Fred Archer
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Death | 138 years ago |
Date of birth | January 11,1857 |
Zodiac sign | Capricorn |
Born | Cheltenham |
United Kingdom | |
Date of died | November 8,1886 |
Died | Newmarket |
Suffolk | |
United Kingdom | |
Career wins | 2,748 |
Spouse | Helen Rose |
Job | Jockey |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 643204 |
The distant scene
A lad of Evesham Vale
Muddy boots and Sunday suits
When Village Bells Were Silent
Under the Parish Lantern
Golden Sheaves, Black Horses
The Cuckoo Pen: Tales of English Village Life Between the Wars
Poacher's pie
The secrets of Bredon Hill
A Country Twelvemonth
When Adam was a boy
Farmers, Craftsmen and Music Makers
The Tibblestone Hundred: Journey Through an English Village
Hay Days: Memories of Country Life in the 1920s
Fred Archer, farmer's son
Fred Archer, Farmer's Son: A Cotswold Childhood in the 1920s
Hawthorn Farm
Sir Lionel
Grain and Chaff Under the Hill
A Hill Called Bredon
Country Sayings
Hawthorn Hedge Country
The Secrets of Bredon Hill: A Country Chronicle of the Year 1900
A Guide to Pershore and Its Environs
A lad of Evesham Vale
Muddy boots and Sunday suits
When Village Bells Were Silent
Under the Parish Lantern
Golden Sheaves, Black Horses
The Cuckoo Pen: Tales of English Village Life Between the Wars
Poacher's pie
The secrets of Bredon Hill
A Country Twelvemonth
When Adam was a boy
Farmers, Craftsmen and Music Makers
The Tibblestone Hundred: Journey Through an English Village
Hay Days: Memories of Country Life in the 1920s
Fred Archer, farmer's son
Fred Archer, Farmer's Son: A Cotswold Childhood in the 1920s
Hawthorn Farm
Sir Lionel
Grain and Chaff Under the Hill
A Hill Called Bredon
Country Sayings
Hawthorn Hedge Country
The Secrets of Bredon Hill: A Country Chronicle of the Year 1900
A Guide to Pershore and Its Environs
Fred Archer Life story
Frederick James Archer, also known by the nickname The Tin Man, was an English flat race jockey of the Victorian era, described as "the best all-round jockey that the turf has ever seen".