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Touching Tribute To Melbourne Cup King Bart Cummings

For the first time in decades, the world’s most iconic race is being run without Bart Cummings, the man who won it more times than anyone.

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The 12-time Cup winner died aged 87 on August 30 after leaving an indelible mark on Australian and world racing.

While his stable hasn’t qualified a runner in this year’s $6.2 million event, Bart will still be a big feature of the day, both for the 100,000 crowd expected to cram into Flemington racecourse and the millions watching on TV.

Bart and his beloved family.

Race three is named in his honour, the J.B. Cummings AM Tribute Plate.

Before the big race, son Anthony and Bart’s grandsons Edward and James will be driven along the straight in a 1938 Bently, holding this year’s trophy and the first Melbourne Cup his grandfather won in 1965 with Light Fingers. They will be joined by Anthony’s wife Bernadette and James’s wife Monica.

In the mounting yard James and father Anthony will walk past the jockey silks of all 12 of the patriarch’s Cup winners before handing the trophies over to the Victoria Racing Club [VRC] officials.

A video montage of family photos, iconic images and famous moments of his illustrious racing career will be played on the big screens and beamed to millions watching at home on TV.

“It’s great to see him honoured at the Melbourne Cup for his legendary racing achievements, which we are all proud of,” says Bart’s youngest daughter Anne Marie Casey, who will also be on course for the tribute.

“He had a wicked sense of humour and growing up with him was always fun and exciting.”

While he is known for his racing achievements, Bart was a “real family man”, says Anne Marie, who shares exclusive family album pictures in this story for The Carousel readers.

Bart and co-owner Lloyd Foyster (Robyn Foyster’s father) inspect their dual Caulfield Cup winner Ming Dynasty.

Bart and devoted wife of more than 60 years, Valmae, also never missed going to church on a Sunday, she adds.

Meanwhile, the VRC is also considering other ways to honour Bart at Flemington so his great racing legacy lives on, including the creation of a Cummings Corner.

“It’s pretty touching that people can all come together with a common respect,” adds grandson James.

*Photographs provided with the permission of Bart Cummings’ daughter Anne Marie Casey

Categories: News
Robyn Foyster: Robyn Foyster is a multi-award-winning journalist, media executive, and the owner and publisher of The Carousel, alongside the Women Love Network (which includes Women Love Wellness, Women Love Travel, and Women Love Tech). At the forefront of digital lifestyle and tech publishing, Robyn was named the 2025 Winner of the Samsung IT Journalism Award for Best Corporate Content and is a 2026 Lizzies Finalist. Voted one of B&T’s 30 Most Powerful Women In Media, she previously served as the Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of Australia’s three biggest flagship magazines—The Australian Women’s Weekly, Woman’s Day, and New Idea—and was a senior executive at the Seven Network. A sought-after speaker and an eight-year judge for the Telstra Business Awards, Robyn remains dedicated to championing women's voices across lifestyle, wellness, and technology.
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