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Joan Phipps was a trailer blazer in horse
racing, opening new avenues for women jockeys in Canada and New Zealand
particularly. Joan was born in Saskatoon on Aug. 24, 1954. She and her
sister Judy were the two girls in the family of six and she quickly
developed an interest in horses. She spent considerable time around the
Exhibition grounds, helping others with their horses and between the
ages 12 to 16, she was active in the 4H activities and competed in horse
shows.
Carl Anderson, a Winnipeg trainer, gave her
a chance to ride in a Powder Puff Derby; she enjoyed it and became an
apprentice rider. Joan first rode at Winnipeg, then returned to
Saskatchewan where she was the leading jockey in Saskatoon and Regina
during 1972 and 1973.
Joan was 19 years old when she made her
riding debut at Fort Erie, Ontario, and it wasn't long before, she was
riding and winning at American tracks like Belmont, Saratoga and
Aqueduct in New York.
She became a pioneer in New Zealand, winning
the first Ladies Invitational in 1976 and the second one in 1977 and
finally earning the right to compete against male jockeys in New Zealand
in 1977. Joan represented Canada and became the winner of the Ladies
International World Championship at Sao Paulo, Brazil, in 1977 and she
repeated as the champion in 1978.
Joan's
riding career ended in 1982 after a series of six knee operations and,
in 1985, she was offered a position as a steward in Saskatchewan, the
first time such a position had been awarded to a woman in Canada. |