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28, 1949
made his protestations of love in no mean
voice. The lady replied by whinnying
back.
" It is ze Iov," declared the Chevalier,
and without further ado introduced the
pair. Signorinetta, winner of the Derby
and Oaks of 19J8 was the offspring.
It may have been that the highly-bred
Signorina required an outcross to her own
good breeding, but perhaps, as the Cheva-
lier said, it was " ze Iov," and it is
known that a " love chi.d " often possesses
qualities that do not come from more
prosaic marriages.
The disciples of artificial insemination in
a Brave New World might well take note.
Under our present system natural selection
is barred. It would be interesting to turn
a few Derby winners on to the prairie with
a selection of mares and watch the results.
Maybe all our present theories would be
turned upside down and the pundits of
them confounded. It would not be for the
first time.
No Set Rules
There can be no hard and fast rules, and
the more one delves into the subject the
more true appear the words of Milton:
" The first and wisest of them all pro-
fessed
To know this only; that he nothing
knew."
Many will disagree, and there is no
gainsaying that the late Duke of Westmin-
ster, the late Lords Derby and Wavertree,
the Aga Khan, Lord Rosebery and others
did and do produce high-class winners year
after year. Yes, they had the cash, and so
had plenty of others with very inferior
results.
Luck does not hold for ever and where
luck is reputed to be, there is generally a
well organised plan as well, or some inborn
intuition which few possess. But nothing
daunted they go on.
Look at any bloodstock sales of impor-
tance and you may see gathered round
the ring peers and potentates, men of busi-
ness, men of letters, statesmen and spivs,
bachelors and spinsters, forsaking all other
in search of the four-leaved clover.
There are few who find it, but to those
who see the creation of their brain passing
the winning post at Epsom in front, it
must seem good.
Breeding a Derby Winner
By R. FENWICK-PALMER
tained in the suggestion which implies that
both sire and dam must be able to win
over a distance of ground.
Recently, in the lament for lack of
stayers in this country, a famous breeder
is reported to have said that we were
barking up the wrong tree when we were
demanding more stallions who could win
over a distance. That, he declared, would
produce a slower breed; that it was speed
which wins races, and the need was speed
and more speed.
It is almost impertinent to argue with a
breeder of such proven celebrity, but the
breeding of the Derby winners of the past
forty years hardly substantiates bis theory.
It is true that a five-furlong horse named
Sundridge sired a good Derby winner in
Sunstar, that a " miler " in Phalaris sired
Manna, but with few exceptions the win-
ner of the Derby has been got by a horse
able to win in the best company at a mile
and a half.
The same applies to the mares. It is
true also, that Mahmoud won the race
in record time, and that he descended
through Mumtaz Mahal from Lady
Josephine, a very speedy five-furlong mare,
but usually the dam of a Derby winner
has been able to win over the distance her-
self or came of a strain capable of doing
so.
Another Recommendation
Another recommendation of Bruce Lowe
was to return the best blood of the dam
to a sire who possessed that blood also.
For instance, if you have a mare tracing
to Pilgrimage, find a stallion who also
traces to Pilgrimage, and the result should
be good.
In such a manner was Sansovino bred
and there are numerous other instances.
Felkington was a great-grand-daughter of
Carbine. She was mated to Spion K.op, a
grandson of Carbine. Felstead, winner of
the Derby of 1928 was the result.
Perhaps the most daring experiment was
the mating of Vampire, a daughter of
Galopin, with Orme, a grandson of Galo-
pin. The outcome was Flying Fox, winner
of the Derby of 1899.
In effect he recommended a certain
amount of inbreeding, and the results, in
certain instances, show that he was right.
But like other things it can be carried too
tar and I am m.ndful of the remark of a
very successful trainer under National
Hunt Rules: "This classic-breeding may
produce a Derby winner but it produces
maniacs as well and it's the maniacs that
come to me! "
There is a thin line between the genius
and the lunatic as the most brainy families
of the human race will prove.
An opposite view appears to have in-
fluenced Col. Vuillier when he instigated
what is known as the Vuillier system.
As an agricultural chemist will analyse
the soil content of a field to find in what
minerals it is short and will report on
what chemicals are required to make up
the deficiency, so Col. Vuillier would ana-
lyse the pedigree of a mare to find in
what strains of the best blood she was
lacking, and would recommend that she
should be sent to a stallion who could
make up those deficiencies.
It is said that the late Lord Wavertree
and the Aga Khan bred on these lines
and if this is correct great weight is added
to the plan. Few breeders have enjoyed
such success.
Outcross Needed
On the same system the late Mr. Ken-
nedy of Stratton. Co. Kildare, imported
Roi Herode. He had come to the conclusion
that there was too much inbreeding to St.
Simon of the Eclipse line and considered
that an outcross was needed from one of
the other three main lines of sires. These
are Eclipse, Herod. Ma'chem.
The first result of his experiment was
The Tetrarch who revived the Herod line
and is a dominant influence in most win-
ning pedigrees up to the present day.
A little later Mr. Murland sent his mare,
Toute Suite, to Marcovil, a fair handicap
horse of the Matchem line. The result
was Hurry On whose influence was as
great as that of The Tetrarch and who sired
three Derby winners in Captain Cuttle,
Coronach. Call Boy. and his son Precipi-
tation sired the recent Derby winner Air-
borne.
One last and little tried experiment.
Chevalier Ginistrelli had a brood mare
named Signorina. and a very good race
mare she had been. He had arranged to
mite her with a well-known stallion at
Newmarket, and as he was lending her
there for the purpose, he passed another
stud farm wh:fh stabled a nine-guinea
stallion named Cha'ereux.
But moderate as his racing abilitv was,
the horse knew a good thing when he saw
it and from the other side of the fence
THE Derby is a championship for the
best three year old in the world. How
then, is this champion bred ? Is it by
luck or by some deeply thought-out
scheme ? To such direct questions it is
usually impossible to give a direct reply,
and this is no exception to the general
rule.
Luck, of course, must enter into it, but
it is safe to say that no winner has emerged
from haphazard mating of a thoroughbred
horse with a thoroughbred mare who have
descended from stock incapable of win-
ning races.
Almost invariably the winner comes from
a dam who has been a good race mare her-
self, or descended from a line of mares
who have proved themselves on the race-
course, or become famous as the producers
of high-class offspring, and from a sire
who has been a good winner himself or
proved himself a sure begetter of winners.
Bruce Lowe's Theory
Though often maligned, an Australian
named Bruce Lowe produced a theory
which, by and large, remains the founda-
tion of successful breeding. Briefly, his
contention was this. Racing merit is im-
parted more by the female than the male,
and he proceeded to show which female
lines were most prolific in producing
winners.
To do this, he traced back the mares
of his day to about fifty original mares
shown in the Stud Book's earliest edition.
He then traced the winners of the Derby,
Oaks and St. Leger to the original mares
from which they were descended, and the
mare whose descendants had won most of
these races, he called the founder of No. 1
family. The next highest producer he
called the founder of No. 2 family, and so
on.
To elucidate this theory, it is the opposite
to that applied to the human race. For
instance, if your family name is Jones,
you derive that name from your father,
who obtained it from his father, and so
on.
Furthermore, if you happen to possess
certain sterling qualities, it is probable
they will be attributed to your fa;her or
grandfather, old Jones, rather than to your
mother and her mother.
But if you happened to be a horse
registered in the Stud Book, according to
Bruce Lowe you would obtain your family
name, or rather number, from your mother,
and she, in turn, from her mother. He
would have been inclined to say also, that,
whatever good qualities you possess came
from the maternal side rather than from
your father.
At the same time, he was conscious of
the part the sire plays in the make-up. He
traced back the sires of the winners of
these races, and he found that Nos. 3, 8,
II, 12 and 14 families had produced the
most winners, and these he called the sire
families.
Pushed Too Far
As usual with the production of a novel
idea, there were fanatics who pushed the
theory too far, and who claimed that the
mating of a No. 3 family horse with a
No. I family mare gave rise to hope that
the breeder had a sure recipe for obtain-
ing a Derby winner. Naturally, there were
many disappointments, and the theory in
turn was ridiculed.
Nevertheless, he had laid down a rough
guide, which still stands. It is notewonhy
that, since his day, the two sires who have
had almost the greatest influence are Poly-
melus and Blandford of No. 3 family, and
that such famous mares as Canterbury
Pilgrim and Paraffin belong to No. 1
family.
Figures, they say, can be made to prove
anything, and doubtless there are plenty
of valid arguments for those who dis-
agree with Bruce Lowe, but his axiom re-
mains established, that there are certain
lines of brood mares from whom classic
winners may result when mated with the
right type of stallion.
The first essential is to get a good brood
mare who springs from one of these good
lines and mate her with a stallion of the
highest class. Then comes the question
with whom to mate ?
A Victorian turfite is alleged to have
said that the correct recipe for breeding
was to mate the winner of the St. Leger
with the winner of the Oaks. It worked,
too, when Rosedrop was sent to Bayardo
and produced the great Gainsborough.
Few can possess the winner of the Oaks,
but nevertheless, there is a lot of wisdom
underlying the saying: If you have a good
mare, send her to a good horse and you
will get results.
There is a further important point con-
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_——■^->-*--"
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED HORSE
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PUBLISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT
FROM GLADIATEUR TO PERSIMMON :
Turf Memories for Thirty Years. By
Sydenham Dixon(" Vigilant " of The Sports-
man).
With Portraits. Medium 8vo. Cloth. iSs.
Two Books by "The British Yeoman"
I.  THE SPORT OF KINGS. By W. Scarth
Dixon. With Portrait. Crown 8vo. Cloth. 6s.
" Certainly one of the best books on hunting
yet published."—Sporting Life.
II.   IN THE NORTH COUNTREE : Annals
and Anecdotes of Horse, Hound, and
Herd. By W. Scarth Dixon. Illustrated.
Demy 8vo. Cloth, ios. 6d. net.
Three Books by "Nat Qubbins"
I.   THE FLOWING BOWL : A Treatise on
Drinks of all Kinds and of all Nations.
By Edward Spencer. Crown 8vo. Cloth. 5s.
"An exceptionally clever and entertaining
book."—Newmarket Journal.
II.  THE GREAT GAME: And How it is
Played. By Edward Spencer. Crown 8vo.
Cloth. 5s.
"No one will care to lay it down until the
last page is reached."— Sportsman.
II. CAKES AND ALE: A Memory of Many
Meals. By Edward Spencer. Third Edi-
tion. Crown 8vo. Cloth. 2s.
The Earl of Rosebery, K.G., writes: "I
never thought to read a cookery book through ;
but then I never came across so pleasant a one."
A Novel of Turf Life
THE SPENDTHRIFT. By Francis Dods-
worth. Crown Svo. Cloth. 6s.
"He knows his subject thoroughly, and he
also knows how to write."—St. James's Gazette.
CINDER-PATH TALES. By W. Lindsey.
Crown 8vo. Cloth. 3s. 6d.
"No athlete past or present should fail to
read it."—Sportsman.
LONDON : GRANT RICHARDS
9 Henrietta St., Covent Garden, W.C.
BIBLIOTHEEK UNIVERSITEIT UTRECHT
3089 898 9
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/
THE
British Thoroughbred
Horse
HIS HISTORY & BREEDING
TOGETHER WITH AN EXPOSITION OF
THE FIGURE SYSTEM
ry
WILLIAM ALLISON, M.A. Oxon.
EDITOR OF 'BREEDING RACKHORSES BY THE FIGURE SYSTEM,' AND
'SPECIAL COMMISSIONER' OF THE SPORTSMAN
WITH COLOURED FRONTISPIECE AND TEN OTHER ILLUSTRATIONS
Honioit
GRANT RICHARDS
9 HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN, W.C.
I 90I
Bibliotheek der
Rijksuniversiteit te Utrecht
Afd. Diergeneeskunde
%
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PREFACE
This volume is more or less the result of my own
sins of omission while editing Bruce Lowe's book,
which has now gained world - wide reputation.
His MS. was very far from ready for press, and
I at the time had no leisure to go minutely into
it. Many errors thus crept into the text, and the
finest and indeed the only certain guide to breed-
ing racehorses was thus marred by inconsistencies
and imperfections.
In this work I have provided a supplement of
" Errata " in Bruce Lowe's, and have demonstrated
the accuracy of the figure guide by many other
tests than the one to which he submitted it.
I have to acknowledge valuable assistance
from Mr. F. H. Birley, who has furnished a
large number of original statistics; Mr. J. A.
Doyle ("Oxonian"), Mr. Cowell of Wakefield,
Mr. W. H. Rowe (America), and many others
whose names appear in the following pages or
are by their own desire not published.
W. ALLISON.
46a Pall Mall,
LONDON.
V
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CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTORY
Judgment by results only sure guide—Theories of breeding—
Valuable opinions : the late Lord Falmouth, the late Lord
Rossi yn, the late Duke of Beaufort—Agnosticism of them all
— "Antwerp and Lamplighter's" Tables—Have we not too
much Eclipse in tail male?—The late Mr. Hume Webster's
theory—Everything vague in comparison with conclusions
to be drawn from following records .....
CHAPTER II
THE FIGURE GUIDE
Scientific uncertainties of breeding—Galtou's law of heredity—
Prepotency—Take refuge from theories in results—The
Figures explained — Form at a glance — Mr. Hermann
Goos's great work—The Figures irresistible
CHAPTER III
THE FIGURES TESTED AXD PROVED
Influence of great brood mares not to be measured by rule of
quarterings—Prepotency of families and purity of origin—
The figures apply to the whole chain of descent up to date
—Bruce Lowe's Standard—Tested further by 2000 Guineas
and 1000 Guineas results—Tested yet again by the Cup
Winners—The Running families are supreme
vii
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
CHAPTER IV
JUDGMENT BY RESULTS----RESULT OF JUDGMENT
PAGE
The Merman cable—Advice to buy him confirmed by the figures
—Wonderful pedigree — Further enquiry satisfactory—
" Mr. Jersey" has the pluck of a dozen men—Merman
bought—He lands in England—Can he stay the Cesare-
witch course?—The figures say "yes" — He wins the
Cesarewitch ......... 41
CHAPTER V
I'ROOF CONCLUSIVE FROM FRANCE
Results in other countries not a fair test—Unequal distribution
of the families—France the only other country where com-
parison at all possible—The figures work out successfully
there—No. 19 supplants Xo. 4—What M. Edmond Blanc
thinks of it—Grand total, English and French—Bruce Lowe
absolutely confirmed—Nothing but ignorant folly can oppose
the Figures
         ......... 49
CHAPTER VI
THE FAMILY RECORDS
Bruce Lowe revised and corrected — Reference to Stud Bonk,
vol. i.—Sires of Classic winners—New test of .Sire Families         .57
CHAPTER MI
SUBDIVISION OF THE FIGURES AND DISTINCTIONS AMONG THEM
Families /, 2, 3, 4, 5, (!, 8, and 12 subdivided—Hermann Goos's
Tables a key to the subdivisions—Explanations as to each
branch—Proposed mark of distinction for Families 13 and 19 107
CHAPTER Mil
OBJECT LESSONS
Lord Rosebery and the figures—Ladas, Sir Visto, Flambard—
Figures speak plainly ; not according to theory—Actual use
viii
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CONTENTS
of figures in discovering winners—Jeddali found to be a
Derby horse—Phenomenal success of Flying Fox anticipated
before he was a three-year-old—His pedigree—Forfarshire
on figures beats Democrat—Individual characteristics not
to be lost sight of—The strange case of Orme—His stud
success a certainty on the figures
         ..... 120
CHAPTER IX
THE FIGURES IN OTHER COUNTRIES
Working of the figures outside England and France—Australian
statistics—Imperfect application of the figures in America,
where nevertheless their value is proved—Native American
blood—Pedigree of Lexington — Bruce Lowe corrected—
German statistics ; Austro-Hungarian ; Belgian—The Run-
ning Families prevail ........ 140
CHAPTER X
THE THEORY OF SATURATION
Inequalities in breeding—Nothing but inbreediijg can fix type—
Excessive inbreeding fatal—Outcrosses essential—Truth of
the figures not dependent on Saturation—The figures deal
with average, not individual results—Scientific authorities
on Saturation—The Penycuik experiments—No decision as
yet—The one important fact: Not to mate repeatedly with
same sire—Cases in point—Was Silvio a result of Saturation?
—Practical conclusion . . . . . . . 1"0
CHAPTER XI
THE FIGURE GUIDE EXAMINED
No exact science claimed — Bruce Lowe more "exact" than
"Beacon"—Mr. Doyle on inbreeding—Fillies and colts—
Sire and dam influence—King Tom and Stockwell, striking
difference explained — Touchstone's sons — Inbreeding to
horse or mare—Sires of brood mares—Mr. Doyle's Memo-
randum .......... 185
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
CHAPTER XII
THE LAW OF SEX
PAGE
Starkweather's theory—" Superior" parent stamps opposite sex—
Polarity the cause—Transmission of resemblances—Galopin
and The Flying Dutchman—St. Simon and Angelica—M.
Giron's tables—Practical utility of the theory—Experiments
with ewes—Deductions from them—Ormonde, Orme, Flying
Fox—Mating stock and keeping healthy .... 218
CHAPTER XIII
DESCENT IN TAIL MALE
Caprice of fashion regulates tail male descent—Eclipse, Matchem,
Herod—Reasons for Herod's collapse in England—His far
stronger position on the Continent—Necessity for Herod
revival—Sources of supply—Upas, Hanover, Fisherman—
None but great racehorses wanted as stallions — Actual
position of Herod in England—Small chance of further
developing Eclipse without Herod importations . . . 224 .
• CHAPTER XIV
AUSTRALASIAN BLOOD-STOCK
" Walers " desirable in England—Messrs. Weatherby and their
Stud Book—Advantage of change in Animal Life—Revival
of lines extinct in England—How to mate Trenton—Com-
parison with Carbine and Carnage—Herod line deficient in
England—Wanted a descendant of Fisherman—Other suc-
cessful Australasian lines—No Hermit among them—Fisher-
man most needed here—Professor Ewart's views
          . . 237
CHAPTER XV
HORSE BREEDING AND BUYING ON THE CONTINENT
German methods—The racing public pays for improving blood-
stock—Count Lehndorff takes racing merit as the only true
test—His fine judgment and purchase of the Australian
racehorse Carnage—Full details from Austria-Hungary—
X
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CONTENTS
PAGE
State-aided horse-breeding—I'rince Louis Esterhazy's suc-
cess—British Governments supine and useless—Where are
our remounts ?—Russian details—Keen appreciation of the
British thoroughbred ........      2o4
Table op Australasian Statistics .... To face      142
Table of American* Statistics . . . . ,,          144
Appendix—Bruce Lowe Corrections .....      299
Special Appendix—Figure Statistics, 1899 and 1900 . .      313
Table of Australasian Statistics. Tail Male Results
1899-1900........Tofaee,      340
Index...........      345
Tabulated Figured Pedigrees of the Derby, Oaks, and
St. Leger Winners from the Earliest Records to 1899          I
Index to Classic Winners' Pedigrees .....       181
\i
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ILLUSTRATIONS
' Which Would Have Won ?"          . . . Frontispiece
Merman, with his Trainer, F. Webb, and his Jockey, J.
Sharpies...... . . To face        42
Mons. C. R. Halbronn, of the Etablissement Cheri, Paris ,,            -52
Flying Fox (M. Cannon up) ..... „          127
Pocahontas (30 Years Old)—by Glencoe—Marpessa by Muley—
Clare by Marmion ...... To face      194
Trenton ......... „          241
Count Lehndohpp ....... „          260
H.S.H. Prince Louis Estehhazy .... ,,          265
The Grand Duke Dmitri Konstantinowitch . . ,,          278
Facsimile Copy op Letter authorising the Purchase of Galtee
More by Major-General J. A. Arapoff . . . To face      284
Persimmon ....... To face pedigree-?        61
Xlll
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CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTORY
Judgment by results only sure guide—Theories of breeding—Valuable
opinions : the late Lord Falmouth, the late Lord Rosslyn, the
late Duke of Beaufort—Agnosticism of them all—" Antwerp and
Lamplighter's" Tables—Have we not too much Eclipse in tail male ?
—The late Mr. Hume Webster's theory—Everything vague in
comparison with conclusions to be drawn from following records.
No Claim to Scientific Knowledge ; Judg-
ment by Results is the Keynote of this
Work.
In these days of scientific enquiry into germ-cells
and protoplasmic units it would ill become any one
with but a practical knowledge of breeding blood-
stock to touch the subject from any but a practical
point of view. Ey this it is not for a moment
suggested that the patient and continuous researches
of eminent men like Professor Ewart will not
ultimately throw light on much that is at present
obscure; but for the present it will probably be
agreed that the Mercantile test, as stated by Mr.
Herbert Spencer on the title-page of this book, is
the safest guide to the successful breeding of the
British thoroughbred. In other words, judgment
by results will stand us in better stead than the
most enticing theories that were ever put forward.
Were it not that I see my way to useful con-
1                                 b
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
elusions which will bear the test of proof from a
series of accomplished facts, I should never dream
of obtruding myself on the public. I have known
in my time many and various theories for the
successful breeding of race-horses. First, there is
the rough-and-ready view that all horses and mares
in the stud-book are equally wrell bred, and that all
you have got to look to is the make and shape and
individual merits of the animals you propose to
mate. Probably, and indeed it may be said certainly,
this system of breeding is vastly preferable to that
of the mere theorist who would arrange his alliances
on paper without regard to individual characteristics.
Still the mating of a Derby winner with an Oaks
winner does not necessarily have a triumphant
result, for Shotover has had three foals by Bend Or,
one by Ormonde, and one by Melton without any
striking success.
Evanescent Theories
As to theories, they are endless, and as fast as
one is played out another arises to take its place.
I remember well when inbreeding to Stockwell,
Rataplan, or King Tom was regarded as fatal, and
then there was the strange antipathy to "the
accursed" Blacklock blood. Now, however, we
find these reputed heresies to be almost the touch-
stones to success, though they in their turn no
doubt will give place to other fancies.
I suppose I shall be charged with lack of
scientific knowledge for using the word " blood " in
relation to matters of heredity, but this book is for
laymen to read, and they would rightly resent too
much mention of germ-cells; besides, how are we
to get over the name of the blood-horse, or blood-
stock if we are to be strictly pedantic in this respect ?
2
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Merman, with his Trainer, F. Webb, and his Jockey, J. Sharples.
From a pcti:
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INTRODUCTION
Blair Athol's the Blood !
Years ago I had a theory, and it was no bad one
either—" Blair Athol's the blood" was my sage
observation to friends at school, but this theory, as
in most cases, resulted purely from special circum-
stances, Blair Athol having been trained near my
home, and being the first race-horse in whom I took
a genuine interest. He became the leading stallion
of his day, however, and thrice headed the list of
winning sires, so that my singularly baseless theory
proved to be better than most.
Between mere theory, however, and the opinions
of experienced men there is a wide line of demarca-
tion, and to these latter full respect should always
be paid, though where they are dogmatic they are
never correct, except in so far as they aim at an
average of success, and are content to put up with
occasional knock-down blows.
Count Lehndorff's Rule : Mares must be
Sound ; Winners and Dams of Winners
Thus, although Count Lehndorff's rule, when
purchasing mares, that they must be sound and
either—if young—have won races, or, if older, have
bred winners, commends itself to most men's
judgment, yet it is not to be forgotten that the
rigid application of such a rule would have led to
the rejection of Queen Mary in her early days, and
would have prevented Echidna from ever giving
birth to The Baron or the roaring Pocahontas to
Stockwell. Count Lehndorff is well aware of these
and other exceptions to his rule, but he is content
to abide by it nevertheless.
3
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Opinions of High Authorities
Some years ago I sought light and leading from
those who seemed best qualified to give information,
and it will be of interest to set out here some of the
letters that were received. It is generally believed
that the late Lord Falmouth pinned his faith entirely
to the theory of sending mares to the stud when
young, but the following letter shows he was far
from convinced on that subject:—
The Late Lord Falmouth : No Certainty as
to best Age for Brood Mares
Tbegothnan, Pbobus, Cornwall,
February 1, 1884.
Deak Sir—I don't think any hard-and-fast rule can be
laid down as to the best age at which a mare should commence
breeding. Some practical men say the constitution of the
stock of a mare of mature age is stronger than that of a
young one. Whether it was true or not I cannot tell, but it
used to be said Mr. Orde left an injunction in his will that
Beeswing was not to be bred from till she was ten years old.
Anyhow I saw her ridden in Rotten Row in the interval
between coming out of training and that age, and I think
she produced nine foals in nine successive years.
Lilian was not overworked, and was as sound as a bell
when I took her out of training. She went to the stud in
the prime of life, nine years old. No one can tell whether
Lillibullero is good or bad, for being a large, heavy colt he
has never been fit enough to show his form.—I remain, yours
faithfully.
                                                                 Falmouth.
W. Allison, Esq.
Lord Falmouth was slightly inaccurate about
Beeswing. She produced eight foals in nine years,
having been barren in 1845, but it is in the highest
degree probable that the rest given her as a Park
4
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INTRODUCTION
hack before she was put to the stud was the real
secret of her success. Lillibullero, who was Lilian's
first-born, after she had slipped for two seasons,
turned out an utter failure, and was sent to India
as a stallion. Lilian did produce one fairly good
horse in Savile, but in her case the fact of slipping
foal her first two seasons on the one hand showed
that her long labours on the turf had probably told
on her constitution, and on the other hand, she got
those two years of comparative rest in which to
recuperate. I do not think, however, that Lord
Falmouth would in later years have regarded her
record as an encouragement to keep good mares in
training several seasons before sending them to the
stud.
The Late Lord Rosseyn : Theorists
Dangerous
The next letter I shall give is from the late Lord
Rosslyn, who, though not such a successful breeder
as Lord Falmouth, was a thorough judge of blood-
stock, and got together some admirable brood mares,
as for instance, Feronia, the dam of St. Serf and
grandam of Ayrshire :—
Dear Sir—I cordially and entirely agree in Lord
Falmouth^ dictum that no hard-and-fast rule can be laid
down about the ages at which mares should be put to the stud,
or in fact upon any point connected with the breeding of
thoroughbred stock. In no pursuit or profession—as it may
almost be termed—does the old proverb so truly apply,
" Circumstances alter cases,11 and the most successful breeder
and best grower is the one who, using common sense, applies
the " circumstances w to the " cases " skilfully.
A theorist in crossing or in breeding is a dangerous adviser.
Experience is the only guide. Theories in stable management
are equally perilous, and observation and good nursing, and
the avoidance of petty economies will enable a breeder to
5
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
escape many of the ills that horseflesh is heir to. Many of
my mares have never been trained, and yet have bred good
winners, and I incline rather to a fresh young mare than to a
broken-down racer as a brood mare, even though the latter
may have been successful on the turf. But to be true to my
text, I must avoid theories. Feronia by Thormanby out of
Woodbine by Stockwell out of sister to Newminster, is a mare
I take for a chance example out of my stud. She has bred
Syrinx, Seringa, Macaria, Atalanta, Camilla, and Kelpie to
Le Marechal, Macaroni, Galopin, and Blair Athol. She was
never trained. Her produce are all winners. Syrinx broke
her leg or might have won the Oaks. Atalanta was paralysed
as a foal, or would have been quite first class. I could multiply
this example by many others, but my letter is already too
long.—Yours obediently.
                                      Rosslyn.
Bi'rghley Paddocks, Stamford,
February 13, 1884.
The above is an eminently sensible letter, and
it is matter for regret that the writer did not live
to know about all the stud triumphs which the
" paralysed " Atalanta was destined to achieve, but
it is clear, at the same time, that he fell into the
common error of recognising no via media between
theory and practice. The extreme, either way, is
bad business. It is ruinous nowadays for a farmer
to persist in farming exactly as his father did before
him, and it is equally ruinous to follow the advice
of the first charlatan who has read the whole subject
of agriculture up in books, or who is interested in
the sale of some chemical manure; but this is not
to say that a man should not constantly keep an
open mind, and test from time to time the theories
that commend themselves to his judgment; for, after
all, theories are the pioneers of progress.
(!
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INTRODUCTION
The Late Duke of Beaufort : Speedy Makes
Essential
The following letter is from that best and most
respected of sportsmen, the late Duke of Beaufort:
Badminton, February 28, 1884.
Sin—In reply to your letter, calling my attention to letters
from Lords Falmouth and Bosslyn, on the question of whether
breeding horses for racing purposes, better ones are obtained
from mares that have not been raced or trained, than from
those that have, I can only relate my own experience. Two
of the best horses I ever bred, both winners of the Two
Thousand Guineas Stakes, were the sons of mares that had
been trained. Vauban, whose dam, Palm, ran five times at
two years old, and won four times (receiving forfeit in three
matches); she met with an accident and never ran afterwards.
Vauban was a horse of very great speed, and beat Achieve-
ment over the New Mile at Ascot, was trained to death for
the Derby, and only got third, and afterwards, recovering
his condition, won the Goodwood Cup, proving himself a
good stayer. The following spring he broke his thigh going
up the tan at Newmarket.
Petronel, a fairly speedy horse and undoubted stayer,
showed speed winning the Two Thousand, and that he could
stay by winning the Doncaster Cup and several Queen's Plates.
His dam, Crytheia (daughter of Palm) ran a great deal.
Ran Times.
Won Times
At two years old
13
•5
At three „
17
4
At four ,,
13
6
At five ,,
9
0
Ran 52                    Won 1.5
She was very speedy. Could just get six furlongs; but at
five furlongs or half a mile she was, if anything, better than
farther. I do not believe that running these short courses
impaired her for breeding at all. Had she run forty or fifty
times for Cups, or Queen's Plates, and had she had many
severe races it is very probable it would have injured her.
Horses and hounds have been bred here for 200 years at least.
I have all my life taken a great interest in it, and watched it
7
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
carefully, and personally superintended the breeding of both
animals; and in the case of horses,—race-horses, hunters,
hacks, and cart-horses—I have arrived at the conviction that
it is a great lottery what the produce will be. Breed three
or four years running from the same mare, put to the same
horse, and you will get animals different in shape, colour, and
qualities. The same with hounds.
There is only one thing of which I am quite certain, and
that I have learnt by experience, that is, that to breed a good
race-horse or a good hunter you must have a speedy mare,
and a stout, staying horse. I know a hunter by a thorough-
bred out of a slow underbred mare never can gallop, and
that one by a cart-horse out of a speedy well-bred mare can.
I have also watched the produce of slow staying mares, and
never saw a good race-horse bred from them; whereas very
speedy half-mile mares have bred many good horses. I
lamented having to sell Gomera,—when I sold all my horses
in training in 1868,—for she had been second for the Ascot
Stakes, and won the Goodwood Stakes in 1867, carrying a
very heavy weight, 8st. 121bs. or 9st., I forget which; but
I am glad now I did not keep her—it might have spoilt my
sale if the public thought I was keeping any back, and though
she has been at Chamont and put to the best stallions she
has never bred anything. She would stay for a week, but
was very slow.
As regards the original question, you ask, Whether racing-
hurts the mai-es,—it depends on many things ; one very severe
race over a distance of ground might injure either a horse or
mare, and their constitutions might not recover it; and
twenty other races might not injure them. It is all a matter
of luck. So much depends on the health of the dam during
her pregnancy, and after the birth of the foal, so much on
the weather and on the foal's health, his catching, and not
catching cold, having the strangles and other ailments, that
I am convinced that, however much knowledge and experience
a man may have of breeding, whether of human beings or
animals, it is one of the greatest lotteries possible.—I am, sir,
your obedient servant,
                                            Beaufort.
Element of Luck does not involve a Lottery
In regard to the above weighty letter, I would
only observe for the moment that His Grace used
8
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INTRODUCTION
the word "lottery" somewhat loosely, for it is
palpable, from the context, that he would not leave
such a question as that of breeding blood-stock or
hounds to chance. On the other hand, it is evident
that the element of luck can never be dispensed
with in such matters, despite all the study, ex-
perience, and constant care that may be brought
into operation. Just in the same way the element
of luck enters into the game of whist. The best
players may hold bad cards ; but all the same, the
best players will inevitably score if you go on play-
ing against them.
The Late Duke of Beaufort : No Rule can
ensure Success. Luck must combine with
Good Judgment.
Yet another letter from the late Duke of
Beaufort:—
!) Cleveland Row, May 4, 1884.
Deae Sir—There is only one certainty that I have ai'rived
at in breeding animals of any sort, and that is that the whole
thing is a lottery. Of course, you may give yourself a good
chance or a bad one ; but so many things are beyond the
control of man that there can be no certainty. That which
convinces me of this fact is, that try three or four years
running the same horse and mare, or the same dog and bitch,
and see what totally different results you arrive at each year.
Take a large human family and observe the same thing. The
fact is, the state of health of both parents, especially the
female at the time of impregnation, her state during the
whole pregnancy—with animals, the weather at the time of
birth, and some time after—all have a wonderful effect.
No doubt the food of the dam and the offspring, too,
greatly affect the quality of the latter. In short, there is no
rule that I know of by which you can ensure success. Luck
must combine with judgment to produce a satisfactory result.
1 o breed a race-horse or fast hunter, one thing I believe I
have arrived at, which is that you must have speed on the
9
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
clam's side—never mind for how short a distance, even three
or four furlongs—and staying power and qualities'on the side
of the sire. A slow mare never will breed a race-horse or fast
hunter, never mind how speedy and good the sire may be.
Of stallions there are plent\', too many perhaps. What are
wanted are better mares ; more of them and better bred.
You have asked my opinion of the matter; I have stated
it shortly, and you may make what use of it you please.----1
am, yours faithfully,                                           Beaufort.
W. Allison, Esq"
It will be seen that this letter bears out exactly
what 1 have stated as to the Duke's meaning when
he writes of the "lottery" of breeding. "Luck
must combine with good judgment to produce a
satisfactory result." This dictum is really in-
disputable, except in so far as there might be some
dispute about the definition of " luck." Careless
or ignorant management may often result in what
is euphemistically called bad luck. Luck is a
curious sprite, nevrer to be quite brought under
control, but nevertheless inclined very much to
favour those who work hard and constantly at
whatever their life-task may be, while it is equally
inclined to visit incapacity and idleness somewhat
roughly.
"Antwerp and Lamplighter's" Tables: Taii,
Male Descent from Eclipse at all points
or nearly all.
Other theories maybe based on such records as the
tables compiled by " Antwerp and Lamplighter,"
and published in New York. These tables show
beyond all question the ever-increasing prevalence
of Eclipse in male descent, especially in England,
and the inference suggested is that Eclipse is bound
to wipe out Herod and Matchem in tail male,
the best remaining descendants of the last tvvo
10
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INTRODUCTION
existing only by virtue of a great preponderance of
Eclipse blood in the male lines of their pedigrees,
other than the top one. The compilers of these
tables, one of whom I think I may describe as the
father of the New York Jockey Club, had not taken
a sufficiently comprehensive view of their subject,
for they omit all German and Austrian pedigrees,
also, with a few exceptions, Australian and New
Zealand. These if gone carefully into would have
materially affected their conclusions. That they
were altogether too one-sided in their researches
may, I think, be safely concluded from the following
passage :—
No CONSIDERATION PAID TO MaRES
" The statement may be ventured that mares are a neees-
sai-y evil, only to serve as material to propagate the breed.
Mares are never produced per se, i.e. for the purpose to serve
as brood mares. They are only the sisters of their brothers
and the daughters of their sires. Therefore no consideration
will be paid to them in these tables. They will only be
treated as the daughters of their sires."
