Rushley Island: Difference between revisions

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'''Rushley Island''' is a small, uninhabited island in [[Essex]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Holland |first=J. |year=2007 |title=Exploring the Islands of England and Wales: including the Channel Islands |publisher=Frances Lincoln |page=92}}</ref>  It is the smallest of six islands comprising an archipelago in Essex, and is privately owned. A seawall was first constructed in the 1780s by John Harriott, and the island has been the object of farming activities since then.<ref>Fautley, M. P. B. and Garon, J. H., ''Essex Coastline: Then and Now'' (Potton Publishing, 2004), {{ISBN|978-0954801007}}, pp. 168, 190–192.  [https://books.google.com/books?id=Hwl1Tefe1q4C&pg=PA191 Excerpts available] at Google Books.</ref><ref>{{cite DNB|wstitle=Harriott, John|volume=24}}</ref>
'''Rushley Island''' is a small, uninhabited island in [[Essex]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Holland |first=J. |year=2007 |title=Exploring the Islands of England and Wales: including the Channel Islands |publisher=Frances Lincoln |page=92}}</ref>  It is the smallest of six islands comprising an archipelago in Essex, and is privately owned. A seawall was first constructed in the 1780s by John Harriott, and the island has been the object of farming activities since then.<ref>Fautley, M. P. B. and Garon, J. H., ''Essex Coastline: Then and Now'' (Potton Publishing, 2004), {{ISBN|978-0954801007}}, pp. 168, 190–192.  [https://books.google.com/books?id=Hwl1Tefe1q4C&pg=PA191 Excerpts available] at Google Books.</ref>


The local racehorse trainer and one-time Rushley Island owner, Frank Threadgold, once bred a horse which he named after the island. Born in 1976 she was a bay mare with horseracing parents called Crooner and Vicki Ann. She was later trained at the famous Newmarket track by Mr. H. C. Westbrook and was entered as a two-year-old for four races, mainly over a distance of six furlongs, between September and November 1978. These took place at Yarmouth, Lingfield (twice) and Doncaster. Unfortunately she was not a tremendously successful racehorse, finishing, at best, second from last in all these races, and she was retired for breeding purposes back into the ownership of the Threadgold family at Southend-on-Sea, who have farmed land at nearby Great Wakering since the 1930s. Sadly, she did not prove to be too successful at breeding either, although she did have one colt, a bay called Tudor Rhythm, in 1980, which was never raced. In 1987 she was officially retired from stud and disappeared from the record books.<ref>[https://www.amazon.co.uk/Islands-Essex-Ian-Yearsley/dp/0860255093/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1510085449&sr=8-1&keywords=islands+of+essex "Islands of Essex"] by Ian Yearsley, p.75</ref>
The local racehorse trainer and one-time Rushley Island owner, Frank Threadgold, once bred a horse which he named after the island. Born in 1976 she was a bay mare with horseracing parents called Crooner and Vicki Ann. She was later trained at the famous Newmarket track by Mr. H. C. Westbrook and was entered as a two-year-old for four races, mainly over a distance of six furlongs, between September and November 1978. These took place at Yarmouth, Lingfield (twice) and Doncaster. Unfortunately she was not a tremendously successful racehorse, finishing, at best, second from last in all these races, and she was retired for breeding purposes back into the ownership of the Threadgold family at Southend-on-Sea, who have farmed land at nearby Great Wakering since the 1930s. Sadly, she did not prove to be too successful at breeding either, although she did have one colt, a bay called Tudor Rhythm, in 1980, which was never raced. In 1987 she was officially retired from stud and disappeared from the record books.<ref>[https://www.amazon.co.uk/Islands-Essex-Ian-Yearsley/dp/0860255093/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1510085449&sr=8-1&keywords=islands+of+essex "Islands of Essex"] by Ian Yearsley, p.75</ref>

Latest revision as of 22:28, 15 November 2022

Rushley Island

Essex


A view of Rushley Island
Location

[[File:]|240px|{{{map caption}}}]]

Location: 51°33’58"N, 0°49’52"E
Grid reference: TQ963890
Data
Population: Uninhabited

Rushley Island is a small, uninhabited island in Essex.[1] It is the smallest of six islands comprising an archipelago in Essex, and is privately owned. A seawall was first constructed in the 1780s by John Harriott, and the island has been the object of farming activities since then.[2]

The local racehorse trainer and one-time Rushley Island owner, Frank Threadgold, once bred a horse which he named after the island. Born in 1976 she was a bay mare with horseracing parents called Crooner and Vicki Ann. She was later trained at the famous Newmarket track by Mr. H. C. Westbrook and was entered as a two-year-old for four races, mainly over a distance of six furlongs, between September and November 1978. These took place at Yarmouth, Lingfield (twice) and Doncaster. Unfortunately she was not a tremendously successful racehorse, finishing, at best, second from last in all these races, and she was retired for breeding purposes back into the ownership of the Threadgold family at Southend-on-Sea, who have farmed land at nearby Great Wakering since the 1930s. Sadly, she did not prove to be too successful at breeding either, although she did have one colt, a bay called Tudor Rhythm, in 1980, which was never raced. In 1987 she was officially retired from stud and disappeared from the record books.[3]

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Rushley Island)

References

  1. Holland, J. (2007). Exploring the Islands of England and Wales: including the Channel Islands. Frances Lincoln. p. 92. 
  2. Fautley, M. P. B. and Garon, J. H., Essex Coastline: Then and Now (Potton Publishing, 2004), ISBN 978-0954801007, pp. 168, 190–192. Excerpts available at Google Books.
  3. "Islands of Essex" by Ian Yearsley, p.75