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About: Forbra

An Entity of Type: animal, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

Forbra was a National Hunt racehorse best known for being the winner of the 1932 Grand National steeplechase when relatively unconsidered at 50/1. Prior to his victory in 1932, Forbra beat Golden Miller in a race where 'The Miller' was disqualified for carrying the wrong weight. The gelding had originally been aimed at another race at the meeting, but was switched to the National after winning a race at Taunton Racecourse. He started at odds of 50/1 in a field of thirty-six runners and won by three lengths from Egremont. Forbra subsequently finished sixth in the race in 1933 and fourth in 1934 and never fell during his racing career. He was put down in 1935 after a race at Newbury, having broken a fetlock between the final two fences.

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dbo:abstract
  • Forbra was a National Hunt racehorse best known for being the winner of the 1932 Grand National steeplechase when relatively unconsidered at 50/1. Prior to his victory in 1932, Forbra beat Golden Miller in a race where 'The Miller' was disqualified for carrying the wrong weight. The gelding had originally been aimed at another race at the meeting, but was switched to the National after winning a race at Taunton Racecourse. He started at odds of 50/1 in a field of thirty-six runners and won by three lengths from Egremont. Forbra subsequently finished sixth in the race in 1933 and fourth in 1934 and never fell during his racing career. He was put down in 1935 after a race at Newbury, having broken a fetlock between the final two fences. Forbra's owner, Mr William (Billie) Parsonage, was a well-known commission agent based in Ludlow, Shropshire, and had previously attempted to win the National with a number of staying chasers. The best known of these was Master Billie, who had been greatly fancied and heavily backed in 1929. Forbra was the first Grand National winner to emerge from the famous Kinnersley stables near Worcester, where in later years Fred Rimell, son of Forbra's trainer , became a champion trainer, winning more Nationals and almost all the major NH events of his time. Forbra is honoured each year with the Forbra Gold Challenge Cup, a Handicap Chase over three miles. It is held at Ludlow Racecourse in early March. (en)
dbo:colour
dbo:country
dbo:grandsire
dbo:honours
dbo:race
dbo:sex
  • Gelding
dbo:trainer
dbo:wikiPageID
  • 8279625 (xsd:integer)
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  • 3021 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
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  • 1084127056 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbp:breeder
  • John Musker (en)
dbp:colour
dbp:country
dbp:dam
  • Thymbra (en)
dbp:damsire
  • Rochester (en)
dbp:foaled
  • 1925 (xsd:integer)
dbp:grandsire
dbp:honours
  • Forbra Gold Challenge Cup at Ludlow Racecourse (en)
dbp:horsename
  • Forbra (en)
dbp:owner
  • William Parsonage (en)
dbp:race
dbp:sex
dbp:sire
  • Foresight (en)
dbp:trainer
  • Tom Rimell (en)
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dcterms:subject
gold:hypernym
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rdfs:comment
  • Forbra was a National Hunt racehorse best known for being the winner of the 1932 Grand National steeplechase when relatively unconsidered at 50/1. Prior to his victory in 1932, Forbra beat Golden Miller in a race where 'The Miller' was disqualified for carrying the wrong weight. The gelding had originally been aimed at another race at the meeting, but was switched to the National after winning a race at Taunton Racecourse. He started at odds of 50/1 in a field of thirty-six runners and won by three lengths from Egremont. Forbra subsequently finished sixth in the race in 1933 and fourth in 1934 and never fell during his racing career. He was put down in 1935 after a race at Newbury, having broken a fetlock between the final two fences. (en)
rdfs:label
  • Forbra (en)
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prov:wasDerivedFrom
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
foaf:name
  • Forbra (en)
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is foaf:primaryTopic of
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