Later on I shall, I think, show that the phe-
nomenon of the increasing prevalence of Eclipse
is not by any means universal, and that where it
exists the breed of horses is, if not degenerating, at
least not improving.
Mr. Hume Webster: Mares oe Running
Family Essential.
No man ever grasped the fundamental points of
successful breeding more quickly than the late Mr.
II ume "Webster. He was a man of very acute
perception, and though he took to breeding blood-
stock when he was middle-aged, and had little or
no previous knowledge of horses, he saw almost at
11
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
once the importance, not of ignoring mares, like our
friends " Antwerp and Lamplighter," but of regard-
ing them as the main factor. All the mares in his
stud were of running blood, either good winners
themselves, sisters of good winners or dams of
good winners. It was the Bruce Lowe idea, of
course, though not reduced to a system ; and in
truth, apart from theories, it must be admitted
that the mare is all-important. As an able French
writer has said : " La bonne pouliniere produit bien
avec presque tous les etalons. Peut-on dire par
contre que les meilleurs etalons produisent bien
avec n'importe cpielle pouliniere ? " ]
ArASTi>y more Definite Conclusions to be
DRAWN FROM THE FOLLOWING PAGES
In thus briefly giving a few of the views, opinions,
and theories of well-known authorities on horse-
breeding, my particular object of the moment is,
while acknowledging the value of much they say,
to contrast in other respects their uncertainty and
practical agnosticism with the conclusions which I
or any one cannot fail to draw from the records of
results as given in the following pages. I shall
have something to say myself later on, upon the
science of breeding, and though of necessity that
portion of the book must trench on more debatable
ground, it will be based almost entirely on the
observations of actual experience touching little if
at all on matters of vague speculation.
1 L. Keilout, Notes sur In miHhode. de classification crcee par Bruce,
Lowe.
12
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CHAPTER II
THE FIGURE GUIDE
Scientific uncertainties of breeding—Galton's law of heredity—Pre-
potency—Take refuge from theories in results—The Figures ex-
plained—Format a glance—Mr. Hermann Goos's great work—The
Figures irresistible.
Doubtful Results from Outcrossing
Writing of the offspring of any two individuals
(unless very closely related) Professor Ewart says:1
The raw material, the living clay out of which the new
individual is developed, comes, as it were, from different
quarries, with, in each case, a different history. In the
struggle amongst the parts as the development proceeds the
legionaries of the immediate ancestors are sometimes worsted
by those of the less recent ancestors, the grandparents being
victorious in the centre, while still more remote ancestors
secure occasional successes on the wings. The final result is
in most cases a drawn battle, neither particularly satisfactory
to those immediately concerned, nor to the world at large.
Galton's Law of Heredity v. Common
Experience
This, as practical breeders are well aware, is a
much truer statement of facts as we find them
than can be claimed for the precise presumption of
1 Penycuik Experiments, p. xxii.
13
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
JMr. Galton's law of ancestral heredity, that the
two parents contribute half, the four grandparents
one-fourth, the eight grandparents one-eighth,
and so on. When a type is clearly fixed and
defined by inbreeding, it may be that Galton's
theory does to a certain extent work, but that
can only be when the matings are very carefully
arranged, and when many other circumstances such
as constitution, health, and nutrition combine to
bring about an equable result in the offspring.
Evidently (says Professor Ewart), the extent to which the
immediate ancestors are represented in the cell (out of which
the new individual is eventually formed) will, other things
being equal, depend on how much the individuals (parents)
from which the cells came, essentially agree with each other.
If alike and closely related, the immediate parents might be
related by more than half the units; if unlike and unrelated,
by considerably less than half the units in the new cell—the
potential new individual. If one parent happened to be pre-
potent and the other not, only one of the parents might
predominate in the new individual.1
Now the above are words of experienced wisdom,
and they show at once the folly of any idea of
regulating pedigrees by mathematical proportions,
except in so far as the careful mating of individuals
of similar type and blood may enable us to approach
such a result.
Prepotency, its Causes and Contributives
There are many mysteries, however, in breed-
ing which science has wholly failed to explain,
and one of them is prepotency. The common
belief is that prepotency is the result of inbreeding,
and tbat an individual so bred, is necessarily pre-
potent over a cross-bred mate. This may be
1 Penycuik Experiments, p. Ixxxii.
14
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THE FIGURE GUIDE
correct in the main, but by no means invariably
so ; for I imagine that much also depends on the
individual health, vigour, and nutrition of the inbred
parent. Be that as it may, prepotency beyond all
question exists not only in individual parents, but
it establishes prepotent families ; and here for the
present we witneave the domain of mere opinion
and theory for the plain logic of facts, or judgment
by results as first set out by the late Mr. Bruce
Lowe in his invaluable work, Breeding Race-horses
by the Figure System.
Judgment by Results the only sale Guide.
The Figure Guide Explained
It will be convenient at this point, that I should
give a brief explanation of the system, or as I prefer
to call it, the guide ; but in this some knowledge of
Bruce Lowe's book is presupposed. So many
misunderstandings and misrepresentations of his
work and of his meaning have arisen, whether from
superficial study or sheer stupidity matters not,
that his own brief but lucid explanation written to
me before, through his most untimely death, his
manuscripts were left to me to edit, may well be
introduced at this point.
London, W., October 1, 1891.
My beau Mr. Alusox—Without the preliminary matter
(which my book will contain) leading up to a certain point,
it is somewhat difficult to give in a few words a sketch of the
system of breeding race-horses by the Figure System.
Put as briefly as possible, the figures are derived from a
statistical compilation of the winners of the three great
English classic races, Derby, Oaks, and Leger. The family
with largest number of wins is No. /, the next No. 2, and so
on to No. 34, though the figures actually run up to 43, and
include families whose descendants have never won a classic
15
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■*!»«--• ■'
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
race. By placing the figures on to any ordinary tabulated
pedigree, the studmaster can tell at a glance what families
have been brought into the combination, and whether they
happen to be the high-class running families., /, 2, 3, 4, and
S, or outside ones, such as l5, 14, 15, 18, 33 and so on; also
how much sire blood (i.e. members of the five great sire
families, 3, 8,11,12, and 14) is present. It does not follow,
because a stallion's pedigree is rich in the running strains, /,
2, 4, and S, that he is going to be a success at the stud. On
the contrary, paradoxical though it seems, he is likely to prove
a failure; except when mated with mares from the sire
families, 3, 8, 11, 12, and 14. All the great sires of the
world, from Eclipse to the present dav, either descend directly
from these five families or are inbred to them—and horses not
in these families (or inbred strongly to them) are, so to speak,
powerless to sire winners, unless the sire element is strong in
their mates. As an ounce of illustration is better than a ton
of assertion I give you the pedigrees of those great con-
temporaries Eclipse and Herod for comparison.
ECLIPSE
1
1
Spiletta 12
1
Hutton's
i
Marske 8
I 4A
1 1
Mother Western Regulus 11
tt. of Squirt 11
!
1 1
Snake1 God. Barb
1
Blacklegs Child
HEROD
Cypron 26                                                          Tartar'
I                                                                                                                                                                                         I
Selima                 Blazel                                       Melora Partner 9
II                                        II
Bethell's Arabian Childers 6                                       Fox 6         Jigg1
The heavy type denotes, sire figures. Eclipse not only
comes from the 12 family through Spiletta, but his sire Marske
is from the 8 line and grandsire Squirt from the 11 line;
also his maternal grandsire Regulus is from the latter line.
1 Family has never won a classic race.
16
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THE FIGURE GUIDE
Eclipse was so remarkably inbred to sire figures that it is no
wonder he has distanced Herod and Matchem in the struggle
for male supremacy. Neither of the two last-named horses
possessed a single strain of the original females forming the
tap-roots of the five sire families, 3, 8, 11, 12, and 14, and
Herod's successes came mostly from the 3 line (two Oaks
winners), while Bridget (Oaks) was from the 8 family. The
dams of Phenomenon (Leger) and Whiskey came from the
2 family, and Woodpecker from the / line, and again Coelia
(Oaks) was out of Eclipse's sister. Eclipse, on the other
hand, being so rich in sire blood did not require it in his
mates, and all his celebrated sons and daughters were from
dams with no sire blood in their veins. I also eive the
pedigrees of the best Australian bred sire, Chester, and the
best English contemporary sire, Isonomy. It will be seen
that they were both strongly inbred to sire figures.
CHESTER.
Lady Chester 8.                                                  Yattenilon 17.
d. of Harkaway 2. Stockwell 3.            <1. of Tros (impd.) 12. Sir Hercules 3.
ISONOMY.
lsola Bella 19.                                                              Sterling 12.
.1. of Ethelbert 12- Stockwell 3.                       d. of Flatcatcher 3. Oxford 12.
The admitted best horse—bar, perhaps, Ormonde—that
ever started in an English race was Gladiateur. In Australia
it is a disputed matter whether The Barb was as good a race-
horse as Carbine. They certainly were the two most phe-
nomenal ever bred at the Antipodes. When put to stud
work both Gladiateur and The Barb were pronounced failures.
Compare their pedigrees with those just given, and the
reasons why are obvious. Neither are in (or inbred to) sire
families.
17                          c
f
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GLADIATEUR.
1
THE
1
Miss Gladiator 5.
1
i
Monarque 19.
i
1
Taffrail
1
1
Gladiator 22.
Poetess.
i
The Emperor 5.
1
—H
H
II II III I         hH
d. of Merman. Sheet Anchor 12. d. of Moses 5. Partisan/. d. of Whisker/. Royal Oak S. d. of Reveller 19. Defence S       gC
5                                                                                                 E
THE BARB.                                                                                                             ^
___________________________________!_______________________________________                                                           <*
I I                                        O
Gulnare ■#. (Aust.) Sir Hercules 3.                                  _i
___________i____________ _________j_________                       2
i i i i                                  O
Galntire. The Doctor 9. Paraguay (inipd.) Cap-a-pie 5.                  HH
___!____ ___L___ ____!____ . L_             £
1,1 II I | i |          W
d. of Theorem/. Gohanua 17. d. of Walton 7. Physician 21. d. of Partisan /. Sir Hercules 2. The Colonel 8.      5Q
w
O
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THE FIGURE GUIDE
I hope the above sketch will give you some idea of the
main principles of the system which has been very successfully
worked by my friend, Mr. Frank Reynolds, in his big stud of
thoroughbreds in Australia for the last twenty years. He is
the only man I gave the figures to up to three years ago, when
I explained the system to Mr. Henry White, of Havilah, a
very successful all-round breeder, who now makes no move in
either mating or buying racehorses until he has submitted
their pedigrees to the Figure Key. It is needless to tell you,
who have given so much time to the study of pedigrees, that
there are many other important conditions to be observed in
mating thoroughbreds, which space will not permit me to
touch upon here, but which are dealt with in my treatise on
the breeding of racehorses, now in the publisher's hands.
I may add that after twenty years'' close criticism of the
Figure System by Mr. Frank Reynolds and myself, we are
every day more convinced of its great value as a test, or key,
to pedigree.
To a student like you, the system will open up new and
most interesting phases of breeding, otherwise not available.
In other words, though it immensely extends the field of
operations, it reduces the chances of failure to a minimum,
because it is based upon the sound principles of "judgment by
results.'" Indeed, I venture to predict that it will to a great
extent revolutionise the present methods of mating thorough-
breds.
Many thanks for your statistical table of respective
winnings of the three great male lines up to date. With your
permission I will include it in my book.—Yours very truly,
C. Bruce Lowe.
And here, if the above be not clear enough for
any one to understand, I give my own short ex-
planation as it first appeared in the Preface to the
CMldwick Stud Book, 1896 :—
For those who have not read Mr. Bruce Lowe's book it is
necessary here to explain that he dealt with all the thorough-
bred families in the female line, tracing them thus to the
original mares, of which only about fifty are represented to-
day. Out of these surviving families only some twenty play
an important part in modern pedigrees, and not more than
19
-ocr page 37-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
nine or ten of these twenty appear to be indispensable in first-
class pedigrees. The test applied by Mr. Bruce Lowe, by
which he placed the various original mares in order, /, 2, 3,
and so on, was simply the degree of success their descendants
in the female line had attained as winners, or dams of winners,
of the three classic races, the Derby, Oaks, and St. Leger.
In this way the figures run down to 34, though other original
mares bring the number to 43, but none of their descendants
have ever won one of the classic races.
The families thus being numbered in order of merit from
a racing point of view, and that, too, on the only safe principle,
i.e. judgment by results, two discoveries were presently made:
First, that families /, 2, 3, 4, and 5 represent the highest
degree of vital force, otherwise racing capacity, but that
these " running families," except in the case of No. 3, are
deficient in the elements that constitute successful sires;
on the other hand families 3, 8, 11, 12, and 14, are distin-
guished for the potency of what Mr. Lowe called their " sire
blood," and, as he declared, no horse has ever been a marked
success as a sire unless descended directly from one of these
families or inbred strongly to them ; where there has been any
exception to this rule, as in Blacklock's case, the horse has
only succeeded by having the " sire" element strong in his
mates. It is further proved to demonstration that no great
borse of modern days can be named, without some of the
"running" and "sire" lines in the three first removes of his
pedigree.
And now if we set out the original mares in order accord-
ing to their figures, with one or two of her principal descend-
ants set against each to serve as a guide, the reader will have
a ready means of reference by which to understand what
every figure in following pedigrees means. It is to be noted
that the figures after the first sire and dam in any given
pedigree are placed only against horses, for the simple reason
that as each figure, by inference, takes in the whole female line
to its original mare, there is no need to repeat it against a
horse's dam, maternal grandam, and so forth. The figures of
the running families are, throughout, printed in italics, with-
out brackets, the sire lines (including No. 3, which is both
" sire" and " running") in thick type, and the other
lines in ordinary type, for the purposes of easy distinction.
Here then is
20
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THE FIGURE GUIDE
THE ALLOTMENT OF FIGURES
No.
/.   Tregonwell's Natural Barb mare .
2.   Burton's Barb mare
3.   The Dam of the Two True Blues .
4.   Layton Barb mare
5.   Dau. of Massev's Black Barb
(>.   Old Bald Beg- ' .
7.   Darcy's Black Legged Koyal mare
8.   Bustler mare (dam of Byerly Turk mare)
!). Old Vintner mare
10.   Dau. of Gower stallion
11.   Sedbury Royal mare
12.   A Royal mare (dam of Brimmer mare)
13.   A Royal mare (dam of Grey Royal)
14.   The Oldfield mare . " .
15.   Royal mare (dam of Grey Why Not)
16.   Sister to Stripling by Hutton's Spot
17.   Byerly Turk mare
18.   Old Woodcock mare
(dam of Old Spot mare) .
1!>. Dau. of I'avill's Old Woodcock .
20.   Dau. of Gascoyne's Foreign Horse
21.   Moonah Barb mare
22.   Belgrade Turk mare
23.   Piping Peg .....
24.   Helmsley Turk mare .
2/i. Brimmer mare ....
Whalebone, Minting.
Yoltigeur, Blacklock.
Stockwell, Sir Peter.
Matchem, Thormanby.
(rladiateur, Hermit.
Priam, Diomed.
W. Australian, Donovan.
Marske, Newminster,
Sulta
r
Mercury, Bendigo,Peter
Blair Athol, Hampton.
Regulus, Birdcatcher,
St. Simon.
Eclipse, Sterling.
Highflyer, Orlando.
Touchstone, Macaroni.
Soothsayer, .Term',
Foxhall.
()rmonde and Agnes
family.
Pantaloon, Vattendon.
Waxy, Trenton (Aus.)
Isonomy, Sir Hugo.
Citadel^ Traducer (N.Z.)
Ghuznee.
Sweetmeat, Lonely.
Gladiator, St. Blaise.
Ossian, Barcaldine.
Camel, The Baron,
Hindoo (Am.)
Y. Melbourne, Comus,
Sefton.
Herod, Promised Land.
Saunterer, Pero Gomez.
Emilius, Dalesman.
Landscape, Ashton.
Paris, Delpini, Stamford.
Ruler, Fazzoletto.
Nike, Fitz Gladiator.
Sergeant, Dungannon.
Antonio, Birmingham.
Haphazard, Bustard
(Castrel).
Economist,Old Engineer.
Dr. Syntax, Little Red
Rover.
2fi. Merlin mare          . . . .
27. Spanker mare .
2fi. Dau. of Place's White Turk .
29.   Natural Barb mare
(dam of Basset Arab mare)
30.   Dau. of Due de Chartres' Hawker
31.   Dick Burton's Barb mare
32.   Barb mare (Dodsworth's dam)
3.3. Sister to Honeycomb Punch
34.   Hautbov mare
35.   Dau. of Bustler .
36.   Dau. of Cumven's Bay Barb .
37.   Sister to Old Merlin .
•>\
-ocr page 39-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
No.
38.   Thwart's Dim mare
39.   Bonny Black         ....
40.   Royal mare (dam of Brimmer mare)
41.   Grasshopper mare
42.   Spanker mare ....
43.   Natural Barb mare
(Emperor of Morocco's gift)
Pot-8-os.
Dagworth (Aus.)
Boston (Am.)
Bagot, Portrait.
Oiseau, Cestus.
Balfe, Underhand.
To Bruce Lowe's list of original mares, must be added-
Joe Miller, Le Destrier.
Barcarolle, Old Calabar.
Young Gouty.
Comesta, La Stella.
Tartar.
Chiselhampton, Orzil.
Bryan o' Lynn.
44.   Bustler mare
45.   Young Cade mare
40. Babraham mare
47.   Spectator mare
48.   Shield's Galloway mare
49.   Whitenose mare .
50.   Miss Euston .
It must not for a moment be assumed, nor did Mr. Bruce
Lowe dream of contending, that the lower figures are
necessarily to be avoided. On the contrary, not a few of
them have lately begun to gain strength by the process of
repeated additions to them of the sire and running blood.
Thus No. 10 has been built up into Queen Mary and her
descendants, No. 16 into Agnes, whose fame culminates in
Ormonde, and No. 19 has been peculiarly unlucky in classic
victories, seeing that one of its members was Isonomy and
another Plaisanterie, while Vedette and Surefoot of the same
line did not get beyond the 2000 Guineas in three-year-old
classics.
Nothing theoretical about the Figures.
They deal with plain Facts
Let it be understood that there is nothing
theoretical about this guide.
The figure No. /
marked against an animal means that he or she
descends in tail female from the original mare whose
family from her day up to the present date has
produced the largest number of Derby, Oaks, and
Leger winners. The inference that this is the best
family is based on solid fact, but it does not of
22
-ocr page 40-
THE FIGURE GUIDE
course follow that all the members of it are equally
good. We may take it that even the Rothschilds
have poor relations.
" Oxonian," one of the very best authorities on
all that pertains to stud lore, has written exactly to
the point on the subject of Bruce Lowe's book, as
follows :—
A large part—in my opinion the most valuable part—of
it is taken up not with theory but with the statement of
certain plain facts, previously overlooked or imperfectly
noticed. The principal are these :—
1. That a very large majority of good horses are descended
in direct female succession from one or other of a
small group of mares.
°,. That a still larger majority of good sires are so descended
from (or inbred to) one or other of another small group.
!3. That among the descendants of certain mares are to be
found numerous good runners but no good sires.
Mr. Lowe's explanation of these facts, and his deductions
from them, may be incorrect or incomplete. They may not
furnish adequate material from which to construct a methodical
system of breeding. These issues are too wide to be discussed
here. But the facts are incontrovertible, and I should think
there is no doubt that they are both interesting and practically
important.1
All experienced Breeders work unconsci-
ously ON THE SAME LlXES AS BllUCE LoWE
It is a curious fact that while many breeders
have been slow to grasp the significance of the
figures, you will never find one who does not agree
that it is the best plan to breed from a winning
family, and by that he will invariably mean a family
successful on the dam's side, such as a Pocahontas,
a Queen Mary, an Alice Hawthorn, a Beeswing, a
Devotion, a Flying Duchess, or some other dis-
tinguished matron.
1 "Oxonian's" letter to The Sportsman, 14th February 189!).
23
'■'.
-ocr page 41-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Also you will find that most breeders of long
experience have their ideas about stallion blood as
apart from running blood. They will eschew a
horse with an effeminate or pony head, no matter
how speedy he may have been on the turf. It was
j ust these root ideas that Bruce Lowe got a thorough
grip of and gave us almost in the form of an A B C
guide, so that no man's knowledge of what is running
and what is sire blood need now be limited by his
own small experience and researches. He can see
the Avhole form from first to last at a glance.
Prepotency of certain Original Makes well
known for many yeaks
It has never been claimed for Mr. Bruce Lowe
j that he was the first to detect the abiding pre-
\ j potency and value of the female descent from
' certain original mares. What he did was as simple
as the egg trick of Columbus, though a good deal
more useful : he invented the method of showing
these and the other families in a pedigree at first
glance, and that by figures denoting their order of
proved merit. Mr. T. P. Frentzel and Mr. Hermann
.',' Goos"had long previously published tables tracing
the best horses of the day in the female line to the
original mares, and in the Preface to Mr. Hermann
Goos's Tables (first edition) published 1885, it was
actually shown that the families now**nmribered
/, 2, 3, and 4 by Bruce Lowe " have produced 46
per cent, or almost one half of all the winners of the
five races, 2000 Gs., 1000 Gs., Derby, Oaks, and
St. Leger." Curiously enough, too, Mr. Hermann
Goos went on to point out how those four families
come out, just in Bruce Lowe's order, as judged by
results, and he further explained that the superiority
of what we now call " No. / "—The Natural Barb
24
-ocr page 42-
THE FIGURE GUIDE
mare—is the more clearly proved through her having
been less numerously represented than the others.
" This family," wrote he, " has with relatively the
smallest amount of material produced the greatest
mimber—and by far the greatest number—of
winners of the above five races, or, if the expression
may be used, the result of the breeding has in this
family taken the most concentrated form."
Mr. Hermann Goos's Tables were from the first
a marvel of convenience, enabling you as they did
to trace almost any thoroughbred in Europe to its
original ancestress, but he never thought of classify-
ing the original mares. On the other hand, Bruce
Lowe, at the Antipodes, had gone through practi-
cally the same labours as Mr. Hermann Goos (for
he never saw the " Tables " until shortly before his
death in England), and on that he put the master
stroke of the figure system.
' I1
The Figure System a Master Stroke ;
ADOPTED BY HERMANN GoOS ON THE ADVICE
oe Count Lehxdorfe.
It is not too much to say that this system or
guide elicited almost at once the approval of
breeders of intelligence throughout the world
(except for a while in England). Mr. Hermann
Goos, who published the third edition of his
"Tables" in 1897, thus describes the position in his
Preface—
It has already been stated in the Preface to the first edition
that the order of my families is quite arbitrary and incidental ;
there was therefore some room for improvement in this direc-
tion ; the only question was on what short basis this was to
take place.
This question had not been settled when at the end of 1895
appeared in London the important work, Breeding Racehorses
t>y the Figure System,
by C. Bruce Lowe.
25
-ocr page 43-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
The author, an Australian, died, unfortunately, before the
publication of his book, which was then taken over and
brought out by Mr. W. Allison in London. This figure
system by Bruce Lowe is based on the enumeration of families
in the direct female line, as was already done in my tables
which first appeared in 1885, also in Frentzel's Family Tables.
His figures are nothing but the numbers of the respective
families ; but Bruce Lowe has numbered his families after a
definite system,
and not arbitrarily.
As the principles for breeding in his book have a special
significance, and are of great value, I have decided to adopt
the same figures for my families as have been utilised by Mr.
Bruce Lowe, after having previously consulted and having
been advised to do so by the Master of the Horse, Count
LehndorfF, Baron C. von Biel, and U. von Oertzen. The new
figures of my families have therefore, in this third edition,
been made to correspond with the family figures / to 43 of
Bruce Lowe. The seven families, 44 to 50, however, have been
omitted by Bruce Lowe, they being partly extinct, though
still of some interest to our German and to the French
breeding.
I need not here enter anv further into the Bruce-Lowe
methods. I enclose, however, herewith, at the special request
of the Master of the Horse, Count Lehndorff, a copy of my
article on Bruce Lowe's book which appeared in No. 11 of the
Sport Welt, published on the 6th February 1896, and which
is intended to call the attention of breeders to the basis
employed in Bruce Lowe's system, and to induce them to study
the same very carefully.
The Continent alert ; England as usual
dull and slow to receive a novelty
The above translation from the Preface to Mr.
Hermann Goos's third edition will show how quick
our Continental friends were to catch and utilise the
judgment by results idea. It is not too much to
say that England has been as usual the dullest-
witted country in the world in appreciating a
novelty. Stupid and insular fossils, too lazy or too
wanting in intellect to read and digest the book,
26
-ocr page 44-
THE FIGURE GUIDE
tried to get rid of the whole subject by denouncing
it as rubbish and so forth ; but all this has been as
idle as was Canute's attempt to stop the flowing tide.
The Bruce Lowe figures are irresistible, because
they are founded on fact. They mean exactly what
they say—if figures can be allowed to speak—and
what they say is true, as anybody can find out for
himself by research in Racing Calendars. No com-
petitive examination that ever was in the history of
the world ever brought out a class list so absolutely
and exactly in accordance with the merits of the
candidates, as is this class list framed by Bruce
Lowe for the original mares. The figures to this
day stamp their respective descendants in correct
order of family merit as achieved through results,
and if any one still doubts let him look at the
statistics which I shall presently give.
21
-ocr page 45-
r
*
^^
.From a painting by Allen C. Sealy.
Flying Fox (M. Cannon up).
■'■ ■                  ii it : i
-ocr page 46-
CHAPTER III
THE FIGURES TESTED AXD PROVED
Influence of great brood mares not to be measured by rule of quarter-
ing^—Prepotency of families and purity of origin—The figures
apply to the whole chain of descent up to date—Bruce Lowe's
Standard—Tested further by 2000 Guineas and 1000 Guineas results
—Tested yet again by the Cup winners—The Running families are
supreme.
Ignorant Criticism as to remote Ancestress
having infinitesimal influence
The Figure Guide has had to run the gauntlet of a
great deal of ignorant criticism, much of which was
based on the premises that only an infinitesimal
portion of the blood of an original mare can be
represented in her modern tail female descendants.
To this there are two answers, either of them
sufficient in its way. The first is that the prepotency
of a great brood mare cannot be calculated by the
removes and quartering^ of a pedigree. Great brood
mares by some superior vitality, constitution, and
purity of blood, establish families, and those families
live on, refreshed every now and again by breeding
back to the parent root. The same phenomenon
has held good of stud horses, some of which can
establish a line while others Cannot. Be the scientific
reason what it may, the fact is that descent in tail
male and in tail female depends almost entirely for
its successful continuance on the purity and vigour
of a series of ancestors, and the longer that series,
and the purer the origin, the more certain is that
28
-ocr page 47-
FIGURES TESTED AND PROVED
line to live. Eclipse, Herod, and Matchem long
rears ago wiped out every other line in tail male ;
and a precisely similar survival of the fittest has
taken, and is yearly taking place, in the families of
the original brood mares, many of which have long-
since died out, others are all but extinct, and a
limited few have attained absolute supremacy.
survival of the fittest ix the female llxe
xecessarily a longer process than ix the
Male, but more certain in its Results.
It is easy to understand that the process of survival
among brood mare families would be more lengthy
than that which applies to horses, for brood mares
in the first instance largely outnumber the stallions
used, and these give the female lines many more
chances of being established. Moreover, almost all
well-grown thoroughbred mares would be allowed
the opportunity of producing foals, while stallions
are by no means equally favoured, and among them
again the force of mere fashion has much to do
with the rise of some lines and the fall of others.
Nevertheless, as will be proved to demonstration
from the following statistics, the families of the
original mares have sorted themselves out, and the
best have risen to the top by inherent superiority.
The Figures apply not oxly to ax Original
AXCESTRESS, BUT TO THE WHOLE ChAIX OF
Descent down to the Present Day, and
their Order of Merit is due to the Vic-
tories of the Family from first to last.
The second answer to the criticism as to the
influence of a remote ancestress is that the figures
fre n°t marked on that remote ancestress only?,
Thgy "refer To "the whole chain of female descent,
or ascent from her to her latter-day representatives,
29
•»
-ocr page 48-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
or from them to her. Thus Ladas is a No. /
horse, not by virtue of the Natural Barb mare
only, but by virtue of the victories which her
descendants, including himself, have won, which
victories entitle the family to precedence over all
oOiers, and so 'long"as that family remains~'No. / by
continuing to prove its superiority on racecourses,
practical breeders will be satisfied. The rest is a
matter of merely academic interest.
Bruce Lowe considered most carefully all
Lines in a Pedigree
Again, because Bruce Lowe was so careful to
class the families in their order, as settled by results,
it has been alleged by those who have never studied
his book that he was therefore entirely negligent of
all the other parts of a pedigree but the bottom line.
Nothing could be more untrue, for no man has ever
gone more elaborately into the question of how to
best combine the various blood lines. His first ob-
ject, however, was to establish as a proved fact what
are the best blood lines, and armed with that know-
ledge his next study, How to combine them, was
simplified both for him—poor fellow!—and for us.
Derby, Oaks, and St. Leger the
Standard Test
I will now give a tabular record up to date,
showing how the Bruce Lowe families really stand
in regard to Derby, Oaks, and Leger victories. It
must be borne in mind that the order of the figures
was first settled in Australia a good many years ago,
and some slight changes in results have occurred
since then, but nothing at all material. The running
families, /, 2, 3, 4, 5, remain absolutely supreme in
being responsible for no fewer than 185 winners out
of 362 ; in other words, more than half, although the
30
-ocr page 49-
FIGURES TESTED AND PROVED
originals are but five mares out of the fifty still
represented, to say nothing of the number which
have died out.
List of the number of Derby, Oaks, and Leger, bv winners
of the respective Original Families
j
1
1
Total
Family.
Derby.
Oaks.
St. Leger.
12
Winners.
1
15
17
44
2
9
17
19
45
3
15
14
13
42
4
7
11
11
29
5
10
7
26
6
11
5
2
18
7
11
2
0
19
8
3
3
8
14
9
5
3
6
14
10
5
3
3
11
11
3
1
3
7
12
1
0
2
9
13
5
3
2
10
14
1
2
3
6
15
3
1
5
9
ic
2
2
1
5
17
')
3
5
18
3
3
1
7
19
1
3
4
20
'•)
2
5
21
3
1
4
22
2
1
3
23
1
4
1
6
24
1
1
25
2
1
3
20
1
2
1
4
27
1
1
2
28
1
1
2
29
1
2
3
30
2
2
31
1
1
32
1
1
33
1
1
34
2
2
35
'.'.'.
36
...
37
38
1
1
39-40
j
120
121
121
362
31
-ocr page 50-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
It will be seen from this table that the running
families, /, 2, 3, 4, and 5, stand out right ahead of
all others, the competition between /, 2, and 3
being very close—indeed No. 2 is just one point
ahead of No. / family; but how well the latter
still deserves its place may be gathered from the
fact that whereas there are 753 mares of No. 2
family in vol. xviii. of the Stud Hook, there are only
.540 of No. /. This clearly points to the average
quality of the produce of No. / being superior.
It is often urged by superficial critics of Bruce
Lowe that the test of Derby, Oaks, and Leger is
an arbitrary and insufficient one. They point to
horses such as Vedette, St. Frusquin, Isonomy,
Sterling, and others, in proof of this, and it is of
course beyond dispute that the winners of the three-
test races are not invariably the best of their year,
yet it is equally certain that they are the best on
the average, over a number of years, and as the
races in question are the aim of the ambition of all
the most important breeders and owners, I have
never doubted that Bruce Lowe was right to take
their average of results as a safe standard by which
to arrange Iris figures.
a furtheh pltoof furnished by adding the
•2000 Guineas and 1000 Guineas Results
It may be urged that if he was right in so doing
the results of other races ought to afford some
confirmatory proof, and admitting this to be so.
I have made out a further table including the
winners also of the 2000 Guineas and 1000 Guineas,
which will be found on the opposite page.
32
-ocr page 51-
FIGURES TESTED AND PROVED
ENGLISH RACES
Oaks.
St. Leger.
Total.
17
12
79
17
19
63
14
13
65
it
11
47
10
7
32
5
2
22
2
(i
26
3
8
20
3
6
19
3
3
14
1
3
11
6
2
19
3
1
14
2
3
7
1
5
9
2
1
7
2
3
3
1
9
3
7
3
2
7
3
1
4
1
7
4
1
8
1
1
1
6
2
1
1
8
6
1
2
1
2
8
2
1
3
1
1
1
2
2
0
1
0
1
1000 Gs.
Derby
17
15
8
9
13
15
11
7
3
9
1
11
3
11
3
3
2
5
Family No. 2000 Gs.
/ H
2
3
4
S
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
L3
14
15
16
17
18
I'.i
20
21
22
23
2-1
25
26
^7
21!
2!)
30
31
32
33
34
35-37
38
39-44
45
I!!
10
10
7
3
::
4
3
3
3
3
6
3
I
1
2
I
3
I
4
3
Now, here we see the further test not only con-
firms Bruce Lowe, but enables No. / family to assert
decisive supremacy, while the other four running
families have more than held their own. The five
33                                D
*•
-ocr page 52-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
running families have in short produced 285 winners,
while all the others put together have only totalled
243. I can hardly think that any one looking at
these figures will fail to see that they indicate
beyond the shadow of a doubt the extraordinary
value of the great families which Eruce Lowe rightly
classed Nos. /, 2, 3, 4, and 5.
The Cup Test, and complete Vindication of
the Running Families
But still there are sceptics who say : These are
only three-year-old results, accumulated by a lot of
animals who never last long enough to win cups and
prove themselves really great horses. Well, I do
not fear that test or any other, where, as in England,
the original mares have all had a comparatively
equal chance. Let us work out the records of the
Ascot, Goodwood, and Doncaster Cups. Here
they are :—
Ascot Gold
Goodwood
Doncaster
Family No.
Cup.
Cup.
Cup.
Total.
/ won
5
8
G
10
2
G
4
8
18
3
G
G
8
20
4
7
4
8
1!)
5
9
3
i
1!)
o
4
4
7
2
2
4
8
1
1
(i
8
9
2
1
1
4
10
2
1
3
6
11
G
G
3
15
12
1
3
2
G
13
1
2
3
14
3
3
G
15 „
2
3
;>
16
2
2
G
84
-ocr page 53-
FIGURES TESTED AND PROVED
Ascot Gold
Goodwood
Doncaster
Family No.
Cup.
Cup.
Cup.
Total.
] 7 won
1
3
2
6
1
1
19
4
7
4
15
20 „
0
21
2
4
6
22
4
2
6
23
2
2
4
24
1
1
25
1
1
26
L
1
2
27
1
1
2
28
I
1
29 & 30 „
0
31
1
2
1
4
32-41
0
42
1
1
2
43
0
44
1
1
NAMES OF THE ABOVE WINNERS IN THEIR RESPECTIVE
FAMILIES
Ascot Gold
Cvp. Goodwood Cup. Doncaster
Cup.
Mark A.
C
;. d.
No. / F.
4MILY.
No. 2 Family.
Rockingham
. D.
Grey Momus . . .A.
Glencoe
. G.
Ilarkaway .
G
. A.
Don John
D
Rockingham
. G.
Ilarkaway
G
Jouvence
. G.
Voltigeur
D
Baronzino
. G.
Teddington
-
D
Dollar.
. G.
Teddington
A
Achievement
. D.
Hungerford
D.
Blue Gown .
. A.
Skirmisher
A.
Speculum
. G.
