HANSTEAD HORSES
Copyright by R.J. CADRANELL
from Arabian Visions Mar/Apr 1997
Used by permission of RJ Cadranell
Next to Crabbet, no English stud has been as important as Hanstead. Hanstead's worldwide influence is particularly remarkable in light of the relatively short time it was in operation -- not even 35 years of breeding -- and the relatively small number of foals produced. There were barely 125, while Crabbet had more than a thousand spread over 93 years.
The Hanstead Stud owed its origin to
Lady Yule, wife of merchant prince Sir David Yule. He and
his brother Andrew amassed a fortune in
Lady Yule "first became interested in Arabs on seeing
the gallant carriage and action of a pair of Arabs regularly driven to
Lady
Yule wanted to try her hand at Anglo-Arab breeding, thus on July 11, 1925, she
and her daughter Gladys visited Lady Wentworth's Arabian stud at Crabbet Park.
That year at Hanstead the Thoroughbred mare Tarantella produced a filly by the
Crabbet stallion *
Razina later won five gold medals, establishing Hanstead as a power in the show ring. Razina's broodmare career, however, established her place in history. After producing the Anglo-Arab filly Razzia in 1926, Razina was never mated to another Thoroughbred.
Razina was not covered in 1926 because of a railway strike,
but in 1927 Lady Yule sent her to the Arabian stallion Almulid
(Skowronek x Alfarouse), bred and owned by the Hon.
Mrs. R.E.L. Vaughan Williams. The resulting filly, Rasana,
soon joined her mother as a Hanstead broodmare, bringing the Arabian mare band
to a total of two. Rasana turned out to be a poor
mother whose foals had to be raised by hand; she was put down in 1937, and her
two fillies not retained.
Raktha (Naseem X Razina)
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Which are the Crabbet horses, and
which are the Hanstead horses? These are the Hanstead foals. Hanstead's worldwide influence is out of all proportion to the relatively small number of foals - an average of just
over four per year. The six foundation mares appear in all capital letters, with sire and dam noted in italics, then each foundation mare's
produce directly underneath. Any daughters with foals registered as bred by Hanstead ...list of their own
produce. Year of birth and whether colt or filly are also indicated.
NAXINA 1927 (Skowronek
x Nessima) Grey Owl 34 c (Raseem) Naseel 36 c (Raftan) Raxina 38 f (Raktha) Samsie 40 f (Riffal) General Grant 45 c (Raktha) *Thorayya 49 f (Rissalix) Grey Thora 55 f (Grey Owl) *Thora Grant 56 f (General
Grant) Thor II 57 c (Rifaria) Samarie 52 f (Rissalix) Samson 54 c (*Count Dorsaz) Samaveda 56 f (Blue Domino) RAFEENA 1940 (Aluf x Ranya II) [*Reenexa 50 f (Irex)] Sylvatica 55 f (Grey Owl) General Exe 56 c (General Grant) [Iridos 51 c (Irex)] Grantchester 52 c (General Grant) Count Rapello 54 c (*Count
Dorsaz) *Blue Raffia 56 f (Blue Domino) *The Count of Al-Marah 57 c (*Count Orlando) Santa Rafeena 58 f (Count Manilla) RAZINA 1922 (Rasim x Riyala) Rasana 28 f (Almulid) Tazee 32 f (Joseph) Ghezala 34 f (Faris) Halil Sherif 29 c (Nuri Sherif) Nurschida 30 f (Nuri Sherif) Sulka 34 f (Naseem) Fallujah 41 f (Rissam) Queen Zenobia 42 f (Radi) Zocola 46 f (Rissalix) La Comtesse 47 f
(Rissalix) Wawona 48 f (Grey Owl) Kasala 49 f (Sala) Bulandoola 50 f (Grey Owl) *Zulima 52 f (Rissalix) *Zorroe 58 c (General
Grant) Zena 53 f (Blue Domino *Princess Zia 54 f (*Count
Dorsaz) Nueyma 36 f (Faris) Namilla 37 f (Algol) Cyclone 41 c (Rissam) *Iorana 42 f (Radi) Kairouan 43 c (Radi) Rusalka 44 c ( Umatella 45 f ( Oraya 50 f (Rissalix) *Count Orlando 51 c (*Count Dorsaz) Azella 52 f (*Count Dorsaz) General Dorsaz 57 c (General Grant) Azure Blue 60 f (Blue Domino) *Grey Stella 53 f (Grey Owl) Bona Blue 59 f (Blue Domino) *Mihrima 46 f (Riffal) *Senab 51 c (Grey Owl) Ranchero 48 c (Riffal) Mikeno 49 c (Rissalix) Count Manilla 52 c (*Count
