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Lilo Blum, Hyde Park Equestrian

October 8, 2019
by the gentle author

‘The first time I rode in Hyde Park was in 1937…’

Born in Germany in 1927, Lilo and her family came to London as refugees escaping the Nazis in 1937 when she was just ten years old, but within a couple of years she had set up her own livery stable next to Hyde Park. Lilo Blum’s Riding Stables flourished for forty-five years as a popular London institution, occupying Lilo’s entire working life and proving an irresistible magnet for any celebrity, jetsetter or socialite who enjoyed a canter in the Park.

My meeting with Lilo Blum came about when her nephew Edward recognised a photograph of his aunt’s stables in Grosvenor Park Crescent in 1952 by Israel Bidermanas published on Spitalfields Life and wrote to me. Naturally, I jumped at the opportunity to interview Lilo at her swish flat in Park Lane with a magnificent view over Hyde Park and hear her triumphant story in her own words.

“I was four or five when I learnt to ride. My brother was three years older than me and I remember he rode in a pony race, and I cried because I wanted to ride as well. So they got me a quiet pony and I rode round the course, quite a few miles behind the others, but at least it kept me quiet. Working with horses runs in our family and my father was a well-known veterinarian. He could tell at one glance if a horse was lame, because in those days they didn’t have x-rays and you had to be able to just say what was wrong.

I started my riding stables in 1943 when I was sixteen years old. I collected threepenny bits in an old whisky bottle and then I went with my father to the big sales at Newmarket where they sold racehorses. We bought one for fifty-five guineas and I called him ‘Pick-up.’ After I had bought him, I thought ‘What am I going to do with him?’ because he was baby racehorse and unbroken, so I couldn’t use him in a riding school. But I was lucky because I had some friends who worked at Knightsbridge barracks and they agreed to keep him in their stable for me.

The sergeant offered to ask his commanding officer if I would be allowed to take my horse riding from the barracks and, luckily for me, they allowed it during the war. The sergeant broke in my horse, and got him nice and quiet and civilised, so people could eventually ride him and I knew he wouldn’t throw anybody off.  Then I sold ‘Pick-up’ to the Huntley & Palmers people and he raced for them and won some races, which was good for me. I can’t remember how much I got but it was enough to buy some ponies and that was how I started my riding stable.

The first time I rode in Hyde Park was in 1937. Before the war, you could see a thousand horses riding down Rotten Row. You had to dress up properly for riding then and the ladies they rode side-saddle – I tried it once, I didn’t like it. There were hundreds and hundreds of stables in the mews around Hyde Park then. I remember when all the mews were horses. It’ll never come back again. After the war, people didn’t dress up for riding any more. Society changed.

I had around twenty horses in my stable and lived for forty-two years in Knightsbridge in Old Barrack Yard, next to The Grenadier. I’ve spent many hours in their with some of our people and I’ve seen a few landlords come and go. If I had a penny for every time people asked me ‘Where’s The Grenadier?’ without question I’d be a millionaire. Most of my friends I met through horses.

I love horses but there were some anxious moments. It was always a gamble because you’d buy a horse in the country yet if it was no good in the traffic you might just as well get rid of it. My father taught me a lot and I had a great friend, an Irish racehorse trainer who was very good at picking out horses.

My favourite horse, we called it ‘Decision’ because we saw it at a sale and my father wasn’t quite sure about it but then the owner asked, ‘What’s your decision?’ He was very popular and he made me a lot of money. He lived to be old and he worked really hard and we thought ‘Well, he’s done well for us,’ so we turned him out in a field but he didn’t like it. He was so used to working and being in the traffic that he died soon after.

With horses, it’s seven days a week, twelve hours a day starting at 5:30am. Often, I would have just locked up and put all the horses away when a whole lot of people would come down, but I would never refuse them. I would unlock the door again, get the horses out and show them all around Hyde Park. It’s nice when people appreciate what you do for them.

Once I started my stable in Grosvenor Crescent Mews, I had loads and loads of famous people coming to ride. Zsa Zsa Gabor kept her horse with us for a little while, but she liked to go one better so she took him down to the Duke of Marlborough in Wiltshire where she galloped all across his lawn and he wasn’t too happy. So she brought her horse back again and rode him out in Hyde Park. Then she decided to go abroad and asked me to sell her horse, and he became the symbol of Lloyds Bank and starred in ‘Black Beauty’ with Vivien Leigh and ‘Knights of the Round Table’ with Robert Taylor and Ava Gardner. A very famous horse.

I remember one day we had our ponies out and the Household Cavalry were training and making an awful lot of noise, so I called Andrew Parker-Bowles, who was officer in charge, and said, ‘You’re upsetting my ponies!’ To be fair he was very nice about it, and he was always very nice to me after that. In fact, one of my horses had an injury and he took it into the barracks to have it treated, so it didn’t do any harm to tell him off.