Lecturer
A.
Mortemer
. A.
Vauhan
G.
Shannon
. G.
. D.
Cremorne
Adventuriere
A.
G.
Craig Millar
. D.
Petronel
D.
Pageant
. D.
Savile .
G.
Robert the Devil
. A.
Gold .
A
The Bard
. G.
Chesterfield
D
. D.
Pinfold
D
Bird of Freedom
. A.
Calveley
D.
35
"*
-ocr page 54-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
No.
3 Family.
Fandango
Winkfield .
The Saddler. . D.
Fandango
Rubini.
G. 1
Newcastle
Glaucus
A.
Gladiateur .
Lanercost
A.
(iood Hope .
Van Tromp .
r*
Dutch Skater
>>
A.
Doncaster
Flying Dutchman
A.
Rataplan
1).
Althorp
Salreur
D.
Kettledrum .
D.
Morion
Tim Whiffler
G.
Barmecide .
>>
D.
General Peel
D.
No. 6 Family.
Rama .
D.
Favonius
G.
Priam . . . . .
Border Minstrel
G.
)>•••''
Rada .
G.
Grimston . . . .
Claymore
1).
Flageolet . . . .
La Fleche
A.
Isinglass
A.
No. 7 Family.
West Australian .
No. 4 Family.
Rogerthorpe
Alice Hawthorn D.
Florizel 11. .
Persimmon . . . .
j? j?
G.
j) j?
U.
No. 8 Family.
The Hero
1).
j)
A.
Miss Craven
);
G.
Tomboy
>;
A.
Beeswing
Virago .
G.
?>
sy
D.
??
Thormanby
A.
j?
Asteroid
A.
)>
Mandrake
D.
Sweet-sauce .
Brigantine
A.
Grafton
Apology
A.
Kincsem
. G.
No. 9 Family-.
Thebais
1).
Hyllus . . . .
Timothy . . . .
Winkfield's Pride
Cyllene . . . .
Hambledoii
Tyrant
Elf II. .
D.
I).
. A.
No. S Family.
No. 10 Family.
Mulatto . . . . D.
Fraulein . . . .
Retriever
. I).
Petrarch
The Emperor
. A.
Hampton
)>
. A.
jj
Woolwich
. A.
Tristan
The Ban
D.
Carlton
36
-ocr page 55-
FIGURES TESTED AND PROVED
No. 11 Family.
No. 17 Family.
Cricketer
. G.
Fleur de Lis
. D
Lottery
. D.
Link Boy
(i
('arew ....
. G.
Fleur de Lis
G
Beggarmaii .
. G.
J5 !> ■
G
Ralph ....
. A.
Verneuil
A
Fisherman
. A.
. A.
. 1).
Louis d" Or .
D
j, ...
Ackworth . . •
No. 18 Family.
St. Simon
. A.
. G.
St. Francis .
. A
5?
Trayles
. A.
. G.
No. 19 Family.
Queen's Birthday
. D.
Alarm ...
A
Love AVisely
. A.
Monarque
G
Merman
G.
Vedette
D
T1
No. 12 Family.
Isoline...
G
Voltaire
. 1).
Sahinus
A
War Eagle .
. D.
Isonomy
A
Kingston
. G.
,, ...
G
Scottish Chief
. A.
,,
D
The Duke
. G.
...
A
Restitution .
. G.
Retreat
Gonsalvo
D
G
No. 13 Family.
Count Schomberg
G
Stumps
. G.
?? j?
G
Ely *\
. A.
G.
King's Messenger
G
},
No. 21 Family.
No. 14 Family.
Touchstone
D.
A.
Laurel ... .
Charles XII.
1)
D
??
D.
>> ?? . . .
G
A.
A.
?j ?? ■
l_T
Buckstone
Sweetmeat . .
Prisoner . .
D
i i
Macaroni . .
D.
D
No. 15 Family.
No. 22 Family.
w
G.
G.
G.
A.
A.
Siderolite
New Holland
G
G
Friday . . .
Sweet Duchess
G
G
D
No. 16 Family.
Kilsallaghan
D
Lily Agnes .
St. Gatien .
D.
A.
No. 23 Family.
Philomel . . • .
G.
Galopade . .
1)
Martagon . . • .
G.
Chanticleer . . .
I)
Marcion . . - .
A.
Starke . . . -
G.
Laodamia .
D.
Madame du Barry
G.
-ocr page 56-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
No. 24 Family.
Sornette . . . . D.
No. 25 Family.
Uhlan.....D.
No. 26 Family.
The Promised Land . . G.
Buccaneer . . . .A.
No. 27 Family.
No. 28 Family.
Caravan . . . .A,
No. 31 Family.
Canezou . . .             G.
. . . .     D.
. . . .     G.
Boiard .....     A.
No. 42 Family.
Dresden China . . . G.
... D.
No. 44 Family.
Rupee . . . . . A. J Joe Miller . . . .A.
No members of the following1 families have yet won any of the above
races :—20, 29, 30, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41 and 43.
There we see the five great families equally to
the fore, having won nearly one half of the whole
number of these long-distance events. No. 19
family asserts itself, as careful students of the
subject would have expected—more especially those
who are acquainted with French results—but noth-
ing interferes with the supremacy of the running
families who " finish all in a heap "' together, but a
glance at the previous table will show that No. /
would be well ahead on a total count, which in fact
comes out as shown in the table on the opposite
page.
88
-ocr page 57-
FIGURES TESTED AND PROVED
Winners of 2000 Gs., 1000 Gs., Derby, Oaks, and Leger ; Ascot,
Goodwood, and Doncaster Cups
Family No.
Winners.
Family No.
Winners.
/
98
22
1
13
2
81
23
12
3
85
24
2
4
66
25
7
5
53
26
10'
6
26
27
8
7
30
28
3
8
28
29
3
9
23
30
2
10
20
31
7
11
26
32
l
12
25
33
l
13
17
34
2
14
13
35, 36, 37
0
15
13
38
1
16
13
39, 40, 41
0
17
13
42
2
18
10
43
0
19
22
44
1
20
7
45
1
21
10
I have not half done with my proofs yet, but
these will suffice for the present chapter.
39
-ocr page 58-
Yattendon (17) (Br. 1861)
Sir Hercules 3
(Br. 1843)
Cap-a-pie 5
(B. 1837)
Paraguay (imp.)
(B. 1835)
Tros 12 (imp.)
(B. 1836)
Alice Grey.
(Ch. 1838)
The Colonel 8 '
(Ch. 1825).
Whisker 1A.
Dr. of Delphine 30.
Daughter of
(B. 1829).
Sir Hercules %
(Bl. 1826).
Sultan 8.4.
Duchess of York by Waxy.
Whalebone 1A.
Peri.
ir 14 (B. 1887)
Daughter of
(Ch. 1819). .
Partisan 1.
Bizarre.
Cassandra
(1841)
Priam 6
(B. 1827).
Ally
(B. 1818).
Emilius 28.
Cressida.
Partisan 1.
Jest.
Rous Emigrant U
(Br. 1823).
Pioneer 1.
Ringtail.
Gulnare (imp.)
(Gr. 1822)
Y. Gohanna 5.
Ultima.
MERMAN (Ch. 1892)
Grand Flanei
- First Lady (B. 1865) (imp.)
St. Albans ?
(Ch. 1S59)
Stockwell 3b
u (Ch. 1849) <•
The Baron 24
(Ch. 1842)
Birdcatcher 11."
Echidna.
Pocahontas
(B. 1837) '
Glencoe IB.
Marpessa.. <,
Bribery
(Ch. 1851)
The Libel 14,
(Br. 1842)
Split Vote
(Ch. 1841)
Pantaloon 17.
Pasquinade.
St Luke 8.
Elec tress.
Lady Patroness
(B. I860)
Orlando 13
(B. 1841)
Touchstone 14
(B. 1831) *
Camel 24.
Banter.
Vulture
(Ch. 1833)
Langar 6.
Kite.
Lady Palmerston
(Br. 1852) s
Melbourne 1
(Br. 1834)
Humphrey Clinker 8.
Dr. of Cervantes 8.
Sister to Jocose
(B. 1844) (
Pantaloon 17.
Banter.
Seaweed 11 (Ch. 1883)
Surf (imp.) (B. 187S) Coltness la (B. 1873)
King Tom 3b
(B. 1851)—
Harkaway 2
(Ch. 1834) ■*
Economist 36
(B. 1825)
Fanny Dawson
(Ch. 1823)
Whisker 1A,
Floranthe
Nabocklish U.
Miss TooleyT""
Pocahontas
(B. 1837)
Glencoe 16
(Ch. 18317
Marpessa
(B. 1830) '
Sultan 8-4.
Trampotrrte.
Muley 6.
Clare ~
Crocus
(Ch. 1866)
Lifeboat 1
(Br. 1855f~
Thormanby A<:
(Ch. 1857P
Windhound3
(Br. 1847)
Pantaloon 17.
Phryne. ~"
Muley Moloch 9.
Rebecca.
Alice Hawthorn
(B. 1838)
Sunflower
(B. 1847)
Bay Middleton lb
(B. 1833) *
Sultan 8^4.
Cobwebr"
lo
(Ch. 183(3)
Whalebone la
(Br. 1807)
Taurus 2g.
Problem?
Sir Hercules 2
(Bl. 1826j~
Waxy 18.
Penelope by Trumpeter 14.
Peri
(B. 1S22)
Wanderer 11
Thalestris."""
Yard Arm
(B. 1843)
Sheet Anchor 12«
(Br. 1832) *»
Fanny Kemble
(B. 1827)
Lottery IL
MorgianaT*
Paulowitz 8.
Loyalty byTlubens %D.
Melbourne 1.
Mowerina. '
Parvenu
(B. 1873)
4
Joskin 6b
(Br. 11558)
Queen Elizabeth
(Ch. 1859)
West Australian 7
(B. 1850)
Peasant Girl
(B. 1846)
The Major UB,
Glance by Waxy Popejf,,
Autocrat 1
(B. 1841)"
Bay Rosalind
(B. 1849) *
Bay Middleton 1.
Empress.
Orlando 1^3.
Elopement, by Velocipede
-ocr page 59-
ECLIPSE
1
Pot-8-os
1
1
King Fero
1
US
Tramp
£1,746
Blacklock
Beauclerc .
Whalebone
i
Bill of Portland
£12,336
Archie
Lamlsborough
1,681
1.363
i
1
Far Niente
Haut Brion
3,005
2.840
Englishman
Mistake
1,121
941
Birdwatcher.
Touchstone
Splendour
2,700
The Broker .
922
1
Brasenose .
930
Mozart
765
l.oebiel
. £16,137
______
Gossoon
652
Farewell
695
Malua
7,851
Musket
Newminster
Gigue
489
Arsenal
592
Metal
4,831
1
and other
tranches
The Jeweller
411
Telephone .
575
Pilgrim's Progress
4.186
Carbine
£8,907
Crowberry .
307
Othello
522
Niagara .
2,815
Escutcheon
3,600
Padlock
. £2,955
Clayton
515
Eiridspord
2,69S
Trenton
3,449
Boolka
. 2,264
£23,070
Goldsbrough
475
Gibraltar
2,373
Thunderbolt
2,750
Canzoni
. 1,651
King of the North
Invader .
2,332
Martini Henry
2,380
Glorious
. 1,193
Zeno
400
Russley .
2,195
Nordenfeldt
2,087
Mostyn
568
Melos .
397
Lord Wilton .
2,117
Light Artillery .
1,492
Yule Cake
385
Vagabond .
365
Reginald .
1,550
Zalinski
1,109
Cheviot
352
Realm .
350
Malvolio .
1.363
Wallace
1,007
Greywing
335
Salisbury
359
Sir Oliver
1,282
Manton
925
Blairgowrie
332
First Demon
300
Bendigo .
1,135
Trenchant .
862
Sunny Days
315
Torchlight .
300
Buckthorpe
1,005
Mana .
659
Castor .
279
Goldreef
290
Acolyte .
920
Enfilade
621
Nautilus
235
Roland
290
Ormond .
910
Fusilier
466
Birragamhil
219
Tim Whiffler
275
Fraud
S72
Tartar
460
Marvellous
205
Fryingpan .
263
Clan Stewart .
823
Iiuiuisitor
443
Town Moor
710
Carnage
396
£11,288
£15,609
Prince Consort
701
Goodfellow .
348
- _^r
Newminster .
701
Krupp.
280
Meteor
683
Flintlock .
264
Battailous
6.77
Firelock
207
Anteros
Rufus
674
666
£32,692
Vengeance
646
11,288
Ascot Vale
St. Blaize
631
575
Total Touchstone £43,980
Vision
568
The Assyrian .
561
Myles-na-Coppaleen
560
Deerswood
538
Grandmaster .
529
M'Quarrie
515
Correze .
All Gold .
Gang Forward
Gnaroo .
King of the Ring
437
430
390
:.iso
370
Total Pot-8-os
Whalebone—
Birdcatcher . £74,907
Touchstone .
43,980
Tormentor
Prodigal .
Emancipation.
Coronet .
370
359
331
330
311
30'. 1
£118,887
Whisker . . 20,262
£139,149
Total Blacklock £23,670
Total Tramp
£15,609
Total Eclipse 6
i
P
Janissary
Beaumont
:i78,428
Lord Farnham
28S
Garfield .
285
Granville
275
Lord Bundoora
275
Harmonist
205
Sir Anthony
262
Invermay
259
Sardius .
247
Vanish
213
Safeguard
240
Irish Home Rule
235
Churchill
231
Auchendarroch
233
Chatham
230
Waterford
205
Whisker
Grand Flaneur £4,925
Carlyon.
2,702
Cranbrook
2,189
Aberconi
1,942
Bengal .
1,370
Albury .
1,282
King Cole
885
Emerald
805
Creswick
702
Chesham
497
Stromboli
475
Sweet Williai
a 440
Premature
274
Stockdale
256
Ruenalf
244
Winchester
222
Dagobert
215
The Duke
215
First Chestei
212
Penance
205
Hesperian
205
£20,2(52
*74,'.i07
HEHOD
Highflyer
Woodpecker
i
Castrki.
Sir Paul
i
Wild Dayrell
Walton
I
Partisan
Seum
Mentor .
Mercury .
Dick Swiveller
Tim Swiveller .
Marksman
Day Star
Cs 10
538
448
27 j
256
212
Wellington
Tremando
Isonomy
Paris
Pacific
Warloo
St. Swithin
Butler
Colewort .
Someil
Wheatsheaf
Tester
Wellesley .
Pell Mell .
Skipper .
Cadogan .
Blue Peter
Albatross
William Tell
Theorist .
Commotion
£1,626,
1,135
1,109
081)
933
722
692
6,33
609
550
392
370
339
325
296
292
284
275
262
260
Fisherman
Pantaloon
Gozo
Neckersgat .
Portsea
Two of Hearts
. £6,294
5,285
495
490
439
427
360
287
286
262
£14,625
Sunrise
Forest King
Trident
Richmond .
The Rake
Tradition
Bargo .
The Admiral
Lennox
Robinson Crusoe
Bohemian .
Richelieu
Wycombe
Navigator .
Belvidere
Cruiser
P rial n .
Broken Hi
Velocipede
Segenhoe
Middlemarch
Bathurst
t^,475
427
352
200
£3,:* 54
Little Bernie
Welcome Jack
Oudeis .
Oast Oft .
Wandering Willie
£2,569 Dunlop
Strife .
Ironhorse
Antaurs
Mainsail
MATCHEM
Melbourne
£12,341
ECLIPSE
HEROD.
MATCHEM
Australian Peer     .        . £2,235
£26,966 Kangaroo .        .             1,948
25.2S6 Glenmarkie             .               207
£52,252                                               £4,390
Totals—
Highflyer
Woodpecker
Herod
t25,2St;
£235,070
AusTHAi-AsiAN Statistics. Tail Mai.io Results. 1899-1900.
[To face page 340.
-ocr page 60-
CHAPTER IV
JUDGMENT BY RESULTS—RESULT OF JUDGMENT
The Merman cable—Advice to buy him confirmed by the figures—
Wonderful pedigree—Further enquiry satisfactory—" Mr. Jersey"
lias the pluck of a dozen men—Merman bought—He lands in
England—Can lie stay the Cesarewitch course ?—The figures say
"yes"—He wins the Cesarewitch.
First Result of studying the Figure System :
The Importation of Merman
As an interlude before again taking up the serious
business of statistics, I will now deal with the first
result which followed after I had managed to
arrange poor Bruce Lowe's manuscripts, and get
liis book, however imperfectly, through the press—
and a lucky thing it was that I had happened to
grasp, after a few conversations with him, the full
meaning and importance of his discovery, for other-
wise he would have died unappreciated in this
country, and his book would never have been.
»} ell, the first practical result followed when, in
November 1896, I received a cablegram from the
late Mr. W. R. Wilson in Australia to the effect
that Merman had just won the Williamstown Cup,
and could be bought for 1600 gs. " Legs like steel,"
so ran the cable—" best horse in Australia to win
handicaps in England."
Now I had the greatest possible confidence in
41
-ocr page 61-
From a photograph by Clarence Hailey.
Trenton.
-ocr page 62-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
my friend's judgment, but people were not then so
used to buying horses at the Antipodes as they are
now, and I set about thinking how could I get
some confirmatory proof of Merman's excellence.
Why not run out his pedigree with the figures ?
I did so, and the result was superb—so superb indeed
that, good horse as Merman has proved himself
since then to be, it may be predicted with the
utmost confidence that his stud success will be in a
higher class. The tabulated pedigree is given on
another page with the figures added, and for reasons
which I shall explain later, some of the figures
have letters attached which indicate the special
branches of the original family.
Merman's Grand Pedigree
It will be seen that Merman not only counts 26
of the sire or running families in the first 32 quarter-
ings of his pedigree, but that the No. / family is
strikingly prominent close up on his dam's side.
There can be little doubt that the actual " nick "
would be brought about in his case through Stock-
well in the dam of Grand Flaneur and King Tom,
the grandsire of Seaweed, but the pedigree through-
out is full of remarkable features, and not the least
remarkable is it that Whisker's best son, The
Colonel, winner of the Feger in 1828, should
occupy precisely the same position in Grand
Flaneur's pedigree as does Economist in that of
Seaweed, Economist being not only a son of
Whisker, but having finished third to The Colonel
for the Leger.
Then, turning to the fourth remove of Yatten-
don's pedigree, we find an extraordinary combina-
tion of' the best No. / blood, Whisker, Whalebone,
Partisan (twice) and Pioneer, all close descendants
42
-ocr page 63-
Colonial Classic Races
Classification of Families in
the Colonies by the
Winners of the following
Classic Races.
if
List of Representatives of Colonial Families.
= 2
Family.
Dam of Two True Blues
Newminster, Hova, Malua, Sheet Anchor, Tim Whittler (imp.), Blink
Bonny, Tim Whiffler (Sydney), Musket (imp.), Richmond, Mari-
byrnong, Gossoon (imp.), St. Leger (imp)., Wallace, Abercorn, Sir
Hercules.
Castor (imp.), Hotclikiss, The Admiral, Angler, Aurnm, Carbine, Fish-
hook, The Marquis (imp.), Gang Forward (imp.).
Trident, Commotion, Navigator, Bundook, The Officer, Atholine (imp.)
Martini-Henry, Cranbrook, Nordenfeldt, Goldsbrough, Carlton,
Robinson Crusoe.
Anteros (imp.), Castle Hill (imp.), Fireworks, Light Artillery, Rose- ;
dale (imp.)
Patron, Cap-a-pie (imp.), Somnus (imp.), Nelson, The Duke, Amberite,
Mirella, Bobadil.
Trenton, Bloodshot, Epigram (imp.), Niagara, Euroclydon, Progress, !
Manuka, Cossack.
Strathmore, Merman, Rous' Emigrant (imp.), The Barb.
Miss Jessie, Briseis, Caspian, G'Naroo, Newhaven.
Wellington, Chandos (imp.), Eiridspord (imp.), Kelpie (imp.), The
Drummer (imp.), Kingston (imp.), Positano (imp.), Quiver, Gibraltar,
Titan.
Grand Flaneur, Darebin, Grandmaster (imp.), Panic (imp.), Le Loup.
Flying Buck.
Maxim, Glorious (imp.), Warhawk (imp.) Tros (imp.), Town Moor.
Mostyn.
Corday, Pollio, Loup Garou, Darriwell, Flying Jib, Nightingale.
Brown and Rose, Highborn, Mahee, Bargo, Blondin, Wycombe.
Crossfire, Creswick, John Bull (imp.), Eleusive, Beauchamp (imp.).
Nobleman (imp.)
Lava, Javelin, Hecla, Woodlands.
Le Grand, Autonomy, Malta, Fort, Ladykirk (imp.), Philip, Paris.
Lantern, Stockownev (imp.), Sunrise, St. Hippo, Sextant.
Nellie, Wilga, Kingsborough, Savanaka, Etra-Weenie, Diffidence.
Matchlock.
The Harvester, New Warrior (imp.), Don Juan, Rusk (imp.), Welcomr
Jack (New Zealand).
Chester, Swiveller, Metford, Ace of Clubs, Trenchant, Roodee.
Carlyon, Fisherman (imp.), King Alfred (imp.), Correze, Guesswork.
Gemma-di-Vergy.
Yattendon, Snowdon (imp.), Sir Modred.
Acolyte, Volley, Traducer.
I Mormon.
I Ladybird.
I Dagworth, Hercules.
i The Plunger.
i Maddelina, Pride of the Hills.
Pardon, Reprieve, Lady Betty, Bel Giorno, Quality.
Albury, The Australian Peer, Vengeance, O'Trigger.
Burton Barb Mare
| Old Vintner Mare
A Royal Mare
(dam of Turk Mare)
Dr. of Sower's Stallion
Dr. of Massy's Black Barb .
Old Woodcock Mare
(Jam of Old Spot Mare)
Layton Barb Mare
Dinah .....
(by Gratis)
Tregonwell's Natural Barb Mare
II
13
10
5
18
4
-\-
3
i
5
6
7
S
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
The Oldfiold Mare
Moss Rose .
(Rous' Emigrant (imp.), mare imported
from Cape of Good Hope)
A Royal Mare (Montagu Mare)
Merliu Mare
(dam of mare by D. Arabian)
Betty......
(by Hector)
Darcy's Black-Legged Royal Mare
Eve ......
(Marquis, Toss Mare)
Royal Mare .....
(dam of Old Whynot)
Spanker Mare
Sappho        .....
(Marquis, Zohrab Mare)
Flirt......
(by Steeltrap— Brunette by B. Camer-
ton)
Helmsley Turk Mare .
Bustler Mare ....
(dam of Byerly Turk Mare)
Sedbury Royal Mare
Byerly Turk Mare
Dr. of Gascoigne's Foreign Horse .
Delaware Girl ....
(Delapre, dr. of Romeo)
Miss Foote.....
(by Herald)
Bonny Black
         ...
(founder of Persian Stallion)
Duchess .....
(Young Gustavus, Whisker Mare)
Old Bald Peg ....
Natural Barb Mare
(dam of Basset, Arab Horse)
Moonah Barb Mare
(of Queen Anne)
14
+
12
26
7
15
27
24
8
11
17
20
+
2
+
2
39
+
6
29
21
[To fare page 142.
Note.—The >^- denotes a Colonial F;
Table of Als
-ocr page 64-
JUDGMENT BY RESULTS
of Prunella, Pioneer being her son. Then we have
the dam of Grand Flaneur very strongly inbred to
Banter 14, through sister to Jocose, Touchstone,
and his sister Pasquinade—indeed it might be that
Grand Flaneur, a phenomenal horse himself, would
sire a more brilliant son than Merman, from a dam
that gave him a return of No. 14 blood, but for
the making of a great stud horse Merman has sire
figures in plenty, and the tremendous aggregation
of No. / must, under the circumstances, tell with
immense effect.
Careful Enquiries as to the Horse himself.
" Mr. Jersey " buys him
I am writing of the horse as we now know him,
but as a result of first figuring out his pedigree, I
cabled to ask if he had size and good looks enough
to make a stallion. The answer was in the
affirmative, and on that I unhesitatingly advised
" Mr. Jersey" to buy him, which the lady who
races under that name, having more pluck than a
dozen men, at once decided to do, and Merman
was bought accordingly in the month of November
1896.
No Case or being Wise after the Event.
The Purchase made axd confidence de-
clared in the Figures while Merman still
in Australia.
Now this is no case of being wise after the event,
for the horse's tabulated and figured pedigree was
published in The Sportsman that month, with a
statement that he had been bought by a believer in
the figure system to win races in this country, and
it was left to the future to decide whether the
figures were false guides or not.
43
-ocr page 65-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
His Stamina taken on Trust from the Figures
and his Sire and Maternal Grandsire
The rest is matter of more or less common
knowledge. Merman was shipped in December,
came round by the Cape, and landed in England
the second week in February. He was in robust
health, and as there was a frost at the time it cost
Shipley, the Cobham stud groom, " mickle toil"
to lead him from Newmarket Station to Fred
Webb's stable, for the horse naturally kicked,
plunged, and disported himself, while the road was
like glass. He ran at Kempton, and ran well on
Easter Monday, and for the rest, after he had won
the Lewes Handicap and was still only coming to
his true form, it was found from a gallop over a
mile and a half with Brayhead, that Merman could
hardly lose the Cesarewitch if he could stay the
distance. He had never run more than a mile and
a half in Australia, but here again the figures came
in useful. Such a concentration of the very best
running blood behind the solid No. 15 and No. 11
families, could be relied on for stamina as it had not
been dissipated on a mere sprinter. Cjanrmon-sense
and experience must, of course, always accompany
jiny such calculation, and it was concurrently noted
that Grand Flaneur was a Melbourne Cup winner,
I that Coltness won the Alexandra Plate, and that
Merman himself was the very cut of a stayer. All
these things having been weighed, he was backed,
and that freely—very freely; and he won a small
fortune for his owner. It is best to write of the
event just as it struck one at the time. So here is
my own account, written within an hour or two
after the race :—
44
-ocr page 66-
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Bruce Lowe No.
w -j4- 4- 4* 4-4- 4- 4*
►£_£, W ^^ N
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Kentucky Derby.
Clark.
Kentucky Oaks
Withers.
Belmont.
Ladies.
—' h-> 03
v:
Tidal.
C. Derby and Realisation.
03 i-1 l-i
Mermaid.
Jersey Derby and Lorillard.
Monmouth Oaks.
T ravers.
Kenner.
01       !-■ to       W
Alabama.
HHIi       l-i
Louisville Cup.
Westchester Cup.
Coney Island Cup.
Monmouth Cup.
_         Saratoga Cup.
^ ' Excelsior,
j         
Champion.
Totals.
303          03          03 03 03 03 03 03 *■ 4^ Oi Ol C" iff O OS OS
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-ocr page 67-
JUDGMENT BY RESULTS
" He Wins the Cesaeeavitch "
Newmarket, Oesarewitch Night, 1807-
" He is a regular bulldog to battle out a finish." Such
was part of the description of Merman given to me by the
horse's late owner, Mr. W. It. Wilson, and no truer words
were ever written. Gameness and stamina, the qualities so
often lacking here, are characteristic of the Australian
thoroughbred, and it is for this reason that I have for years
past done my little best to interest English breeders in the
" Waters." Well, it has come, and come quickly, the practical
demonstration. Merman, the Australian handicapper (my
horse, as the man of observation yesterday styled him), has
done exactly what I anticipated. What, then, are we to say
about the Australian classic winners, Carbine, Trenton, and
Carnage, who are all standing in this country ? There are
occasions when one is afraid to face the task of writing—the
subject is too engrossing. At this moment there lies before
me the document which I had printed on November 10 last
year, immediately on receiving the cable that Merman had
won the Williamstown Cup, and giving the option of his
purchase up to the 16th of that month—only a week. " Legs
like steel," so ran the cable—" best horse in Australia for tbe
purpose of winning handicaps in England." I need not
pursue that subject; suffice it that "Mr. Jersey" purchased
Merman, who was landed in England in the early part of last
February and duly escorted to Newmarket by Shipley, the
Cobham stud groom, who delivered him to Fred Webb, and
here am I sitting down with some idea of describing this
horse's Cesarewitch victory. Honestly, I don't feel equal to
the task. It is almost impossible so quickly after the race to
shed one's personal interests in the winner and view the whole
affair in proper perspective. There is an almost irresistible
temptation to round on those who have reviled colonial horses
for no earthly reason, as I well know, except that I have
recommended them. But I forbear. Merman's victory is an
all-sufficient answer. Then again, tlie figure system; has it
not been repeatedly stated in these columns that on the
figures Merman is one of the finest-bred horses in the world,
and his numbered pedigree, which I append, cannot well be
improved on ?
45
-ocr page 68-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
And now came the paddock inspection of the Cesarewitch
horses, one of the first of whom to catch my eyes was St.
Bris. Last year's winner looked trained to the hour, and
there could be no sort of doubt of the extraordinary confidence
of his party, but he is at best moderate, and he ran just
about as I expected he would do, though I had not expected
that M. Cannon would manage to ride him at 8 st. 2 lb.
Presently I came across Mr. James Waugh, who assured me
that all was well with The Rush, who would, he fully expected,
win. The son of Barcaldine had bandages on his forelegs in
the paddock, but these were presently removed, and it was
then seen that he wore a cloth on his near foreleg. In him-
self he looked almost too well, but he was doubtless thoroughly
fit, or he would not have finished as he did in such a very
fast-run race. I now saw Northallerton, who looked as fit as
hands could make him, though perhaps a little substantial for
a thorough stayer, and the race showed two miles to be reallv
the length of his tether.
Meanwhile Merman had been going badly in the market,
as a result, no doubt, of the stupid report of his indifferent
display in his Monday gallop, a report which I did my best
to counteract yesterday and the day before by reiterating the
oft-told tale, so far as the The Sportsman is concerned, that
Merman is notorious for sluggish work in home gallops. He
himself, when he appeared on the scene, commanded almost
universal approval, for he was indeed clean wound up to the
very zenith of condition, and the bloom of thorough health
was on him. He is a horse of fine size, with ideal legs and
feet, and he is one of the sinewy, lithe sort, carrying not an
ounce of lumber. Some day he will make a fine stallion, and
will be especially valuable as bringing back to us the best
line of Whisker through The Colonel, winner of the St.
Leger of 1828. True Art pleased me well, being a game-
looking, old-fashioned filly, with size and power. Carlton
Grange had done well since last I saw him; and Canvass
Back, a great lengthy brown, made many friends. Keenan I
did not see, but was constantly told of his great chance.
Jacobus did not impress me quite so unfavourably as he did
at Kempton, and, for the rest, Comfrey, Limasol, and History
all found favour, but Asterie went down rather stiltily, as
if feeling the effects of her previous day's race. The Monte
Video champion, Cartouche III., seemed not unlikely to un-
ship Pio Torterolo when he got out on the course, but
46
-ocr page 69-
JUDGMENT BY RESULTS
thought better of it after the jockey had menaced him with
the whip. Sloan rode the bull-fronted St. Cloud II. in the
approved American style, and I have now mentioned all that
I really saw.
Viewing the race from the far side of the course, and pretty
wide of it, I think I got a better view than I have ever done,
though the light was by no means good. Mr. Rucker's
colours first caught my eye after the field had breasted
the ascent from the Ditch gap. St. Bris was running
well, and, yes, Merman was there all right. I did not see
The Rush just then, but there were many of them running
exceedingly well considering the pace and the distance.
On they came, and still Merman stuck to his work, but at
the Bushes Northallerton cried a go, and then The Rush
was on the scene threatening deadly danger to the best.
Carlton Grange was showing prominently, but St. Bris could
not hold his own. Keenan was nowhere visible and had
run shockingly, refusing to gallop after the first half mile.
The utmost excitement prevailed, as down the Bushes hill
came Merman and The Rush, Waugh's horse having a trifle
the best of it, and with Wood matched against Sharpies
most people thought fortune was inclining towards the top
weight. Even " Mr. Jersey " fancied the great coup was just
going to be missed, but as I watched the struggle Mr. W. R.
VVilson's words, which head this article, came into my mind,
and believing them thoroughly—as I should always do any-
thing he seriously told me—I felt certain that we were about
to have their absolute truth proved. And so it was. Merman
did stick to his work like a bulldog, and got home by
a neck. No one ever saw a horse struggle more indomi-
tably to the bitter end of a punishing race, and no praise is
too great for Sharpies, who rode him. Carlton Grange
showed the exact truth of the Lewes form. What excite-
ment there was !
In the paddock after this "Mr. Jersey1'' was overwhelmed
with congratulations, and was accompanied by the Duke of
Cambridge to the winner's box to see him clothed up and
started off home. " He is a game one, indeed," I heard the
Duke say, and so he is. The stable must have won a big
pile, and F. Webb's usual impassive countenance could no
longer conceal his joy. For myself—well, it is no use
writing about myself, and I pass on.—The Sportsman,
Oct. 14, 1897.
47
-ocr page 70-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
All this a mere Object Lesson as to prac-
tical Result of studying the Figures in
connection with study of horses.
Now all this is given here, not for the purpose of
glorifying Merman—still less, myself—but just to
put on record an object lesson of what practical
result a careful study of the figures did in fact
produce at the very first attempt. It would be
easy to tabulate the pedigrees of more brilliant
horses and show from the figures whence their
brilliancy came, but explanations, after the event,
are never altogether convincing. In Merman's case
the figure guide pointed the way to victory before
the event, and was utilised accordingly.
At the same time the story of the purchase of
Merman, and the taking on trust that he would stay
'2\ miles, may be useful also as showing that the
figure guide should be used simply as a ^Me_and
in con] unction""with all other knowledge that we
can gain from experience or enquiry. The finest
combination of blood which it is possible to imagine
may from any one of a variety of causes result in a
wretched weed, but, cveteris paribus, blood is certain
to tell. The man who breeds horses, or buys them,
on paper only, is more foolish than the one who
wholly disregards pedigree ; but when you have
some knowledge of the horse you are dealing, or
about to deal with, a further knowledge of his
blood lines will tell you vital truths about him, and
the figures will tell you this " at a glance."
Note.—Since this chapter was written, Merman hy winning- the Ascot
and Goodwood Cups has taken much higher rank, and an offer of 6000
guineas for him has heen refused.
48
-ocr page 71-
CHAPTER V
PROOF CONCLUSIVE FROM FRANCE
Results in other countries not a fair test—Unequal distribution of the
families—France the only other country where comparison at all
possible—The figures work out successfully there—No. 19 supplants
No. 4—What M. Edmond Blanc thinks of it—Grand total,
English and French—Bruce Lowe absolutely confirmed—Nothing
but ignorant folly can oppose the Figures.
In other Countries the Families are Un-
equally Distributed according to the
Accident of Importation.
In testing the figure guide by results of racing in
other countries, we must all see at once that the
basis of comparison is not an equally fair one. The
original mares passed their stud careers in this
country, and each had her chance in the race for
family distinction. Some may have been more
favoured by luck than others, but here they all
were, and it must be remembered that mere fashion
does not influence the stud fortunes of a brood
mare anything like so much as it does those of a
stallion. Almost any well-grown good-looking
mare is given a chance.
All the Families started fair in England,
and Calculations extend over 120 Years
of Results.
But whereas all the original mares started fair in
England, it was very much a matter of chance in
49                                   E
-ocr page 72-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
what numbers, if any, their descendants were
exported to other countries, and the basis for cal-
culation so far as those countries go is therefore by
no means so trustworthy. Moreover, racing for
our classic events has been going on for 120 years
or more, and this again enables us to arrive at more
sound conclusions from the average of results.
