Background
George Dawson was the son of the Scottish trainer John Dawson who won the Epsom Derby with Petrarch in 1876.
George Dawson was the son of the Scottish trainer John Dawson who won the Epsom Derby with Petrarch in 1876.
He was also the nephew of the trainers Thomas Dawson and Mathew Dawson. Despite his background, Dawson did not initially pursue a career in horse racing but went into business and by 1883 was running a successful brewery at Burton-on-Trent. When Mathew Dawson "retired" in 1885, George was invited to take over the stable despite his limited experience.
George Dawson operated Heath House as a private stable for a consortium of aristocratic owners led by the Duke of Portland.
Dawson was given some cr for introducing modern training methods, preferring shorter, faster gallops to the long, slow pieces of work previously favoured. The rest of Dawson"s classic wins came with four fillies, all owned by the Duke of Portland.
Dawson"s run of success ended when the lease on Heath House expired in 1898, and Portland moved his horses to the stable of John Porter at Kingsclere. Dawson took over his father"s Warren House stable in 1900 but was never able to reproduce his earlier success.
He died at Warren House on 14 June 1913.
In 1888, Dawson trained Ayrshire, owned by Portland, to win both the 2000 Guineas and the Epsom Derby, whilst the Duke"s colt Donovan was the season"s leading two-year-old. Although there was no official championship in 1888, Dawson was the leading British trainer in terms of prize money, and the £77,914 won by horses trained at Heath House set a record which stood for forty-three years. In the following season Donovan gave Dawson a second Derby and also won the Street Leger. In 1890 Semolina won the 1000 Guineas and Memoir took both the Oaks and the Street Leger. Mrs Butterwick won the Oaks in 1893 and Amiable took both fillies" classics a year later.
A member of a highly successful racing family, he trained the winners of ten British Classic Races in seven seasons between 1888 and 1894.