344 SPORTING REMINISCENCES [1845 to 



George Carter who was then sixty-seven 

 years old, was retained as huntsman, and Jack 

 Frieker and Will Brice as whippers-in. 

 sir Edmund Sir Edmund Antrobus had fre- 

 Antroims. q uen tly taken the management in 

 the field during Mr. Smith's illness ; and no 

 gentleman could be better qualified to do so, 

 as he had been a master of hounds himself, 

 having succeeded Mr. Maberly in the manage- 

 ment of the old Surrey country in 1839. Sir 

 Edmund is a first-rate sportsman and has 

 always been a staunch supporter of fox hunt- 

 ing. 



Mr. joim ^ r - J° nn Day, the well-known 



Day's har- trainer of Daneburv, kept a verv 



ners, 1858. . 



neat pack of harriers, which afforded 

 great sport. He hunted them himself, and 

 was whipped in to by his son and little 

 Judd, who has since distinguished himself 

 by winning several races for the Danebury 

 Stable. This pack was given up in 1860-1, 

 and, I believe, went to Austria. 

 Good runs. The H. H. had an extraordinary 

 ?• H » run from West Tisted, where Mr. 



from \\ est ' 



Tisted, James Stubbs entertained the field 



with his usual hospitality. They 

 found immediately in Ashton Wood and went 



away over Basing Park, racing over the good 