In France Racing and Breeding have gone
on long enough to render comparison
of the Figures just possible.
Nevertheless, as our nearest neighbours the
French have had a Derby since 1836 and an Oaks
since 1843, I have thought it well to ascertain how
the figures work out in that country, for although
throughout the Continent the British thoroughbred
pure and simple is alone accepted as the foundation
of their stud books, there has nowhere been such a
long-continued effort to produce good race-horses
as in France. I was fully prepared to find discrep-
ancies in the positions gained by the various
families. But what is the actual state of affairs ?
Let the table on the following page show.
Remarkable Confirmation of Bruce Lowe
It will be seen from the following table that the
French Derby, Oaks, and Grand Prix are first dealt
with separately from the other four important races,
and then the totals of both groups are added together.
The two separate totals and the grand one are alike
an almost exact confirmation of Bruce Lowe. The
running families, /, 2, 3, and 5, hold their positions
as absolutely in France as in England, and though
No. 4 drops down it has been explained by Dr.
50
-ocr page 73-
PROOF FROM FRANCE
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Froduits
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(183
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Carlier and by M. L. Bedoutx that this is solely due
to there being an extraordinary paucity of No. 4
mares in France. Steps are being taken to remedy
1 Notes sur la Methode de Classification creee par Bruce Lowe (Paris,
Adolphe Legoupv).
51
%
-ocr page 74-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
this deficiency, more especially as the few mares
they have of the family have done excellently well,
one being responsible for the famous stayer Elf II.
and another for their great stud horse Le Sancy.
M. Edmond Blanc, among others, has within the
last few years imported very choice mares of this
line, such, for example, as Adoration and Veneration,
both daughters of Devotion.
Apart from this the only other noticeable differ-
ence between the French table and the English is
the rise of No. 19 family into fourth place, and this
need occasion no surprise whatever, for Bruce Lowe
specially adverted to the bad luck of this family in
not being much higher in England, and our own
Cup results distinctly point to the same conclusions.
M. Edmond Blanc realises what the Figures
MEAN, AND ACTS ACCORDINGLY
I have reason to know that M. Edmond Blanc,
who at first regarded the figure guide as fantastical,
and of no value, was so struck when he found that
the figures worked out as they do in regard to
French results as apart from English, that being a
man of sound common sense he at once changed his
views on the subject, and will now have none but
mares with good figures in his stud. Naturally
No. 19 family is esteemed almost as highly in
France as any other, and though it must retain its
figure by the Bruce Lowe test, I venture to suggest
that it is entitled to a star of distinction.
The French Classic Winners in their
respective Families
It will be convenient here, I think, to give the
winners of the three French Classic races under
their respective families, distinguishing them by the
52
-ocr page 75-
PROOF FROM FRANCE
letters "D" (Derby), " O " (Oaks), and "P" (Grand
Prix). Most of us remember not a few of the animals
in these lists, and can form some idea of the class
represented by the various figures :—
French Oaks          French Derby          Grand Prix de Paris.
(Prix de Diane). (Prix du Jockey Club).
No. / Family
No. 3 Famils
'
Plower . T>
Black Prince
Meudon
D.
Stradella
St. Germain.
D.
Vermouth
Jouvence
I
). D.
Gontran
Honesty
Victorieuse .
O.
O.
Versiguy
Bruce .
Trent .
P.
Verte Bonne
n
Mondaine
O.
Barberine
Kilt
D.
Reluisant
Brie .
. O.
Stuart .
.
i
Robert the Devil
P.
Clover
Albion .
D.
Fitz Royal
Paradox
P.
Clamart
Minting
P.
Chene Royal
Vasistas
P.
Kasbah
Brisk .
O.
Piane .
Roxelane
o.
Palmiste
Doge .
p.
No. 4 Family
Kisbe'r.
Primrose
No. 2 Family.
No. S Family
Lydia.....D.
Tontine
Serenade
o.
Ventre St. Gris .
Etoile du Nord .
o.
Finlande
Gabrielle d'Estrees
D.
Fille de l'Air
La Tocques .
<
1. D.
Gladiateur . .
The Ranger.
P.
Jenny .
Bois Raussil
D.
Mile, de Senlis .
De'liane
O.
St. James
Patricien
D.
Le Roi Soleil
Cremorne
P.
Campeche
O.
No. 6 Family-
Le Janchere
O.
Romulus
Jongleur
D.
Lanterne
t
Thurio.
P.
Vergogne
Nubienne
I
EX P.
Fleur-de-Marie .
Sycomore
D.
Bigarreau
Champaubert
D.
Beauminet .
Arreau
P.
Criniere . - .
Cambridge .
O.
Gardefeu
53
-ocr page 76-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
No. 7 Family.
No. 18 Family.
Fervaques .
p.
Experience .
. D.
Salterella
D.
Solange
O.
No. 19 Family'.
Poetess
. D.
No. 8 Family.
Hervine
. O.
Ronzi ....
Potocki
Revigny
Destine'e
Fregate
Presta ....
Monarque . . (
O.
D.
D.
O.
0.
o.
D.
Bounty ■ ■ . O.
Celebrity . . . . D.
Monarque . . (1855) D.
Dame d'Honneur
Jeune Premiere .
. O.
. O.
1887;
St. Christophe
Sepolette II.
Upas ....
Tenebreuse . . .
. P.
. O.
D.
Perth ....
D
P.
. V.
No. 9 Family.
Ermak
. D.
Vendride
D.
No. 20 Family.
Nataria
O.
Heaume
. D.
Fitz Emilius
D.
Dorade
O.
No. 21 Family.
Morock
D.
Dolma Baghtche' .
. P.
No. 11 Family.
No. 22 Family.
Porthos
D.
Gambette
. D.
Tyrolienne .
O.
Amain
. D.
Germaine
O.
Insulaire
Omnium
. D.
. D.
No. 12 Family.
Franck
D.
No. 23 Family.
Ceylon
P.
Praline
. O.
'Die Earl .
P.
Bavarde
0.
No. 24 Family.
Wirthschaft.
. O.
No. 13 Family.
Surprise
. O.
Mile, de Chantilly
.
o.
Beauvais . ■
. D.
Florentin
D.
Souvenir
. D.
Salvator
b
P.
Sornette
O. P.
Little Duck .
o
P.
Frontin
D. P.
No. 15 Family.
No. 25 Family.
Foxhall
P.
Renonce
Sauvita .' .
. D.
. O.
No. 16 Family.
Gospodar
. D.
Little Agnes
O.
No. 26 Family.
Audree
P.
Peripetie
. O.
No. 1" Family.
No. 27 Family.
Zut ....
D.
Suzerain
. D.
Annita
.
O.
Dandin
. 1).
Rueil ....
I'
Ragotsky
D. P.
54
-ocr page 77-
PROOF FROM FRANCE
No. 31 Family.
No. 39 Family.
Lion
Uoiard.
. D.
1). P.
Wandora
<).
No. 43 Family.
No. 35 Family.
Consul.
o.
. 1).
Geologie
No members of the following families have yet won any of the above
races :—10, 14, 28, 29, 30, 32, 33, 34, 36, 37, 38, 40, 41,' 42 and 44.
Grand Total foe England and France
Taking now what may be described as a supreme
test and quite an unfair one—owing to the irregular-
distribution of importations as already explained—I
will add the whole of the winners of the English
Classic and Cup races to those given in the fore-
going list of French records, and shall be quite
content to stand by the result. Here it is :—
Winners of all English and French Races that have
been referred to.
Family.
Winners.
~.....
Family.
t Winners.
Family.
31
Winners.
12
/
142
10
19
2
128
17
24
32
2
3
124
18
12
33
1
4
74
19
51
34
2
5
85
20
10
35
2
6
47
21
11
30
7
37
22
22
37
8
47
23
16
38
1
9
34
24
14
39
2
10
22
25
14
40
11
3(5
20
11
41
12
32
27
14
42
2
13
28
28
5
43
5
14
13
29
3
44
2
15
19
30
! 2
45
1
Quod erat Demonstrandum
Now, what can the most carping critic say to
that ? There are the five running families,—/, 2, 3,
55
-ocr page 78-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
4, 5,—far away at the top, and in their exact order,
too, saving for the slight difference between 4 and 5,
which is due entirely to French deficiency in that
blood. No. 19 comes up, and deservedly so, but
for the rest the order of the figures is very fairly
maintained, and nothing touches the running
families. Can any one explain away these facts ?
Can any one without obstinate ignorance contend
that those first five families are not the best running
families, and that a horse is not more likely to do
well from having a large proportion of those first
five figures in his pedigree ?
Only Ignorant or Obstinate Prejudice can
gainsay Facts and Figures, which depend
on Results and not on Theories.
It is of course unnecessary to labour the proof
further to any one of ordinary intelligence accus-
tomed to exercise his reasoning powers without
foolish prejudice; but, unfortunately, there are
many persons in the blood-stock world who are
veritable epicureans ; they have minds, but shirk the
trouble of exercising them, and therefore condemn
as nonsense anything which it would require an
effort for them to understand. In a certain measure
they are quite right in holding fast to mere personal
experience of themselves and their fathers as against
theories of breeding, no matter on what authority
promulgated, but facts are not theories, and judg-
ment by results is not judgment by theories.
Figures, too, such as have been given, depend on
something vastly more solid than theories. In
short, the Figure Guide of Bruce Lowe, if intelli-
gently followed, cannot possibly, on the average of
results, lead us astray.
56
.
-ocr page 79-
CHAPTER VI
THE FAMILY RECORDS
Bruce Lowe revised and corrected—Reference to Stud Book, vol. i.—
Sires of Classic winners—New test of sire families.
The reader of these pages is credited with some
knowledge of Bruce Lowe's book, and further
details will now be given of the classic winners
descending from each of the families, the 2000
Guineas and 1000 Guineas winners being included.
Against each name is added the figure of the sire
which the animal in question was got by, and some
indication is thus afforded of the combinations which
have been most successful. Certain necessary
corrections of Bruce Lowe's book are made, and
lists are also given, under each family, of the
stallions belonging to it which have sired classic
winners. It is not proposed to interfere with Bruce
Lowe's arrangement of the sire families, but it has
been pertinently asked : Ought not the same test to
be applied to a sire line as to a running line ? If
winning Derby, Oaks, and St. Leger is the test for
running families, ought not siring winners of those
races to be the test for sire families ? To further
elucidate this idea a table of the first twenty win-
ning stallions in each year since 1850 is given, with
his figure set against each. Finally, to obtain a
better sense of proportion when discriminating
among the merits of the various families, there will
57
-ocr page 80-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
be found set out the number of mares belonging to
each family in vol. v., vol. x., and vol. xviii. of the
General Stud Bool: In dealing now with the
respective families, they are identified, for the sake
of convenience, by giving the Stud Book references
to the earliest matrons there recorded.
No. /.—Tregonweix's Natural Baku Mare.
(Great grandam of Ramsden's Byerly Turk
Mare. Stud Book, vol. i. p. 5).
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. /
Derby.
Sire's
St. Legem.
Sire's
Figure.
Figure.
1790.
Rhadamauthus .
3
1795.
Hambletoiiian
(i
1794.
Dsedalus
3
1833.
Rockingham
8
1809.
Waxy Pope
. 18
18.37.
Mango
28
1810.
Whalebone
. 18
18.58.
Sunbeam
2.3
1815.
Whisker
. 18
18GG.
Lord Lyon .
3
1819.
Tiresias
. 1.5
18G7.
Achievement ' .
3
182.5.
Middleton .
. G
1870.
Hawthoruden
2
18.30.
Bay Middleton
8
1875.
Craig Millar
10
1847.
The Cossack
2
1877.
Silvio .
10
186G.
Lord Lyon .
3
1878.
Jannette
2
1808.
Blue Gown
. 13
1880.
Robert the Devil
18
1877.
Silvio .
. 10
1884.
The Lambkin
2
1880.
Bend Or
5
1894.
Ladas
. 10
1898.
Jeddah
/
2000 Gi-ineas.
Oaks.
1820.
Piudarrie .
G
1782.
Ceres .
4
1821.
Reginald
. 35
1804.
Pelisse
2
1822.
Pastille
2
1808.
Morel
. G
1826.
Dervise
8
181:3.
Music
. 18
1827-
Turcoman .
2
181.5.
Minuet
. 18
18.31.
Riddlesworth
. 28
1822.
Pastille
2
1834.
Glencoe
8
1824.
Cobweb
G
18.3.5.
Ibrahim
8
1828.
Turquoise .
2
18,36.
Bay Middleton .
8
18.31.
Oxygen
. 28
18.37.
Achmet
8
18.34.
Pussy
2
1847.
Conyngham
. 25
1844.
Princess
. 2.5
18.58.
Fitz Roland
. 18
1803.
Queen Bertha
. 12
186G.
Lord Lyon .
3
187.5.
Spinaway .
. 14
1878.
Pilgrimage .
5
1878.
Jannette
2
1879.
Charibert .
4
1879.
Wheel of Fortuu
e . 12
1884.
Scot Free
4
1884.
Busybody .
. 10
1885.
Paradox
. 12
1890.
Canterbury Pilgi
im . 10
1894.
Ladas.
. 10
58
-ocr page 81-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 1—continued
1000 Guineas
Sire's
Figure.
Sire's
Figure.
1820.
Rowena
. 3.5
1867.
Achievement
3
1822.
Whizgig
2
187.5.
Spinaway .
. 14
1824.
Cobweb
6
1878.
Pilgrimage .
S
1825.
Tontine . .
5
1870.
Wheel of Fortune
. 12
182(5.
Problem
8
1884.
Busybody .
. 10
1830.
Charlotte West .
3
1889.
Minthe
2
183.5.
Preserve
. 28
189.5.
Galeottia
3
1847.
Clementina
. 11
1897.
Chelandry .
4
1861.
Nemesis
8
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. / THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Goldfinder, 1764, sire of Serina 9, 1781 (St. Leger).
Woodpecker, 1773, sire of Ephemera 3, 1800 (Oaks).
Scud, 1804, sire of Sam 6, 1818 (Derby) ; Shoveler 0, 1819 (Oaks);
Sailor 0, 1820 (Derby).
Whalebone, 1807, sire of Caroline 23, 1820 (Oaks); Moses 5, 1819
(Derby) ; Lapdog 3, 1826 (Derby) ; Spaniel 3, 1831 (Derby).
Woful, 1809, sire of Augusta 26, 1821 (Oaks); Theodore 2, 1822 (St.
Leger) ; Zinc 2.5, 1823 (1000 Gs., Oaks) ; Arab 2.5, 1827 (1000 Gs.)
Partisan, 1811, sire of Zeal 2.5, 1821 (1000 Gs.); Mameluke 3, 1827
(Derby); Patron 26, 1829 (2000 Gs.) ; Cyprian 23, 1836 (Oaks).
Whisker, 1812, sire of Memnon 11,182.5 (St. Leger); Colonel 8, 1828
(Leger).
Andrew, 1816, sire of Cadland 12, 1828 (2000 Gs., Derby).
Bran, 1831, sire of Our Nell 4, 1842 (Oaks).
Bay Middleton, 1833, sire of Flying Dutchman 3,1849 (Derby, St. Leger);
Aphrodite 22, 18.51 (1000 Gs.) ; Andover 8, 18.54 (Derby); Hermit
12, 18.54 (2000 Gs.)
Melbourne, 1834, sire of Sir Tatton Sykes 8, 1846 (2000 Gs., St. Leger) ;
Canezou 31, 1848 (1000 Gs.);' Cymba 2, 1848 (Oaks); West
Australian 7,18.53 (2000 Gs., Derby, St. Leger); Mentmore Lass 3,
18.58(1000Gs.); Marchioness.2,1855(Oaks); Blink Bonny 10,1857
(Derby, Oaks).
Jericho, 1842, sire of Promised Land 26, 18.59 (2000 Gs.)
The Cossack, 1844, sire of Gamester 19, 1859 (St. Leger).
Trumpeter, 1856, sire of Lady Elizabeth /, 1868 ; Queen's Messenger /,
1872.
Lord Lyon, 1863, sire of Placida 2, 1877 (Oaks).
Mortemer, 1865, sire of Chamant 3, 1877 (2000 Gs.)
Speculum, 1865, sire of Seftou 25, 1878 (Derby).
Trappist, 1872, sire of L'Abbesse de Jouarre, 16, 1889 (Oaks).
Bend Or, 1877, sire of Ormonde 16,1886 (2000 (is., Derby, St. Leger);
Bonavista 4, 1892 (2000 Gs.)
Janissary, 1887, sire of Jeddah /, 1898 (Derby).
Note.—Moses (Derby, 1822) by Whalebone or Seymour, is given to
Whalebone.
59
-ocr page 82-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
No. 2,
-Burton's Barb Mare.
vol. i. p. 4)
{Stud Book,
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 2
1795.
Derby. sire's
Figure.
Spread Eagle . . 9
1797. Lounger
Sire's
Figure.
4
1790.
Didelot
14
1799. Cockfighter
. 11
1810.
Prince Leopold .
11
1822. Theodore .
/
1838.
Amato
3
1832. Margrave .
0
1848.
Surplice
14
1835. Queen of Trumps
3
1850.
Voltigeur .
12
1838. Don John .
2
1851.
Teddington
13
1848. Surplice
. 14
1872.
Cremorne .
7
1850. Voltigeur .
. 12
1890.
Sainfoin
12
1857. Imperieuse .
1800. St. Albans .
. 13
3
Oaks.
1802. Marquis
3
1780.
The Yellow Filly
17
1803. Lord Clifden
8
1794.
Hermione .
3
1882. Dutch Oven
S
J 790.
Parisote
3
1800.
Bronze
3
2000 Guineas.
1807.
Briseis
7
1812. Cwrw .
. 9
1818.
Corinne
18
1838. Gray Mom us
. 25
1820.
Lilias
17
1840. Crucifix
0
1835.
Queen of Trumps
3
1842. Meteor
3
1838.
Industry
6
1802. Marquis
3
1840.
Crucifix
6
1807- Vauban
2
1848.
Cymba
6
1873. Gang Forward .
3
_ 1849.
Lady Evelyn
2
1875. Camballo
. 19
1855.
Marchioness
I
1880. Petronel
3
1860.
Butterfly .
0
1898. Disraeli
3
1870.
Enguerrande
3
1877.
Placida
/
1894.
Amiable
. 11
1000 Guineas.
St. Leger.
1818. Corinne
1836. Destiny
. 18
8
1782.
Imperatrix .
. 12
1840. Crucifix
6
1783.
Phoenomenon
20
1857. Imperieuse.
. 13
1784.
Omphale
13
1805. Siberia
2
1780.
Paragone .
3
1873. Cecilia
, 10
----J790.
Ambidexter.
2
1888. Briar-root .
. 12
1792.
Tartar
5
1894. Amiable .
. 11
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 2 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Phcenomenon, 1780, sire of Ambidexter 2, 1790 (St. Leger); Bellissima
3, 1798 (Oaks).
Whiskey, 1789, sire of Eleanor 0, 1801 (Derby, Oaks) ; Pelisse /, 1804
(Oaks).
Stripling, 1795, sire of Octavian 8, 1810 (St. Leger).
60
-ocr page 83-
Count Lehndorff.
M^//^^
'-■.. .
-ocr page 84-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
Selim, 1802, sire of Medora 4, 1814 (Oaks); Cesario Mare Filly 27,
181.5 (1000 Gs.); Azor 25,1817 (Derby); Nicolo 6,1823 (2000 Ga.)
Turcoman /, 1827 (2000 Gs.) ; Turquoise /, 1828 (Oaks).
Rubens, 1805, sire of Landscape 29, 1816 (Oaks); Pastille /, 1822
(2000 Gs. and Oaks) ; Whizgig /, 1822 (1000 Gs.)
Ardrossan, 1809, sire of Jack Spigot S, 1821 (St. Leger).
Catton,1809, sire of Tararre 6,1826 (St. Leger) ; Mundig 7,1835 (Derby).
Waverlev, 1817, sire of Don John 2, 1838 (St. Leger).
Pollio, 1823, sire of Pussy /, 1834 (Oaks).
Sir Hercules, 1826, sire of Corsair 4, 1839 (2000 Gs.) ; Coronation 26,
1841 (Derby); Faugh-a-Ballagh 11, 1844 (St. Leger).
Harkawav, 1834, sire of King Tom 3, 1854.
Don John, 1835, sire of Lady Evelvn 2, 1849 (Oaks).
Hetman Platoff, 1836, sire of" The Cossack /, 1847 (Derby).
St. Lawrence, 1837, sire of Saucebox 17, 1855 (St. Leger).
Ithuriel, 1841, sire of Jris 21, 1851 (Oaks).
Voltigeur, 1847, sire of Vedette 19, 1857 (2000 Gs.)
Teddington, 1848, sire of Mayonaise 3, 1859 (1000 Gs.)
Muscovite, 1849, sire of Siberia 2, 1805 (1000 Gs.) ; Vauban 2, 1807
(2000 Gs.)
Lord Clifden, 1800, sire of Hawthornden 7,1870(St. Leger); Wenlock 4,
1872 (St. Leger); Hampton 10, 1875 ; Petrarch 10, 1876 (2000 Gs.
and St. Leger) ; Jannette /, 1878 (Oaks, St. Leger).
Camballo, 1872, sire of The Lambkin /, 1884 (St. Leger); Minthe /,
1889 (1000 (is.)
Note.—Don John (St. Leger) by Tramp or Waverley, is given to
Waverley.
Bruce Lowe omitted under these figures the filly by
Tandem out of Perdita, winner of the Oaks in 1786.
No. 3.—Dam op the Two True Blues. {Stud
Book,
vol. i. p. 5)
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 3
Dkkby.
Sire's
Oaks.
Sire's
Figure.
Figure.
1782.
Assassin
. 15
1779.
Bridget
20
1787.
Sir Peter .
. 13
1781.
Faith
26
1789.
Skyscraper
. 13
1783.
Maid of the Oaks
26
1800.
Champion .
. 38
1785.
Trifle .
3
1802.
Tyrant
. 38
1798.
Bellissima .
2
1804.
Hannibal
. 11
1800.
Ephemera .
1
1826.
Lapdog
/
1809.
Maid of Orleans .
6
1827.
Mameluke .
/
1832.
Galata
8
1831.
Spaniel
/
1854.
Mincemeat.
21
1846.
Pvrrhus 1st
. 13
1856.
Mincepie
21
1849.
Flying Dutchman
/
1871.
Hannah
3
1861.
Kettledrum
3
1876.
Camelia
14
1871.
Favonius
• 7
1890.
Memoir
11
1875.
Galopin
. 19
1892.
La Fleche .
11
1893.
Isinglass
. 19
61
-ocr page 85-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 8—continued
Sire's
Sire's
Figure.
. 13
1868.
Moslem
Figure.
3
. 13
1871.
Bothwell .
3
5
1874.
Atlantic
4
3
1877.
Chamant
I
. 38
1893.
Isinglass
. 19
3
/
1000 Guineas.
. 24
3
1814.
Charlotte
8
6
1831.
Galantine
. 19
. 11
1832.
Galata
. . .8
. 11
1839.
Cara .
. 11
. 19
1845.
Picnic
3
1853.
Mentmore Lass . . /
1859.
Mayonaise
2
1860.
Sagitta
. 21
. 13
1862.
Hurricane
7
. 11
L864.
Tomato
3
. 14
1871.
Hannah
3
. 24
1876.
Camelia
. 14
. 25
1892.
La Fleche
. 11
St. Leger.
1787.   Spadille .
1788.   Young Flora
1793. Ninety-Three
1796. Ambrosio .
1800. Champion .
1847.   Van Tromp
1849.
   Flying Dutchman
1852.
   Stockwell .
1871.
  Hannah
1879.
   Rayon d'Or
1890.
   Memoir
1892.   LaFleche .
1893.   Isinglass .
2000 Guineas.
1810. Hephestion
1845. Idas .
1848.   Flatcatcher
1852. Stockwell .
1864. General Peel
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 3 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Paymaster, 1766, sire of Paregon 2, 1786 (St. Leger).
Justice, 1774, sire of Trifle 3, 1785 (Oaks); Rhadamanthus /, 1790
(Derby) ; Daedalus /, 1794 (Derby).
Sir Peter," 1784, sire of Hermione 2, 1794 (Oaks); Parisote 2, 1796
(Oaks) ; Ambrosio, 3,1796 (St. Leger) ; Sir Harry 4, 1798 (Derby);
Archduke 30,1799 (Derby) ; Ditto 7, 1803 (Derby) ; Paris 30, 1806
(Derby); Fyldener 13,1806 (St. Leger); Paulina 8,1807 (St. Leger);
Petronius 15, 1808 (St. Leger).
Buzzard, 1787, sire of Quiz 5,1801 (St. Leger); Bronze Z, 1806 (Oaks).
Tramp, 1810, sire of Barefoot 5, 1823 (St. Leger); Charlotte West /,
1830 (1000 Gs.); St. Giles 9, 1832 (Derby); Dangerous 5, 1833
(Derby) ; Tarantella 22, 1833 (1000 Gs.)
Velocipede, 1825, sire of Queen of Trumps 2, 1835 (Oaks, St. Leger) ;
Amato 2, 1838 (Derby); Meteor 2, 1842 (2000 Gs.)
The Saddler, 1828, sire of Gorella 6,1844 (1000 Gs.)
Glaucus, 1829, sire of Picnic 3, 1845 (1000 Gs.) ; Refraction S, 1845
(Oaks).
Lanercost, 1835, sire of Van Tromp 3, 1847 (St. Leger) ; Catherine
Hayes 22, 1853 (Oaks).
Pyrrhus the First, 1843, sire of Virago 4, 1854 (1000 Gs.)
Flying Dutchman, 1846, sire of Ellington 18, 1850 (Derby); Brown
Duchess 12, 1861 (Oaks).
Windhound, 1847, sire of Thormanby 4, I860 (Derby).
62
■■
-ocr page 86-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
Stockwelh; 18,19, sire of Audrey 7,1859 ; St. Alnaus 2, 1860 (St. I .eger);
taller Ou 10, 1861 (St. Leger); Marquis 2, 1862 (2000 Gs., St.
Leger); Lady Augusta 20, 1863 (1000 Gs.); Blair Athol 10, 1864 ;
(Derby, St. Leger) ; Regalia 17, I860 (Gaks) ; Repulse 20, 1860
(1000 Gs.); Lord Lvoii /, 1866 (2000 Gs., Derby, St. Leger);
Achievement /, 1867 (1000 Gs., St. Leger); Botliwell 3, 1871
(2000 Gs.); Gang Forward 2, 1873 (2000 Gs.); Doncaster 5,
1873 (Derby).
Rataplan, 1850, sire of Kettledrum 3, 1861 (Derby).
King Tom, 1851, sire of Tomato 3, 1864 (1000 Gs.); Tormentor 10,
1866 (Oaks) ; Hippia 14, 1867 (Oaks); Kingcraft 11, 1870 (Derby);
Hannah 3, 1871 (1000 Gs., Oaks, St. Leger).
Toxophilite, 1855, sire of Belphcebe 13, 1877 (1000 Gs.).
Knight of St. Patrick, 1858, sire of Moslem 3, 1808 (2000 Gs.).
Vermout, 1861, sire of Enguerrande 2, 1876 (Oaks).
Musket, 1867, sire of Petronel 2, 1880 (2000 Gs.).
Favonius, 1868, sire of Sir Bevys 10, 1879 (Derby).
Statesman, 1869, sire of Elizabeth 5, 1880 (1000 Gs.).
(ialopin, 1872, sire of Galliard 13, 1883 (2000 Gs.) ; Donovan 7, 1889
(Derby, St. Leger); Galeottia /, 1895 (1000 (is.); Disraeli 2.
1898 (2000 Gs.).
Master Kildare, 1875, sire of Melton 8, 1885 (Derby, St. Leger).
Note.—Moses (Derby, 1822) is given to Whalebone (/), not to Seymour
(3); Don John (St. Leger, 1838) to Waverley (2), not to Tramp'(3).
Bruce Lowe omits under the family Camellia, dead heat for
the Oaks in 1876, and he wrongly includes Volante (Oaks)
who was of No. 6 family.
No. 4.—The Layton Barb Mare. (Stud Booh;
vol. i. p. 12)
As showing descent from one reputed branch of
this family, the Skim Mare (i. p. 184) members of
that branch are marked with the letter E referring
to their ancestress, Expectation. This branch of the
family has of late years been far the most successful.
If the Skim Mare was out of Young Country
Wench, as stated in Mr. Vernon's own Stud Book,
she was of No. 11 family ; but Messrs. Weatherby
are of opinion that her descent as given in their
Stud Book is correct, and it would have been called
in question when first published had it been
otherwise.
03
-ocr page 87-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 4
E from Expectation
Derby. sires
Sires'
F
gure.
3
Figure.
1798.
Sir Harry .
1874. Apology E .
12
1814.
Blucher
18
1881. Iroquois
14
1860.
Thormanby E
3
1888. Seabreeze .
19
1870.
Kisber E .
14
1891. Common E
19
1881.
Iroquois
Common E
14
1894. Throstle
10
1891.
19
1895. Sir Visto E
23
1895.
Sir Yisto E
23
2000 Guineas.
Oaks.
1824. Schadriar .
8
1788.
1814.
1827.
1842.
1869.
1870.
Nightshade
Medora
Gulnare
Our Nell .
Brigantine E
Gamos . . .
38
2
18
/
14
27
1839. Corsair
1844. Ugly Buck .
1855. Lord of the Isles E
1870. Macgregor E
1891.   Common E
1892.   Bonayista E
2
11
14
14
19
/
1874.
Apology E .
12
1000 Guineas.
1881.
Thebais
5
1886.
Miss Jummy E .
10
1849. Flea .
26
1887.
Reve d'Or .
10
1852. Kate .
. 14
1888.
Seabreeze .
19
1854. Virago
1856. Manganese E
3
. 11
St. Leger.
1874. Apology E .
1881. Thebais
. 12
5
180.5.
Staveley
21
1882. St. Marguerite .
5
1816.
Duchess
4
1883. Hauteur E.
5
1820.
St. Patrick
7
1886. Miss Jummy E .
. 10
1831.
Chorister E
. 11
1887. Reve d'Or .
. 10
1872.
Wenlock E
2
1899. Sibola
. 19
STALLIONS OF FAJ
(ULY
No. 4 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Matchem, 1748, sire of Hollandaise 9, 1778 (St. Leger) ; Teetotum 26,
1780 (Oaks).
Wildair, 1753, sire of Tommy 15, 1779 (St. Leger).
Sweet William, 1768, sire of'Ceres /, 1782 (Oaks).
Plunder, 1771, sire of Stella 13, 1784 (Oaks).
Drone, 1777, sire of Lounger 2, 1797 (St. Leger).
Fortitude, 1777, sire of John Bull 13, 1792 (Derby).
Governor, 1802, sire of William 6, 1814 (St. Leger).
Cardinal York, 1804, sire of Duchess 4, 1816 (St. Leger).
Lamplighter, 1823, sire of Mayday, 27,1834 (1000 Gs.); Phosphorus 27,
1837 (Derby); Firebrand 27, 1842 (1000 Gs.).
Ion, 1835, sire of Wild Dayrell 7, 1855 (Derby).
Lord of the Isles E, 1852, sire of Dundee 16, 1861.
64
-ocr page 88-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
Thormanbv, 1857 E, sire of Hester 12, 1870 (1000 Gs.); Atlantic 3,
1874 (2000 Gs.); Charibert /, 1879 (2000 Gs.)
Rococo, 1863 E, sire of Chippendale 24, 1879.
Macgregor, 1867 E, sire of Scot Free /, 1884 (2000 Gs.).
Common, 1888 E, sire of Nun Nicer 12, 1898 (1000 Gs.).
Goldfinch, 1889 E, sire of Chelandry /, 1897 (1000 (fs.).
No. 5.—Daughter of Massy's Black Barb
(dam of Old Ebony). (Stud Book, vol. i. p. 9)
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. S
Dkhbv.
Sire's
Figure.
St. Legeh.
Sire's
Figure.
1807.
Election
. 24
1801.
Quiz .
3
1822.
Moses
/
1821.
Jack Spigot
2
-^3629.
Frederick .
S
1823.
Barefoot
3
18,33.
Dangerous .
3
1827.
Matilda
. 23
1845.
Merry Monarch .
. 25
1865.
Gladiateur .
. 19
1885.
Gladiateur .
. 19
1873.
Marie Stuart
12
1887.
Hermit
8
1897.
Galtee More
. 16
1873.
Doncaster .
3
1897.
Galtee More
Oaks.
. Ki
2000 Guineas.
1791.
1795.
1817.
I'ortia
Platina
Neva .
9
9
8
1865.
1895.
1897.
Gladiateur .
Kirkconnel
Galtee More
. 19
. 11
. Ki
*». 1J839.
Deception .
5
1845.
Refraction .
3
1847.
Miami
. 11
1000 Guineas.
1864.
Fille de 1'Air
. 11
1872.
Reine
. 19
1817.
Neva .
8
1878.
Marie Stuart
12
1872.
Reine
. 19
1898.
Airs and Graces .
8
1880.
Elizabeth .
3
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. S THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Trentham, 1766, sire of Tag 9, 1789 (Oaks).
Florizel, 1768, sire of Diomed 6,1780 (Derbv) ; Eager 15,1791 (Derby):
Tartar 2, 1792 (St. Leger); Ninetv-Three 3, 1793 (St. Leger).
Quiz, 1798, sire of Tigris 12, 1815 (2000 Guineas).
Election, 1804, sire of Manfred 10, 1817 (2000 Gs.) ; Gustavus 7, 1821
(Derby); Tontine /, 1825 (1000 Gs.).
Little John, 1816, sire of Frederick 5, 1829 (Derby).
Mulatto, 1823, sire of Bloomsburv 9, 18.39 (Derby).
Defence, 1824, sire of Deception 5, 1839 (Oaks).
The Palmer, 1864, sire of Pilgrimage /, 1878 (2000 Gs., 100O Gs.);
Jenny Howlett 20, 1880 (Oaks).
65                             v
-ocr page 89-
.. # ......... ~a
f-!7~*
C^*ipi
i*Vom a photograph by K. Jelussieh, Abbazia.
II.S.H. Prince Loirs Kstkrhazy.
-ocr page 90-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Hermit, 1804, sire of Tliebais 4, 1881 (1000 Gs., Oaks) ; Shotover 13,
1882 (2000 Gs., Derby); St. Marguerite 4, 1882 (1000 Gs.);
St. Blaise 22,1883 (Derby); Lonely 21, 1885 (Oaks).
Rosicrucian, 1805, sire of Beauclerc 10, 1878 ; Geheinmiss 14, 1882
(Oaks) ; Hauteur 4, 1883 (1000 Gs.).
Dutch Skater, 1800, sire of Dutch Oven 2, 1882 (St. Leger).
Doncaster. 1870, sire of Bend Or /, 1880 (Derby); Farewell 10, 1885
(1000 Gs.).
Bruce Lowe incorrectly includes Pretender under this
family. He was of No. 10 family and is so described by
Bruce Lowe later on.
No. 6.—Old Bald Peg (dam of Old Morocco
Make). {Stud Book, vol. i. p. 14)
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 0
1780.
1781.
1797.
1801.
Derby.
Diomed
Young Eclipse .
Fidget Colt
Eleanor
Sire's i
Figure.
5
. 12
. 15
2
1801.
1819.
Eleanor
Shoveler
St. Leger.
