Norah Wilmot (1889–1980) was the first British woman horse trainer to officially train a winning horse. Her historic win came with her filly Pat, at Brighton in August 1966, just one day after she became one of the first two women to be granted a training licence by the Jockey Club. She was the eldest daughter of racehorse trainer Sir Robert Wilmot, 6th Baronet (1853–1931) and his second wife Eleanor Georgiana, née Hare.
Before 1966 women could only train in an unofficial capacity, and were forced to employ men to hold licences on their behalf or have licences in their husbands' names. In the unmarried Wilmot's case "her" licence was held by her successive horse groom: Rickards, Metcalfe, Swash, and finally Bob Greenhill. Although Wilmot had successfully trained racehorses since inheriting Binfield Grove Stud, Bracknell in 1931, had been her father's assistant trainer for twenty years before his death, and counted the Goodwood Cup and the Doncaster Cup, with Haulfryn, in 1937 among her uncredited wins, she was not an officially acknowledged trainer. Since inheriting her father's stable Wilmot had frequently applied to the Jockey Club for a training licence, and each time her request had been summarily declined.
This situation was often unpopular with the racegoing public, especially as Wilmot's patrons included Queen Elizabeth II. On one occasion when Wilmot's multiple 3 yr old winner in 1961, No Fiddling, won at Kempton, Wilmot who trained No Fiddling for one of her greatest supporters, Captain George Drummond, the crowd had chanted her name, and the royal racing manager, Captain Charles Moore, had personally, defying Jockey Club rules, taken Wilmot into the unsaddling enclosure at Kempton to stand beside her winning horse in the manner of a male trainer. Wilmot produced another 3 yr old winner for Capt Drummond with Don't Tell at Folkestone in 1964.
In 1963, Elizabeth II sent her horse, Night Watch, to Wilmot to train, defying the Jockey Club by including "a WOMAN (sic) among her trainers for the coming flat-racing season" according to the Daily Herald. in 1964, Wilmot trained the Queen a winner with the horse Don’t Tell, who won at Folkestone.
On 3 August 1966, one of Norah Wilmot’s horses won at Brighton Racecourse, making her the first official woman trainer of a winning horse.
Besides Halfryn, Wilmot's most notable horses were Halcyon Gift and Squander Bug.
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