Linda Jones (jockey)
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Linda Christine Jones (born 1952) is a New Zealand former thoroughbred horse racing jockey. She was the first woman to be granted a race licence in New Zealand in 1977 and the first in Australasia to achieve four victories in a single day the following year. Jones finished second in the 1978/1979 Jockey Premiership with 18 winners by Christmas 1978. She later became the first woman to ride a Derby winner in each of the Australasia, Europe, and North America continents and the first female to beat professional male entrants at an Australian-registered event. Injury prompted Jones to retire in 1980; she had achieved 65 victories within 18 months. She is an inductee of both the
New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame The New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame is an organisation commemorating New Zealand's greatest sporting triumphs. It was inaugurated as part of the New Zealand sesquicentenary celebrations in 1990. Some 160 members have been inducted into the Hall o ...
and the
New Zealand Racing Hall of Fame The New Zealand Racing Hall of Fame recognises and honours those whose achievements have enriched the New Zealand thoroughbred horse racing industry. History The Hall of Fame's first group of honorees were inducted in 2006, and inductions are he ...
.


Career

In 1952, Jones was born in
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, New Zealand. She partook in the 1970 Powder Puff Derby as one of eleven jockeys in an era when women were not allowed to be jockeys. Jones was later invited to compete at a meet in Brazil in 1975 and told her husband Alan Jones she wanted to be a jockey. She went on to win the 1975 Qantas International Women's Handicap at
Rotorua Rotorua () is a city in the Bay of Plenty region of New Zealand's North Island. The city lies on the southern shores of Lake Rotorua, from which it takes its name. It is the seat of the Rotorua Lakes District, a territorial authority encompass ...
, and was considered New Zealand's leading female jockey. In September 1976, Jones became the first woman to apply for a apprentice jockey licence with the New Zealand Racing Conference (NZRC). The application was rejected on the grounds of her being "too old, married and not strong enough"; they felt she would claim men's jockey's winnings and would not receive the appropriate dressing rooms. Jones and her husband were prepared to go to court, and she led a campaign for improved equality within the racing industry, for which she received hate mail. The
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later passed legislation in the form of the Human Rights Commission Act 1977 banning sexual discrimination. Following heavy pressure from the racing journalist John Costello, the NZRC approved female racing licences in July 1977, and Jones became both the first woman to be granted a New Zealand race licence and the first woman to compete against men in the country. She was apprenticed to her husband, and required to stay apprenticed until 1982 per New Zealand racing rules with her earnings put into a Racing Conference trust. She began riding professionally on 12 August 1978, at
Matamata Matamata () is a town in Waikato, New Zealand. It is located near the base of the Kaimai Ranges, and is a thriving farming area known for Thoroughbred horse breeding and training pursuits. It is part of the Matamata-Piako District, which takes ...
. Jones achieved her first winner at
Te Rapa Te Rapa is a mixed light industrial, large-scale retail and semi-rural suburb to the northwest of central Hamilton, New Zealand that is built on a flat area that was previously the bed of an ancient river, the forerunner to the present Waikato ...
, and received nationwide attention for becoming the first woman in Australasia to win four times on the same day at a September 1978 meeting at Te Rapa. She was also the first woman in the
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to claim victory. Jones rode 18 winners by Christmas 1978 and was second in the 1978/1979 Jockey Premiership. She went on to ride Holy Toledo to victory in the 1979 Grade II Wellington Derby that took place that January, becoming the first woman to ride a Derby winner in each of the Australasia, Europe, and North America continents. Jones later became the first woman to ride a winner over professional male entrants at an Australian-registered event when she rode Pay The Purple to a first-place finish at the 1979 Labour Day Cup at Brisbane in May 1979. That year, she sustained two separate injuries by fracturing her rib and puncturing her lung. Jones had achieved 65 victories as a jockey within 18 months. In March 1980, she sustained a suspected broken pelvis, a fractured vertebrae atop her spine, sprained wrist and concussion in an accident while training at her husband's
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establishment. Jones accepted that she possibly could never fully recover to peak fitness and retired from racing in September 1980. She went into semi-retirement and began training race horses and achieved success with them in Australia in the 1980s.


Personal life

She and her husband have a daughter who was born in 1977. Jones was appointed
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in the 1979 Queen's Birthday Honours "for her contribution to racing and women's rights".


Profile

Jones was listed between . In 1979, she sought not to enter one or two events of a single meeting as she combined her career with a holiday. Jones wrote the autobiography, ''The Linda Jones Story'', in 1979.


See also

*
Thoroughbred racing in New Zealand The racing of Thoroughbred horses (or gallopers, as they are also known) is a popular gaming and spectator sport and industry in New Zealand. History Thoroughbred horse racing commenced soon after European settlement. The first totalisator machi ...


Honours

She was nominated for the 1978 New Zealand Sportswoman of the Year by the nation's
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channel, and received the New Zealand Racing Personality of the Year Award from the
Prime Minister A prime minister, premier or chief of cabinet is the head of the cabinet and the leader of the ministers in the executive branch of government, often in a parliamentary or semi-presidential system. Under those systems, a prime minister is not ...
Robert Muldoon Sir Robert David Muldoon (; 25 September 19215 August 1992) was a New Zealand politician who served as the 31st Prime Minister of New Zealand, from 1975 to 1984, while leader of the National Party. Serving as a corporal and sergeant in th ...
the following year. In 1990, Jones was added to the sporting category of the
New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame The New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame is an organisation commemorating New Zealand's greatest sporting triumphs. It was inaugurated as part of the New Zealand sesquicentenary celebrations in 1990. Some 160 members have been inducted into the Hall o ...
. She was the first woman to be inducted into the
New Zealand Racing Hall of Fame The New Zealand Racing Hall of Fame recognises and honours those whose achievements have enriched the New Zealand thoroughbred horse racing industry. History The Hall of Fame's first group of honorees were inducted in 2006, and inductions are he ...
in March 2010. In April 2019, a retirement village on
Hamilton Hamilton may refer to: People * Hamilton (name), a common British surname and occasional given name, usually of Scottish origin, including a list of persons with the surname ** The Duke of Hamilton, the premier peer of Scotland ** Lord Hamilt ...
's River Road was named after Jones in celebration of her sporting achievements.


References


External links


Linda Jones
Profile at the New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame {{DEFAULTSORT:Jones, Linda 1952 births Living people Sportspeople from Auckland 20th-century New Zealand women 21st-century New Zealand women New Zealand jockeys Female jockeys New Zealand racehorse trainers New Zealand Racing Hall of Fame inductees New Zealand Members of the Order of the British Empire