Sire's
Figure.
2
1
1811.
Phantom .
7
1814.
William
4
1818.
Sam .
1
1826.
Tarrare
2
1820.
Sailor.
1
1830.
Priam
. 28
2000 Guineas.
1834.
18.59.
1802.
Plenipotentiary .
Musjid
Caractacus .
Oaks.
. 28
8
. 12
1819.
1823.
1851.
Antar
Nicolo
Hernandez.
. 35
2
. 17
1792.
Volante
. 13
1000 Guineas.
1793.
Cffilia.
9
1844.
Sorella
3
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 0 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS.
King Fergus, 17/0,
Beningbrough 7,
sire of Young Traveller 12, 1791 (St. Leger) ;
1794 (St. Leger) ; Hambletonian /, 1795 (St.
Leger).
Sorcerer, 1790, sire of Morel /, 1808 (Oaks) ; Maid of Orleans 3, 1809
(Oaks); Wizard 12, 1809 (2000 Gs.) ; Soothsayer 15, 1811 (St.
Leger); Sorcery 12, 1811 (Oaks) ; Trophonius 9', 1811 (2000 Gs.) ;
Smolensko 18, 1813 (2000 Gs., Derby).
Phantom, 1808, sire of Pindarrie /, 1820 (2000 Gs.) ; Cobweb /, 1824
' (1000 Gs., Oaks); Cedric 9, 1824 (Derby); Middleton /, 1825
(Derby) ; Enamel 11, 1825 (2000 Gs.).
66
-ocr page 91-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
Muley, 1810, sire of Margrave 2, 1832 (St. Leger); Vespa 10, 1833
(Oaks); Little Wonder 11, 1840 (Derby).
Langar, 1817, sire of Elis 13, 1830 (St. Leger).
Priam, 1827, sire of Miss Letty 12, 1837 (Oaks) ; Industry 2, 1838
(Oaks) ; Crucifix 2, 1840 (1000 Gs., 2000 Gs., Oaks).
Plenipotentiary, 1831, sire of Potentia 20, 1841 (1000 Gs.) ; Poison 12,
1843 (Oaks).
Tumus, 1840, sire of Butterfly 2, 1800 (Oaks).
Flageolet, 1870, sire of Rayon d'Or 3, 1879 (St. Leger).
'Hie Rover, 1874, sire of St. Gatieu 10, 1884 (Derby).
This family is not doing well. It has largely diminished
in point of numbers, and since 1849 its best non-classic
winners have been See-Saw, Flageolet, Ecossais, Newry, Grey
Leg, Holocanste and Forfarshire.
Bruce Lowe wrongly includes Phosphorus under this family.
He belongs to No. 27. On the other hand Bruce Lowe omits
the ()aks winners, Green Mantle and Volante. He states that
Musjid in the Derby 1859 was the last classic winner of this
family ; but Caractacus was later.
No. 7.—Black Legged Royai- Mare. (Stud
Book,
vol. i. p. Hi)
CLASSIC: WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 7
Dehby.
Sire's
Figure.
St. Legeh.
Sire's
Figure.
1783.
Saltram
. 12
1794.
Beuiugbrough
. 0
1803.
Ditto .
3
1858.
West Australian.
/
1808.
Pan .
9
1889.
Donovan
3
1821.
Gustavus .
5
1890.
Persimmon
. 11
1835.
Mundig
2
1898.
Wildfowler
. 19
1843.
Cotherstone
. 14
1899.
Flying Fox
. 11
1853.
West Australian
/
1855.
Wild Dayrell .
4
2000 Guineas
1889.
Donovan
3
1843.
Cotherstone
. 14
1890.
Persimmon
. 11
1853.
West Australian
/
1899.
Flying Fox
. 11
1801.
Diophantus
. 13
Oaks.
, 1899.
Flying Fox
1000 Guineas.
. 11
1843.
Extempore .
. 28
1787.
Annette
. 12
1809.
Scottish Queen .
. 10
1802.
Feu de Joie
. 21
1890.
Semoline
. 11
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 7 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Le Sang, 1759, sire of Bourbon 37, 1777 (St. Leger).
Meteor, 1783, sire of Meteora 17, 1805 (Oaks).
67
-ocr page 92-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Beningbrough, 1701, sire of Orville 8, 1802 (St. Leger) ; Briseis 2, 1807
(Oaks) ; Oriana 18, 1810 (Oaks).
Walton, 1799, sire of Phantom 0, 1811 (Derby); Nectar 17, 1810
(2000 Gs.); St. Patrick 4, 1820 (St. Leger)."
West Australian, 1850, sire of Summerside 18, 1859 (Oaks) ; Wizard
9, 1860 (2000 Gs.).
Wild Dayrell, 1852, sire of Buccaneer 14, 1860 ; Hurricane 3, 1802
(1000 Gs.).
Parmesan, 1857, sire of Favonius 3, 1871 (Derby); Cremorne 2, 1872
(Derby).
Wisdom, 187;?, sire of Surefoot 19,1890 (2000 Gs.) ; Sir Hugo 19, 1892
(Derby) ; La Sagesse 9, 1895 (Oaks).
No. 8.—Bustler Mare (dam of Byekly Turk
Make ; fourth dam of Coneyskins Mare).
{Stud Book, vol. i. p. 7).
" There is an omission," writes Mr. F. H. Birley, " in the
Stud Book under this Coneyskins Mare. Filly by Bay Bolton
ought to be added to her foals. She appears on page 3 as
Bay Bolton Mare (bred by Hutton). 1 learned on good
authority in March 1895 that this Bay Bolton Mare was
daughter of the Coneyskins Mare. It is from this mare that
Chester (Australian), Newminster, Melton, Ayrshire, St. Serf,
and other good horses come.'1
CLASSIC: WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 8
Sire's
Figure.
. i
3
. 10
1828.
1840.
1851.
1885.
'Hie Colonel
Sir Tatton Sykes
Newminster
Melton
Sire's
Figure.
/
/
. 14
. 3
. 12
. 12
11
2000 Guineas.
1840.
1849.
1888.
Sir Tatton Sykes
Nunnykirk
Ayrshire
/
14
. 10
17
1000 Guineas.
7
3
2
1829.
1858.
1898.
Young Mouse
Governess .
Siffleuse
. 40
. 12
. 14
Derby.
1854. Andover
1885. Melton
1888. Ayrshire .
Oak> .
1850. Rhedycina .
1858. Governess .
1893. Mrs. Butterwick
St. Legem .
Pewet
Orville
Paulina
Octavian
1789.
1802.
1807.
1810.
68
-ocr page 93-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 8 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Orville, 1799, sire of Octavius 23, 1812 (Derby); Charlotte 3, 1814
(1000 Gs.) ; Ebor 19, 1817 (St. Leger) ; Emilius 28, 1823 (Derby) ;
Zoe 4, 1828 (1000 Gs.).
Cervantes, 1806, sire of Neva 5, 1817 (1000 Gs., Oaks).
Octavian, 1807, sire of Antonio 34, 1819 (St. Leger).
Shuttle Pope, 1807, sire of Schahriar 4, 1824 (2000 Gs.).
Paulowitz, 1813, sire of Archibald 12, 1832 (2000 Gs.).
Merlin, 1815, sire of Dervise /, 1826 (2000 Gs.) ; Problem /, 1826
(1000 Gs.).
Sultan, 1816, sire of Green Mantle 6, 1829 (Oaks) ; Augustus 26, 1830
(2000 Gs.); Galata 3, 1832 (1000 Gs., Oaks); Glencoe /, 1834
(2000 Gs.) ; Ibrahim /, 1835 (2000 Gs.); Destiny 2, 1836 (1000 Gs.) ;
Bay Middleton /, 1836 (2000 Gs., Derby); Achmet /, 1837 (2000 Gs.).
Humphry (.'linker, 1822, sire of Rockingham /, 1833 (St. Leger).
Tomboy,' 1829, sire of Nutwith 9, 1843 (St. Leger).
Newminster, 1848, sire of Musjid 6, 1859 (Derby) ; Nemesis /, 1861
(1000 Gs.); Lord Clifden 2, 1863 (St. Leger); Hermit 5, 1867
(Derby).
Ayrshire 1885, sire of Airs and Graces 5, 1898 (Oaks).
St". Serf, 1887, sire of Thais, 23, 1896 (1000 Gs.).
Bruce Lowe wrongly includes Camelia here, she being of
No. 3 family. He omits the Leger winner, Octavian.
No. 9.—The Old Vintner Mare. (Stud Book,
vol. i. p. 17)
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 9
Derby.
Sire's
Sire's
1786.
Noble
Figure.
. 13
1803.
Remembrancer .
Figure.
14
1824.
1832.
Cedric
St. Giles
. 6
3
1843.
1856.
Nutwith
Warlock .
8
. 11
1839.
Bloomsbury
5
1887.
Kilwarlin .
. 27
1852.
Daniel O'Rourke
Oaks.
. 11
2000 Guineas.
1811.
Trophonius
6
1789.
Tag . . .
5
I860.
The Wizard
7
1830.
Variation .
. 35
1881.
Peregrine .
. 27
1895.
La Sagesse .
Sr. Legeh.
7
1000 Guineas.
1778.
Hollandaise
4
1850.
Lady Orford
. 25
1781.
Serina
I
1855.
Habena
. 11
G9
-ocr page 94-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 9 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Mercury, 1778, sire of Hippolyte 21, 1790 (Oaks) ; Platina 5, 1795
(Oaks).
Volunteer, 1780, sire of Portia 5, 1791 (Oaks) ; Cajlia 6, 179,3 (Oaks) ;
Spread Eagle 2, 1795 (Derby).
St. George, 1789, sire of Pan 7, 1808 (Derby).
Dick Andrews, 1797, sire of Cwrw 2, 1812 (2000 Gs.); Manuella 11,
1812 (Oaks) ; Altisidora 11, 1813 (St. Leger).
No. 10.—Daughter of Gower Stallion (out of
Childers Mare). (Stud Book, vol. i. p. 188.
Snap Mare, Postmaster's dam).
The Stud Booh says, vol. i. p. 188, that the Snap mare's
dam by Gower Stallion was probably the mare by Grey
Childers out of Fair Helen, which appears as Matron in vol. i.
p. 10.
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 10
Derby.
Sire's
Figure.
St. Legeh.
Sire's
Figure.
1785.
Aimwell
. 1,3
1861.
Caller Ou .
3
1857.
Blink Bonny
/
1864.
Blair Athol
3
1864.
1869.
Blair Athol"
Pretender .
3
. 12
1876.
Petrarch
2
1879.
Sir Bevys .
3
2000 Guineas.
Oaks.
1817.
Manfred
S
188,3.
Vespa
6
1869.
Pretender .
. 12
1857.
Blink Bonny
I
1876.
Petrarch
2
1866.
Tormentor .
3
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 10 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Blair Athol, 1861, sire of Scottish Queen 7, 1869 (1000 Gs.) ; Prince
Charlie 12, 1872 (2000 Gs.); Cecilia 2, 187,3 (1000 Gs.) ; Craig
Millar /, 1875 (St. Leger) ; Silvio /, 1877 (Derby, St. Leger).
Petrarch, 187,3, sire of Busybody /, 1884 (1000 Gs., Oaks); Miss Jummy 4,
1886  (1000 Cs., Oaks'); Throstle 4, 1894 (St. Leger).
Hampton, 1872, sire of Merry Hampton 22,1887 (Derby) ; Reve d'Or 4,
1887 (1000 Gs., Oaks) ; Ayrshire 8,1888 (2000 Gs.", Derby) ; Ladas
/, 1894, (2000 Gs., Derby).
Tristan, 1878, sire of Canterbury Pilgrim /, 1890 (Oaks).
Note.—No members of No. 10 family have won the 1000 Guineas.
70 '
-ocr page 95-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
No. 11.—The Sedbury Royal Make (dam, per-
haps, of the Pet Mare). (Stud Book, vol. i.
p. 15).
" To my mind," writes Bruce Lowe, " it is probable that
Grey Royal, Grey Wilkes, and Grey Robinson, as well as the
Pet Mare, all descend from the same Sedbury Royal Mare."
On this Mr. Birley observes : " This rather seems as if Bruce
Lowe thought he had made a discovery, but the Stud Book
shows clearly that the Pet Mare was dam of Grey Wilkes, and
that Grey Wilkes was grandam of Grey Robinson, so that these
three must be from the same source. Further, the Stud Book
says that the Pet Mare was daughter either of Grey Royal or
of a Sedbury Royal Mare. If Grey Royal was the dam then
she is practically the source from which come all the members
of Family 11, all of Family 13, and perhaps most of Family 4,
that is to say, such part of Family 4 as comes from
Expectation."
Later Mr. Birley adds : " The Stud Book says it is probable
that the cover which produced the Pet Mare was abroad. If
that was so it is not at all likely that Grey Royal 13 was
the dam, because she was clearly bred in England, and not
likely to have been sent abroad for a cover."
Bruce Lowe gives John Bull (Derby) and Bellina (Oaks), as
of this family, but they belong properly to No. 13, if it be
granted that the families are distinct.
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 11
1805.
1840.
Derby.
Cardinal Beaufort
Little Wonder .
Sire's
Figure.
. 24
. 6
1825.
1844.
Memnon
Faugh-a-Bal lagli
Sire's
Figure.
/
2
1870.
Kinjjcraft .
3
2000 Guineas.
Oaks.
1825.
Enamel
. 6
1812.
Manuella .
St. Legeh.
. i)
1841.
1887.
Ralph
Enterprise .
1000 Guineas.
• 37
. 12
1818.
Altisidora .
. i)
1828.
Zoe .
8
71
-ocr page 96-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 11 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Driver, 1783, sire of Hannibal 3, 1804 (Derby).
Overton, 1788, sire of Cockfighter 2, 1799 (St. Leger).
Golumpus, 1802, sire of Otterington 20, 1812 (St. Leger).
Hedley, 1803, sire of Prince Leopold 2, 1816 (Derby).
Lottery, 1820, sire of Chorister 4, 1831 (St. Leger).
Liverpool, 1828, sire of Idas 3, 1844 (2000 Gs.).
Belshazzar, 1830, sire of Cara 3, 1839 (1000 Gs.).
Venison, 1833, sire of Ugly Buck 4, 1844 (2000 Gs.); Miami 5, 1847
(Oaks) ; Clementina /,' 1847 (1000 Gs.).
Birdcatcher, 1838, sire of The Baron 24, 1845 (St. Leger); Daniel
O'Rourke 9, 1852 (Derby); Songstress 23, 1852 (Oaks); Knight of
St. George 26, 1854 (St. Leger); Habena 8, 1855 (1000 Gs.);
Warlock 9, 1856 (St. Leger) ; Manganese 4, 1856 (1000 Gs.).
Faugh-a-Ballagh, 1841, sire of Fille de l'Air 5, 1864 (Oaks).
St. Simon, 1881, sire of Memoir 3,1890 (Oaks, St. Leger); Semolina 7.
1890 (1000 Gs.); La Fleche 3, 1892 (1000 Gs., Oaks, St. Leger);
Mrs. Butterwick 8, 1893 (Oaks); Amiable 2,1894 (1000 Gs., Oaks);
St. Frusquin 22, 1896 (2000 Gs.); Persimmon 7, 1896 (Derby, Sf.
Leger).
Royal Hampton 1882, sire of Kirkconnel 5, 1895 (2000 Gs.).
Orme, 1889, sire of Flying Fox 7, 1899 (2000 Gs., Derby, St. Leger).
No. 12.—Royal Mark (dam of Brimmer Mare ;
great-gran dam of Montagu Mare)
Book, vol. i. p. 12).
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 12
(Stud
Derby.
Sire's
Figure.
2000 Guineas.
Sire's
Figure.
1828.
Cadland
/
1809.
Wizard
(i
1815.
Tigris
s
St. Legek.
1828.
Cadland
1
1791.
Young Traveller
. 6
1832.
Archibald .
8
1815.
Filho da Puta
OB
35
1854.
Hermit
/
Oaks.
1872.
Prince Charlie
10
1802.
Scotia
. 30
1000 Guineas.
1811.
Sorcery
. 6
1837.
Miss Letty .
6
1819.
Catgut
. 25
1843.
Poison
6
1870.
Hester
4
1861.
Brown Duchess .
3
1891.
Mimi .
. 23
1891.
Mimi .
. 23
1898.
Nun Nicer .
4
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 12 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Eclipse, 1764, sire of Young Eclipse 6, 1781 (Derby) ; Saltram 7, 1788
(Derby) ; Sergeant 33, 1784 (Derby) ; Annette" 7, 1787 (Oaks).
72
-ocr page 97-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
Alfred, 1770, sire of Imperatrix 2, 1780 (St. Leger).
Young Marske, 1771, sire of Ruler 31, 1780 (St. Leger).
Filho da Puta, 1812, sire of Birmingham 34, 18.30 CSt. Leger).
Voltaire, 1826, sire of Charles XII. 21, 18.39 (St. Leger) ; Voltigeur 2,
1850 (Derby, St. Leger).
Wintonian, 18.34, sire of Rhedycina, 8, 18.50 (Oaks).
Chatham, 1839, sire of Governess 8, 18-58 (1000 Gs., Oaks).
Weatherbit, 1842, sire of Beadsman 1.3, 1858 (Derby).
Kingston, 1849. sire of Caractacus 6, 1862 (Derby); Queen Bertha /,
186-3 (Oaks).
Marsvas 18.51, sire of George Frederick 1-3, 1874 (Derby).
Adventurer, 18-59, sire of Pretender 10, 1869 (2000 Gs., Derby);
Apologv 4, 1874(1000 Gs., Oaks, St. Leger); Wheel of Fortune /,
1879 (lOOOGs., Oaks).
Scottish Chief, 1861, sire of Marie Stuart S, 1873 (St. Leger).
Sterling, 1871, sire of Harvester 1-5, 1884 (Derby) ; Paradox /. 188-5
(2000 Gs.); Enterprise 11, 1887 (2000 Gs.);" Enthusiast 27, 1889
(2000 Gs.).
Springfield, 187-3, sire of Briarroot 2, 1888 (1000 Gs.); Sainfoin 2, 1890
(Derby).
No. 13.—Royal, Mare (dam of Grey Royal).
{Stud Book, vol. i. p. 10)
Here we have to correct Bruce Lowe and add John Bull
(Derby) and Bellina (Oaks) as members of this family.
CLASSIC
WINNERS
OF FAMILY No. 1-3
Derby
Sire's
Figure.
St. Leger.
Sire's
Figure.
1792.
John Bull .
4
1806.
Fvldener .
3
1844.
Orlando
. 14
18.36.
E'lis
6
18.58.
Beadsman .
. 12
1874.
George Frederick
. 12
2000 Guineas.
1882.
Shotover
5
1814.
Olive .
. 13
1882.
Shotover
5
Oaks.
188.3.
Galliard
1000 Guineas.
3
1784.
Stella.
4
18-37.
Chapeau d'Espagne
. 37
1799.
Bellina
. 24
184(i.
Mendicant .
. 14
1846.
Mendicant .
. 14
1877.
Belphoebe .
3
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 13 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Marc Anthony, 1767, sire of Aimwell 10, 178.5 (Derby).
Highflyer, 1774, sire of Omphale 2, 1784 (St. Leger)"; Cowslip 17, 1787
(St. Leger) ; Noble 9, 1786 (Derby); Sir Peter'S, 1787 (Derby) ;
Spadille 3, 1787 (St. Leger); Young Flora 3, 1788 (St. Leger) ;
Skyscraper 3, 1789 (Derby) ; Volante 6. 1792 (Oaks).
73
-ocr page 98-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Alexander, 1782, sire of Nike 32, 1797 (Oaks) ; Hephestion 3, 1810
(2000 Gs.).
Don Quixote, 1784, sire of Sancho 17, 1804 (St. Leger).
Sir Oliver, 1800, sire of Olive 13, 1814 (2000 Gs,).
Colwick, 1828, sire of Attila 16, 1842 (Derby).
Epirus, 1834, sire of Pyrrhus the First 3, 1846 (Derby) ; Pitsford 23,
1850 (2000 Gs.).
Orlando, 1841, sire of Teddington 2, 1851 (Derby); Fazzolette 31,1856
(2000 Gs.); Imperieuse 2, 1857 (1000 Gs., St. Leger); Fitz
Roland /, 1858 (2000 Gs.) ; Diaphantus 7, 1861 (2000 Gs.).
Beadsman, 1855, sire of Blue Gown /, 1868 (Derby); Pero Gomez 27,
1869 (St. Leger).
Salvator 1872, sire of Ossian 23, 1883 (St. Leger).
It is to be noted here that the American horses, Sir Archy
and Sarpedon, were of this No. 13 family, and not of No. 41,
to which Bruce Lowe assigned them.
No. 14.—The Oldfield Make (great-grandam
of Lady Mare). {Stud Book, vol. i. p. 11)
Bruce Lowe wrongly assigns Tammany to this family
(page 28), whereas Mr. Marcus Daly's champion racehorse is
really a member of No. 12 family.
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 14
Sire's
St. Legeii.
Sire's
Figure.
Figure.
. 21
1834.
Touchstone
. 24
1840.
Launcelot .
. 24
1841.
Satirist
. 17
3
2000 Guineas.
5
1863.
Macaroni .
. 21
Derby.
1863. Macaroni .
Oaks.
1867. Hippia
1882. Geheimniss
1000 Guineas. No winners.
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 14 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Trumpator, 1782, sire of Didelot 2, 1796 (Derby).
Pipator, 1786, sire of Remembrancer 9, 1803 (St. Leger).
Touchstone, 1831, sire of Blue Bonnet 20, 1842 (St. Leger); Cother-
stone 7, 1843 (2000 Gs., Derby); Orlando 13, 1844 (Derby);
Mendicant 13,1846 (1000Gs.,Oaks); Flatcatcher 3,1848 (2000 Gs.);
Surplice 2,1848 (Derby, St. Leger); Nunny Kirk 8,1849 (2000 Gs.);
Newminster8,1851 (St. Leger); Lord of the Isles 4,1855 (2000 Gs.).
Auckland, 1839, sire of Kate 4, 1852 (1000 Gs.)
Leamington, 1853, sire of Iroquois 4,1881 (Derby, St. Leger).
74
-ocr page 99-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
Buccaneer, 1857, sire of Formosa 18, 18G8 (1000 Gs.,-2000 Gs., Oaks,
St. Leger); Brigantine 4, 1869 (Oaks) ; Kisber 4, 1876 (Derby).
Macaroni, 18(i(), sire of Macgregor 4, 1870 (2000 Gs.); Spinaway /,
1875 (1000 Gs., Oaks); Camelia 3, 1876 (1000 Gs., Oaks) ; Bonny
Jean 16, 1883 (Oaks).
■ Saraband, 1883, sire of Siffleuse 8, 1893 (1000 Gs.).
No. 15.—Royai, Mare (dam of Grey Why Not).
(Stud Book, vol. i. p. 18)
Bruce Lowe describes this mare as the dam of Old Why
Not, meaning apparently Why Not by Fenwick's Barb, whom
he numbers 15 in Herod's pedigree, page 50 B. L. This
Why Not, however, was the sire of Grey AVhy Not 15, and
his dam was a different Royal Mare altogether from the one
under notice (Stud Book, vol. i. p. 384).
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 1.5
Dehby.              Sire's
Figure.
1791. Eager          ... 5
1842. Attila          . . .13
1884. Harvester . . .12
St. Legeh.
1779. Tommy
                               4
Sire's
Figure.
' 1798. Symmetry . . .30
1808. Petrouius ... 3
1811. Soothsayer. . . 6
1824. Jerry. ... 18
Oaks.
1803. Theophania . . 30
2000 Guineas, 1000 Guineas. No winners.
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 15 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Sweetbriar, 1769, sire of Assassin 3,1782 (Derby).
Fidget, 1783, sire of Fidget Colt 6, 1797 (Derby).
Asparagus, 1787, sire of Rhoda 22, 1816 (1000 Gs.).
Soothsayer, 1808, sire of Interpreter 17, 1818 (2000 Gs.) ; Tiresias /,
1819 (Derby).
Jerry, 1821, sire of Clearwell 19, 1833 (2000 Gs.).
No. 16.—Sister to Stripling by Hutton's
Spot (grandam of Young Marske Mare).
(Mud Book, vol. i. p. 317).
Dealing with the mistake Bruce Lowe made in the pedigree
of Ormonde in substituting Don John for Don Juan, and with
the further mistake made by the Editor in describing Don
75
-ocr page 100-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Juan as of No. 9 family, Mr. Birley writes : " Don Juan + he
traces to Old Coquette, daughter of Curwen Old Spot Mare
(Stud Book, vol. i. p. 17). I cannot trace this mare to the
Vintner Mare, or to any other source. There is another
Curwen Old Spot Mare, just above her on p. 17, who is grand-
daughter of the Vintner Mare.'1
The Editor of Bruce Lowe's book was misled by this second
Curwen Spot Mare. Don Juan really is of No. 44 family as
shown in Hermann Goos's tables, and of the same family in
more recent years is the well-known French horse Le Destrier.
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 16
DebbY.                Sire's
Figure.
1884. St. Gatien .        .        . «
1880. Ormonde                         /
Oaks.
188a Bonny Jean        . . 14
1889. L'Abbesse <le Jouarre. /
St. Leger.             Sire's
Figure.
1886. Ormonde . .        . /
2000 Guineas.
1886. Ormonde . .       . 1
1000 Guineas.
1888. Farewell . .        . S
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 16 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Kendal 1883, sire of Galtee More 5, 1897 (2000 (is., Derby, St. Leger).
Martagon, 1887, sire of Musa 20, 1899 (Oaks).
No. 17.—Byerly Turk Mare (dam1 of Wharton
Mare). (Stud Book, vol. i. p. 18)
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 17.
Oaks.              Sire's                       St. Leoek.
Figure.
180.5. Meteors ... 7 1785.  Cowslip
1865. Regalia . . .3 1804.  Sancho
18.5.5.  Saucebox .
Sire's
Figure.
. 13
. 13
2
2000 Guineas.
1816. Nectar . . . 7 | 1818. Interpreter
Derby and 1000 Guineas. No winners.
1.5
1 Grandam, according to the Stud Book, but there is a note question-
ing the accuracy of one step in the pedigree.
76
-ocr page 101-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 17 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Tandem, 1773, sire of The Yellow Filly 2, 1786 (Oaks); Pewet 8,
1789 (St. Leger).
The Flyer, 1814, sire of Wings 28, 1825 (Oaks).
Interpreter, 1815, sire of Lilias 2, 1820 (Oaks).
Pantaloon, 1824, sire of Satirist 14, 1841 (St. Leger); Ghuznee 20,1841
(Oaks); Hernandez 6, 18,51 (2000 Gs.).
No. 18.—Daughter of Old Woodcock (dam of
Daughter of Old Spot ; fourth dam of
Barti.et's Chieders Mare). (Stud Book,
vol. i. p. 2).
Sir Thomas (Derby) is wrongly included here by Bruce
Lowe. He was half brother to Pot-8-os, of No. 38 family.
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 18
Derby.
Sire's
Figure.
St. Legeu.
Sire's
Figure.
1793.
Wraxy
. 38
1868.
Formosa
. 14
1813.
Smolensko .
. 6
1856'.
Ellington .
3
2000 Guineas.
1813.
Smolensko .
6
Oaks.
1868.
Formosa
. 14
1810.
Oriana
7
1859.
Summerside
7
1000 Guineas.
1868.
Formosa
. 14
1808.
Formosa
. 14
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 18 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Waxy, 1790, sire of Waxy Pope, /, 1809 (Derby) ; Whalebone /, 1810
(Derby); Music /, 1813 (Oaks); Bluctier 4, 1814 (Derby);
Whisker /, 1815 (Derby) ; Minuet /, 1815 (Oaks) ; Corinne 2, 1818
(1000 Gs., Oaks).
Smolensko, 1810, sire of Jerry 15, 1824 (Derby); Gulnare 4,1837 (Oaks;.
Bertram, 1869, sire of Robert the Devil /, 1880 (St. Leger).
Poulet, 1877, sire of Limasol 23, 1897 (Oaks).
77
-ocr page 102-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
No. 19.—Daughtek of Daviix's Old Woodcock
(great - grandam of Counsellor (Wood's
Mare). {Stud Book, vol. i. p. 8).
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 19
Derby.
1892. Sir Hugo .
St. Leger.
1817.   Ebor .
1818.   Reveller
1850. Gamester .
2000 Guineas.
Sire's
Figure.
. 15
2
. 7
Sire's
Figure.
1833. Clearwell
18-5". Vedette
1890. Surefoot
/
Oaks and 1000 Guineas. No winners.
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 19 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Reveller, 1815, sire of Galantine 3, 1831 (1000 Gs.).
Heron, 1833, sire of Fisherman 11, 1856.
Monarque, 1852, sire of Gladiatem-5,1865 (2000 Gs., Derby, St. Leger);
Reine 5, 1872 (1000 Gs., Oaks).
Vedette, 1857, sire of Galopin 3, 1875 (Derby).
Cambuscan, 1861, sire of Camballo 2, 1875 (2000 Gs.).
Isonomv, 1875, sire of Seabreeze 4,1888 (Oaks, St. Leger) ; Common 4,
1891 (2000 Gs., Derby, St. Leger); Isinglass 3, 1893 (2000 Gs..
Derby, St. Leger).
The Sailor Prince, 1880, sire of Sibola 4, 1899 (1000 Gs.).
Gallinule, 1884, sire of Wildfowler 7, 1898 (St. Leger).
No. 20.—Daughtek of Gascoyne's Foreign
Horse (dam of (Grey) Favourite). {Stud
Book,
vol. i. p. 9).
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 20
Oaks.
Sire's
Figure.
St. Legeh.
Sire's
Figure.
1841.
Ghuznee
. 17
1812. Otterington
. 11
1880.
Jenny Howlett .
S
1842. Blue Bonnet
. 14
1899.
Musa .
. 16
1000 Guineas.
1863. Lady Augusta . . 3 1866. Repulse
Derby and 2000 Guineas. No winners.
78
-ocr page 103-
m^^^^mmm^m^mmemmm
The Guano Duke Dimithi
KoNSTANTINOWITCH
* /
-ocr page 104-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 20 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
(None.)
No. 21.—The Moonah Barb Mare of Queen
Anne. (Stud Book, vol. i. p. 14)
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY NO. 21
Oaks.
Sire's
Figure.
1790. Hippolyte • .
. 9
18.51. Iris
. 2
188.5. Lonelv.
. 5
St. Legeh.            Sire's
Figure.
1839. Charles XII.                . 12
Derby, 2000 Guineas, 1000 Guineas. No winners.
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 21 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Shuttle, 1793, sire of Staveley 4, 180.5 (St. Leger).
Sweetmeat, 1842, sire of Mincemeat 3, 18-54 (Oaks) ; Mincepie 3, 18.56
(Oaks) ; Macaroni 14, 1863 (2000 Gs., Derby).
Longbow, 1849, sire of Sagitta 3, 1860 (1000 Gs.) ; Feu de Joie 7,1862
(Oaks).
No. 22.—Belgrade Turk Mare (dam of Bay
Bolton Mare ; grandam of Flora). (Stud
Book,
vol. i. p. 86).
Bruce Lowe wrongly includes Barcarolle (1000 Gs.) here.
There were two of the name foaled in 1835, and one belonged
to this family, but the 1000 Gs. winner traced to Maid of Ely,
and is of the No. 45 family, from which also came Old
Calabar.
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 22
1896.
2000 Guineas.
St. Frusquin
1000 Guineas.
Sire's
Figure.
. 11
1816.
1833.
18-51.
Rhoda
Tarantella .
Aphrodite .
. 1.5
3
/
Derby.               Sire's
Figure.
1883. St. Blaise . . . 5
1887. Merry Hampton          . 10
Oaks.
18.53. Catherine Hayes
          . 3
St. Leger. No winners.
79
-ocr page 105-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 22 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
(None.)
No. 23.—Piping Pec; (dam of the Old Hobby
Make). (Stud Book, vol. i. p. 11)
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 23
1812.
Derby.
()ctavius
Oaks.
.Sire's
Figure.
8
1883.
St. Legeh.
Ossian
2000 Guineas.
Sires
Figure.
. 13
1820.
Carolina
■ /
1850.
Pitsford
. 13
1836.
1852.
1897.
Cyprian
Songstress .
Limasol
/
. 11
. 18
1890.
1000 Gl IXEA-.
Thais .
8
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 23 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Pontac, 1772, sire of Sir Thomas 38, 1788 (Derby).
Chanticleer, 1843, sire of Sunbeam /, 1858 (St. Leger).
Barcaldine, 1878, sire of Mimi 12, 1891 (1000 Gs., Oaks) ; Sir Visto 4,
189.5 (Derby, St. Leger).
No. 24.—Helmsley Turk Mare (dam of Rock-
wood Mare) ; grandam of Old Lady
(Bolton's). {Stud Hook, vol. i. p. 15).
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 24
St. Legek.                        Sire's
Figure.
1845. The Baron         .... 11
Derby, Oaks, 2000 Guineas, 1000 Guineas. No winners.
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 24 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Rockingham, 1781, sire of Bellina 13, 1799 (Oaks).
Walnut, 1780, sire of Ashton 29, 1809 (St. Leger).
Gohanna,'1790, sire of Cardinal Beaufort 11, 1805 (Derby) ; Election S,
1807 (Derby).
Camel, 1922, sire of Touchstone, 14, 1834 (St. Leger) ; Launcelot 14,
1840 (St. Leger).
The Baron, 1842, sire of Stockwell 3, 1852 (2000 Gs., St. Leger).
80
-ocr page 106-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
No. 25.—A Brimmer Mare (dam of Old Scar-
borough Mare). (Stud Book, vol. i. p. 16)
Bruce Lowe wrongly includes Bourbon (St. Leger) here.
He was of 37 family. He omits Azor (Derby).
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 25
Dejiby.
Sire's
Figure.
1000 Guineas.
Sire's
Figure.
1817. Azor .
. . 2
1821.
Zeal .
. /
1878. Sefton .
. 1
1823.
Zinc
. /
1827.
Arab .
. /
Oaks.
1823. Zinc .
. 1
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 25 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Coraus, 1809, sire of Reveller 19, 1818 (St. Leger); Catgut 12, 1819
(1000 Gs.); Matilda 5, 1827 (St. Leger); Grey Momus 2, 1838
(2000 Gs.).
Slane, 1833, sire of Princess /, 1844 (Oaks); Merry Monarch 5,1845
(Derby); Conyngham /, 1847 (2000 Gs.); La'dv Orford 9, 1850
(1000 Gs.).
Young Melbourne, 1855, sire of General Peel 3, 1864 (2000 Gs.).
No. 26.—Daughter of Old Merlin (dam of
mare by Darley Arabian ; great-grandam of
Salome, or Selma). (Stud Book, vol. i. p. 16).
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 26
2000 Guineas.
1829.   Patron
1830.   Augustus
1859. Promised Land
Dehby.
1841. Coronation .
Oaks.
1780. Teetotum .
1821. Augusta
Sire's
Figure.
. 2
Sire's
Figaro.
. /
. 8
. /
1000 Guineas.
St. Legeb.
1854. Knight of St. George . 11 ' 1841. Potentia . . . r,
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 26 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Herod, 1758, sire of Bridget 3, 1779 (Oaks); Faith 3, 1781 (Oaks);
Phenomenon 2,1783 (St. Leger) ; Maid of the Oaks 3, 1783 (Oaks).