Topol lived in the house on the corner and we had Jean Simmons & Stewart Grainger at the top of the mews with their daughter Tracy who used to come and mess about with the ponies. Paul Newman came, Raquel Welch was another regular, and Stirling Moss – he lived in our mews, I knew him when he was a kid.

Luciano Pavarotti was a heavy man and he used to sit at the front of the horse, so I said to him, ‘Hey mister, you give my horse a sore back! Sit further back in the saddle.’ Mohammad Ali rode one of our horses in the Park too, but after I shook hands with him I felt mine was going to drop off! Jacqueline Kennedy’s sister’s husband, the Polish Prince Radziwiłł kept his horses with us and that’s how I got to know the Kennedys. I taught the little children, Caroline & John Kennedy to ride but I always had to have a police escort when I took them out.

Sometimes we got these pushy mums. I’ll never forget one lady, she said to me, ‘When are you going to teach my little girl to trot?’ and I said, ‘Give her a bit of a chance, she’s only two years old.’ I told the little kid, ‘Your mummy wants me to teach you to trot,’ and she did it once it, but she couldn’t get the rhythm so she said, ‘Enough now!’ I’ll never forget that but, in time, she turned out good.

I ran my stables until 1988 and it was a great success. Eventually the Duke of Westminster built the Lanesborough Hotel at Hyde Park Corner and he didn’t want any more horses in the mews. It was very disappointing after forty-five years, but life goes on. Everything has changed so much hasn’t it?

It has been an interesting life I must say. You’ve got to make the best of it. I keep telling my friends, ‘It’s a rehearsal not the real thing,’ but they don’t take any notice. I made money and blew money like everybody else. I was lucky I always worked for myself which is a great thing. I’ve done alright. I can’t complain! If I see a horse I like out in the park from my window, I still think ‘That one’s nice, that would have done me nicely.'”

Lilo Blum’s Riding Stables, Grosvenor Park Crescent W1 – as photographed by Israel Bidermanas in 1952. Lilo’s dog Peggy sleeps in the foreground.

The Grenadier, Old Barrack Yard, Lilo Blum’s local for half a century

Archive photographs courtesy © Bishopsgate Institute

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20 Responses leave one →
  1. Su C permalink
    October 8, 2019

    What a very interesting woman! I love it! So glad you jumped on the chance to meet her.
    Su C

  2. October 8, 2019

    I think my father used to hire hacking ponies there, but it’s surely not Grosvenor Park Crescent W1. The ‘main’ road is Grosvenor Crescent SW1, but I’m sure the stables were in Grosvenor Crescent Mews [SW1]

  3. Barbara Rose permalink
    October 8, 2019

    I am astonished because I have spoken to this lovely lady a couple of times in Grosveor Square and to open The Gentle Author’s page and see her there was both marvelous and delightful.
    I hope I speak to her soon so that I can tell her that I read about her!
    Barbara.

  4. Connie Unangst permalink
    October 8, 2019

    Love reading about little known history. This woman lived an interesting life. I am glad she was able to share it with us. Horses in history always makes for good reading.

  5. Eric Forward permalink
    October 9, 2019

    Amazing woman with an amazing life. I’m sure she’s got many more stories to tell.

  6. October 10, 2019

    This is a wonderful article. I was 11 years old when I rode at Lilo Blum’s in 1973. I rode a horse called Midnight along Rotten Row. I remember it vividly. I now run my own riding school in Worcestershire.

  7. October 26, 2019

    Fascinating. I grew up always seeing the horses in Hyde Park, and always longed to be able to ride. I could only watch as they trotted by.

  8. Maurice Levy permalink
    March 16, 2020

    I worked for Mike Taylor as racing mechanic until Mike had a dreadful accident during practice for the 1960 Belgian Grand .Taylor and Crawley had the service station next to Lilo Blum so we used to see Lilo and her brother all the time tending her horses .
    They were great days .I worked there after Mikes accident up until 1966 when I’d had enough of travelling from North London every day ,but never the the exotic cars we worked on for many “locals” and also being Mercedes Benz dealers we maintained numerous embassy cars .As stated in Lilos history ,Raquel Welch lived on the corner directly opposite the garages office .
    One of the notable visors to the stables was Jackie Kennedy with an entourage of men in blue suits with bulges under their jackets. .Richard Johnson was also a resident in the latter time I spent working in that fabulous area .
    I live with great memories of those days and that lovely “old girl” Lilo (who was -of cours a “re3latively” young women back then .Thanks for the memories .

  9. Amelie Charlotte permalink
    April 26, 2020

    My mother lived in Kensington Park Gardens & used to ride at Miss Blum’s stables. Her favourite horse was an ex-racer called Bubbles. I think he was the tallest horse there at the time. I have a couple of photographs of the stables if you’d like to see them.

