1836: two-year-old season Chapeau d'Espagne raced five times as a two-year-old in 1836, winning twice. She made her first appearance at
Goodwood Racecourse on 29 July when she finished third of the four runners in the
Molecomb Stakes. She did not appear again until the autumn, when she ran four times at Newmarket. At the Second October meeting she finished second, beaten a head by Colonel Peel's unnamed filly in the Clearwell Stakes and was unplaced in the Prendergast Stakes three days later. Two weeks later, she appeared at the Newmarket Houghton meeting, which only went ahead after the course was cleared of snow by a team of a hundred men. The Criterion Stakes was one of only three races possible on the opening day, and Chapeau d'Espagne, ridden by her trainer's brother Samuel Day started at odds of
7/4 against eight opponents. In what was described as a "hammer and tongs" finish, Chapeau d'Espagne won by a head from Fantastic. Three days later the filly won a Sweepstakes over the Abington Mile course, beating two rivals at odds of 1/4.
1837: three-year-old season Chapeau d'Espagne began her three-year-old season with two wins at Newmarket's First Spring meeting. On 25 April she won a Sweepstakes over the Ditch Mile course, beating Mr Batson's filly Voluptuary, with the odds-on favourite Velure, owned by
Lord Exeter in third place. Two days later, Chapeau d'Espagne was one of five fillies to contest the 1000 Guineas Stakes over the same course and distance. Ridden by her trainer John Day, she started the 2/5 favourite and won from Velure, with Comate, another of Lord Exeter's fillies in third. A month after her successes at Newmarket, Chapeau d'Espagne was moved up in distance to contest the Oaks Stakes over one and a half miles at
Epsom Downs Racecourse. She was made 2/1 favourite in a field of thirteen runners. She finished second to
Miss Letty, with Velure in third. Chapeau d'Espagne's form deteriorated and she failed to win in eight subsequent races in 1837. At
Ascot Racecourse in June she finished third to
Mango in the
Ascot Derby, second to Velure in the Windsor Forest Stakes and then finished unplaced in the
Wokingham Stakes. In July at Goodwood she ran four times without success. She finished second in the Drawing-room Stakes, unplaced in the
Goodwood Stakes, second in a King's Plate and unplaced in the Waterloo Shield. In August she was sent to
Salisbury Racecourse to contest a King's Plate which was run in a series of two mile heats, with the prize going to the first horse to win twice. Chapeau d'Espagne finished third to the
gelding Olympic in the first heat and second to the same horse in the second heat.
1838: four-year-old season Chapeau d'Espagne stayed in training as a four-year-old but did not appear in a race until 31 July by which time she had officially entered into the ownership of
Lord George Bentinck. At Goodwood she recorded her first success in over a year when she was ridden to victory by John Barham Day in a Sweepstakes over three and three quarter miles. She cantered to the start for the Goodwood Stakes on the following day, but was kicked by another horse before the start and withdrawn from the race. On 16 August, the filly was sent to Salisbury where she finished second to Mr Herbert's six-year-old horse Luck's-all in a King's Plate over three miles. On the following afternoon Chapeau d'Espagne reversed the form with Luck's-all, beating her older rival in the two mile Salisbury Gold Cup. A week after her exploits at Salisbury, Chapeau d'Espagne appeared at the
Devon and Exeter meeting where she won the Devonshire Stakes, beating Rattle and King of Clubs. Bentinck's filly was at
Weymouth a week later where she finished second to the unusually named three-year-old filly in a King's Plate. Chapeau d'Espagne's last race was at
Abingdon on 12 September. In the two and a half mile Abingdon Cup she defeated , carrying nineteen
pounds more than her younger rival. ==Stud record==