Coronation, 1838, sire of Flea 4, 1849 (1000 Gs.).
81                              G
-ocr page 107-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
No. 27.—A Spanker Make (dam of a Byerly
Turk Make ; grandam of Farmer's Mare).
(Stud Book, vol. i. p. 9).
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 27
1837.
Derby.
Phosphorus .
Sire's
Figure.
. 4
2000 Guineas.
1880. Enthusiast .
1000 Guineas.
Sire's
Figure.
. 12
1869.
St. Legem.
Pero Gomez .
. 13
Oaks. N
1815. Cesario Filly
1834. May Day '.
1842. Firebrand
j winners.
. 2
. 4
. 4
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 27 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Saunterer, 1854, sire of Gamos 4, 1870 (Oaks).
Pero Gomez, 18<S6, sire of Peregrine 1881 (1000 Gs.).
Arbitrator, 1874, sire of Kilwarlin 9, 1887 (St. Leger).
No. 28.—Daughter of Peace's White Turk
(dam of Coppin Mare). (Stud Book; vol. i.
p. 7).
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 28
Derby. Sire's I Oaks.                Sire's
Figure.                                                     Figure.
1823. Emilius . . - 8 | 182-5. Wings . . .        .17
St. Leger, 2000 Guineas, 1000 Guineas. No winners.
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 28 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Emilius, 1820, sire of Priam (j, 1830 (Derby) ; Oxygen /, 1831 (Oaks) ;
Riddlesworth /, 1831 (2000 Gs.) ; Plenipotentiary (i, 1834 (Derby);
Reserve/, 1835 (1000 Gs.); Mango/, 1837 (St. Leger); Barcarolle,
45, 1838 (1000 Gs.) ; Extempore 7, 1843 (1000 Gs.).
82
-ocr page 108-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
No. 29.—A Natural Baiuj JNIake (dam of a
Basset Arabian Mare ; great-grandam of
Fox Mare (Vanessa's dam). (StudBook, vol. i.
p. 89).
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 2!)
Oaks.                 Sire's |                      St. LegER.            Sire's
Figure
1816. Landscape .
                      2
Figure.
180!). Ashton
          .         .         .24
182!). Rowton                           .42
Derby, 2000 Guineas, 1000 Guineas. No winners.
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 2!) THAT HAVK SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
(None.)
No. 30.—Daughter of Due dk Chartres'
Hawker (grandam of Golden Locks). (Stud
Book,
vol. i. p. 10).
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 30
Deiiby.
Sire's
Sire's
Figure.
Figure.
• 3 I
1806.
Paris .
3
1799. Archduke .
St. Leger, Oaks, 2000 Guineas, 1000 Guineas. No winners.
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 30 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Delpini, 1781, sire of Symmetry 16, 1798 (St. Leger) ; Scotia 12, 1802
(Oaks) ; Theophania 15, 1803 (Oaks).
No. 31. — Dick Burton's Mare, sometimes
called a Barb Mare (dam of Son of Brimmer
Mare). (Stud Book, vol. i. p. 4).
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 31
St. Leoeii.           Sire's j                    2000 Guineas.         sire's
Figure.                                                       Figure.
1780. Ruler                 .         . 12 I 1850. Fazzoletto .         .         . 13
1000 G line as.
1848. Canezou                                 /
Derby, Oaks. No winners.
83
-ocr page 109-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 31 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
(None.)
No. 32.—Barb Make (dam of Dodsworth).
(Royal Mare, Stud Book, vol. i. p. 15)
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 32
Oaks                   Sire's
Figure.
1797. Nike . . . .13
Derby, St. Leger, 2000 Guineas, 1000 Guineas. No winners.
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 32 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
(None.)
No. 33.—Sister to Honeycomb Punch (dam of
Makeless Mare), (Devonshire). (Stud
Hook,
vol. i. p. 13).
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. .33
Derby.                  sire's
Figure.
1784. Sergeant, . . .12
Oaks, St. Leger, 2000 Guineas, 1000 Guineas. No winners.
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No 33 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
(None.)
No. 34. — Daughter of Hautboy (dam of
Coneyskins Make, progenitor of Hutton's
Daphne ; grandam of Surley Mare (dam
of Hutton's Spot)). (Stud Book, vol. i. p. 205).
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 34
St. Leger.
Sire's                    - "                                   Sire's
Figure.                                                         Figure.
1819. Antonio . . . 8 j 1830. Birmingham . . 12
Derby, Oaks, 2000 Guineas, 1000 Guineas. No winners.
84
-ocr page 110-
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Facsimile Copy of Letter authorising the I'uuchake of Galtee Moke bv Major-General J. A. Ahapoff.
-ocr page 111-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 34 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
(None.)
No. 35. — Daughter of Bustler (dam and
grandam of Byerly Turk and Bay Bolton
Mares ; fifth dam of Clio (Morley's)).
(Stud Book, vol. i. p. 240).
FAMILY No. 35
No Classic Winners.
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 35 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Haphazard, 1707, sire of Fillio da Puta 12, 1815 (St. Leger) ; Antar (i,
1819(2000 Gs.); Rowena /, 1820 (1000 Gs.); Reginald /, 1821
(2000 Gs.).
Bustard, 1813, sire of Variation 9, 1830 (Oaks).
No. 86.—Daughter of Curwen Bay Barb
(daughter of Young Greyhound Mare,
Miner's Dam). (Stud Book, i. p. 97).
FAMILY No. 30
No Classic Winners. No Sires of Classic Winners.
No. 37.—Sister to Old Merlin (great-grandam
of Makeless Mare (Pierson's)). (Stud Book,
vol. i. p. 13).
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 37
St. Legeh.                Sire's
Figure.
1777. Bourbon ... 7
Derby, Oaks, 2000 Guineas, J 000 Guineas. No winners.
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 37 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Dr. Syntax, 1811, sire of Chapeau d'Espagne 13, 1837 (1000 Gs.);
Ralph 11, 1841 (2000 Gs.).
85
-ocr page 112-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
No. 38. Thwaite's Dun Mare. {Stud Book,
vol. i. p. 380)
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 38
Derby.
                   sire's
Figure.
1788. Sir Thomas . . .23
Oaks, St. Leger, 2000 Guineas, 1000 Guineas. No winners.
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 38 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
l'ot-8-os, 1773, sire of Nightshade 4, 1788 (Oaks) ; Waxy 18, 1793
(l)erhv): Champion 3, 1800 (Derby, St. Leger); Tvrant 3, 1802
(Derl)'y).
No. 39. — Bonny Black (from a daughter of
Persian Stallion), dam of Cyprus Arabian
Mare. {Stud Book, vol. i. p. 9).
No. 40.—A Royal Make (dam of Brimmer
Mare; grandam of two Castaway Mares).
{Stud Book, vol. i. p. (i).
No. 41.—A Grasshopper Mare (dam of
Hartley's Blind Horse ; grandam of
Traveller Mare). {Stud Book, vol. i. p. 215).
FAMILIES No. 39, 40, 41
No Winners. No Sires of Classic Winners.
No. 42.—A Spanker Mare   (dam of mare by
Pulleine's Arabian ;      fourth dam of
(Bolton) Patriot Mare).    {Stud Book, vol. i.
p. 155).
FAMILY No. 42
No Classic Winners.
STALLIONS OF FAMILY No. 42 THAT HAVE SIRED
CLASSIC WINNERS
Oiseau, 1809, sire of Rowton 29, 1829 (St. Leger).
80
-ocr page 113-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
No. 43.—Natural Barb Mare (presented by
Emperor of Morocco ; great - grandam of
Cardigan Colt Mare). {Stud Book, vol. i.
p. .54).
FAMILY No. 43
No Classic Winners. No Sires of Classic Winners.
No. 44.—Bustler Mare
FAMILY No. 44
No Winners. No Sires.
No. 45.—Young Cade Mare. Maid of Ely.
{Stud Book, vol. ii. p. 121)
CLASSIC WINNERS OF FAMILY No. 45
1000 Guineas.             sire's
Figure.
1838. Barcarolle . .            28
Derby, Oaks, St. Leger, 2000 Guineas. No Winners.
SIRES OF CLASSIC WINNERS FROM MAID OF ELY
(None.)
No. 46.—Babraham Mare. Matchem Mare
(sister to Grinder). {Stud Book, vol. i. p. 124)
FAMILY No. 40
No winners.
SIRES FROM SISTER TO GRINDER
Godolphin, 1818, sire of Young Mouse 8, 1829 (1000 Gs.).
No. 47.—Spectator Mare.
No Winners. No Sires.
No. 48.—Shields Galloway Mare.
No. 49.—Whitenose Mare.
No. 50.—Miss Euston.
87
-ocr page 114-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
To gain some further knowledge of the value of
the various families from a sire point of view, it
will be convenient here to set out the tables of the
first twenty winning stallions since 1850, giving
the family number of each horse and the amount
won by his stock in each particular year.
FIRST TWENTY WINNING STALLIONS FROM 1850 TO 1899
No. of 1850.
Amount
Family. won by Stock.
13. Epirus .
£8,665
12. Voltaire.
8,524
25. Slane
8,037
14. Touchstone .
7,178
22. Gladiator
6,526
3. Lanercost
6,451
2. Sir Hercules .
6,373
/. Bay Middleton
6,091
17. Pantaloon
5,603
11. Venison.
5,327
2. Don John
4,805
18. St. Francis
4,743
4. Provost .
3,743
12. Wintonian
3,585
9. Nutwith
3,510
2. Harkaway
3,466
23. Doctor .'
3,433
7. Ootherstone .
3,340
2. Phlegon.
3,080
11. Birdcatcher
2,836
No. of
Amount
Family. won by Stock.
22. Robert de Gorham
£2,981
/. Melbourne
2,752
7. Cotherstone .
2,669
19. Alarm .
2,636
4. Provost .
2,584
2. Hetman Platoff
2,360
1852.
11.
Birdcatcher .
17,149
14.
Touchstone
14,275
24.
The Baron
9,895
11.
Venison .
9,246
3.
Lanercost
7,204
2.
Ithuriel .
5,968
7.
Cotherstone .
5,843
25.
Slane
5,627
4.
Ion
5,558
i ••;.
Orlando.
4,817
12.
Weatherbit .
4,179
17.
Pantaloon
4,112
11.
Faugh-a-Ballagh
3,855
2.
Don John
3,577
19.
Alarm .
3,248
2.
Sir Hercules .
3,057
1.
Melbourne
2,555
12.
Magpie .
2,522
/.
Bay Middleton
2,482
1851.
13.
Orlando.
12,181
11
Venison .
11,578
17.
Pantaloon
. 9,306
11
Birdcatcher .
8,672
14,
Touchstone
. 8,196
2.
Don John .
8,131
2
Ithuriel .
7,361
9.
Pompey .
7,026
/.
Bay Middleton
6,093
25.
Slane
4,678
13.
Epirus .
4,369
3
Lanercost
3,857
11.
Faugh-a-Ballagh
3,774
12
Chatham
3,081
1853.
/.
Melbourne
21,299
13.
Orlando.
14,564
3.
Lanercost
10,269
11.
Birdcatcher .
9,710
/.
Bay Middleton
9,703
14.
Touchstone
8,749
88
-ocr page 115-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
No. of
Family.
11. Faugh-a-Ballagh
Nutwitli
Alarm .
Slane
Ion
Chatham
Venison .
John o' Gaunt
Weatherbit
Harkaway
Old England
Ithuriel .
2. Cowl
1854
Orlando
Melbourne
Touchstone
Bay Middleton
Birdcatcher
Pyrrhus the 1st
Ion
Chanticleer
Alarm .
Epirus .
Sweetmeat
Ithuriel .
Cowl .
Cotherstone
Hetman Platoff
lago
Baron .
Van Tromp
Slane
2. Harkaway
1855
Touchstone
()rlando.
Birdcatcher
Melbourne
Ion
Flying' Dutchman
St. Lawrence
Harkaway
Bay Middleton
Chanticleer
Slane
Faugh-a-Ballagh
Van Tromp
Tearaway
Amount
won by Stock.
£7,362
6,139
5,243
4,970
4,824
4,726
4,689
4,349
4,143
3,897
3,830
3,796
3,668
No. of
Family.
Amount
won by Stock.
Sir Tatton Sykes
Sweetmeat
Cotherstone
Flatcatcher
The Baron
8.
21.
7.
3.
24.
2. Barnton
1856.
11
Birdcatcher
13.
Orlando.
/.
Melbourne
3.
Flying Dutchman
14.
Touchstone .
4.
Aunandale
21.
Sweetmeat
19.
Alarm .
6.
Idle Boy
12.
Chatham
2.
Surplice
3
Flatcatcher
1!).
Heron .
23.
Chanticleer .
3
Van Tromp
8.
Sir Tatton Sykes
6.
The Cure
12.
Tadmor .
11.
Iago
7.
Cotherstone .
16,974
15,185
13,992
12,611
11,924
11,102
6,760
6,750
6,276
6,206
5,759
5,378
4,787
4,777
3,995
3,966
3,943
3,890
2,838
2,718
20,147
15,871
12,451
11,313
7,159
6,856
6,315
5,543
3,931
3,846
3,765
3,742
3,676
3,239
1857.
/.
13.
11.
14.
3.
Melbourne
Orlando.
Birdcatcher .
Touchstone .
Flying Dutchman
2.   Voltigeur
11. F^augh-a-Ballagh
19. Alarm .
3.   Flatcatcher
24. Collingwood .
23. Chanticleer .
2. Surplice.
4.   Annandale
Weatherbit .
Bay Middleton
Heron .
The Cure
Nutwith
Womersley
The Cossack .
1
1.
89
-ocr page 116-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Amount
won by Stock.
£7,556
7,343
5,103
4,990
4,833
4,809
4,366
3,83(3
3,672
3,482
3,132
2,843
2,836
2,832
No. of
Family.
11.   Birdcatcher .
21. Sweetmeat
21. Longbow
8. Newminster .
6. Turnus .
3. Pyrrhus the 1st
6.   The Cure
2. Teddington .
2.   Surplice
7.   Wild Dayrell .
12.   Weatherbit
3.   Rataplan
27. Prime Minister
11.   Faugh-a-Ballagh
No. of
Family.
13. Orlando
23. Chanticlee14. Touchston12. Weatherbi12. Chatham
11. Birdcatche3. Flying Du2. Teddingto/. Bay Middl/. The Cossa/. Jericho .
8. Newminst
2.   Voltigeur
19. Alarm .
21. Longbow
3.   Pyrrhus th/. Melbourn
19. Heron .
7. Cothersto2. Surplice.
1858          Amount
won by Stock.
£15,28.3
11,197
9,482
9,043
8,336
6,321
5,90(i
5,545
4,856
4,780
4,760
4,623
4,622
4,210
3,985
3,714
3,039
3,474
3,406
3,170
1861.
3.   Stockwell
3.   Flying Dutchman
13.   Orlando
8.   Newminster .
3.
   Rataplan
3.   King Tom
12.   Kingston
7.   Wild Dayrell.
2.   Voltigeur
12.   Tadmor .
7.   West Australian
21.
   Sweetmeat
23.   Chanticleer .
27. Prime Minister
6.   Idle Boy
24.   Mountain Deer
11.   Birdcatcher .
2.   Barnton.
4.   Loup-garou
4. Annandale
1862.
3.   Stockwell
12.   Kingston
8.   Newminster
2.   Voltigeur
13.   Orlando.
7.   Wild Dayrell .
3.   Flying Dutchman
21. Longbow
21.   Sweetmeat
8.   Rifleman
3.
   Rataplan
3.
   King Tom
12. Weatherbit .
1859.
8
Newminster .
17,338
11,403
10,738
8,219
7,995
7,849
6,751
6,623
5,375
5,160
5,059
5,008
4,645
3,683
3,456
3,288
3,217
2,966
2,932
2,798
3. Flying Dutchman
13. Orlando.
i.
I.
West Australian
The Cossack .
2. Teddington
23. Chanticleer .
11. Birdcatcher
11. F'augh-a-Ballagh
/. Jericho .
2. Voltigeur
Kingston
Stockwell
Pyrrhus the 1st
Surplice.
Touchstone .
Longbow
Annandale
The Cure
Buckthorn
12.
3
3
2.
14.
21.
4
<;.
8
1860.
3. Stockwell
3. Flying Dutchman
13. Orlando.
2. Voltigeur
7. West Australian
23. Chanticleer .
18,201
13,632
9,967
9,933
8,430
7,795
1)0
-ocr page 117-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
No. of
Amount
No.
„f 1865.
Amount
Family. won by Stock.
Family. won by Stock.
5. Van Galen
. £4,349
3.
Stockwell
£33,302
14. Touchstone .
4,033
19.
Monarque
20,479
2. King of Trumps
4,024
8.
Newminster .
18,269
2. Teddington .
3,887
7.
Wild Dayrell.
8,803
7. West Australian
3,609
2.
Voltigeur
8,702
6. Hesperus
3,155
3.
King Tom
8,226
6. Idle Boy
3,108
19.
Vedette .
7,348
1863.
9.
Lambton
0,846
2.
Muscovite
6,794
8. Newminster .
22,465
2.
Teddington .
5,474
3. Stockwell
20,978
27.
Prime Minister
5,060
21. Sweetmeat
16,891
3.
Artillery
4,778
12. Kingston
11,702
12.
Oxford '.
4,569
3. King Tom
9,960
12.
Kingston
4,434
2. Voltigeur
9,586
12.
Marsyas.
4,187
6. The Cure
6,355
27.
Saunterer
4,013
13. Orlando
6,004
12.
Weatherbit .
3,795
7. Wild Dayrell.
5,544
11.
Faugh-a-Ballagh
3,555
12. Weatherbit .
4,905
6.
The Cure
3,542
2. Teddington
4,374
20.
Gemma di Vergy
3,359
5. Fandango
4,102
27. Saunterer
3,742
1806.
12. Ethelbert
3,704
3.
Stockwell
61,391
11. Faugh-a-Ballagh
3,529
8.
Newminster .
21,488
2. King of Trumps
3,517
3.
King Tom
14,123
3. Flying Dutchman
3,266
7.
Wild Dayrell.
13,351
6. Hesperus.
3,265
3.
Rataplan
6,576
19. Vindex .
3,220
27.
Prime Minister
5,481
4. Lord of the Isles
3,206
16.
Dundee .
5,459
1864.
2.
St. Albans.
5,140
3. Stockwell
3. King Tom
8. Newminster .
12.   Kingston
13.   Orlando.
11. Faugh-a-Ballagh
2.   Teddington .
27. Saunterer
3.   Rataplan
28,708
14,283
13,971
10,421
8,327
8,124
7,340
6,866
6,632
3.
12.
3.
4.
18.
2.
12.
2.
19.
21.
Windhound
Marsyas.
Knight of Kars
Thormanby .
Colsterdale
Skirmisher
Weatherbit
Voltigeur
Vedette .
De Clare
5,023
4,898
4,674
4,656
4,424
4,245
4,068
3,831
3,802
3,772
25. Young Melbourne
6,200
2.
Muscovite
3,500
6. The Cure
31. Fazzoletto
6,078
5,702
9.
Lambton
3,420
7. Wild Davrell.
5,501
1867.
12. Ethelbert
5,393
2. Voltigeur
5,300
3.
Stockwell
42,521
24. Mountain Deer
4,956
8.
Newminster .
31,083
9. Lambton
3,889
2.
St. Albans
17,601
19. Vedette .
3,816
1.
Trumpeter
16,641
12. Marsyas.
.3,720
2.
M uscovite
13,505
24. Claret .
3,598
13.
Beadsman
12,300
91
-ocr page 118-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
No. (
>f
Amount
No.
3f
Amount
Family. won by Stock.
Family. won by Stock.
3.
King Tom
£10,696
12.
Marsvas.
£5,649
14.
Buccaneer
7,8.31
7.
Wild" Dayrell.
4,958
12
Weatherbit .
7,444
/.
Trumpeter
4,904
7.
AVild Dayrell.
7,032
2.
King of Trumps
4,506
2.
Voltigeur
6,552
25.
Young Melbourne
4,225
3.
Rataplan
5,979
27.
Prime Minister
4,008
2.
Chevalier d'ludustr
ie 5,871
31.
Cape Flyaway
3,711
7.
Caterer .
5,539
9.
Lambton
5,510
1870.
lit.
Vedette .
4,758
3.
King Tom
20,376
25.
Young Melbourne
4,597
8.
Newminster .
13,004
12.
Marsyas.
4,258
27.
Saunterer
12,514
27.
Prime Minister
4,186
10.
Blair Athol .
11,318
1!!.
Colsterdale
3,507
4.
Thormanby
9,689
1868.
2.
Lord Clifden .
9,686
3.
Stockwell
9,186
14
Buccaneer
33,713
12.
Adventurer .
8,055
3
Stockwell
28,596
2.
Voltigeur
7,418
8.
Newminster .
19,709
14.
Macaroni
7,268
13.
Beadsman
19,405
19.
Monarque
6,816
3.
Knight of St. Patrh
:k 13,208
12.
Oxford .
6,4l2
2.
St. Albans
12,513
7.
Parmesan
6,016
25.
Young Melbourne
11,355
12.
Marsyas
5,951
4.
Thormanby
9,866
12.
Scottish Chief
5,424
3.
Rataplan
8,360
9.
Lambton
4,490
3.
King Tom
8,190
3.
Kettledrum . .
4,034
7.
Wild Dayrell
8,130
11.
Atherstone
8,893
2.
Skirmisher
7,479
3.
Tim Whiffler .
3,674
5.
Newcastle
6,418
14.
Buccaneer
3,518
1
Trumpeter
5,932
lit.
Yedette .
5,462
1871.
9.
Lambton
5,221
3.
King Tom
18,116
12
Weatherbit .
5,202
7.
Parmesan
15,080
2.
Voltigeur
4,769
10.
Blair Athol .
11,016
27.
Prime Minister
4,485
3.
Stockwell
10,174
L3.
Orlando.
4,423
/.
Trumpeter
8,032
1869.
3.
Rataplan
7,934
12.
Oxford .
6,931
4.
Thormanby .
15,857
12.
Scottish Chief
6,734
8.
Newminster .
14,549
11.
Thunderbolt .
6,416
12.
Adventurer .
14,385
2.
St. Albans
6,157
14.
Macaroni
13,333
2.
Lord Clifden .
5,710
13.
Beadsman
12,482
16.
Dundee .
5,179
14
Buccaneer
11,868
9.
Lambton
5,128
2.
St. Albans
8,795
8.
Newminster .
4,765
3
King Tom
8,397
4.
Thormanby .
4,698
3
Stockwell
8,349
19.
Cambuscan
4,421
10.
Blair Athol .
7,046
14.
Macaroni
4,398
2.
Skirmisher
6,865
6.
Caractacus
4,260
9.
Lambton
6,374
13.
Beadsman
3,451
2
Voltigeur
5,682
19.
Monarque
3,221
92
-ocr page 119-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
No. of 1872.
Amount
No. o
f
Amount
Family. won bv Stock.
Family. won by Stock.
10. Blair Athol .
£14,537
19.
Cambuscan
. £^4,-i
3. Stockwell
12,233
2.
Lord Clifden .
6,584
7. Parmesan
. 10,379
13.
Beadsman
6,227
2. Lord Clifden .
9,705
3.
Stockwell
5,679
19. Monarque
. 9,510
14.
Macaroni
5,632
14. Macaroni
8,846
7.
Caterer .
5,120
/. Trumpeter
7,607
S.
Hermit .
4,890
2. St. Albans
7,273
3.
King Tom
4,740
12. Scottish Chief
6,687
7.
Orest
4,469
2. Skirmisher
6,581
12.
Oxford .
4,455
12. Adventurer .
6,458
10.
Broomielaw .
4,107
12. Oxford .
6,114
4.
Soapstone
4,160
14. Saccharometer
4,953
1.
Trumpeter
4,036
12. The Duke .
4,320
5.
Ventre St. Oris
3,670
8. Cathedral
4,091
1875.
3. Rataplan
3,764
27. Saunterer
3,709
10.
Blair Athol .
19,704
7. Wild Dayrell.
3,573
14.
Macaroni
17,940
12. Marsyas.
3,471
2.
Lord Clifden .
16,500
3. Kettledrum .
3,216
7.
Parmesan
12,375
12.
Adventurer .
9,311
1873.
19.
Vedette .
7,710
10. Blair Athol .
18,362
13.
Beadsman
6,664
3. Stockwell
13,650
13,505
3.
King Tom
6,656
12. Scottish Chief
12.
The Duke
6,611
2. Lord Clifden .
9,281
19.
Cambuscan
6,344
12. Adventurer .
14. Macaroni
6,648
6,538
2.
Speculum
Lecturer
5,751
5,544
11. Thunderbolt .
6,387
1.
Trumpeter
.5,0.50
2. Skirmisher
6,347
10.
Breadalbane .
4,887
3. King- Tom
14. Saccharometer
6,289
5,957
/.
14.
Lord Lyon
Saccharometer
4,720
4,650
19. Monarque
25. Young Melbourne
5,568
8.
Cathedral
4,481
4,70.5
7.
Orest
4,383
27. Saunterer
4. Thormanby .
4,616
4,534
12.
12.
Marsvas .
The Earl
4,271
3 848
2. St. Albans" .
4,399
1876.
3. Rataplan
12. Oxford .
4,357
4,270
3,860
2.
Lord Clifden .
19,288
3. Lacydes .
10.
Blair Athol .
15,706
8. Cathedral
3,724
3.
King Tom
11,522
12. Marsvas .
3,672
/.
Lord Lyon
10,543
14.
Macaroni
10,366
1874.
/.
Speculum
10,200
5.
Hermit .
9,429
12. Adventurer .
21,667
/.
Mortemer
7,685
10. Blair Athol .
19,947
12.
Adventurer ,
7,561
4. Thormanby .
12,906
3.
Victorious
6,966
12. Marsyas.
10,247
5.
The Palmer .
6,274
11. Thunderbolt .
9,028
7.
Parmesan
6,083
8. Cathedral
8,958
14.
Buccaneer
5,755
93
-ocr page 120-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
No. of                                     Amount
Family.                                 won by Stock.
S, Rosicrucian . . £5,218
Knight of the Garter 4,989
Thunderbolt . . 4,732
No. c
,f 1879.
Amount
Family. won by Stock.
6.
Flageolet
£18,657
12.
Adventurer .
16,185
S.
Rosicrucian .
14,997
3.
Favonius
9,691
ID.
Blair Athol .
9,055
14
Carnival
8,873
12.
Sterling.
8,663
5.
Hermit .
7,677
5.
Doncaster
7,650
4.
Rococo .
7,271
12.
Prince Charlie
7,171
11.
Strathconan .
7,100
2.
Lord Clifden .
6,734
11.
Thunderbolt .
6,504
4.
Thormanby .
6,407
3.
Victorious
6,358
/.
Speculum
6,182
s.
The Palmer .
6,175
<;.
See-Saw.
6,101
/.
Lord Lyon
1880.
5,749
5.
Hermit .
30,907
12.
Adventurer .
16,371
8.
Bertram
12,808
5.
Rosicrucian .
12,558
3
Favonius
. 12,351
5.
Doncaster
11,819
14.
Carnival
10,973
14.
Macaroni
. 9,992
12
Scottish Chief
8,959
.5.
The Palmer .
8,129
11.
Strathconan .
. 7,929
18.
Albert Victor
7,368
/.
Speculum
. 6,971
3.
Musket .-
6,769
16.
Brown Bread .
. 6,728
12.
Sterling.
6,450
8.
Cathedral
6,422
3.
Statesman
6,381
3.
Knight of the Gart
er 5,790
10.
Blair Athol .
1881.
. 4,874
5.
Hermit .
. 27,223
14.
Leamington .
. 16,805
6.
See-Saw.
. 16,547
2.
Cremorne
. 15,237
27.
Pero Gomez .
. 11,905
See-Saw.
St. Albans
Cathedral
Toxophilite
187
Blair Athol
Scottish Chief
Lord Clifden
Rosicrucian
King Tom
Lord Lyon
Hermit .
Mortemer
Adventurer
Speculum
Parmesan
Macaroni
Toxophilite
Pero Gomez
St. Albans
Victorious
Knight of the
See-Saw.
The Miner
Broomielaw
1878
Speculum
Lord Clifden
Hermit .
Adventurer
Blair Athol
Scottish Chief
Victorious
Parmesan
Knight of the
Strathconan
St. Albans
Cathedral
Macaroni
Sterling.
Rosicrucian
Toxophilite
Julius
The Palmer
Brown Bread
See-Saw.
4,495
4,463
4,305
4,265
28,830
18,258
16,896
12,700
12,519
9,718
9,060
8,703
8,638
8.346
7,658
7,508
7,410
6,888
6,810
6,701
4,484
4,345
3,755
3,712
Garter
27,071
25,370
14,835
12,875
11,632
7,351
7,049
0,611
6,149
5,900
5,844
5,770
5,390
5,313
5,194
4,945
4,913
4,613
4,525
4,432
Garter
9-1
-ocr page 121-
lanaaaMHMHMMHHHHMMMHNNNHINHHMHNMMHHM
J:
Photographed from life in 18C>6. Reproduced by Clarence Bailey.
Pocahontas (30 yeaks old)—bv Glencoe—Marpessa isv Mui.ey—Clare bv Marmion.
-ocr page 122-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
No. of
Amount
No. of
Amount
Family. won by Stock.
Family. won by Stock.
11. Strathconan .
. £11,472
10. Petrarch
. £6,905
5. Rosicrucian
. 10,778
2. Camballo
. 6,627
5. Dutch Skater .
. 10,592
S. Doncaster
6,410
14. Carnival
. 10,406
/. Craig Millar .
6,406
/. Speculum
. 10,249
/. Queen's Messeugei
6,142
12. Scottish Chief
. 7,872
11. Strathconan .
. 5,705
13. Albert Victor.
. 7,714
4. Macgregor
5,41]
12. Adventurer .
. 7,585
5. Doncaster
. 7,264
1884.
4. Wenlock
. 7,140
S. Hermit .
. 29,418
11. Kingcraft
6,169
12. Sterling .
. 22,594
14. Macaroni
. 5,190
5. Doncaster
. 13,491
/. Uncas
. 5,119
/. Uncas
. 12,827
3. Knight of the Gart
er 4,984
2. Camballo
. 12,711
, American King Alft
mso 4,836
5. Rosicrucian
. 10,914
1882.
10. Hampton
9,971
5. Hermit .
14. Macaroni
47,311
18,672
10. Petrarch
4. Macgregor
6. See-Saw.
9,856
. 9,377
8,919
5. Rosicrucian
/. Speculum
13. Albert Victor.
12. Adventurer .
11.   Strathconan .
12.   Springfield
5. Dutch Skater.
10. Hampton
4. Wenlock
3. Galopin .
12. Scottish Chief
17,051
11,223
10,240
9,894
9,754
8,371
7,853
7,443
7,259
6,261
6,169
10. Beauclerc
12. Springfield
/. Speculum
3.   Galopin .
4.   Kisber .
7. Wisdom
10. Blair Athol .
3.   Master Kildare
11. Strathconan .
4.   Wenlock
8,212
. 7,786
7,698
7,570
7,503
. 7,246
6,133
5,347
4,998
4,580
19. Lovvlander
5,582
1885.
10. Blair Athol .
16. Brown Bread .
2. Camballo
2. Cremorne
/. Distin .
S. Doncaster
5,293
5,282
5,244
4,851
4,227
4,200
5. Hermit .
3. Master Kildare
12. Sterling.
10. Petrarch
12. Springfield
/. Lord Lyon
30,737
13,251
13,210
12,334
10,418
10,017
1883.
10. Hampton
9,574
S. Hermit .
30,406
3. Galopin
9,134
3. Galopin .
16,031
16. Muncaster
9,083
13. Salvator.
12,164
/. Speculum
8,969
/. Speculum
11,608
13. Albert Victor.
3,361
12. Sterling .
10,927
5. Doncaster
8,281
6. See-Saw.
9,597
/. Cceruleus
8,023
10. Hampton
9,139
/. Uncas
7,594
5. Rosicrucian .
8,656
10. Beauclerc
7,430
14. Macaroni
7,744
/. Bend Or
7,061
12. Springfield
7,589
10. Blair Athol .
6,950
13. Albert Victor
7,434
6. See-Saw
6,529
4. Wenlock
6,973
12. Prince Charlie
6,391
19. Lowlander
6,965
14. Touchet.
5,745
9.5
-ocr page 123-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
No. of                 1880
Family.
5.   Hermit .
/.   Bend Oi-
lO.
   Hampton
10.
   Petrarch
/.   Speculum
4.   Weulock
4.   Ben Battle
4.   Kisber ,
6.   See-Saw
12.
   Springfield
3.   Galopin
5.   Rosicrucian
16.
   Muncaster
13.
   Albert Victor
10.
   Beauclerc
2. Camballo
/. Uncas
22. New Holland
12. Sterling
5. Doncaster
1887
10.   Hampton
5.   Hermit .
12.
   Springfield
19.
   Isonomy
/. Speculum
2. Camballo
6.   See-Saw.
14. Toucliet.
12. Sterling .
Amount
won by Stock.
£12,410
10,825
10,617
9,144
8,383
8,014
7,929
7,343
7,093
6,583
6,042
5,953
5,898
5,459
No. of
Family.
7.   Wisdom
12.   Sterling
/.   Robert the Devil
7.  The Miser
2.   Mask .
4.   Fitz James
/.
   Uncas
/.   Charibert
27.   Arbitrator
14.   Touchet
13.   Albert Victor
24.   Chippendale .
5.   Rosicrucian
10.
   Petrarch
Amount
won by Stock.
£22,817
22,803
15,767
15,112
13,061
11,094
10,788
9,962
9,720
9,569
9,350
8,662
8,571
8,121
7,150
5,566
5,562
5,115
4,910
4,856
]889.
3. Galopin .
10.   Hampton
11.   St. Simon
19. Isonomy
12.   Springfield
Hermit
Wisdom
Mask
Petrarch
Barcaldine
Peter .
Charibert
Sterling
Robert the Devil
Arbitrator
Camballo
Hagioscope .
Bend Or
Galliard.
.5
7.
2.
10.
2.-;.
/.
12
/.
27.
2.
23.
/.
I3.
31,454
25,733
21,607
18,294
13,765
10,943
9,686
8,384
7,797
7,246
7,158
7,050
6,668
6,465
6,397
5,875
5,741
5,660
5,505
5,145
27.
/.
9.
2.
3.
10.
4.
4.
16.
/.
5.
Arbitrator
Bend Of
Peter .
Pell Mell
Galopin .
Beauclerc
Kisber .
Philammon
Muncaster
Uncas
Rosicrucian
10.   Sir Bevys
1890.
11.   St. Simon
7. Wisdom
/. Bend Or
12.   Springfield
23. Barcaldine
/. Charibert
10. Petrarch
/. Robert the Devil
19. Isonomy
/. Trappist
2. Marden .
10. Beauclerc
27. Energy .
1888
3. Galopin
19. Isonomy
/. Bend Oi-
lO. Hampton
12. Springfield
5. Hermit .
30,211
26,847
22,635
20,024
14,643
13,271
96
-ocr page 124-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
No. of
Amount
No. of 1893.
Amount
Family. won by Stock.
Family. w
)n by Stock.
10. Hampton
£7,093
11. St. Simon
. £36,369
16. Muncaster
6,599
19. Isonomy
. 26,410
23. Hagioscope .
. 6,272
10. Hampton
. 19,852
5. Hermit .
6,234
16. Ormonde
. 11,493
27. Arbitrator
5,923
9. Necromancer .
. 11,470
4. Philammon .
5,612
8. Melton .
. 11,469
9. Peter .
. 5,391
3. Galopin .
. 11,285
1891.
