On this date in 1978 the racehorse Red Rum retired from competition. 10 things you might not know about Red Rum.
His name comes from the names of his parents. His dam was Mared and his sire Quorum.
He was born on 3 May 1965 at Rossenarra Stud in Kells, County Kilkenny. His dam’s owner, Martyn McEnery, had taken her to Balreask Stud, near Dublin airport and paid £251.12s for the stud fee and Mared’s board for two weeks.
His first ever race was at Aintree, at the Grand National meeting, though not in the big race itself. The result was a dead heat with a filly also bred at Rossenarra Stud. It was on this day that he first came to the attention of Donald “Ginger” McCain, who would later become Red Rum’s owner and trainer, although the first time the horse came up for sale, he didn’t bid as Red Rum was at that time being touted as a sprinter and McCain’s speciality was steeplechasers.
McCain was a second hand car dealer who trained horses from stables behind his car showroom in Birkdale. He got engaged to his wife Beryl on Grand National day and married her on Grand National Day two years later. Hence they were always at the National, celebrating their anniversary. His lifelong dream was to train a National winner. He was, as he’d say, always on the lookout for “one good horse”. McCain eventually bought Red Rum in 1972 on behalf of a businessman called Noel Le Mare whose lifelong ambition was to own a Grand National Winner. Le Mare paid 6,000 guineas for the Horse.
There was a problem, however. When they got Red Rum home, it looked like, as a car dealer might say, they’d been sold a lemon; for Red Rum was lame. Le Mare had already commented that Red Rum backwards spelled “murder” and that had to be a bad sign. It turned out the horse had pedolostisis, a debilitating and thought to be incurable bone disease, the equine equivalent of arthritis and bone spurs. However, there was one cure and that was training on a beach and in the sea. McCain knew this, having seen working horses recover from it after working on the beach. He was also the only trainer in England who exercised his horses on a beach. As it happened, Red Rum loved the sea and would go in up to his chest any chance he got – and it did the trick. His lameness disappeared.
Comedian Lee Mack was a stable boy before he became famous, and the horse on which he took his first riding lesson was Red Rum.
Red Rum is the only horse to win both the Aintree Grand National and the Scottish Grand National in the same season in 1974. That said, Aintree seemed to be Red Rum’s favourite course where he gave his best performances, often doing less well at other venues.
Red Rum won the Grand National in 1973, 1974 and 1977, finishing second in 1975 and 1976. He was all set to give it another go in 1978, but the day before the race it was discovered he had a hairline fracture which could have led to collapse of the bone if he’d taken part in the race. So he was retired, although he would return to Aintree as a celebrity horse and lead the opening parade after that. In retirement, he earned more from merchandise, opening supermarkets, a roller coaster and switching on the Blackpool Illuminations, than he’d ever won in prize money. Since he was a gelding, his owners missed out on another potential goldmine they could have earned from stud fees.
Red Rum lived to the grand old age (for a horse) of 30. The McCains kept him at their country home in Cheshire until he died on 18 October 1995. He was buried beside the winning post at Aintree, where his epitaph reads “Respect this place, This hallowed ground; A legend here, His rest has found; His feet would fly, Our spirits soar; He earned our love, For evermore.” There is also a statue of him at Aintree.
A Merseyrail train and a fire engine in Southport were named after him.


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