill building at Normanville.

ISBN:  978-0-6483159-1-9

by Lorraine Day

Paperback – 49 pages

Additional information

Weight.095 kg
Dimensions21 × 15.2 × 0.3 cm

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The record-breaking 1950 Melbourne Cup winning horse, Comic Court, and legendary trainer, the late Bart Cummings, were remembered during History Month, May 2018, in a photographic display at Normanville. Comic Court spent his first couple of formative years at the Bowyer brothers’ Beau Neire Stud at Normanville. He was stabled, along with other horses, in a building which forms part of the heritage-listed Fergusson’s Mill / Cornish’s Mill / Gorge Mill, a steam-powered flour mill originally built in 1856. Albert Bowyer, a champion hay stacker and thatcher, bought the property in 1918 where he ran a dairy farm. Three of his sons Hiram, Melville and David, established Beau Neire Stud, from where they bred, trained and raced horses.