11. Royal Hampton
. 9,773
12. Springfield
8,41.5
11. St. Simon
. 26,890
7. Wisdom
. 8,287
3. Galopin .
21,019
23. Barcaldine
8,284
23. Barcaldine
20,533
14. Saraband
. 7,724
19. Isonomy
19,212
9. Peter .
. 7,238
7. Wisdom
17,833
23. Lowland Chief
6,866
/. Robert the Devil
14,618
/. Bend Or
6,711
5. Hermit .
13,183
23. Hagioscope .
5,830
/. Bend Or
12,843
9. Prism .
5,801
16. Ormonde
10,867
8. Melanion
5,484
10. Petrarch
10,385
/. Charibert
. 5,479
13. Galliard
9,183
10. Tristan
5,325
27. Energy .
9,053
/. Trappist
8,567
1894.
9. Peter .
8,356
11. St. Simon
. 42,092
10. Hampton
7,648
19. Isonomy
. 42,055
23. Hagioscope
6,698
10. Hampton
. 21,103
2. Thurio .
6,676
7, Wisdom
. 11,950
/. Charibert
6,257
10. Petrarch
11,204
a Prism .
5,876
23. Barcaldine
11,118
16. Muncaster
4,923
11. Royal Hampton
10,883
12. Springfield
9,972
1892.
8. Melton .
9,279
11. St. Simon
53,504
14. Saraband
9,185
/. Bend Or
17,892
3. Galopin .
9,174
16. Ormonde
16,049
10. Despair
7,594
7. Wisdom
15,774
23. Hagioscope .
6,201
14. Saraband
12,395
16. Kendal .
5,877
19. Isonomy
11,330
9. Prism
5,564
13. Galliard
10,411
/. Minting
5,475
/. Robert the Devil .
9,863
8. Melanion
5,257
12. Springfield
9,170
19. Gallinule
5,112
10. Hampton
9,053
10. Tristan
4,803
16. Muncaster
8,906
10. Beauclerc
4,431
5. Hermit .
8,201
3. Galopin .
7,801
1895.
/. Charibert
7,743
11. St. Simon
30,469
19. Retreat.
7,616
23. Barcaldine
21,713
16. Kendal .
7,216
19. Isonomy
20,341
9. Prism .
6,758
3. Galopin .
16,663
S. Morgan .
6,346
7. Wisdom
14,699
/. Minting
5,970
/. Bend Or
13,014
16. St. Gatien
5,794
11. Royal Hampton
12,062
97
n
-ocr page 125-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
No. of
Amount
No. of
Amount
Family. won by Stock.
Family. won by Stock.
10. Hampton
£11,567
4. Bonavista
£7,389
4. Le Sancy
9,290
/. Minting .
0,979
2. Friars Balsam
8,398
2. Sheen
6,539
16. Kendal .
8,113
/. Bend Or
6,104
32. Salisbury
7,784
4. Goldfinch
6,047
10. Despair .
7,216
23. Barcaldine
5,804
8. Melanion
6,948
2. Panzerschiff .
6,766
1898.
2. Sheen
0,295
14. Saraband
0,194
3. Galopin .
21,699
7. Donovan
0,005
19. Gallinule
18,410
8.   Castlereagh .
9.   Prism
5,350
5,113
4. Bonavista
8. Ayrshire
17,844
10,077
11. St. Simon
15,210
1896.
7. Donovan
14,398
11. St. Simon
59,734
8. St. Serf .
11,860
8. St. Serf.
15,052
/. Janissary
10,311
3. Galopin .
2. Sheen .
13,802
13,525
4. Common
27. Enthusiast
10,202
10,030
16. Kendal .
10,710
2. Sheen
9,173
4. Goldfinch
10,078
11. Orme
9,020
7. Donovan
9,870
9,051
10. Martagon
8,932
23. Barcaldine
12. Amphion
3,788
10. Tristan .
8,842
10. Hampton
8,702
/. Minting
10. Hampton
14. Saraband
8,731
7,263
0,570
8. Melanion
4. Crowberrv
/. Bend Or '
8,380
8,300
7,720
9. Prism
0,440
12. Sensation (American) 7,343
27. Enthusiast
0,267
9. Juggler .
0,326
8. Ayrshire
0,123
2. Brag .
5,941
1899.
4. Crowberry
5,939
11. Orme
46,043
20. Chitabob'
5.837
12. Sensation (Am.)
20,038
/. Bend Or
5,017
11. St. Simon
17,505
11. Royal Hampton
4,935
11. Royal Hampton
14,693
7. Donovan
11,243
1897.
8. St. Serf .
10,598
10. Kendal .
28,845
10. Hampton
10,210
11. St. Simon
. 22,541
4. Bona Vista
9,108
8. Ayrshire
. 16,852
10. Martagon
9,000
7. Donovan
. 12,816
2. Sheen
9,000
3. Galopin .
. 12,370
12. Amphion
. 8,597
10. Hampton
. 11,054
10. Kendal .
8,465
14. Saraband
. 10,270
19. Gallinule
. 8,369
7. AVisdom
. 9,042
19. The Sailor Prince
. 8,060
16. Martagon
. 9,392
10. St. Aiigelo
. 6,726
10. Despair .
. 9,367
8. Ayrshire
6,563
19. Gallinule
. 9,165
8. Melanion
.. 6,490
19. Sailor Prince .
. 8,417
9. Juggler .
6,080
12. Amphion
7,974
4. Pontiac (Am.)
. 5,952
11. Royal Hampton
. 7,724
13. Orion .
. 5,165
98
-ocr page 126-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
RACES WON BY HORSES OF DOUBTFUL PARENTAGE ARE
NOT DEALT WITH IN THE FOREGOING LISTS.
The sires which suffer most are :—
The Palmer, in the cases of Pilgrimage and several other winners
by The Earl or The Palmer.
The Rover, in the case of St. Gatien.
Camballo, in the case of Nunthorpe.
Rosebery, in the case of Amphion.
Melton, in the case of Best Man.
Galopin, in the cases of Lady Hermit and St. Angelo.
Below are given the changes which would be made if these winners
were accredited to these sires, and some other changes in the case of
other winners.
18.50. 3 Lanercost (£1-322 for Haricot), from 6th place to 4th.
18-5!). 3 Windhound (£3585 for Thormanby) comes in 14th ; 8
Buckthorn goes out.
1860.      3 Windhound (£6200 for Thormanby) comes in 8th; 11
Faugh-a-Ballagh goes out.
1861.      3 Windhound (£1820 for Thormanby) comes in 16th ; 4
Annandale goes out.
187.5. 5 The Palmer (£480 for Forerunner) comes in 19th ; 12 The
Earl goes out.
1876. 5 The Palmer (£2292 for Forerunner and others), from 11th
place to 8th place.
1877- 5 The Palmer (£4195 for Pilgrimage and others) comes in 12th;
10 Broomielaw goes out.
1878. 5 The Palmer (£10,122 for Pilgrimage and others), from 18th
place to 4th place.
1878.      2 Crk.iiorne (£2484 for Thurio) comes in 19th ; 6 See-Saw goes
out.
1879.      5 The Palmer (£878 for two winners by The Earl or The
Palmer), from 18th place to 13th place.
1884. 6 The Rover (£7393 for St. Gatien) comes in Kith ; 4 Wen-
lock goes out.
1888.      2 Camballo (£1212 for Nunthorpe) comes in 18th; 10 Petrarch
goes out.
1889.    22 Rosebery (£4730 for Amphion) comes in 18th ; 10 Sir Bevys
goes out.
1890.    22 Rosebery (£12,868 for Amphion) comes in 4th; 9 Peter
goes out.
1891.    22 Rosebery (£2205 for Amphion) comes in 20th ; 16 Muncaster
goes out.
1891. 2 Camballo (£4632 for Nunthorpe) comes in 17th ; 9 Prism
goes out.
1891.      2 Thurio (£3242 for Lily of Lumley), from 17th place to 11th
place.
1892.       8 Melton (£1480 for Best Man) comes in 17th ; 16 St. Gatien
goes out.
99
-ocr page 127-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
1892. 3 Gai-opin (£6640 for Lady Hermit and St. Angelo), from 13th
place to 5th place.
1894. 8 Melton (£3435 for Best Man), from 9th place to 4th place.
Other good winners of doubtful parentage are : — Hackthorpe,
Controversy, Coomassie, and Midlothian, of which neither Hackthorpe
nor Coomassie affects this list, assuming that King Tom was not
Coomassie's sire.
If The Miner were the sire of Controversy and Strathconan was
sire of Midlothian, add :—
1876. 4 The Miner (£5860 for Controversy) comes in 9th ; 3 Toxo-
philite goes out.
1878. 11 Strathconan (£1650 for Midlothian), from 10th place to 7th
place.
A general summary of all the foregoing tables
and statistics will at this point be found useful.
This will be found to give the number of classic
winners that have been produced by the respective
families, each race being separately dealt with ; and
on a second line each family is credited with the
number of its sires of classic winners. Then in a
final column a fresh test is suggested, which is
taken from the tables of winning stallions, and this
simply shows how many times each family has been
represented among the first twenty stallions since
1850. It will be found from these statistics that
there is probably more to be said for the running
families in regard to sire merit than Bruce Lowe
was inclined to allow, but on the other hand he
never claimed that successful stallions were neces-
sarily members of the sire families. What he did
claim was that they either are members of those
families or are inbred to them. It is very easy to see,
however, under all tests, that Nos. 3, 11, 12, and
14 hold their own well as sire producers, though
8 does not come out quite so well as might be
expected.
100
-ocr page 128-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
SUMMARY OF CLASSIC WINNERS AND SIRES OF CLASSIC
WINNERS
'
Number of
times repre-
No. of Family.
Derby-
Oaks.
St. Leger.
12
2000 Gs.
1000 Gs.
sented
amongst 20
Leading Sires
since 1850.
/. Winners
15
17
18
17
/. Sires of winners
14
12
9
9
6
89
2. Winners
9
17
19
10
8
2. Sires of winners
5
11
12
7
5
102
3. Winners
15
14
13
10
13
3. Sires of winners
19
13
18
9
13
108
4. Winners
7
11
11
7
11
4. Sires of winners
3
3
5
3
5
47
5. Winners
9
10
7
3
3
5. Sires of winners
8
6
3
4
6
49
6. Winners
11
5
2
3
1
6. Sires of winners
5
10
7
6
3
26
7. Winners
11
2
6
4
3
7. Sires of winners
4
5
3
3
1
49
8. Winners
3
3
8
3
3
8. Sires of winners
5
4
5
8
8
40
9. Winners
5
3
6
3
2
9. Sires of winners
2
5
1
1
0
27
10. Winners
5
3
3
3
0
10. Sires of winners
4
4
3
3
5
58
11. Winners
3
1
3
3
1
11. Sires of winners
5
7
10
5
7
61
12. Winners
1
6
2
6
4
12. Sires of winners
10
7
7
4
4
97
13. Winners
5
3
2
3
3
13. Sires of winners
8
2
8
6
1
36
14. Winners
1
2
3
1
0
14. Sires of winners
6
6
6
6
6
46
15. Winners
3
1
5
0
0
15. Sires of winners
3
0
0
2
1
1
16. Winners
2
2
1
1
1
16. Sires of winners
1
1
1
1
0
25
17- Winners
0
2
3
2
0
17. Sires of winners
0
4
2
1
0
3
18. Winners
3
3
1
2
1
18. Sires of winners
5
5
1
0
1
4
19. Winners
1
0
3
3
0
19. Sires of winners
4
2
5
4
3
43
20. Winners
0 !
3
2
0
2
20. Sires of winners
0
0
0
0
0
3
21. Winners
0 1
3
1
0
0
21. Sires of winners
1
3
1
1
1
13
101
-ocr page 129-
I
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Number of
times repre-
No. of Family.
Derby.
2
Oaks.
____
1
St.Leger.
2000 Gs.
1000 Gs.
sented
amongst 20
Leading Sires
since 1850.
22. Winners
0
1
3
22. Sires of winners
0
0
0
0
0
3
23. Winners
1
4
1
1
1
23. Sires of winners
2
1
2
I)
1
23
24. Winners
0
0
1
0
0
24. Sires of winners
2
1
4
1
0
8
25. Winners
2
1
0
0
3
25. Sires of winners
1
1
2
3
2
11
26. Winners
1
2
1
3
1
26. Sires of winners
0
3
1
0
1
0
27. Winners
1
0
1
1
3
27. Sires of winners
0
1
1
1
0
23
28. Winners
1
1
0
0
0
28. Sires of winners
2
1
1
1
3
0
29. Winners
0
1
2-.
0
0
29. Sires of winners
0
0
0
0
0
0
30. Winners
2
0
0
0
0
30. Sires of winners
0
2
1
0
o
0
31. Winners
0
0
1
1
1
31. Sires of winners
0
0
0
0
0
2
32. Winners
0
1
0
0
0
32. Sires of winners
0
0
0
0
0
1
33. Winners
1
0
0
0
0
33. Sires of winners
0
0
0
0
0
0
34. Winners
0
0
2
0
0
34. Sires of winners
0
0
0
0
0
0
35. Winners
0
0
0
0
0
35. Sires of winners
0
1
1
2
1
0
36. Winners
0
0
0
0
0
36. Sires of winners
0
0
0
0
0
0
37. Winners
0
0
1
0
0
37. Sires of winners
0
0
0
1
1
0
38. AViimers
1
0
0
0
0
38. Sires of winners
3
1
1
0
0
0
39. Winners
0
0
0
0
0
39. Sires of winners
0
0
0
0
0
0
40. Winners
0
0
0
0
0
40. Sires of winners
0
0
0
0
0
0
41. Winners
0
0
0
0
0
41. Sires of winners
0
0
0
0
0
0
42. Winners
0
0
0
0
0
42. Sires of winners
0
0
1
0
0
0
43. Winners
0
0
0
0
0
43. Sires of winners
0
0
0
0
0
0
102
-ocr page 130-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
Number of
times repre-
Derby.
Oaks.
St. Leger.
2000 Gs.
1000 Gs.
sented
amongst 20
Leading Sires
since 1850.
Maid of Ely (43)—
Winners
o
"
0
0
]
Sires of winners
0
0
0
0
0
0
S. to Grinder (46)—
Winners
()
0
{)
0
0
Sires of winners
0
0
0
0
0
0
American—
Winners
0
0
0
0
0
Sires of winners
0
0
0
0
0
]
Rosedan Mare—
Winners
0
0
0
0
0
Sires of winners
0
0
0
0 .
0
0
And now comes perhaps the most instructive
table of all, which gives the number of mares of
the various families in vols, v., x., and xviii. of the
Stud Book, thus enabling any one to see at a glance
how each particular family has progressed or other-
wise during the past sixty years. For convenience
of reference, the first mares recorded in the Stud
Book
are given against the respective numbers,
their connection in every case with the, in several
cases, earlier mares given by Bruce Lowe having
already been shown :—
103
-ocr page 131-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
NUMBER OF MARES BELONGING TO THE VARIOUS
FAMILIES, AS SHOWN IN THE GENERAL STUD BOOK,
VOL. V., VOL. X., AND VOL. XVIII. RESPECTIVELY
Vol. V.
Vol. X.
vol. xvur.
/. Ramsden's Byerly Turk
Mare. Vol. i. 5
48
152
544
2. Burton Barb Mare. Vol. i. 4
98
212
755
3. Bowes' Bverlv Turk Mare.
Vol. i. 5 .
63
145
513
f4. Layton Barb Mare. Vol. i. 12
\4. Expectation. Vol. i. 265 .
3» \*.
49"| 9
1311 o
8J-*
59/S
309/3
5. Old Ebony. Vol. i. 9
57
109
394
6. Old Morocco Mare. Vol. i. 14
41
76
151
7. Royal Mare (D'Arcy's Black-
legged). Vol. i. 16 .
9
40
203
8. Coneyskins Mare. Vol. i. 7
32
91
365
9. Vintner Mare. Vol. i. 17 .
25
62
245
10. Snap Mare (dam by Gower
Stallion). Vol. i. "l88
3
12
197
11. Grey Wilkes. Vol. i. 11 .
36
71
227
12. Montagu Mare. Vol. i. 13
36
69
273
13. Grey Royal. Vol. i. 10
15
32
152
14. Lady Mare. Vol. i. 11
7
36
188
15. Grey Why Not. Vol. i. 18
30
53
100
16. Young Marske Mare. Vol.
i. 317 (grandam S. to Strip-
ling) ....
2
12
168
17. Wharton Mare. Vol. i. 18
19
45
46
18. Bartlet's Childers Mare.
Vol. i. 2 .
11
18
49
19. Counsellor (Wood's) Mare .
12
37
229
20. Grev Favourite. Vol. i. 9 .
4
21
138
21. Moonah Barb. Vol. i. 14 .
6
22
55
22. Flora. Vol. i. 86
12
30
110
23. Hobby Mare. Vol. i. 11 .
12
36
160
24. Old Lady (Bolton's). Vol. i. 15
10
18
47
25. Old Scarboro'Mare. Vol. i. 16
6
7
27
26. Salome (or Selima). Vol. i. 16
12
33
42
27. Farmer Mare. Vol. i. 9
8
22
72
28. Coppin Mare. Vol. i. 7
8
11
33
29. Fox Mare (Vanessa's dam).
Vol. i. 89 .
4
6
36
31. Son of Brimmer Mare. Vol.
i. 4.....
4
3
17
32. Royal Mare (Barb). Vol. i. 15
2
6
19
34. SurlevMare(damofHutton's
Spot). Vol i. 205 .
7 .
3
0
35. Clio (Morley's). Vol. i. 240
l
4
15
104
-ocr page 132-
THE FAMILY RECORDS
Vol. V.
Vol. X.
Vol. XVIII.
36. Y. Greyhound Mare. Vol.
i. 97 (dam by Curwen Bay
Barb) ....
1
4
5
37. Makeless Mare (Pierson's).
Vol. i. 13 .
0
8
0
39. Cyprus Arabian Mare. Vol. i.
9 (her dam, Bonnv Black)
3
3
1
41. Traveller Mare, 1746
(Routh's). Vol. i. 215 .
0
3
8
42. Patriot Mare(dam by Gander).
Vol. i. 155
8
9
44
43. CardiganColtMare. Vol. i. 54
3
11
24
Those families which have no representatives in any one of those
three volumes are omitted.
Other families are dealt with as follows :—
Vol. V.
Vol. X.
Vol. XVIII.
Y. Cartouch Mare (Cream Pot'
3
dam). Vol. i. 56
0
2
23
Moorpout. Vol. i. 143 .
1
0
6
Carbuncle Mare (dam by Doge)
Vol. 1. 237
0
1
3
Curwen Old Spot Mare. Vol. i. Ii
(dam by Y. Spanker)
3
3
1
Maid of Ely. Vol. ii. 121 .
2
5
7
Rib Mare (Hutton's). Vol. i. 172
2
3
0
Cade Mare (Bruce's). Vol. i. 48
1
4
0
Spectator Mare (Barton's dam)
Vol. i. 196 .. .
4
0
0
Babraham Mare (her dam, Puss)
Vol. i. 28 .
1
0
0
Matchem Mare (S. to Grinder). Vol
i. 124
1
0
0
I/Orient Mare (Billiard Ball). Vol
ii. 115 ....
2
1
0
Duchess (Arabian). Vol. ii. 55
1
2
7
Arabian Mare (Grey). Vol. iv. 9
1
4
10
Marengo Mare. Vol. vi. 110
0
10
5
Nannette. Vol. iii. 348 .
1
1
0
Crazy Jane. Vol. iii. 316
1
0
0
Lady Easby. Vol. iv. 118 .
2
0
0
Fatima (grandam of Y. Lalage)
Vol. iii. 343
]
o
0
Maid of the Mist. Vol. v. 71
1
1
0
Mrs. Johnson. Vol. viii. 290
0
1
0
105
-ocr page 133-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
American mares in vol. xviii. number 36, of which
17 trace to Montagu Mare (Family 12).
3 „ Old Morocco Mare (Family 6).
2        „ Grey Why Not (Family 15).
1  traces to Grey Favourite (Family 20).
Lady Jane is granddaughter of Bay Leaf, dam of Preakness. Bay
Leafs dam was imp. Black Maria, who was the br. f. 1834 by Filho da
Puta out of the Smolensko Mare (Hutchinson's) in Stud Book, vol. iv.
p. 233. If that be so, she traces to the Vintner Mare (Family 9).
Of the remaining 12
3  trace to Summerside by Lexington.
2         „ Edina by Knight of St. George.
1 traces to Florence Nightingale by O'Meara.
1         ,,       Florine by Glencoe.
1               Vesper Light by Childe Harold.
1               Helen by Vauxhall.
1                Blonde by Glencoe.
1         ,,       S. to Pryor by Glencoe.
1               Mistletoe by Cherokee.
None of these 36 American mares are included in the preceding list
of mares in vol. xviii.
Arabian mares in Vol. xviii. :—
There are six in the general list—
Kama from Tomyris, vol. xvi. p. 656.
Lady Regent.
Lady Strathnairn from Rocket, vol. xiii. p. 521.
Shahzarad from Ayesha, vol. xi. p. 490.
Wildflower from Ishtar, vol. xv. p. 598.
Zealot Mare from Purple Stock, vol. xv. p. 594.
These tables may be left without comment.
Every reader can readily form his own conclusions
from them.
106
-ocr page 134-
CHAPTER VII
SUBDIVISION OF THE FIGURES AND DISTINCTIONS
AMONG THEM
Families /, 2, 3, 4, 5, <S, 8, and 12 subdivided—Hermann Goos's
Tables a key to the subdivisions—Explanation as to each branch—
Proposed mark of distinction for Families 13 and 19.
While it is obviously desirable, in the interests
of uniformity, to do nothing that would tend
to confuse Bruce Lowe's arrangement of the
figures, except indeed in the improbable event of
the running families losing their places, it will
manifestly be convenient for the rapid study of
pedigrees, if we subdivide the most numerous and
important families, and further—though this may
be more open to question—if, without in any way
altering the figure of a family, we distinguish it by
a star of merit, when all the circumstances appear
to warrant such a course, as, it is submitted, they do
in the case of Nos. 13 and 19 families.
As to subdivisions of families, the system has
already been illustrated in the pedigree of Merman
(p. 40), but no explanation was there given. The
explanation is very simple, and those who possess
copies of Mr. Hermann Goos's tables will at once
understand it. Letters of the alphabet are added
to certain of the figures to mark the most import-
ant subdivisions of the families in question, and
107
-ocr page 135-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
these accord exactly with the arrangement of Mr.
Hermann Goos, who gives a separate sheet of his
Tables to each subdivision of a family so lettered.
No. / Family
Thus, to commence with No. / family, we find
on the first sheet, pure and simple, the branches of
the family through which came such horses as Mel-
bourne, Mortemer, Speculum, Craig Millar, Dollar,
Scot Free, Robert the Devil, Archiduc, etc. ; but
beyond all those is the Prunella branch of the family,
which manifestly deserves separate treatment. So
then we denote Penelope by /a, and this does not
include her daughter Web, who is so largely repre-
sented by descendants that she has a mark and a
table to herself, lb.
Prunella Branch : Penelope /a, not includ-
ing her Daughter Web
From Penelope /a come an immense number of
great horses through her daughters, Wire, Whizgig,
and Waltz, such for example as Blue Gown, Silvio,
Minting, Uncas, The Rake, Hawthornden, etc. ; but
it cannot be doubted that Web lb constitutes the
special cuvee of this invaluable family. From her,
almost immediately, came Middleton, Glencoe,
Cobweb, and Bay Middleton, while in later years
we have Queen Bertha and all her wonderful off-
spring and descendants, culminating through three
Oaks winners in Meddler.
Pope Joan, Piquet, and Prudence /a
In /a, it should be stated, are included Pope
Joan, Piquet, and Prudence, daughters of Prunella
that are very little, if at all represented to-day;
108
-ocr page 136-
SUBDIVISION OF THE FIGURES
indeed, if we except War Dance /a (sire of Perth),
who is a descendant of Piquet, I do not know where
to find a living animal tracing to any of the three
mares mentioned.
Note.—Since the above was written I find that there is
a Two-year-old now running that traces to Prudence, viz.
Irish Idyll, by Kilwarlin out of Flitters, by Galopin.
Pawn (Sister to Penelope) /c
It is different, however, with Pawn, who, like
Penelope, was by Trumpator out of Prunella. She
needs a table to herself—a pretty big one too—and
ranks as /c, nor is it certain by any means that my
dictum in favour of the Web or /b branch of the
family will be accepted without demur by those
who call to mind that from Pawn /c we get the
Paradigm line and also that of Sunflower, not to
mention that of Nameless, from which come Pil-
grimage and her excellent stock. Through Jannette
/c and Pilgrimage /c Jeddah combined two of the
greatest mares of this branch of the No. / family,
and to this he unquestionably owed his Derby
victory. It was knowledge of the value of this /c
blood which led Prince Louis Esterhazy to purchase
the brood mare Red Hot /c, by lsonomy (19) out
of Red Flag by Lord Lyon /c. She was closely
inbred to the Paradigm branch, and she was in foal
to Galopin. Her foal proved to be Gaga, one of
the very best horses that ever ran in Austria-
Hungary, and now one of their best stud horses.
No. 2 Family
Passing on now to No. 2 family, we find that Mr.
Hermann Goos divides it into five tables—and that
is none too many for such a prolific race. The
109
•«
-ocr page 137-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
figure plain and simple includes the family in
general and all the descendants of Miss Makeless
except Atalanta and the Alexander Mare. Ring-
bone, an earlier branch than Miss Makeless, has a
table to herself.
Under the plain 2 denomination we find such
winners as Harkaway, Teddington, Blacklock, Sir
Hercules, and St. Albans, and these and multitudes
of others which need not be mentioned would alone
suffice to make the line immortal; but a separate
table has to be given to Atalanta 2a, by Matchem,
who was the most prolific of the descendants of
Miss Makeless. From Atalanta 2a, descend White-
lock, Don John, Grey Momus, Margrave, Sheen,
and such latter-day names as Enigma, Lady Yardley,
Duty (by Rifleman), Headlong, etc. But 2a does
not absorb the whole of the Atalanta branch. She
again has to be subdivided, and her daughter Flora
(1789), by King Fergus, becomes 2b. From her
under this figure we trace Crucifix, Surplice,
Placida, La Toucques, Sainfoin, Aurum, and that
good brood mare, Bramble, dam of Chesterfield
and grandam of Thessalian; but her great-grand-
daughter, Leda (1824), by Filho da Puta, deserves
a special ear-mark, and so ranks as 2c. From Leda
we get the priceless Martha Lynn family, and 2c in
fact means Martha Lynn, for no descendants of
Love Charm, the other daughter of Leda, are now
surviving, so far as I can ascertain.
The Alexander Mare 2d
Thus we have accounted for the Atalanta branch
of No. 2 family and subdivided it. The Alexander
Mare, another line altogether, though also tracing
through Miss Makeless, now claims attention, and
is distinguished as 2d. This mare was the dam of
110
-ocr page 138-
SUBDIVISION OF THE FIGURES
Rubens, Selim, and Castrel, and from her in proper
descent come such good brood mares as Rigolboche
(dam of Cremorne), Mazurka, Eglentine, Lady
Blanche (dam of Lilian), Makeshift, Joliette (dam
of Jongleur), Miss Theo, and others. Most of these
trace to Bronze (1803), sister to Rubens and
brothers.
Ringbone 2e
The last branch of No. 2 family to be distin-
guished is No. 2e Ringbone (1732), by Partner.
Ringbone, who was three generations nearer to the
original mare than Miss Makeless, is responsible
for Waverley, Whiskey, Ardrossan, Amato, and,
later on, the great brood mare Cinizelli, whose de-
scendants live and thrive in Australia. The Sabine
is also of this family, and she has nicked well witli
the Australian bred Carnage, whose sire, Norden-
feldt, gets the same 2e blood through Marchioness.
No. 3 Family
And now, touching No. 3 family, we find that it
also needs subdivisions for the sake of convenience.
The members of the family mustered under the
general figure are numerous enough in all con-
science, consisting as they do of Sir Peter Teazle,
Tramp, Windhound, Toxophilite, the Australian
Sir Hercules, and others, while of later date are Tim
Whiffler, Mince Pie, Musket, Memoir, La Fleche
and many others. Fuller details might be given,
but it is presupposed that the reader possesses and
will refer to Mr. Hermann Goos's Tables, which
render all details unnecessary.
All the members of the family as already dealt
with trace through the daughter of Bartlet's
111
"*
-ocr page 139-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Childers, granddaughter of the original mare ; but
this mare, in addition to her daughters, Midge,
Camilla, and Miss Belsea—the two first named by
Bay Bolton, and the last by Regulus—had also a
daughter, foaled 1749, by Regulus, who requires a
table to herself, 3a.
Make (1749) by Regulus out of Bartlet's
Chieders Mare 3a
From this branch, 3a, we get Fyrrhus the
First and the Emerald family, from which descend
Mentmore Lass, Favonius, Hannah, etc. Then,
also, there is the Hurricane branch of this line,
from which we get Atlantic and the famous New
Zealand Stallion, St. Leger.
Referring again, however, to the descent through
the Bartlet's Childers Mare, there came in the sixth
remove from her a mare called Amazon (by Driver),
who also needs a separate table, No. 3b ; and this,
no doubt, is the most distinguished branch of the
whole house, for Amazon was great-great-grandam
of Pocahontas, in herself a tower of strength, and
of the same immediate line came Boarding School
Miss. Then, too, through other descendants of
Amazon we get Isinglass, Vermouth, and Vertu-
gadin, and it is clear that No. 3b is of really inestim-
able value.
Going back again to the Bartlet's Childers Mare
and her daughter, Miss Belsea, by Regulus, we
have to take a line through two daughters of the
latter, Rosebud and Elfrida, both by Snap, and de-
scribe it as 3c. Rosebud's daughter (1778) by
Eclipse produced (1781) a daughter of Highflyer, and
from her descend Lanercost and his sister Otisina,
whence we get the beautiful inbreeding in Lady
Langden, by Kettledrum (maternal grandson of
112
-ocr page 140-
SUBDIVISION OF THE FIGURES
Otisina), she being out of a granddaughter of Laner-
cost; and for this reason mares by Hampton or
Sir Bevys (sons of Lady Langden) would assuredly
nick with Abercorn, who traces on his dam's side to
Hybla, dam of Kettledrum and daughter of Otisina.
From the daughter of Highflyer also descend
Mincemeat, Tomato, Fitzroy, and Marco.
Elfrida, already mentioned, had a daughter
(1784), Editha, by Herod, and she produced (1794)
a daughter by Pot-8-os, who is responsible for a
very important lot of descendants indeed, including
as they do Velocipede, The Flying Dutchman, and
Galopin, to say nothing of the Mayonnaise line
which takes in all the Corrie family, as well as that
of Carine, dam of Bruce, and the great brood mare,
Sterling Love.
No. 5 Family
No. 5 family is also so numerously represented
that it requires to be subdivided. The general
figure takes in the whole of the Magnolia branch,
from which descend such as Defence, The Emperor,
Miami, and Madame Eglentine, from which last two
we trace so many celebrities. Other famous repre-
sentatives of the figure on this same table are
Breadknife, Avington, Alicante, Franc Tireur,
Galaor, etc.
Miss West 5a
A separate table is required for the descendants
of Miss West (1777), by Matchem. She was but
five removes from the Massey Mare, and she became
responsible for a famous progeny, most of which
attained celebrity abroad, or rather were bred there,
as, for instance, Gladiateur, Fille de lAir, and Reine.
Madame de Senlis, Ventre St. Gris, Fra Diavolo,
113                           i
*
-ocr page 141-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
and Nougat, may also be mentioned. The War-
wick Mare was the most famous matron of this
branch, and, apart from being the great-great-
grandam of Gladiateur, she is well represented at
the present day by Kirkconnel, in Germany, and
by the magnificent Australian stallion, Patron,
now standing in England.
Mare by Herod out of Young Hag 5b,
Ancestress of Doncaster
The Miss West branch of the family is marked
5a. Another mare, also five removes from the
Massey mare, claims a table to herself. This is
the daughter (1780) of Herod and Young Hag.
To her is assigned No. 5b, and hers is perhaps the
most flourishing branch of the whole family, for to
her were due Marigold (dam of Doncaster, etc.),
Seclusion (dam of Hermit), and several other
excellent brood mares, such as The Empress Maud.
Well - known names catch the eye all over this
table—such, for example, as Dutch Skater, Refrac-
tion, Tokio, Lady Rosebery, Simonian, etc.
No. 6 Family
No. 6 family, famous as it was and valuable as
it is, has been waning of late years, and it needs
but one extra table to cover the whole field up
to date. The general figure includes all the de-
scendants of Old Bald Peg, except those who
trace to her through Horatia (1758) by Blank.
Horatia was seven removes from the original
mare, and she and her descendants are ear-marked
as 6a. Under the figure 6 we find the peerless
brood mare, Young Giantess, who did perhaps
more than any other to improve the British
114
-ocr page 142-
SUBDIVISION OF THE FIGURES
thoroughbred, but it is questionable whether the
female line has been preserved in England, though
there are representatives of it in Austria and
France. Then, again, King Fergus was a No. 6
horse, and in later years we had Musjid from the
same line of the family—Creeping Polly.
HOEATIA 6A
But it is pretty clear that it is through Horatia
6a that the family will retain its position, if it does
so at all. The Classic winners have of late years
been conspicuous by their absence, but we have
seen not a few horses very fairly worthy of the
family, for example, Grey Leg and Frontier. Old
Margery Daw, however, was the most famous
modern matron of the 6a family, and her son See-
Saw, and her daughters, Cradle and Crinon, firmly
fixed her reputation. What might not Ecossais
have done had a stud career for him been possible !
Cradle seems likely to have the honour of first re-
establishing the family as producing Classic winners,
for Forfarshire traces to her, and even should he
fail, his dam, St. Elizabeth, is quite young and
appears certain to make a famous matron.
No. 8 Family
The next family requiring a subsidiary table is
No. 8. The general figure includes all but the
descendants of the Hutton's Spot Mare out of
daughter of Bay Bolton. She is seven removes
from the original Bustler Mare, and comes into
Table 8a. The general table takes in Beeswing and
all her priceless descendants, and I need only just
115
-*
-ocr page 143-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
mention such names as Humphrey Clinker, Orville,
and Paulowitz, but in mentioning them I of course
pay tribute to those landmarks of the Stud Book,
Pewet and Evelina.
The Hutton's Spot Mark 8a
The Hutton's Spot Mare 8a had among her
descendants Sultan and Cain, as also the Oaks
winners, Rhedycina and Governess, but the family
is now almost entirely a continental one. No great
English winner of recent years belongs to it, unless
Marvel be accounted great. On the other hand
there are such continental inembers as Monarque
(1884), Krakatoa, Fousi-Yama, Fregate, Presta,
Montargis, and many others.
No. 12 Family
The last family requiring a second table is
No. 12, and it may be questioned whether there
is any better all - round family than this, its
American record being specially good.
The general figure includes all but the descend-
ants of the Greyhound Mare (1723) out of daughter
of Curwen Bay Barb. She was four removes
from the old Montagu Mare. Famous among
matrons in No. 12 table is Tomyris, grandam of
Prince Charlie and dam of Hester. Then there is
the Orville Mare (1815), not only dam of Miss
Letty (dam of Weatherbit), but also of Francesca
and Alteruter, the grandam and great - grandam
respectively of Adventurer and Oxford. Other
famous names in this table are Scottish Chief,
Marsyas, and Kingston.
