Sydney Frederick Galvayne

Sydney Frederick Galvayne
Horse Tamer and Author
Born2 April 1848 (1848-04-02)
Died10 June 1913 (1913-06-11)
Spouse(s)Emily A Westley, Edith Webster Morgan, Sarah Ann Unknown, Gertrude May Atkinson and Emilie Newell Simpson.
ChildrenFrederick Henry George Attride, Albert Vernon Attride Galvayne, Winifred Emily Attride, Harold Frederick Clark Osborne (Morgan), Francis Dorrington Osborne (Morgan), Cecil W R Galvayne, Rita M Galvayne and Nita Beryl Webster Attride.
Parent(s)Henry Attride and Sarah Anne Phillips

Sydney Frederick Galvayne (2 April 1848 - 10 June 1913) was the nom de plume of Frederick Henry Attride, also known as Ralph Frederick Osborne, a well-known Victorian-era horse tamer, and author. He was a renowned expert in the health and well-being of horses and authored four books on the topic. He is best known for estimating the age of a horse by a groove on its teeth. The groove is widely known as the Galvayne's Groove, and is located on the lateral surface of the upper third incisor.[1]

Birth and family[edit]

Frederick Henry Attride was born on 2 April 1848,[2] at Park Road in Peckham. His parents were Henry and Sarah Attride (nee Phillips), and Frederick was the second child of ten children. Henry was a Clerk at the Bank of England.[3]

Early years[edit]

Frederick went to school at the Upper School in Peckham, founded by Dr. John Yeats,[4] for four years and the Manilla College,[5] another Independent Boys School, established by Mr. John Douglas for three years. His schooling was clearly focused on a career in the City of London, like his father and grandfather before him. Frederick was a keen sportsman, both in cricket and athletics. There was a great cricket oval at Peckham Rye near his home and school. He played at least one game at The Oval. His father Henry was a committee member of the Hanover Cricket Club for whom Frederick played. At the time Cricket clubs also participated in athletics where he was a runner in the 440 yards handicap.[6]

The Bank of England[edit]

Frederick followed in his father’s footsteps and became a Clerk in the Bank of England at the age of 18 as an unattached clerk in the Accountant Departments Bank Note Office. However, three years later he was asked to tender his resignation because he made a false statement to the bank about loans that he had taken out.[7] He was then employed as a Brewer's Clerk.[8] [9]

Horse taming[edit]

Frederick, after facing Bankruptcy in late 1872, left the United Kingdom, leaving his wife Emily and two sons, under the assumed name of Ralph Frederick Osborne.[10][11][12] He arrived in Australia in March 1876.[13]

In November of that year, he took on the license of the Albion Hotel in Bank Street, Belfast, Victoria (now known as Port Fairy) in the person of Ralph Frederick Osborne. The advertisement that announced his arrival and appeared in the Belfast Gazette on 10 November 1876, states that, ‘The building is now undergoing a complete renovation and is being refurnished, which will make it one of the most comfortable hotels in the Western District.’[14] He left Belfast some time in 1877.

He became a horseman and acquired his knowledge of horses while in the colony of New South Wales where he bought horses for sale from the Darling River, the Riverina and around Mudgee.[15] He also drove horses between Paramatta and Sydney, Australia. He traveled widely in Australia and spent time in the pastoral areas of Queensland where he had a first-hand knowledge of the Warrego River, Walloon and Banana on the Dawson River, Westwood and Rockhampton in central Queensland and Eton and Bowen further north.[16][17] In May 1878 He also trucked hoses by rail from Wodonga to Melbourne for sale.[18]

In 1879 he went to Sydney and ran a business called ‘F. OSBORNE and CO., Horse Bazaar’ in the Haymarket area. He later moved the business to Melbourne where he married and fathered two boys.[19] It was here that he met Professor Hamilton Sample,[20] an American horse tamer and author who taught Frederick the art of horse taming. Frederick was a good student and used Professor Sample’s teaching to become a horse tamer. He reinvented himself as Professor Sydney Frederick Galvayne,[21] the Australian Horse Tamer.[22] He left Melbourne and returned to the United Kingdom as a new and successful horse tamer.

