22/05/2025
Peshawar Vale Hunt - Staff and the Hounds (1935) Photographed by Flt Lt A.J. Kennedy, RAF, this evocative image captures the present-day Garrison Park, with a camel caravan on the old Qafila Road. In the distance, the distinctive three-toothed silhouette of Tatara Peak rises against the horizon.
The Peshawar Vale Hunt (PVH) was a sporting tradition introduced in the North-West Frontier of British India. Established along the lines of the classic English fox hunt, the PVH catered to British officers and civilians posted in Peshawar, providing them a taste of the countryside pursuits they missed back home. However, lacking the native fox, the hunt turned to the jackal, considered less elusive than the fox, but a suitable enough quarry to recreate the theatre and pageantry of the chase.
More than mere sport, the PVH reflected the British penchant for replicating homegrown customs in foreign settings, often with an eccentric flair. Clad in traditional red coats and mounted on fine horses, the hunters rode across the arid plains and shrubbery surrounding Peshawar, accompanied by hounds. It was as much a social event as it was a hunt. It was part ritual, part recreation, and part imperial theatre. The PVH is now a forgotten memory of the colonial life in the Frontier. Portraits of hunt masters still hang on the walls of the Peshawar Club, which served as the headquarters of the PVH until the 1950s. The former kennels became the site of a school run by Catholic brothers (St Mary's). The summer PVH kennel at Garial in Murree still survives.
The hunt took place during the winter months, usually starting early in the morning. One of the enduring traditions was the grand Hunt Ball, held annually around Christmas, which became a major social event in the town's calendar. Among all the hunts in British India, the PVH was regarded as the most prestigious. Established in the 1870s, it continued for several decades, eventually coming to an end a few years after the creation of Pakistan, in the 1950s.
(With special thanks to Ken Kennedy, son of Flt Lt A.J. Kennedy, for sharing this remarkable photograph)