Background
Charlie Mills was born as one of the six sons of an Irish horse trainer Anthony Mills.
Charlie Mills was born as one of the six sons of an Irish horse trainer Anthony Mills.
Mills was one of the most legendary harness racers in Europe during his long career that lasted from the 1900s to the early 1960s. He gained a total of 4 364 victories as a driver, trainer or breeder. Mills had a great influence on the development of German harness racing before the World World War World War II Two of his most famous horses were the American bred Walter Dear and French Gelinotte.
His father came to Germany for working as a trainer at the newly opened Bahrenfeld race track in Hamburg.
In 1931 he started a stud farm named Gestüt Lindenhof in Templin, Brandenburg with a Jewish publisher and horse breeder Bruno Cassirer, who later emigrated to Britain. In 1935 Mills acquired another stud farm in Kremmen.
After the war Mills moved to France in 1947 and had a farm at Senlis, north of Paris. Charlie Mills spent his last years in Switzerland where he died at the age of 83.
In 1966 Mills made a short appearance in a French comedy Le Caïd de Champignol by Jean Bastia.
The film was shot in Senlis. Germany
Deutsches Traber-Derby – Raute (1910), Zora (1925), Lebenskünstler (1926), Plutarch (1934), Probst (1935), Fried (1937), Leo (1938), Dachs (1939), Missouri (1942)
Austria
Österreichisches Traber-Derby – Baka (1919), Plunger junior (1920), Vickerl (1927)
Graf Kalman Hunyady-Gedenkrennen – Tizian (1929), Walter Dear (1931), Rama (1937), Gelinotte (1957)
France
Prix d"Amérique – Walter Dear (1934), Gélinotte (1956, 1957)
Critérium des 3 ans – Élope (1951), Luth Grandchamp (1958)
Critérium des 4 ans – Bleinheim (1949), Chambon (1950), Élope (1952), Gelinotte (1954), Kimono Royal (1958)
Critérium des 5 ans – Volcano (1948), Agramant (1949), Enfant des Houlles (1953), Fortunato II (1954)
Italy
Gran Premio Lotteria – Gelinotte (1956)
Sweden
Elitloppet – Gelinotte (1956, 1957)
Åby Stora Pris – Gelinotte (1956, 1957)
Danmark
Copenhagen Cup – Guy Bacon (1928), Walter Dear (1931, 1932), Gelinotte (1957).