Frank Butters
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Frank Joseph Arthur Butters (1878 - 1957) was a racehorse trainer specialising in flat racing who trained in Austria, Italy and England in the first half of the 20th century. He trained for two of the most successful owner-breeders in British racing at the time, Lord Derby and HH Aga Khan III, and was British flat racing Champion Trainer on eight occasions.
Frank Butters was born in Vienna, Austria, in 1878 while his father, Joseph Butters, was training racehorses there. He was educated in Britain but returned to Austria as an assistant to his father. He was interned in Austria during World War I and trained in Italy after the war.
In 1926 he returned to Britain to start a four-year contract as Lord Derby's trainer at Stanley House stables in Newmarket in succession to George Lambton. He trained a number of Classic winners for the Earl and also trained for other owners, winning the Epsom Oaks in 1927 for the Earl of Durham. In 1930 Lord Derby terminated Butters' employment but he set up as a public trainer and when the Aga Khan split with Dick Dawson, Butters took over as his trainer.
He trained for the Aga Khan until forced to retire after a serious bicycle accident in 1949. In that period he trained nine Classic winners for the Aga Khan including Mahmoud, who won the 1936 Epsom Derby in a then-record time, and the unbeaten 1935 Triple Crown winner Bahram. He trained three winners of the Irish Derby for the Aga Khan and won the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe with Migoli in 1948. He also trained the Epsom Oaks winner Steady Aim for Sir Alfred Butt.
He trained 1,019 winners in Great Britain and was Champion Trainer in 1927, 1928, 1932, 1934, 1935, 1944, 1946 and 1949. In 1934 he trained the winners of nine of the 28 races at Royal Ascot. His brother, Fred Butters, was also a trainer and won the 1937 Epsom Derby with Mid-day Sun.
[edit] British Classic wins
- 1,000 Guineas - (1) - Fair Isle (1930)
- 2,000 Guineas - (1) - Bahram (1935)
- Epsom Oaks - (6) - Beam (1927), Toboggan (1928), Udaipur (1932), Light Brocade (1934), Steady Aim (1946), Masaka (1948)
- Epsom Derby - (2) - Bahram (1935), Mahmoud (1936)
- St. Leger - (4) - Fairway (1928), Firdaussi (1932), Bahram (1935), Turkhan (1940)
[edit] References
- Wright, Howard (1986). The Encyclopedia of Flat Racing. Robert Hale, pp43-44. ISBN 0709026390.
- National Horseracing Museum

