24/05/2026
The pub where the race finished at the front door.
The race track was through the scrub behind the Border Inn Hotel in Apsley. The straight ran through the settlement on the dirt track. And the finishing post? Right at the front door of the pub.
That's not a metaphor. That was the actual course design β by the publican.
His name was Joseph Botterill. And as the enterprising Border Inn publican, he made sure the finish line was not far from his door. Whether thirsty punters needed convincing to come inside after the race is not recorded. We suspect they did not.
The year was 1855. The Apsley Racing Club is the oldest surviving racing club in Victoria β and it predates the Melbourne Cup by six years.
Famous poet and jockey Adam Lindsay Gordon regularly rode in those races β the same man who later became one of the most celebrated voices in Australian literature, whose bust sits in Westminster Abbey, and who reportedly leapt his horse over the hitching rail of the Royal Oak Hotel in Penola for fun.
The 1871 races were shrouded in controversy when the winning jockey was pulled off his horse and attacked by Naracoorte racegoers who had placed their money on the beaten favourite.
The Border Inn itself closed in 2011. A syndicate of 23 local farming families from 12 households banded together in 2014 and bought it back β because nobody else was going to save them. "We drew a line in the sand," one of them said. "If we want to be saved as a community we knew we'd have to do it ourselves."
The pub is open again. The town is alive again. And the front door still stands β right where the horses used to finish.
Some pubs are worth saving. This one always was.
π Border Inn Hotel, Apsley VIC. Est. 1850.