John Oaksey | |
---|---|
Occupation | Jockey, Journalist, Commentator |
Born | 21 March 1929 |
Died | 5 September 2012 (aged 83) |
Career wins | 200 |
Major racing wins | |
Hennessy Gold Cup CGA Foxhunter Chase Kim Muir Challenge Cup |
|
Racing awards | |
Racing Journalist of the Year, 1968 Daily Telegraph Order of Merit, 2003 Peter O'Sullevan Award for Services to Racing, 2008 |
|
Honours | |
OBE Honorary Member of the Jockey Club |
|
Significant horses | |
Carrickbeg, Carruthers |
John Geoffrey Tristram Lawrence, 4th Baron Trevethin and 2nd Baron Oaksey OBE (21 March 1929 – 5 September 2012) was a British , horse racing journalist, television commentator and former amateur jockey. He was twice British Champion Amateur Jump Jockey, before becoming a celebrated journalist and recognisable racing personality both on television and through his charitable work for the Injured Jockeys Fund, which he helped establish. He has been described as "quite possibly the outstanding racing figure of modern times, touching so many via his compelling writing, broadcasting, race-riding and tireless fund-raising".
He was the son of the noted jurist Geoffrey Lawrence, 1st Baron Oaksey and his wife Marjorie, daughter of Commander Charles Robinson, RN. He preferred to be called Oaksey, although Trevethin is the longer-established title. In his broadcasting career, he was initially known as John Lawrence before adopting the name John Oaksey when he succeeded to the baronies on the death of his father in 1971. The Oaksey family seat is the parish of Oaksey in the extreme north of Wiltshire, between Malmesbury and Cirencester.
He was educated at Eton College, where he was captain of the boxing team. At age 16 he spent the summer attending the Nuremberg Trials at which his father was officiating, the family diaries and memoires of which are now on permanent loan to the NCCL Galleries of Justice in Nottingham.
After Eton, he undertook National Service at Catterick and was commissioned as second lieutenant with the 9th Queen's Royal Lancers. He then went up to New College, Oxford to study Philosophy, Politics and Economics. On graduating, he took law at Yale University and, at that point, looked destined to follow his father into the profession.