Gerry Hindley

Article by Chris Pitt


Gerry Hindley held a jump jockey’s licence between the 1951/52 and 68/69 seasons and rode a total of 19 winners.

He rode his first winner on Provident, owned and trained by Guy Cunard, in a novice riders’ handicap chase at Kempton Park on Wednesday, November 23, 1955. However, he had to wait almost two years before the second came along, Abershaw for Bridlington owner-trainer Clifford Watts in a Market Rasen novices’ chase on October 19, 1958.

But it was another owner-trainer, Fred Cliffe, whose stables were at Messingham in Lincolnshire, who provided Gerry with the majority of his career highlights courtesy of a good steeplechaser named Solray, certainly the best horse Gerry ever rode.

Solray gave Gerry his fourth career victory when dead-heating with Owen Brennan’s mount Chocolate House in a Market Rasen novices’ chase on Boxing Day 1958. Solray won again at Market Rasen in March and then followed up at Stratford two weeks later.

Gerry and Solray began the 1959/60 season by winning a two-horse chase at Wetherby, beating Jimmy Fitzgerald’s mount Bollinger by two lengths. Gerry then won twice more on Solway at Market Rasen and Haydock. Four days after that Haydock victory, the horse gave his owner-trainer his biggest moment when winning the Kim Muir Challenge Cup at Cheltenham, ridden by Mr Nick Upton.

Later that month, Gerry had his only ride over the Grand National fences, his mount being Bollinger – who Solray had beaten in the match race at Wetherby – in the 1960 Topham Trophy. Unfortunately, they failed to complete the course, falling when out of contention.

Anita’s Hope, trained by Gordon Fleming at Brigg, Lincolnshire, won at Southwell in May to give Gerry his fourth winner of the 1959/60 campaign, but he drew a blank in 1960/61 and had to wait until March 1962 before Fred Cliffe’s horse King Mackie gave him his next winner. He then won on Cliffe’s Intermittent at Manchester and rounded off the season by winning on Home Chief at Cartmel.

There was just one winner to show for 1962/63 – Mistress Nell on Easter Monday at Market Rasen – and none at all for the next two seasons. By then Gerry had taken out a trainer’s licence, based initially at Wellingore Hall in Wellingore, Lincolnshire, and then at The Stables, Blankney Hall, Blankney, again in Lincolnshire. It was a small scale operation with around a dozen horses.

Young Mason gave Gerry his first riding success for almost two and a half years when scoring at Fakenham in September 1965, but then there was a three year wait for the next.

In some ways the wheel had come full circle, for Gerry rode his last two winners – both on Blow Less, at Perth and Fakenham in the autumn of 1968 – for Guy Cunard, the man who had provided him with his very first winner 13 years earlier.

He relinquished his trainer’s licence at the end of 1968.


Gerry Hindley’s 19 winners were in chronological order:

1. Provident, Kempton, November 23, 1955

2. Abershaw, Market Rasen, October 19, 1957

3. Bellanta, Market Rasen, September 20, 1958

4. Solray (dead-heat), Market Rasen, December 26, 1958

5. Solray, Market Rasen, March 7, 1959

6. Solray, Stratford-on-Avon, March 19, 1959

7. Royal Encounter, Market Rasen. May 8, 1959

8. Redress, Stratford-on-Avon, May 23, 1959

9. Solray, Wetherby, October 10, 1959

10. Solray, Market Rasen, January 9, 1960

11. Solray, Haydock, March 4, 1960

12. Anita’s Hope, Southwell, May 17, 1960

13. King Mackie, Stratford, March 10, 1962

14. Intermittent, Manchester, April 23, 1962

15. Home Chief, Cartmel, June 11, 1962

16. Mistress Nell, Market Rasen, April 15, 1963

17. Young Mason, Fakenham, September 22, 1965

18. Blow Less, Perth, September 26, 1968

19. Blow Less, Fakenham, October 12, 1968