Dorsaz) Countess Nina 53 f (*Count Dorsaz) *Blue Millet 54 f (Blue Domino) Manzana 38 f (Naufal) Rusa 39 c (Naufal) Beauty Spot 41 f (Rissam) Rikitea 42 f (Rissalix) Garance 46 f (Grey Owl) Diamond Dust 47 c (Grey Owl) Chellala 49 f (Sala) Chief Kasalo 50 c (General
Grant) Teresita 51 f (General Grant) Rinessa 52 f (General Grant) *Taheki 53 f (Grey Owl) Rikki 55 c (Rifaria) El Bahra 46 c (Grey Owl) Wahine II 31 f (Joseph) Kehelan 32 c (Akal) Raktha 34 c (Naseem) Riffal 36 c (Naufal) Shamnar 39 f (Naziri) Carlina 43 f (Rissam) Pale Shadow 44 f (Rissalix) *Count Dorsaz 45 c (Rissalix) Asma 46 f (Grey Owl) Colinda 51 f ( Ambria 52 f (General Grant) * Yateemah 54 f (Blue Domino) *Aliciaa 57 f (Iridos) *Blue Sal 58 f (Blue Domino) *Kabara 49 f (Rissalix) *Little Owl 54 c (Grey Owl) Khada 55 c (Iridos) Kami 57 c (Iridos) General Sherman 50 c (General Grant) Lanisa 51 f (General Grant) Blue Grotto 53 c (Blue Domino) Sala 44 c (Grey Owl) Elvira 45 f (Rissalix) Endora 50 f (General Grant) Eloia 52 f (General Grant) Oliviera 53 f (Grey Owl) Grey Elf 54 f (Grey Owl) Rhavi 48 c (Rissalix) Kumara 50 f (Grey Owl) Suvorov 42 c (Rissalix) Grey Fairy 44 f (Grey Owl) |
Lady Wentworth was unhappy when she learned Lady Yule
was using Razina for purebred breeding. For the
next several years, Lady Yule sent her mares to outside stallions, but did
not have access to those at Crabbet. Instead she used horses of entirely or
largely Crabbet blood. These horses included C.W. Hough's Nuri
Sherif (*Nureddin II x Sheeba) and Akal (Shelook x In 1932 the Hanstead mare band expanded. Mr. and Mrs. Kent, known to the pony breeding fraternity, visited Crabbet and purchased two young mares. In less than a week the mares turned up at Hanstead. They were chestnut Astrella (Raseem x Amida) and grey Naxina (Skowronek x Nessima). Lady Wentworth had used a similar ploy to acquire Skowronek in 1920. The ice between Lady Wentworth and Lady Yule broke not long after this episode, and in 1933 Lady Yule sent all five of her Arabian mares to Crabbet for breeding. The 1934 foal crop included Hanstead's first sire
prospects, the greys Raktha
and Grey Owl. Of the two colts produced prior to 1934, Halil
Sherif was gelded "as he had not got a perfect
Arab head or eyes." (2) He was hunted with the Heythrop
Hunt in 1933-34, jumping anything asked, and later took up dressage, giving a
performance at the International Horse Show, It could be debated endlessly whether the Yules had a knack for choosing sires, or whether they simply had in Razina the beginning of a mare family with which it was scarcely possible to go wrong. Probably both were factors. According to Miss Yule's companion and stud manager, Miss Patricia Wold, Gladys Yule believed in using only the best sires and wanted the Arab Horse Society to inspect the conformation and type of all stallions before approving them for breeding (Spring 1960 Arab Horse Society News, p. 15). To return to Raktha, he
swept the show ring in 1937, and that year it was noted that "much
interest and amusement has been caused by the various opinions as to which is
the best, Grey Owl or Raktha." (3) Although
Grey Owl did leave several lines, 60 years of breeding have proven Raktha the more influential of the two. Lady Wentworth
bought Raktha in 1939, and from 1940 until his sale
to During the 1930s the Hanstead mares continued to visit
outside stallions. Lady Yule patronized Crabbet's Naseem, Raseem, Faris, Naufal, and Naziri. Lady Yule is the only outside breeder recorded in
the stud books as sending a mare to Naseem.
