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    Rene Shadbolt

    René Shadbolt led the only New Zealand contingent to the Spanish Civil War. She and fellow nurse, Isobel Dodds, cared for wounded soldiers, particularly those from the International Brigades, from July 1937 to November 1938.

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Death of Phar Lap

1932 Death of Phar Lap

The champion racehorse Phar Lap has been the source of great trans-Tasman debate and rivalry. New Zealand-born and -bred, Phar Lap raced primarily in Australia. Of his 51 races, he won 37 and was placed second or third in five others. At the height of his career he was as close to a ‘sure bet’ as was possible in the unpredictable world of horseracing. From the autumn of 1930 he won 33 of his last 35 races, including the Melbourne Cup. In the gloom of the great Depression Phar Lap's exploits thrilled thousands of people.

Phar Lap arrived in Australia as a two year old. A bright red chestnut, he grew to be huge 17.1 hands high, earning nicknames such as ‘Big Red’ and ‘The Red Terror’. His name meant ‘lightning’ in the Thai language, and he lived up to it with his ability to finish races with a great surge of speed. While he was no looker, with warts all over his head, this mattered little to the punters. 

Having conquered Australasia, Phar Lap was on the verge of repeating the effort in America. On 24 March 1932 he won the rich Agua Caliente Handicap in California by two lengths and in record time. Invitations to race in the major meetings in the eastern United States flooded in. Unfortunately, Phar Lap died mysteriously on 5 April. There were suspicions that he had been fed poisoned grass, but the real cause was never established.

In death both New Zealand and Australia wanted its share of the champion’s remains. His heart, which weighed an incredible 6.3 kilograms, went to Canberra while the Museum of Victoria in Melbourne obtained his hide. His bones were returned to New Zealand and the complete skeleton is now on display at Te Papa Tongarewa, the Museum of New Zealand in Wellington.