Queen Charlotte Fillies' Stakes

Queen Charlotte Fillies' Stakes
Listed race
LocationChelmsford City Racecourse
Great Leighs, England
Race typeFlat / Thoroughbred
SponsorLouis Roederer
WebsiteChelmsford City
Race information
Distance7f (1,408 metres)
SurfacePolytrack
TrackLeft-handed
QualificationFour-years-old and up fillies and mares
Weight9 st 0 lb
Penalties
7 lb for Group 1 /2 winners*
5 lb for Group 3 winners *
3 lb for Listed winners *
* since 31 August 2021
Purse£100,000 (2024)
1st: £44,560
Queen Charlotte Fillies' Stakes
2024
Red, white sash, royal blue cap White, red sash, red and white striped cap White and royal blue (quartered), white sleeves, royal blue seams, check cap
Vetiver Cloud Cover Zenga
Previous years
2023
Royal blue Black and white (halved), sleeves reversed, red cap Green, gold sleeves, white cap
White Moonlight Queen Aminatu Hodd's Girl
2022
Royal blue Grey, black seams, black cap, grey pom pom Grey
Soft Whisper Bounce The Blues Improvised
2021
Red, yellow star Terracotta, black cap Dark blue, large yellow spots
Highfield Princess Double Or Bubble Shimmering Dawn
2020-2018
2020
Dark blue, white sleeves and cap Emerald green, black collar, cuffs and cap Black, white spots, black sleeves, white cap
Miss Celestial Billesdon Brook Farzeen
2019
Emerald green, yellow star, red sleeves and cap Dark blue, large yellow spots Light blue, white hollow box, light blue sleeves and cap
Billesdon Brook Crossing The Line Solar Gold
2018
Dark blue, emerald green stars, white sleeves, emerald green stars, dark blue cap, emerald green star Royal blue Grey
Carolinae Belle Boyd Marie Of Lyon
 

The Queen Charlotte Fillies' Stakes is a Listed flat horse race in Great Britain open to fillies and mares aged four years or older. It is run over a distance of 7 furlongs (1,408 metres) at Chelmsford City in June.

The race was created as a new Listed race in 2018.[1] and is the highest-graded race belonging to Chelmsford City. The title commemorates the Queen Charlotte Stakes, a race run at Chelmsford Racecourse in the 18th and 19th centuries. The new race required royal approval for the title, which carries the name of Queen Charlotte, the consort of George III.[2]

  1. ^ "Progress continues on stayers' project following further Pattern race upgrades". British Horseracing Authority. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  2. ^ Porteous, Lewis. "Chelmsford to stage richest evening meeting in UK as prize fund pips Sandown". Racing Post.