Eleanor (horse)

Eleanor
Eleanor, c. 1801, in a painting by Richard Denew
SireWhiskey
GrandsireSaltram
DamYoung Giantess
DamsireDiomed
SexMare
Foaled1798
CountryKingdom of Great Britain
ColourBay
BreederCharles Bunbury
Owner1) Charles Bunbury (1798–1821)
2) Mr. Rush (1822–c.1824)
TrainerCox or J. Frost
Record46: 29-8-1
Major wins

Eleanor (1798 – c. 1824) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse bred by Charles Bunbury and was the first female horse to win The Derby. Eleanor also won the 1801 Epsom Oaks among many other races before retiring from racing at age eight to become a broodmare for Bunbury. She produced the stallion Muley, which in turn sired the mare Marpessa (dam of Pocahontas and grandam of Stockwell) and the influential stallion Leviathan which was exported to the United States in the early nineteenth century. Through the produce of her daughter Active (the grandam of Woodburn), Eleanor is present in the pedigrees of 19th-century American Standardbred racehorses.