Frederick arrived in London six months before Sample did. Sample on his return to London found that Frederick was using his horse taming system and had his own horse taming show. He demanded that Frederick become part of his horse taming show otherwise, he would let it be known that Frederick had breached their confidentially agreement. Frederick must have introduced his brother-in-law, George Sexton, known as Franklin, a clerk, to Sample and then Frederick and Sexton joined Sample's entourage. It appears that during that time Sexton learned 'the system’ from Sample. Subsequently, Frederick and Sexton fell out[23] and parted ways. Later, Sexton ‘burst on the world’[24] as 'Professor Leon the celebrated Mexican Horse Tamer' with his own horse taming show.[25] It looks like as a publicity stunt Frederick challenged Sexton to a horse-breaking contest. It seems as though the challenge was never taken up.[26]

Frederick was known as a scientific and humane horse tamer using a humane system of training unbroken or vicious horses that utilized the horse’s strength against itself.[27] He held over 300 classes teaching these methods and in 1887 appeared before Queen Victoria. He is also known for "Galvayning", a horse-taming method he invented in which the horse's head was tied to its tail causing it to spin around until it quieted down.[28][29] On the outbreak of the Second Boer War in 1899, Frederick, using the name Sydney Galvayne, volunteered for active service. He left for South Africa to serve in the Army Remount Service as a farrier and was appointed an honorary lieutenant and horse breaker.[30] He was awarded the Queen's South Africa Medal with four clasps (Cape Colony, Orange Free State, Transvaal, and Natal).[31]

Author[edit]

During his lifetime Frederick wrote four books[32] on horses under the name of Sydney Galvayne. First was, Horse dentition: showing how to tell exactly the age of a horse up to thirty years published in 1885. This book is still used in horse dentistry today.[33] The second was, The horse: its taming, training, and general management: with anecdotes, &c., relating to horses and horsemen published in 1888.[34] Third, War horses present & future: or, Remount life in South Africa in 1902[35] and finally The XXth century book on the horse in 1905.[36] This book also contained a Practical Treatise on Training Ponies and Playing Polo, by his son Fred. Galvayne, born Frederick Henry George Attride. He also wrote articles for newspapers.[37]

Controversy[edit]

The method of aging a horse called the Galvayne's Groove which he claimed as his invention was actually promoted by Professor Hamilton Sample[38] in his book, The Horse and Dog: Not as They are But as They Should Be in 1882,[39] where he demonstrated ‘how to tell a horses age up to 21 years’. It can be drawn from this that Frederick was not the originator of this theory; however, he made it his own, and the groove on the horses’ tooth is still called the Galvayne Groove today.[40]

Marriage and children[edit]

Frederick was married five times and had eight children.[41]

Death[edit]

He died on 10 June 1913 in Ovington, Hampshire, England.[42]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ "Aging Horses by Their Teeth".
  2. ^ England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1837-1915
  3. ^ See Bank of England Archives
  4. ^ "Independent boys' schools".
  5. ^ "Independent boys' schools".
  6. ^ See The Sportsman, South London Press and Bells Life in London and the Sporting Chronicle.
  7. ^ See Bank of England Archives
  8. ^ See Bank of England Archives
  9. ^ See baptism record for Albert Vernon Attride and Winifred Emily Attride 8 June 1873
  10. ^ "Field Theatre Group - Origins of 'horse whispering'".
  11. ^ McCarthy, PH. Galvayne: The mystery surrounding the man and the eponym, 1987
  12. ^ Hayes, M. Horace, Among Men and Horses, 1894
  13. ^ Victoria, Australia, Assisted and Unassisted Passenger Lists, 1839–1923.
  14. ^ See Belfast Gazette. 10 November 1876
  15. ^ Gympie Times and Mary River Mining Gazette (Qld.: 1868 - 1919)Saturday 9 June 1900 - Page 3
  16. ^ McCarthy, PH. Galvayne: The mystery surrounding the man and the eponym, 1987
  17. ^ Hayes, M. Horace, Among Men and Horses, 1894
  18. ^ Mc Carthy, PH. Galvayne: The mystery surrounding the man and the eponym, 1987
  19. ^ He married Edith Webster Morgan on 23 Mar 1882 and was divorced on 2 Dec 1884.
  20. ^ "Field Theatre Group - Origins of 'horse whispering'".
  21. ^ "Frederick Henry Attride – fiction and an attempt at the truth". 5 January 2014.
  22. ^ Zabawski, Evan (April 2019). "Galvayne's groove". Tribology & Lubrication Technology. 75 (4): 8. ProQuest 2199153737.
  23. ^ Hayes, M. Horace, Among Men and Horses, 1894
  24. ^ Hayes, M. Horace, Among Men and Horses, 1894
  25. ^ Hayes, M. Horace, Among Men and Horses, 1894
  26. ^ https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/3311573
  27. ^ http://assets.yukonarchives.ca/YAA_Newsletter_2009_09.pdf
  28. ^ "Galvayning, 1870s-1930s | University of Edinburgh Archive and Manuscript Collections".
  29. ^ Wallace, Robert (1911). "Horse" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). pp. 712–725 see page 725. Breaking.—Systematic breaking begins at about the age of two years, and the method of subduing a colt by "galvayning" is as good as any....
  30. ^ Galvayne, Sydney (1902). War Horses Present and Future: Or, Remount Life in South Africa. R. A. Everett. OCLC 867743047.[page needed]
  31. ^ McCarthy, PH. Galvayne: The mystery surrounding the man and the eponym, 1987, page 334.
  32. ^ https://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/lookupname?key=Galvayne%2C%20Sydney
  33. ^ "Equine Dentistry (Third Edition) PDF | PDF | Tooth | Dentin".
  34. ^ "The horse, its taming, training and general management: With anecdotes, &c., relating to horses and horsemen / By Sydney Galvayne".
  35. ^ Galvayne, Sydney (1902). War Horses Present and Future: Or, Remount Life in South Africa. R. A. Everett. OCLC 867743047.[page needed]
  36. ^ Galvayne, Sydney (1905). The XXth Century Book on the Horse. R. Atkinson. OCLC 890571172.[page needed]
  37. ^ The Horse. HOW TO MOUTH AND EDUCATE COLTS., Australian Town and Country Journal, Saturday 8 October 1892 - Page 23 (BY SYDNEY GALVAYNE.)
  38. ^ McCarthy, PH. Galvayne: The mystery surrounding the man and the eponym, 1987
  39. ^ [San Francisco, Self-published, 1882].
  40. ^ See for example this article in 2020 https://nevadanewsgroup.com/Content/NEWS-Homepage-Rotator-/NEWS-Homepage-Main/Article/Determining-age-of-horses-by-their-teeth/31/175/43545
  41. ^ https://www.ancestry.com.au/family-tree/person/tree/83385834/person/38475841494/facts
  42. ^ See England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858-1966.