  10. Wendy Grimont permalink
    September 13, 2020

    Reading this article made me feel so nostalgic! Myself with a group of friends taught riding at Lilo’s for around 5 years. I remember going there at 12 just to help look after the horses and then gradually LILO let me ride for free until the day came to teach riding to others. Worked there 7 days a week. It was my passion. I was the one who took Paul Newman riding and when Zaza Gabor came she wanted to adopt my best friend! Of course when Topol lived there we would all go around singing ‘if I were a rich man’. We had great times and I am still in touch with my friends made there. What a lucky childhood I had.

  11. jacqui whewell permalink
    March 30, 2021

    How wonderful to find and read this.I was 8 when I started to ride at her stables.My horse was a chestnut called Dizzy and George taught me to ride in the Row.I am now 75 and remember it all.Wonderful lady.

  12. May 11, 2021

    My mother, sister and I were so fortunate to ride Lilo’s ponies during the 70s. Lollypop for my sister, Dice for me and gentle Sovereign for my mom. I wound up marrying a Ferrari mechanic and we care for different kind of horses! Still have a photo of my mom and sister standing in front of the stables and I now see there is a Lamborghini and Alfa Romeo in the photo, so possibly Sir Sterling’s spare parking spots.

  13. Mandy Knight permalink
    June 28, 2021

    A Wonderful lady. I met she and Georgina in the late 70s. Georgina taught me to ride. Fantastic people.

  14. Andy Hartman permalink
    October 27, 2021

    My sister Cheryl and I rode with Miss Blum’s group in the early 1960s.
    Cheryl rode Rocket
    I rode Blue Boy ( a biter)
    “Miss Blum, may I canter ahead?”
    What a wonderful Lady who gave wonderful experiences to so many!!

  15. Claire Nichols Zimmerman permalink
    December 11, 2021

    As a child in the 70’s we lived in London for a few years. I would go down to Lilo’s stable almost every day– after school or on the weekend- pretty much any time I could. I would help groom horses and muck stalls and help tourists get onto to their mounts. I got very attached to the horses I spent time with. And every now and then I would get a chance to ride — to help hold a lead rein, or I’d scrounge some money to pay for an hour, or Lilo would generously offer. She was so very kind to me. I was a mess of a child and I think she saw how much the horses meant to my survival. I am forever grateful.

  16. James O'Connell permalink
    January 12, 2022

    I enjoyed reading that, brought back a few memories.

    I worked for Lilo, around 1975/6 mucking out the stables for a while,
    I left, the early starts eventually wore me down.

    I ended up selling hot dogs, at Hyde Park corner, Lilo would ride past,
    I don’t know if she recognised me but never acknowledged me,
    I like to think she didn’t know it was me, we were perhaps 25 yards away,
    it was yards in those days.

    Then one day she smiled at me and the rest of the week was the same, nods and smiles, the following week, she was on her own, and stopped, we chatted and she asked me to come back to work.
    Sadly, I didn’t go back,
    but after reading this I wish I had, she was a fine lady and good to work for.
    Her brother Gerry, a racehorse trainer in Newmarket, used to send up some injured/sick horses, for Lilo to nurse back to health.
    Fine memories, my love of horses has never wained and I think of Lilo, whenever I’m near them.

  17. Liz Bohlke permalink
    October 3, 2023

    Just found this article my sister and I lived in London from 1968 – 1974. Came over from America. Have fond memories of riding around Hyde park corner and onto the park. Never could believe we rode through hide park corner. Kind of Crazy. Was so fortunate to have known Ms. Blum

  18. Lyn A’Court permalink
    February 29, 2024

    I kept my horse Little Gem at Lilo’s Stables I. Grosvenor Crescent Mews and
    at her yard in Richmond in the 1980’s. I really enjoyed those years and the
    Great times we had.

    Mobile 07754662438

  19. Adam Kinn permalink
    May 27, 2024

    My sister & I lived in Lowndes Square in the early 60s, round the corner from Grosvenor Crescent Mews. We would ride regularly around the park setting off from Lilo’s stables. I remember how frightened I was riding out onto Hyde Park Corner before getting into the park. I was featured bouncing up & down on a pony on an Italian travel show called ‘Hello London’!
    There’s wonderful footage of Lilo on a Man Alive documentary about Hyde Park from 1971 available on BBC iPlayer

  20. Traci Joseph permalink
    August 13, 2024

    I used to ride with Lilo back in the late 60’s early 70’s. I also rode Zsa Zsa Gabor’s horse on a regular basis because Lilo bought him. Hs name was Haron. I would take out rides for Lilo when I was 12 or 13 years old It was a bit hairy iding accross Hyde park Corner and you had to put your hand up to stop the traffic coming up Knights bridge from Harrods direction. Those were great days and it is where my love of horses began.
    I believe I also knew Wendy who posted a comment earlier. If I am right Cloudy was her favourirte Horse.

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