Louie Dingwall

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Louie Dingwall (née Louisa Foott) (18931982) was one of the first English female racehorse trainers.

During World War I Dingwall worked as a driver for the Canadian Army who were in Britain preparing to enter hostilities in France. She owned a Model T Ford, possibly a gift from the Canadians, when she moved to Sandbanks in Dorset after the war. At first she lived in a sea-side hut but by hard work moved to a bungalow on Panorama Road.[1]

She built stables and a garage with a petrol pump in a shed close by from where she ran a taxi business with her husband[2] and an independent bus service in the Poole area until the outbreak of war in 1939 when she provided transport for officers stationed in the area.[1][3] She trained horses on the beach at Sandbanks, though her husband owned the licence for the Jockey Club, who looked unfavourably on women licensees.[2]

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