London's most urban riding school transforms lives through horses
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on March 13, 2026
3 min readLast updated: March 13, 2026

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on March 13, 2026
3 min readLast updated: March 13, 2026

Ebony Horse Club, a riding school nestled between housing blocks and train tracks in Brixton, offers free horse riding to disadvantaged local youth, building confidence and life skills—transforming an urban landscape into a therapeutic, empowering space.
By Sarah Young and Will Russell
LONDON, March 13 (Reuters) - Sandwiched between social housing blocks and busy train tracks in south London is Britain's most urban riding school, where children from disadvantaged backgrounds learn to ride horses as part of a project aimed at improving their wellbeing.
About 160 children each week attend the Ebony Horse Club, a 30-year-old charity in the Brixton area of the capital which ranks amongst the most deprived in England and is a hotspot for knife crime.
Outside the stables, opened in 2011 by Queen Camilla, nine-year-old Matthew Sanchez shovelled horse dung into a wheelbarrow before his lesson.
Like many of the children who come for classes, he had never encountered a horse before. But riding teacher Rachel Scott-Hayward, 37, said the children grow in confidence over weeks, learning to ride, grooming the animals and mucking out the stables.
Nylah Murray Charles, aged nine, said she was nervous before trotting on a horse for the first time.
"I got scared a bit, but I was like maybe I should just give it a try... when I tried, it was actually great and I had fun," she said.
The club is an oasis of rural charm in Brixton, about three miles (5 km) from central London, where the smell of hay hangs in the air. Lessons are free - a contrast to similar stables in wealthier parts of the city, where a 30-minute class can cost around 50 pounds ($67).
Scott-Hayward said while horse riding was traditionally "a white, upper-class hobby", the charity made it accessible to local children, about 45% of whom identify as being from an ethnic minority.
The stables have become a home-from-home for Shanice Reid, 29, since she first learnt to ride with the project as a schoolgirl. She now teaches at the club, and said it offers "somewhere to escape" for those with difficult home or school lives.
Between 2010 and 2019, about a third of London's youth clubs closed due to cuts to public funding, shrinking services for young people just as the pandemic hit.
Scott-Hayward said that horse riding can also be an antidote to the anxiety that she increasingly sees in children who spend a lot of time on screens and social media.
"When you're on a horse, you can't really think about too much else," she said.
($1 = 0.7466 pounds)
(Reporting by Sarah Young and Will Russell; Editing by Ros Russell)
The Ebony Horse Club is a charity in Brixton, south London, providing free horse riding lessons to children from disadvantaged backgrounds.
The club helps children grow in confidence, improve wellbeing, and offers an escape from challenging home or school environments.
The club is open mainly to local children, about 160 each week, many of whom have never encountered horses before.
Yes, lessons at the Ebony Horse Club are free, making horse riding accessible to children who might not otherwise afford it.
Riding at the club helps children reduce anxiety and gives them a distraction from the stresses of daily urban life.
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