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Norman Wilson was born
at Werribee, Melbourne in 1849 the son of Alexander Wilson, a pioneer
pastoralist who migrated from Ireland in the early 1840s settling in at
Mount Emu in the Western District of Victoria. At the age of 20 he entered
into partnership with his brother Hector and purchased a number of sheep
stations in the Wimmera (Kennell and Vectis), Queensland (Curranuya and
Coogny) as well as part-owner of others (Trawalla near Ballarat); the
partnership flourished and they were believed to have made an enormous
amount of money through sheer hard work. They later “set out to have a gay
time” and toured Great Britain and Europe which included a stay at Monte
Carlo where they managed to turn over £20,000. The Australasian
noted “his slim, upright figure, and just the faintest suspicion of brogue
in his speech, in his heyday might have passed for the original of one of
Charles Lever’s rollicking, hard-riding, and hard-fighting Irish dragoons”.
Prominent in racing circles since the early 1870s, Wilson was a convener of
a steeplechase meeting (“The Gold Cup”) on 24 March 1876 at Dowling Forest,
near Ballarat which resulted in the formation of the Victorian Amateur Turf
Club (V.A.T.C), “a body which is second only in importance and prestige to
the Victorian Racing Club”. In 1878 the club moved its headquarters to
Melbourne and took over the Caulfield racecourse. A member of the committee
from its inception (1876-98) and later as a trustee, contemporary records
regarded Wilson “as the founder of the V.A.T.C”. But it was as a judge that
Wilson is best remembered being appointed to the position on 10 February
1905 and later to the Victoria Racing Club (V.R.C) at Flemington in June
1913 which he held at the time of his death. He also raced a number of
horses but with little success; amongst them were Ringwood
(Australian and Hobart Cups, 1885),
Blue Mountain
(Caulfield Grand
National Steeplechase, 1887),
Bolton
(Ararat Cup, 1893) and
Canary “one of the best jumpers of a period when 5ft fences were
common”. Contemporary writers of the day wrote of Wilson as “a fearless
straight-goer…a splendid type of sportsman and a daring and skilful rider in
his day”. Residing at Coongy - 8 Charnwood Road, St. Kilda, he died
on 1 February 1924 after an illness lasting a few weeks survived by his wife
Susan née Gray; the Coogny Handicap was named in his honour. |

Monumental
Headstone |