Rosemary Archer explains this was because no other breeders in In 1936 two more sire prospects were born at Hanstead:
Riffal (of whom more later)
and Naseel. Naseel was a
classic 14.1 hand grey, sold as a yearling to Mrs. Nicholson in "I was thrilled. I had never ridden an Arab horse before, let alone a stallion, and I just couldn't believe the joy that he gave me." Naseel became a successful sire of children's show
ponies as well as purebreds. Naseel's sire was Raftan (Naseem x Riyala), bred at Crabbet but owned elsewhere. Naseel was invited to make a special appearance at the
Arab Horse Society's 1956
Summer Show, where he and his progeny paraded in front of the
Queen. Another outside horse Hanstead used in the late 1930s was George Ruxton's Algol (Dwarka x Amida), who sired Namilla for Lady Yule. The last time an outside stallion
was used was 1939, when Razina and Nurschida went to Shihab (Algol x In 1938 or 1939 Lady Yule acquired the last of her foundation mares by trading Ghezala to Lady Wentworth for the Rissam daughter Niseyra. Through her son Blue Domino, Niseyra was to be just as important as the earlier acquisitions. Lady Yule seems to have brought home no more than three stallions in her entire career as a breeder. One was Radi, the foal Razina had had in 1925. He was acquired from Crabbet during the early part of the war years and was used at Hanstead before returning to Crabbet. Lady Yule seems to have made a special effort to work Rissam into the herd. In 1940, five out of the six Yule mares were bred to Rissam. No other Hanstead sire ever dominated a single foal crop to this extent. Only Rissam's daughter Niseyra had a 1941 foal by a different horse, although Lady Yule would try her with Rissam the following year -- the only close inbreeding at Hanstead recorded in the stud books. |
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Blue Mint 543 c (Blue Domino) Mintey 56 f (General Grant) *Lucretia 57 f (*Count
Orlando) *Al-Marah Count Mint 58 c (*Count Dorsaz) ASTRELLA 1929 (Raseem x Amida) Sarab 34 c (Naseem) Ariffa 36 f (Raftan) Astrab 39 f (Radi) Rayolanda 41 f (Rissam) Rubiana 42 f (Riffal) The Chief 43 c (Riffal) NISEYRA 1935 (Rissam x Neraida) Champurrado 40 c (Irex) Quaker Girl 41 f (Riffal) Kazarov 44 c (Riffal) Kaba 45 c (Rissalix) Tehoura 46 f (Radi) Blue Domino 47 c (Rissalix) *Radeyra 48 f (Radi) |
Although Radi and Rissam each sired a few important foals at Hanstead, the most brilliant acquisition was Rissalix (Faris x Rissla), purchased from Crabbet in 1940. Known for his quality and brilliant action, a better cross for the Hanstead mares could scarcely have been found. Yet another example of Hanstead's worldwide success despite tiny numbers, Rissalix sired fewer than 20 Yule-bred foals of record, but they include such as *Count Dorsaz, Blue Domino, Mikeno, and Pale Shadow (dam of Bright Shadow). Rissalix was one of the few horses Lady Wentworth later regretted selling, but owing to labor shortages after the start of the war it was necessary to reduce the number of stallions at Crabbet. The decade of cooperation between Crabbet and Hanstead
came to a close toward the end of the war. Lady Yule tried to buy from
Crabbet a colt named Indian Grey, full brother to Indian Magic, but Lady
Wentworth refused to sell. In 1943, shortly after, Lady Wentworth made an
offer on |
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Crabbet
and Hanstead emerged from the war years as rivals, both in the show ring and
the marketplace. The stud was now under the direction of Miss Gladys Yule, as
Lady Yule gave the horses to her daughter in 1946. Lady Yule died on
In the post-war years Hanstead was a mature stud, with a band of 10 to 15 mares and a battery of homebred stallions standing alongside and later succeeding Rissalix and Radi. In addition to Grey Owl, these included:
Riffal, a brown horse foaled
1936, and already a show winner as a yearling. He matured to 16 hands and a
quarter inch. Because most of his Hanstead career took place during the war
years,
his
opportunity at stud was limited, but true to the Hanstead pattern, he achieved
much with his few foals, which included
Suvorov (Rissalix x Razina), as a son of Hanstead's most influential foundation mare and stallion, might have proven an important sire, but he was not fertile.
Sala (Grey Owl x
*Count
Dorsaz (Rissalix x Shamnar) was one of the many
Hanstead horses exhibited under saddle. At the Royal International Horse Show
he was twice awarded the Winston Churchill Cup for the supreme riding horse. He
inherited and passed on a full measure of the Rissalix action. By 1956 he had
also won nine first prizes in hand.
General
Grant (Raktha x Samsie)
carried two crosses to Razina and was typical of what
may be thought of as Hanstead type: a deep-bodied horse of quality, good
balance and substance, and obvious Arabian character. General Grant was later
owned by the Hedleys. He sired many British
champions.
Blue Domino
(Rissalix x Niseyra) ranks among the most famous
horses bred at Hanstead. Although not tracing to Razina,
he seems to have had much the same proportions as, for example, General Grant.
