The Grand National didn't start in 1839 - this is the true story of racing's greatest race
Lee Mottershead continues our weekly series by taking us back in time to Aintree - in 1836 rather than 1839

Through 2025, the Racing Post will be telling the history of racing through the stories of the 20 most significant races ever run. Lee Mottershead continues the series by recounting the tale of the first ever running of the Grand National
Part one:
By the time the clock struck two, a crowd of maybe 30,000 people had assembled at what was, and still is, Aintree racecourse. On a beautiful spring afternoon they were waiting to see something the likes of which had never before been witnessed. It was the last day of February 189 years ago and a huge chapter in the history of racing was about to be written.
Read the full story
Read award-winning journalism from the best writers in racing, with exclusive news, interviews, columns, investigations, stable tours and subscriber-only emails.
Subscribe to unlock
- Racing Post digital newspaper (worth over £100 per month)
- Award-winning journalism from the best writers in racing
- Expert tips from the likes of Tom Segal and Paul Kealy
- Replays and results analysis from all UK and Irish racecourses
- Form study tools including the Pro Card and Horse Tracker
- Extensive archive of statistics covering horses, trainers, jockeys, owners, pedigree and sales data
Already a subscriber?Log in
Published on inThe Story Of Horseracing In 20 Races
Last updated
- How a son of slaves was mocked and abused by his peers - but then imitated forever
- 'The killer of the English' - Gladiateur and the day Britain lost control of its greatest race
- The dust-up to end all dust-ups that brought 150,000 to the Knavesmire - with not a public hanging in sight
- The day racing changed forever: how the 1780 Derby sparked a 250-year turf revolution
- The Story of Horseracing in 20 Races: an unmissable new series is ready to launch and we’re celebrating with 60% off Racing Post+
- How a son of slaves was mocked and abused by his peers - but then imitated forever
- 'The killer of the English' - Gladiateur and the day Britain lost control of its greatest race
- The dust-up to end all dust-ups that brought 150,000 to the Knavesmire - with not a public hanging in sight
- The day racing changed forever: how the 1780 Derby sparked a 250-year turf revolution
- The Story of Horseracing in 20 Races: an unmissable new series is ready to launch and we’re celebrating with 60% off Racing Post+