References[edit]

  • Australian Town and Country Journal, A new market for horses, Sydney, 2 July 1892.
  • Australasian Pastoralists Review, Inventions & Works of Sydney Galvayne, Scientific and Humane Horse Tamer and Educator.
  • Australasian, Turf Gossip, Melbourne, 7 May 1887.
  • Bank of England Archives, London.
  • Bedfordshire Mercury, Court Reports, 15 Jan 1904.
  • Bolton, D.K., Croot, P.E.C. & Hicks, M.A. Willesden: Economic history, A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 7, Acton, Chiswick, Ealing and Brentford, West Twyford, Willesden, London, 1982, pp. 220–228.
  • Evening News, Sample the horse Tamer, 19 June 1885, Page 5.
  • Galvayne, S. Horse dentition: showing how to tell exactly the age of a horse up to thirty years. Thomas Murray & Son, Glasgow, 1885.
  • Galvayne, S. The horse: its taming, training, and general management: with anecdotes, &c., relating to horses and horsemen. Thomas Murray & Son, Glasgow,1888.
  • Galvayne, S. War horses present & future: or, Remount life in South Africa. 1902.
  • Galvayne, S. The XXth century book on the horse. Robert Atkinson Limited, London, 1905
  • Hayes, M.H., Among men and horses, T. Fisher Unwin, London, 1894.
  • Leader, Literature, Melbourne, 23 August 1902.
  • London Evening Standard, The law courts, London, 30 June 1893.
  • London Gazette, Bankruptcy, 10 December 1875, page 8284.
  • Lynch, J. Teeth Are the Reason To 'Never Look a Gift Horse in the Mouth', Mackinac Town Crier, 9 February 2008
  • Nottingham Evening Post, Libel on a horse trainer, 30 June 1893.
  • Ramey, D., Aging the Horse (or not), 10 January 2016.
  • Sample, H. The horse and dog, 1882.
  • South Wales Echo, An interview with Mr. Galvayne, 18 August 1890.
  • South Australian Register, Horse Breaking Extraordinary, 4 January 1886.
  • Sporting Times, Northern cracks, 9 August 1902.
  • Sporting Life, Horse Taming by Professor Leon, 19 April 1890.
  • Supreme Court Notes, Morgan V’s Osborne, 15 December 1884.
  • Swindon Advertiser and North Wilts Chronicle, Under the Patronage of Her Majesty the Queen, Sydney Galvayne, The King of Horse Tamers, 16 June 1888.
  • Thanet Advertiser, Alleged False Pretenses, 21 March 1914.
  • The Herald, Osborne v's Osborne, Melbourne, 1 November 1884.
  • The Scotsman, Galvayne and his system, 13 December 1912.
  • The Telegraph, The courts, Melbourne, 13 October 1883.
  • Western Mail, It was an Australian who discovered a useful aid to judging the age of horses, Perth, 3 Oct 1946.
  • Yarmouth Independent, The Theater Royal, 2 August 1890.
  • Zabawski, E. Galvayne’s Grove - Why you should not look a gift horse in the mouth? Tribology & Lubrication Technology, April 20.