This stamp of horse is also apparent in Rissam, Blue
Domino's grandsire. A dark chestnut color, Blue Domino won acclaim in the show
ring as a young horse and sired a long list of internationally influential
horses. A 1956 Hanstead ad noted that his "stock are very promising, good
movers with good heads."
*Count Orlando (*Count
Dorsaz x Umatella) was the Arab Horse Society's
Junior Male Champion in 1954, and was awarded the Winston Churchill Cup in
1956. He was sold to the
Count Manilla
(*Count Dorsaz x Namilla) represented several
generations of Hanstead breeding on both sides of his pedigree. He won first
prize stallion under saddle at Roehampton in 1956.
Count Manilla was sold to
Rifaria (Rifari x Meccana,
by Riffal) was another horse who stood at Hanstead in
the 1950s. He was one of the few outcrosses Gladys Yule introduced.
Iridos (Irex
x Rafeena) was a son of one of the two new mares
Gladys Yule added to the stud. In 1950 Rafeena
arrived with her Irex filly, *Reenexa.
She was in foal to Irex again, and produced the grey
colt Iridos in 1951.
*Minta was Gladys
Yule's other addition to the stud. A granddaughter of Rissam
and Irex, she was less an outcross than an added
source of lines already tried in the stud.
Lady
Wentworth never had much room for visiting mares, so smaller breeders in
England were grateful to Miss Gladys Yule for making available stallions like
Rissalix, General Grant, *Count Dorsaz, and Blue Domino to the public.
During the 1930s, 40s, and
50s, Hanstead joined Crabbet and Courthouse in dominating the British show
ring. A look at Deirdre Hyde's 40 Years
of British Arab Horse Champions shows nine of the first 40 titles going to
horses bred by the Yules. An additional 17 winners
had a parent bred at Hanstead. Only four horses (Dargee,
Bahram, Sirella, and
Celina) were without any Yule-bred ancestors. Many of Crabbet's
winners were sired by
Gladys Yule served as president of the Arab Horse
Society in 1949. She was also chairman of the Ponies of Britain Club, helping
to preserve
Early in 1957 an article in the Arab Horse Society News noted that 20 Hanstead Arabs had been sold
overseas: four to
Among the young mares and fillies, the late Queen Zenobia's daughters *Zulima, Zena, and *Princess Zia were admired, of which *Princess Zia was probably the most decorated in the show ring.
When Lady Wentworth died in August of 1957, Gladys Yule
remarked "now we can go back to Crabbet." But it was not to be.
Within a few weeks she had also died. The estate taxes owed were reported in
the Daily Mail to be in excess of 3 million pounds under headline "Last of
a vanishing 20,000,000 pound fortune may go in taxes." It was necessary to
reduce the stud. The single largest group sold, consisting of about 14 head,
went to Bazy Tankersley's Al-Marah Arabians in the
Miss Wolf sent a letter published in the Arab Horse Society News for autumn, 1958, explaining the situation with the remaining horses:
"I was left options on some Thoroughbreds, Arabs and Anglo-Arabs and therefore I retained in a small way some of the best of each. Since then foals have increased in number and it will not be long before there are more foals on the way and so I have felt that I must sell some more horses... These are to be sold by auction on November 27th here at Hanstead when all the saddlery, stable and stud equipment are sold.... I shall be moving to Aylesbury.... All the horses and the stud I retain are the property of the Exors. of the late Miss G.M. Yule and so for the time being I shall be the Manager."
Many breeders in
By 1959 Gladys Yule's band of 15 broodmares had been reduced to three. Of these Rafeena died the next year at age 20, and Umatella and Azella each produced one Blue Domino filly for Miss Wolf before moving on to new homes.
Finally just Blue Domino was left. He lived out his days surrounded by Miss Wolf's Thoroughbreds and Anglo-Arabs, succumbing to intestinal cancer in October of 1966. But by then Hanstead breeding was firmly established in Arabian studbooks around the world.
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1) Jack Gannon, "Hanstead Stud," Arab Horse Society News, spring 1957, p. 10.
2) The Journal of the Arab Horse Society, article on Hanstead Stud.
3) Ibidem
Other sources:
Rosemary Archer, Colin Pearson, and Cecil Covey, The Crabbet Arabian Stud, Its History and Influence
Deirde Hyde, 40 Years of British Arab Horse Champions
Erika Schiele, The Arab Horse in Europe, section on Hanstead.
Rosemary Archer, "The Hanstead Stud," Arabians, September 1984, p. 128.
Michael Bowling, "Razina at the Hanstead Stud" in CMK Record, spring 1991.
The Arab Horse Society News, issues from 1956 to 1960.
Undated clipping from the Daily Mail.
The General Stud Book; stud books of the Arabian Horse Registry of America and Arab Horse Society.