Earlier Winners
- 1877: Jannette
- 1878: Wheel of Fortune
- 1879: Bend Or
- 1880: Bal Gal
- 1881: Dutch Oven
- 1882: Sigmophone
- 1883: Duke of Richmond
- 1884: Rosy Morn
- 1885: Sunrise
- 1886: Panzerschiff
- 1887: Friar's Balsam
- 1888: Gulliver
- 1889: Golden Gate
- 1890: Siphonia
- 1891: Orme
- 1892: Inverdon
- 1893: Galloping Dick
- 1894: The Nipper
- 1895: Persimmon
- 1896: Chillingham
- 1897: Paladore
- 1898: St Gris
- 1899: Winifreda
- 1900: Handicapper
- 1901: Duke of Westminster
- 1902: Mead
- 1903: Queen's Holiday
- 1904: Polymelus
- 1905: Lally
- 1906: Weathercock
- 1907: Bolted
- 1908: Bayardo
- 1909: Charles O'Malley
- 1910: Pietri
- 1911: Sweeper
- 1912: Seremond
- 1913: Black Jester
- 1914: Pommern
- 1915–18: no race
- 1919: Golden Guinea
- 1920: Sunblaze
- 1921: Fodder
- 1922: Bombay Duck
- 1923: Halcyon
- 1924: Manna
- 1925: Pantera
- 1926: The Satrap
- 1927: Gang Warily
- 1928: Rattlin the Reefer
- 1929: Challenger
- 1930: Four Course
- 1931: Spenser
- 1932: Solar Boy
- 1933: Colombo
- 1934: Bobsleigh
- 1935: Mahmoud
- 1936: Perifox
- 1937: Unbreakable
- 1938: Chancery
- 1939: Moradabad
- 1940–45: no race
- 1946: Petition
- 1947: Birthday Greetings
- 1948: Star King *
- 1949: Palestine
- 1950: Grey Sovereign
- 1951: Gay Time
- 1952: Artane
- 1953: The Pie King
- 1954: Eubulides
- 1955: Ratification
- 1956: Red God
- 1957: Promulgation
- 1958: Hieroglyph
- 1959: Dollar Piece
- 1960: Typhoon
- 1961: Sovereign Lord
- 1962: Romantic
- 1963: Gentle Art
- 1964: Ragtime
- 1965: Sky Gipsy
- 1966: Hambleden
- 1967: Berber
- 1968: Tudor Music
- 1969: Village Boy
- 1970: Swing Easy
- 1971: Sallust
- 1972: Master Sing
- 1973: Dragonara Palace
- 1974: Legal Eagle
* The 1948 winner Star King was later exported to Australia and renamed Star Kingdom.
Read more about this topic: Richmond Stakes
Famous quotes containing the words earlier and/or winners:
“Simile and Metaphor differ only in degree of stylistic refinement. The Simile, in which a comparison is made directly between two objects, belongs to an earlier stage of literary expression; it is the deliberate elaboration of a correspondence, often pursued for its own sake. But a Metaphor is the swift illumination of an equivalence. Two images, or an idea and an image, stand equal and opposite; clash together and respond significantly, surprising the reader with a sudden light.”
—Sir Herbert Read (18931968)
“The two real political parties in America are the Winners and the Losers. The people dont acknowledge this. They claim membership in two imaginary parties, the Republicans and the Democrats, instead.”
—Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. (b. 1922)