![cli457.badm_145](https://article-imgs.scribdassets.com/nz3jnx7pccg27pl/images/file43CAFV6H.jpg)
The pioneering professional
SHEILA WILLCOX was not the first female winner—that was Margaret Hough in 1954—but she was ahead of her time in her rigid methodology (which still holds good today) and professional attitude to what was then an amateur sport; she certainly gave no quarter to rivals. In 1959, she beat David Somerset (later the 11th Duke of Beaufort and Badminton’s host), who worked full time as an art dealer. This was despite his children, including the present Duke, jumping up and down beside the showjumping ring excitedly yelling at her: ‘Go on, knock one down!’
Willcox’s hattrick of wins (1957–59) remains a record, so difficult is it to produce a horse for this famously challenging competition, let alone win it. However, she had a tetchy relationship with team selectors and was forever resentful of missing out on an Olympic