Horsename: | Wings |
Sire: | The Flyer |
Grandsire: | Vandyke Junior |
Dam: | Oleander |
Damsire: | Sir David |
Sex: | Mare |
Foaled: | 1822 |
Country: | United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland |
Colour: | Chestnut |
Owner: | Thomas Grosvenor |
Race: | Epsom Oaks (1825) Epsom Gold Cup (1825) Stamford Gold Cup (1825) |
Wings (1822 - 1842) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse that was the winner of 1825 Epsom Oaks. Her son Caravan won the Ascot Gold Cup in 1839 and her daughter Fiammetta won the French 2,000 Guineas.
Wings was bred by General Thomas Grosvenor and was foaled in 1822 at his stud.
In April during the first start of her career, Wings finished second to Mr Batson's colt Hogarth in a sweepstakes race at Newmarket. In May, she won a Gold Cup against Picton and was sold to Chifney for 250 sovereigns.
Mr Stonehewer's stud was sold on 2 July 1832 and Wings was bought by Mr. Greatrex for 125 guineas.[1] By 1834, Wings was sold to the King and relocated to the Hampton Court stud. On 25 October, the entire Hampton Court Stud was liquidated at Tattersall's. The Classic winners Wings (600 guineas), Young Mouse (360 guineas) and Fleur-de-lis (550 guineas)[2] were bought by Auguste Lupin and exported to his stud farm in Saint-Cloud, France. Wings produced six colts, one filly and one foal of unrecorded sex in England.Wings died in 1842 at Lupin's stud after aborting her Lottery colt.[3]
Wing's best racers were her 1834 colt Caravan and her 1838 French-born filly Fiammetta. Caravan was second in the 1837 Derby to Phosphorus and won the 1839 Ascot Gold Cup. Caravan was later exported to France as a breeding stallion. Fiammetta won the French 2,000 Guineas for Auguste Lupin, his first Classic win, but died in 1842 after dislocating a fetlock joint while running in the Pavilion Stakes at. Wing's 1837 colt Monops was blinded in one eye as a yearling due to an outbreak of "influenza" at the Hampton Court Stud shortly before the dispersal sale in 1837. As a result of the impairment, he was sold for only 46 guineas, but he could see well enough with one eye to withstand training and run, but not place, in the 1840 Derby.
Foals produced in the United Kingdom include:
Foals produced in France include:[4]