owned L'Abbesse de Jouarre in partnership with the
Earl of Dunraven during her racing career. Lord Randolph and the
Earl of Dunraven owned and raced L'Abbesse de Jouarre in partnership. Churchill's racing colours were a pink shirt with brown sleeves and cap. L'Abbesse de Jouarre earned the nickname "Abscess on the Jaw" during her racing career, owing to the difficulty the public and
bookmakers had in pronouncing her name correctly, leading her to be associated with the phonetically similar phrase. Her trainer Robert Sherwood referred to the horse as L'Abbesse to avoid the pronunciation issue. In her first start at Croydon, L'Abbesse ran unplaced, losing to the colt
Amphion. L'Abbesse won the May Plate Stakes at
Newmarket and two other races. She finished second in the Fernhill Stakes at
Ascot, losing to Hazlehatch. L'Abbesse won £935 during her two-year-old season.
1889: three-year-old season In her first start of the season, L'Abbesse, starting at 20-to-1 odds, won
The Oaks by a neck against the betting favourite Minthe. L'Abbesse started in four other races that year, but did not win again. L'Abbesse finished sixth in the
St. Leger Stakes, won by
Donovan. L'Abbesse was second in the
Gold Vase in June at Ascot, losing to Tyrant, a horse owned by A.M. Singer "of sewing machine notoriety". On 23 July, L'Abbesse was second in the Liverpool Cup, losing to the horse Father Confessor. At
Sandown, L'Abbesse defeated "a big field of sprinters" to win the Princess of Wales's Stakes, and she also won the
Portland Stakes. In 1891, L'Abbesse ran unplaced in the City and Suburban Handicap and won the
Hardwicke Stakes. ==Breeding career==