116
-ocr page 144-
SUBDIVISION OF THE FIGURES
The Greyhound Mare 12a
The Greyhound Mare 12a is ancestress of such
a numerous progeny that it is easy to foresee a
further subdivision of them in the next edition of
Mr. Goos's tables. It is here that we find Sheet
Anchor and Whisper, the dam of Sterling, who
showed with Oxford how well the family stands
and profits by inbreeding. Bay Celia is another
great mare of this figure (and her son, The Duke,
proved very valuable in the Yardley pedigrees), also
Wedlock, dam of Best Man. Then we may note
Mimi and Priestess, and cast back to the mighty
name of Voltaire. Springfield also is in this table ;
and it may be that the best branch of all is the
American one, which traces to the Cullen's
Arabian Mare (1747) exported to America, and
there called Duchess or Diamond.
The American Branch of 12a possibly the
best of all
This family, as judged by winning results, heads
all others in America. It descended through two
branches up to 1817, and one of these was then
represented by Lady Grey, who was the great-
grandam of Lexington on the one hand, and
through another daughter of hers became re-
sponsible for the great Levity line, which has
produced countless winners, including the inimitable
Salvator. Salvator, it must be noted, was by
Prince Charlie 12, and his dam was by Lexington
12a, out of a mare of the same 12a line. The
second branch of the American 12 family diverged
also in 1817 at Young Maid of Oaks, one of whose
117
-ocr page 145-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
daughters, Gipsy, by American Eclipse, is the
direct ancestress of Suspender, and the other, Katy
Ann, by Ogle's Oscar, is now represented in tail
female descent by Sensation (sire of Democrat,
etc.). It will thus be seen that the American
branch of the No. 12 family is very vigorous,
and that it is again exercising influence in England.
Pedigree of Patron to illustrate the
Foregoing
To more fully illustrate the meaning of the fore-
going chapter, the pedigree of Patron is now
given with the subdividing letters added to the
figures and stars to Families 13 and 19. It is a very
instructive pedigree, and having regard to the fact
that Patron favours the Stockwell type, there can
be little doubt that it is the 3b blood which has
nicked in his case, twice through Stockwell and
once through Boarding School Miss (half-sister to
Pocahontas); but there is a wealth of No. /, la, and
lb blood at the back of this.
118
-ocr page 146-
p„™!, t>- c f The Colonel 8
«mp" J (Gh-1825>
/n ifi's'7\ I Daughter of
(B. 1837) [ (B8 lg29)
/Whisker la
\Dau. of Delpini
/Sultan 8a
\ Duchess of York
/Whalebone la
\Peri
/Partisan /
\ Bizarre
jEmilius 28
\Cressida
/Partisan /
\Jest
/Pioneer /
X Ringtail
(Y. Gohanna /
\^ Ultima
/Birdcatcher 11
X Echidna
f Glencoe lb
X Marpessa
/Pantaloon 17
X Pasquinade
/St. Luke 2
\Electress
/Camel 24
\ Banter
/Langar 6
\Kite
f Humphrey Clinker 8
\Dau. of Cervantes 8
/Pantaloon 17
\ Banter
If
II
Paraguay
(imp.) ■
(Br. 1835)
Tros 12
(imp.)
(Br. 1836)
Sir Hercules .2
(Bl. 1826)
Daughter of
(Ch. 1819)
(Priam 6
I (B. 1827)
I Ally
n
J
£
H
c
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I (B. 1818)
(Rous' Emigrant 4
Alice Grey | (imp.) (B. 1822)
(Gr. 1833) 1 Gulnare (imp.)
I (1822)
Wkwel! fatf^
TO
ce oo
(Ch. 1849)
(B. 1837)
(The Libel 14
I (Br. 1842)
"| Split Vote
I (Ch. 1841)
/Touchstone 14
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~\ Vulture
I (Ch. 1833)
/"Melbourne /
ffl
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(Ch. 1851)
/"Orlando
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(B. 1841)
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         ,B g .
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/"Heron 19*
J (Br. 1833)
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(Br. 1844)
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Cinizelli
(B. 1842)
/Bustard 35
LDau. of 0rville8
f Sheet Anchor 12a
\Dau. of Bay Middleton lb
/Humphrey Clinker 8
\Dau. of Cervantes 8
/Touchstone 14
| Brocade
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03 ^
1872
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v_'
Fisherman
11 (imp.)
(Br. 1853)
Marchion-
ess (imp.)
(B. 1852)
("Bay Middleton lb (Sultan 8a
| (B. 1833)
           I Cobweb
J3
M
fFlying
Dutchman
3c
(B. 1846)
Boarding
School Miss
(B. 1841)
0> OO
IBarbelle               /Sandbeck 8
{ (B. 1836)           \Darioletta
/"Plenipotentiary 6 /Emilius 28
h«l
\ Harriett
| Muley 6
X Clare
/Birdcatcher 11
X Echidna
/Glencoe lb
\
Marpessa
| (Oh". 1831)
1 Marpessa
I (B. 1830)
(The Baron 24
I (Ch. 1842)
| Pocahontas
[ (B. 1837)
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^Dau. ofOrville8
/Sheet Anchor 12a
X Dau. of Bay Middleton lb
/Humphrey Clinker 8
(Dau. of Cervantes 8
(Sheet Anchor 12b
X The Warwick Mare
Ennui
(Br. 1843)
| (B. 1833)
1 Blue Devils
( (Ch. 1837)
/"Fisherman
11 (imp.)
(Br. 1853)
Omen
(imp.)
(B. 185
(Heron 19*
I (Br. 1833)
1 Mainbrace
{ (Br. 1844)
("Melbourne /
I (Br. 1834)
1 Stormy Petrel
a
' I (Bl. 1844)
119
-ocr page 147-
CHAPTER VIII
OBJECT LESSONS
Lord Roseberv and the figures—Ladas, Sir Visto, Flambard—Figures
speak plainly; not according to theory—Actual use of figures in
discovering winners—Jeddah found to be a Derby horse—Pheno-
menal success of Flying Fox anticipated before he was a three-
year old—His pedigree—Forfarshire on figures beats Democrat—
Individual characteristics not to be lost sight of—The strange case
of Orme—His stud success a certainty on the figures.
Lord Roseberv dealing with the Figures
entertains an angel unawares
The study of figures is unquestionably dull, and
even so omnivorous a reader as Lord Rosebery has
recoiled from the task of perusing and mastering
Bruce Lowe's book. This much may be assumed
from the fact that his Lordship evinced complete
ignorance of the meaning of the figures in a speech
which he delivered after a dinner of the Gimcrack
Club. He has since stated that he was misreported,
but I do not gather that he claims to have spoken
with any knowledge of the subject to which he
refers. And yet his Lordship, had he grasped at
that time what the figures mean, could not but
have been struck by the fact that when he himself
attained two objects of his ambition by becoming
Prime Minister and winning a Derby—both in the
120
-ocr page 148-
OBJECT LESSONS
same year,—he achieved the latter infinitely more
satisfying result by the aid of a colt of the No. /
family, Ladas to wit. Nor was this all, for when
he followed on with another Derby winner, Sir
Visto, this too was of one of the winning families,
viz. No. 4. On the other hand it would not be
difficult to demonstrate that Lord Kosebery in the
long period during which he failed to breed winners
was straying off the track among the outside figures,
whereas now when perhaps to his own surprise he
breeds a useful horse in Flambard by Oriflamb (of
whom Matthew Dawson could make nothing) out
of Armorica, it might serve to explain the apparent
phenomenon if he realised that Oriflamb is by Bend
Or / out of Illuminata /, and that Armorica is by
Victorious 3 and is herself of the No. 11 family.
In other words Flambard represents, though not
through immediately distinguished channels, the
very best running and sire blood in perfect com-
bination.
Figures not elastic and cannot lie
But, it may be said, an ingenious person could
prove anything by these figures ; and within certain
limits, superficially speaking, that is so. Just as
people are apt to find out virtues of conformation
in a great winner, so are students of breeding apt
to discover that in some way or other he vindicates
their favourite theories. In this respect, however,
the figure student is less likely to be led astray than
the one who has no such guide. The figures are
not like accountants' figures, which can be balanced
this way and that through bewildering mazes with
amazing results. They are childishly simple and
they cannot lie, use them how we may.
121
" *
-ocr page 149-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Occasions when the Figures have actually
been used as a guide
Remembering always the plain fact that the
best figures denote the best families, it is manifest
that other conditions being fairly equal they afford
a reasonable guide as to which of two or more
animals is likely to prove the best, and in buying
yearlings or backing racehorses the Figure Guide
will always prove pretty sure. This statement is
not made without solid facts on which to base it,
for in the columns of the Sportsman the writer of
this has, since the publication of Bruce Lowe's book,
never hesitated to anticipate by an examination of
their figures what will be the best three-year-olds
of their year. Strictly on this examination, and
when nine judges out of ten favoured Velasquez, it
was concluded that Galtee More would assuredly
prove the better.
Jeddah's Derby Victory anticipated
The following year a still more remarkable
result was arrived at when Jeddah, whom no one
dreamed of as a Derby candidate, was found on
the figures, so early as the first week in January,
to be a not improbable winner of that race.
Flying Fox certain to beat Caiman and
All-comers
Similarly in the figure analysis of the two-year-
olds of 1898 it was pointed out that Caiman could
have no possible chance against Flying Fox, whose
figures, seeing that he had avoided the Galopin
excitability, betokened something very remarkable
both for speed and stamina. Repeatedly was it
122
-ocr page 150-
OBJECT LESSONS
written—and before anyone connected with the
stable had committed himself to such an opinion
—that Flying Fox was one of the very best colts
ever trained at Kingsclere, and, later, when sug-
gestions were made that he did not stay, it was
again and again pointed out that his stamina was
practically certain on account of his close aggrega-
tion of the No. 19 family.
FoRFARSHTRE V. DEMOCRAT
Again, when the two-year-olds, Forfarshire'and
Democrat, met at Kempton Park, and all public
form and public opinion pointed to Democrat as
the probable winner, the figures indicated the
opposite conclusion, and they were right. On all
these points chapter and verse can be given, and
these are not merely a few successes culled from
many failures, but they represent absolutely all the
occasions on which the figures have been publicly
called into requisition in this way as a popular
guide. In other words, an examination of rival
candidates by such means has never yet failed to
find the winner.
Jeddah
Here is the appreciation of Jeddah reproduced
from the Sportsman of January 1 in the year when
he won the Derby :—
123
-ocr page 151-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
/Birdcatcher 11
(Honey Dear
f Flatcatcher 3
( Silence
/ The Baron 24
( Pocahontas
/Ethelbert 12
( Bassishaw
/Touchstone 14
( Beeswing
f Melbourne /
\Vollev
/The Baron 24
( Pocahontas
fParagone 2-,
\ Ellen Home
/Sheet Anchor 12
( Miss Betty
f Touchstone 14
(Lady M. Carew
/Bay Middleton /
( Crucifix
/Defence 5
\ Folly
T Gladiator 22
\Lollypop
/"Pantaloon 17
( Banter
/Humphrey Clinker 8
(Dau. of Cervantes
/Jerry 15
1 Nameless
j Oxford 12
Whisper
[ Stockwell 3
\ Isoline
fNewminster 8
Sterling 12
,« Msola Bella
Lord Clif-
den 2 [The Slave
Chevi-         f Stockwell 3
I saunce |,-, -, ■
(Paradigm
"> .Beadsman jWeatherbit 12
I
                      [ Mendicant
2 -
u Madame |
H I Eglentine |Diversion
Sweetmeat 21
Jocose
Melbourne /
ery
i I
.2 (Macaron
14
lib
^Secret         J
[
Jeddah, if only he does not grow up still more on the
leg, has the makings of quite a high-class colt. It will be
seen that he is bred on the principle of returning to his sire,
Janissary, the best blood that horse takes in through his
dam. That is, unquestionably, of course, the No. / family,
and in mating Pilgrimage with Janissary, not only was this
famous blood tapped again in the direct female line, but
that, too, in the Pawn branch of it, from which both
Jannette and Pilgrimage descend. Similar mating was very
successful in the case of Minting, whose sire and dam were
both of No. / family, and whose dam, like Jeddalfs, took in
a cross of Melbourne /. It cannot be said that Jeddah
has done anything suggestive of Derby form as yet, but he
was the merest baby last season, and there are great possi-
bilities for such a colt. The No. / family is never to be
despised with impunity, and breeders will do well to look at
Janissary's figures in Jeddah's pedigree.
124
-ocr page 152-
OBJECT LESSONS
It is of course ridiculous to turn to mere
prophecies as to the winners of races. Any one
who has written long enough might do that. It is
a very different matter, however, to show how the
figures can help and have helped to guide anticipa-
tions.
Flying Fox
Here is what was written about Flying Fox,
Frontier, St. Gris, and Caiman in the Sportsman
of December 21, 1898, and it must be remembered
that both St. Gris and Caiman had defeated
Flying Fox that year :—
In accordance with a plan which I adopted last year, and
to some extent in the two previous seasons, I am giving in
this issue, and in one or two others, the figured pedigrees of
two-year-olds that are, so far as we can tell, the best of the
past season, and I shall wind up by adding an outsider as I
did on the first day of this year when I gave Jeddah as
likely to win the Derby.
It is on such occasions as this that a study of the figures
is likely to prove useful, granted that you know the animals
individually, their form so far as it has gone, and their
general characteristics. To discriminate among them look
up their figures, but do not rush to conclusions on the
figures alone without considering the channels through
which those figures trace to the original mares. Thus there
is almost an equality, on the figures, as between Flying Fox
and his stable companion Frontier, the former boasting 23
running or sire figures and three of No. 19 out of 32
quarterings, and the latter 22 running or sire figures and
three of No. 19. Glancing at their pedigrees, it seems any
odds on Flying Fox being the stouter of the two, for he has
escaped the excitability of the Galopins though closely
inbred to that horse, and the further addition of Speculum
blood should all make for stamina. On the other hand a
glance at the pedigree of Frontier would make most of us
anticipate a mere sprinter. Inbreeding to Bend Or, and
that on the top of Rosicrucian, suggests speed and speed
only. Now, mark where the figures help you in this matter.
Frontier, like Flying Fox, has three lines of No. 19 in his
125
-ocr page 153-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
32 quarterings, but, unlike Flying Fox, he gets them
through three different channels, to wit, Vedette, Cambuscan,
and Monarque, and to this combination, I doubt not, he
owes his undoubted stamina.
I would not for a moment, however, uphold Frontier
against Flying Fox now that we know the latter has
managed to stow away the concentrated essence of Galopin
and Speculum, and yet remain temperate. Such a Black-
lock mix up there has rarely been, for an immense addition
comes through Macaroni, and Stockwell twice over brings
in his share. It is not a pedigree that I should have
recommended on paper, for I should have feared a mad
horse, but as Flying Fox is there and anything but mad, it
is only reasonable to give him the full benefit of his breeding
without any of its drawbacks.
("Doncaster 5
f Bend Or / J (1870)
(1877) I Rouge Rose
I (1865)
I Macaroni 14
I Lily Agnes | _ (1860)
(Stockwell 3
( Marigold
/Thormanby 4
\
Ellen Home
(Sweetmeat 21
\ Jocose
"j Polly Agnes
I (1865)
fVedette 19
J (1854)
) Flying Duchess
I (1853)
/"King Tom 3
I (1851)
\ Adeline
I (1851)
("Stockwell 3
I (1849)
1 Marigold
I (1860)
("Thormanby 4
(1857)
(1871)
/The Cure 6
^Miss Agnes
fVoltigeur 2
[Mrs. Ridgway
f Flying Dutchman 3
\ Merope
("Harkaway 2
Y
Pocahontas
/Ion 4
/Little Fairy
/The Baron 24
\ Pocahontas
(Teddington 2
^Sister to Singapore
("Windhound 3
[Alice Hawthorn
/Redshank 15
/Delhi
/Weatherbit 12
^ Mendicant
Galopin 3
(1872)
It'
PC
St. Angela
(1865)
ft
H
s
PR
("Doncaster
5 (1870)
©£■
' Rouge Rose
I (1865)
Ellen Home
1
(1844)
(Beadsman 13
J (1855)
Rosicru-
cian 5
(1865)
Fenella
(1869)
P
c-
j Mdme. Eglentine /Cowl 2
/Diversion
/Newminster 8
/The Arrow
/Monarque 19
/Constance
I (1857)
("Cambuscan 19
J (1861)
I La Favorita
I (1863)
The pedigree of Flying Fox followed in thirty-
two quarterings, but in view of his now known
importance it is extended here to sixty-four.
126
-ocr page 154-
FLYING FOX (B. 1896)
Vampire 7 (Br. 1889)
Orme 11 (B. 1889)
-ocr page 155-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Next comes St. Gris, and good colt as he is, I must cast
him on the figures, not but what his " back numbers," if we
take him back a remove or two, give him a strong show. I
do not forget that he is half-brother to St. Frusquin, but I
also remember that he is a son of old Galopin, and is more
likely to follow in the character of his dam than of his sire.
Caiman, somewhat strangely, brings the No. 19 family
directly to the fore, his Kingsclere antagonists, Flying Fox
and Frontier, having, as already shown, three crosses of that
blood. It is a rare family this No. 19, and Caiman gets it
through the same line as does Gallinule. Where No. 19
family means anything it means stamina, and though I do
not for one moment anticipate seeing Caiman ever again
defeat Flying Fox, I do not doubt that the American colt is
a good one. The Middle Park Plate result, with the wind
blowing as it was and Sloan riding, was a foregone conclu-
sion; but Flying Fox is a good colt judged by the Kings-
clere standard, and Frontier would not have beaten Caiman
for the Dewhurst Plate had the Middle Park running been
within measurable distance of truth.
(Voltaire 12
/Blacklock 2
\ Phantom Mare
/Mulatto 5
^Leda
(Sir Hercules 2
\Guiccioli
/Inheritor 4
\ Nell, by Blacklock
/"Sultan 8
\ Cobweb
/Sandbeck 8
\ Darioletta
/ Blacklock 2
\ Phantom Mare
/Juniper 9
/Sorcerer Mare
(Melbourne /
^Mowerina
/The Major 4
\ Glance
/Bay Middleton /
V Empress
/Orlando 13
1 Elopement
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128
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OBJECT LESSONS
| Sir Hercules 2
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/Pantaloon 17
(Daphne
/Boston 40
( Alice Carneal
/*Glencoe /
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f King Tom 3
\ Merry Sunshine
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( Nantura
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j Mendicant
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Imported into America.
Flying Fox to win the Triple Crown ; Trident
and Caiman to be placed in 2000 Guineas
On December 31, 1898, after the foregoing and
other researches by the figure guide, came the
following conclusion in the Sportsman:
I daresay I have bored a few of my readers by my method
of working out these matters on the figures and otherwise,
but many all over the world are interested in the subject,
and others who remember how I found Jeddah, Wildfowler,
Disraeli, Batt, and Golden Bridge last year, while discarding
Ninus and Dieudonne, will bear with me till I finish, which
I now propose to do.
To sum up the whole thing, I have not the faintest doubt
that Flying Fox, on all grounds, is the best of his year,
129                             K
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
though Trident1 makes a splendid show on pedigree and in
conformation, and, to a certain extent, on form. Sloan may
be here^ to ride Caiman, but I am judging horses and not
jockeys, and under any circumstances—except a gale of wind
blowing down the Rowley Mile—I am very sure Caiman will
never again beat Flying Fox. More to my mind is the
extreme outsider Skopos, though Frontier is improving and
well bred, bar his double Bend Or cross, and Scintillant2
also deserves more than passing notice, if he escapes the
infirmity of his half-brother, St. Evox.
Here, then, is the final conclusion :—
Taking now the principal three-year-old races, I think
John Porter can score another treble event for the Duke of
Westminster with FLYING FOX, who, I repeat, is a good
colt, according to best Kingsclere standard. Trident and
Caiman are his most dangerous antagonists for the 2000
Guineas.—Sportsman, December 31, 1898.
It is perhaps needless to add that John Porter
did win the treble event for the Duke of West-
minster with Flying Fox, while Trident and Caiman
were the placed horses in the 2000 Guineas.
CONCERNING MYAKKA AND AMERICAN PEDIGREES
The following observations were also made in
that same article on Myakka's pedigree, then be-
lieved to be the best filly of the year :—
I give now the pedigree of Myakka, which at first sight
tells all against the figures, and is especially worth careful
study. It will be seen that this undoubtedly good filly has
not a single running figure in the first three removes of her
pedigree, and that beyond that she gets Lexington twice
with his three lines of native unknown blood, not to men-
tion such figures as 40 and 41 close up in his pedigree. To
give further details, I may say we find in Lexington's pedigree
such names as Boston 40, Sir Archy 41, Sarpedon 41, Timo-
1  Third in the 2000 Guineas to Flying Fox and Caiman, and prob-
ably second best in that race.
2  Winner of the Cesarewitch.
130
-ocr page 158-
OBJECT LESSONS
leon >J«,—and here let me explain that *^» means a family not
in the English Stud Book—Wildair 40 (four times), Fear-
nought 32 (seven times), Rodringham 24 (twice), Melzas 40
(once), Royalist and Emilius 28 (once each) Robin Grey ►!«,
Ball's Florizel >5«, and Alderman 26 (once).
Bruce Lowe points out that Lexington's principal successes
were with Glencoe mares, and that one can readily under-
stand ; but breeding like this cannot fairly be judged by any
standard which applies solely to the British thoroughbred;
for, to put it plainly, Lexington was not a thoroughbred nor
anything like one, from our Stud Book point of view. It is
possible that the extraneous blood in him may have been of
superlative merit, for the old planters before the days of
Stud Book, Volume I., imported plenty of our then best
stock ; but this is of course unregistered, and it is impossible
to institute any satisfactory comparison of the produce of
such stock with our own horses, if we use a Bruce Lowe or
any other standard which applies exclusively to the latter.
The only way to estimate American horses fairly would be
to rank their families in order according to their own best
results, and as we know they can gallop — that is to say,
some of them can—we should then be able to see which
really are their best families as distinct from our own.
One thing I have observed in a study of American pedi-
grees, and that is that, so far as figures go, inbreeding to
No. 12 is extraordinarily successful—as, for instance, in the
case of Salvator—and a double line of Lexington pays well,
especially with plenty of our best running blood at the back
of it. Now it will be seen that in Myakka's pedigree we get
two close crosses of No. 12 on the sire's side through Sensa-
tion himself and Lexington, whose mate was by Glencoe /,
and then on the dam's side we find Magnetism, by King-
fisher 12, son of Lexington 12 out of Eltham Lass, by King-
ston 12, with two crosses of Stockwell 3, son of Pocahontas,
by Glencoe /. When Bruce Lowe wrote that the No. 12
family paid for inbreeding, he can hardly have imagined such
a strong case as this—indeed, it exactly fulfils his conditions,
including the necessary supports of running blood, Glencoe
for choice.
Myakka is of the No. 15 family, and it is a little curious
that though we ourselves have not bred any great winners of
this line since the days of Hornsea and Miss Elis, unless
such as Skylark and Harvester are to be counted, there have
131
-ocr page 159-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
been good ones bred from it, both in Australia and America,
such, for instance, as Foxhall and Paris III. Paris III., in
fact, is not remotely connected with Myakka, for you only
have to go back five removes in his case before you find a
common ancestress in the Velocipede mare (sister to that
good horse Hornsea), who produced, to the cover of Laner-
cost, Countess of Albemarle — vide the foot of Myakka's
pedigree. It will thus be seen that the blood on the dam's
side comes through an exceptionally good immediate channel,
and it will be remembered that Hornsea plays a prominent
part near the foot of St. Simon's pedigree. Then, again,
we have Myakka's dam inbred to Queen Mary through
Breadalbane and Balrownie, good horses both, while the
Lanercost in Ellerdale suggests the Haricot and Caller Ou
" nick " with these ; and the Kingston in Eltham Lass and
the Birdcatcher in Chanticleer call to mind how Blair Athol
sired Silvio and Claremont from mares by Kingston, dam by
Birdcatcher, while from old Orange Girl, by Kingston, he got
those beautiful fillies Madge Wildfire and Twine the Plaiden.
There is enough in Myakka's pedigree to account for her
being a good one to a man who also knows the American
stud book and results; but I confess I am this much insular
at any rate that while I have tried to explain how the figure
guide is not a fair test of such a pedigree, and while I have
said what I know to be the fact as to the merits of Lexington
blood in certain combinations, I am all for the undiluted
British thoroughbred such as we get in this country, the
Continent and Australasia (in the vast majority of cases),
and, other things being fairly equal, I shall always stand one
of our blood ones to beat anything with flaws in its pedigree.
The utter failure of Foxhall and his sister at the stud has in
a measure confirmed this view, though I admit this will
hardly console the bookmakers who laid against him for
Cesarewitch and Cambridgeshire. Here, however, is Mvakka's
pedigree:—
132
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OBJECT LESSONS
(Sir Hercules 2
/ Whalebone /
\ Peri
(Bob Booty 23
\ Flight
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! Daphne
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12 (1850)
I (1833)
I Alice Carneal
(Ball's Florizel Mare
I Sarpedon 41
I (1836)
("Glencoe /
Sally Lewis I (1831)
(1852)
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[Stookwelia           (The Baron 24
J        (1849)            \ Pocahontas
I Blink Bonny         ( Melbourne /
I (1854)            \ Queen Mary
("Chanticleer 23 / Birdcatcher 11
I
        (1843)            \ Whim
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| Maud                    f Stockwell 3
{ (1859)                \ Countess Albemarle
* Family not in the English Stud Book.
Note.—This article was written before the corrections in
Bruce Lowe's figures of Lexington were brought to the
author's notice. See next chapter.
This last quotation is perhaps a little amusing,
as it shows the author at one of his weakest
moments honestly expressing his opinion at the
beginning and end of his remarks, viz. that the
chances are against Myakka being a good three-
year-old, and at the same time discounting the
possibility of her doing well by explaining midway
on how her figures might conceivably be more or
less all right. Myakka has turned out badly, and
firm faith in her figures, or rather the lack of them,
would here have been the best guide, as indicated
in the first paragraph of the article about her.
133
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Forfarshire to reat Democrat, though the
Latter an odds on Favourite
A later instance in which the figure guide has
been invoked to assist the anticipation of an
important result was on the occasion of the meeting
of the two-year-olds Democrat and Forfarshire at
Kempton. Here again let us quote from the
Sportsman, October 4, 1899 :—
At Kempton on Friday and Saturday next we shall have
what is always one of the most interesting meetings of the
year, though, curiously enough, since the Imperial Stakes,
run on the former day, was reduced from one mile to six fur-
longs, it has scarcely ever been won by the best animal. That
Teufel should beat St. Frusquin, and that St. Gris should
catch the judge's eye before Flying Fox,* seem now to be
eccentricities of form utterly past comprehension; but as
such things have been in this race, so may they continue
to be, and while we are thinking that the issue resolves itself
into a match between Forfarshire and Democrat, some colt
or filly of much humbler pretensions may on this occasion
only defeat them both. It was thought possible that Vane,
own sister to Flying Fox, would have a winning chance in
this race, but she appears to have been beaten in her trial,
and it will be no surprise to pedigree students if she proves
to be moderate. What I mean is that Flying Fox is bred
exactly on the Bruce Lowe theory for the production of
phenomenal colts, viz. returning to the sire the best blood of
his dam, but there is very little in the pedigree to work up
the converse of this, a phenomenal filly. It might chance to
come through the Breadalbane blood in Vampire nicking
with Doncaster on Orme's side, but there is small prospect
of any such coincidence, having regard to the resjjective
pedigrees. Reasonably speaking, however, and not going
out of the way to anticipate flukes, we must look upon the
race as a match between Forfarshire and Democrat, and as
the former has to concede 3 lb., I doubt not the American
gelding will be a strong favourite. Nevertheless, if it were
only on the score of breeding, I should incline to Forfarshire,
who is by Royal Hampton 11 out of St. Elizabeth 6, by St.
Simon 11, her dam, Esa, by LTncas / out of Fleada, by
Hermit 5. Democrat comes of a family which does not trace
134
-ocr page 162-
OBJECT LESSONS
to the English Stud Book, but to a mare by imported Janus,
foaled some time in the last century; further pedigree
unknown. Sensation, sire of Democrat, was of No. 12 family
and by Leamington 14, but he was far from a good stud
horse, and, except for the Faverdale colt, I cannot call to
mind a single really good horse that he got in America, and
even the Faverdale colt did little or nothing after he was a
two-year-old. It is in Democrat's favour that he is the
obvious result of a " nick " with the best blood of his sire's
dam, viz. Glencoe, she having been by Lexington out of a
Glencoe mare. Not only is Democrat's dam by Rayon d'Or,
who was grandson of Pocahontas by Glencoe, but her dam
again was out of a Glencoe mare, and there is consequently
a fine accumulation of this most beautiful blood in the
American champion. In the other points of his pedigree,
however, he does not compare favourably with Forfarshire,
who has grown and done well individually since he was last
seen in public. Moreover, the son of Royal Hampton, being
a very young colt, may probably have been coming on more
rapidly, and I certainly thought him most unfortunate not
to defeat Democrat when they met at Sandown, but this
time, of course, their meeting will be on very different terms.
However, I shall stand the thoroughbred against the other,
and, as the figures do not often tell us wrong, shall go for
FORFARSHIRE, though should he be beaten there will be no
occasion to think the worse of him, inasmuch as he will have
had illustrious predecessors in the same category. The same
observation, needless to say, applies to Democrat, whom I do
not for a moment underrate, only I like Forfarshire better.
There is no need perhaps to add here that Forfar-
shire won after having all the worst of the luck in
the race under notice, and there can hardly be a
better proof of the value of the figure guide than
this, for Democrat, as anticipated, started an odds
on favourite.
Figures must never Blind us to Individual
Characteristics
Students of pedigrees and the figures, however,
should never forget amid considerations of this
135
•*
-ocr page 163-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
character that individual animals have to be care-
fully studied, and that while Forfarshire, if he
grows in the right directions and keeps sound and
well, must always on a mere question of blood beat
Democrat, it does not follow that being such a big
colt he will not outgrow his strength and develop
some weakness or unsoundness. Against troubles
of this character the figures afford no safeguard
whatever.
The StkanGe Case of Orme
It was always evident that Orme, being in himself
a great racehorse, would on the score of blood make
a great sire. This too was anticipated again and
again in the Sportsman, and during Orme's racing
career it was from time to time pointed out that he
was altogether underrated by contemporary opinion.
That he could, with ordinary luck, have won the
2000 Guineas, Derby, and St. Leger of his year
hardly admits now of doubt, but he was prevented
by no fault of his own from achieving any such
triumph. He was incapacitated by poison or a
decayed tooth—no one will ever know which—
before the Derby, and though as a mere shadow of
himself he gained a glorious triumph by winning
the Eclipse Stakes of that year at Sandown Park,
the cloud of evil destiny still hung over him at
Doncaster, and he was beaten for the St. Leger
under circumstances which it is needless to dilate
on here. Suffice it to state that Orme was not
beaten for lack of stamina; indeed, stamina had
always been considered his forte, as it was almost
bound to be from the many Blacklock crosses in
him. That he was really better than La Fleche—
good as she was—John Porter well knew, and when
the filly with the rest of Baron de Hirsch's and the
136
-ocr page 164-
OBJECT LESSONS
Prince of Wales's horses were removed from
Kingsclere to Egerton House, a fair opportunity
was given the following year to prove their
respective merits in genuine rivalry. Orme had
developed a "joint," and from the St. Leger day no
opportunity was ever taken to gallop or train him
over a long course. Foolish persons declared that
the Duke of Westminster must be aware that the
son of Ormonde could not stay, or he would have
entered him for the Ascot Cup ; whereas the Duke
has himself written that in his long gallops before
the St. Leger Orme stayed remarkably well, and
on the other hand Porter has observed—"We
should have been foolish indeed to break him down
with a Cup race at Ascot when he had 10,000
sovereigns to win at Sandown over a mile and a
quarter."
In short, Orme's leg would never have stood a
cup preparation, and few but the famous Kingsclere
trainer would have been able to get him ready for
his shorter distance engagements.
Orme's Second Eclipse and First Triumph
over La Feeche
This was done, however, and at Sandown, in his
second Eclipse victory, Orme decisively proved his
superiority over the mare who was stated by her
connections before the race to be thoroughly well.
" It is no use, John, trying to look as though
you were not pleased," said an old friend to the
famous trainer as he stood by Orme in the weighing-
room enclosure after the race.
" I don't want to make any secret of it—I am
pleased," was the reply.
137
I
-ocr page 165-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Orme's Crowning Victory
Still greater cause for pleasure was accorded a
month later at Goodwood, when Orme gave La
Fleche 7 lb. for the Gordon Stakes, a mile and a
quarter, and this time won by sheer stamina and
gameness. He had all the best of it up to the
distance, and then just as they were passing the
lawn the mare got at him and actually headed him.
The crucial test had now to be applied, and Morny
Cannon gave him one, two, with the whip. To a
non-stayer this would have been useless, but Orme
instantly shot out again, won by a neck, and was
palpably running on as they passed the post. For
this race, as for the Eclipse Stakes, La Fleche was
considered by her trainer to be as fit as she could
possibly be made.
The simple explanation, as Porter has given it,
is that from Orme's troubled career as a three-year-
old no one outside the stable got any idea of what
a horse he really was, and his chance never really
came till he was a four-year-old, nor then a full
and adequate chance, for he had a "leg."
Orme's Stud Success Foretold as a
Certainty
It was repeatedly pointed out by the writer that
Orme's merit was due to the Blacklock blood in
Ormonde's dam being strongly returned by
Angelica, and it was from the first foretold that he
would make a great sire. When the produce of
his first stud season did not carry all before them,
the fickle public buyers and breeders began to
point to him as a failure, but an inspection of his
second year's stock — then yearlings at Eaton —
138
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OBJECT LESSONS
caused the writer to still further emphasise his high
opinion of Orme as a sire, and Flying Fox was even
then pointed to as a probable champion on account
of his blood—if he avoided the Galopin excitability.
It has all come about as was anticipated, and Orme
as a result of his second stud season has gone right
to the top of the list of winning stallions, his best
son, Flying Fox, being again an outcome of the
system of returning to a sire the best blood on his
dam's side. This system and the converse of it will
be dealt with more fully in another chapter, and we
may conclude this by asking haphazard breeders if
they really think all the foregoing anticipations
based on pedigree and the intelligent blending of
it came true by accident ?
Note.—Since this chapter was written a forecast similar
to the foregoing was published in the Sportsman at the end
of 1899 in which Diamond Jubilee was found, on the figures,
to be the probable winner of the 2000 Guineas and Wini-
freda of the 1000 Guineas.
139
-ocr page 167-
CHAPTER IX
THE FIGURES IX OTHER COUNTRIES
Working of the figures outside England and France — Australian
statistics — Imperfect application of the figures in America,
where nevertheless their value is proved—Native American
Mood—Pedigree of Lexington—Bruce Lowe corrected—German
statistics ; Austro - Hungarian ; Belgian — The running families
prevail.
It has already been fully explained that in countries
outside England, with the possible exception of
France, where importation of English stock has
gone on for such a long time without intermission,
it is not to be expected that results will tally
with Bruce Lowe's figures ; but an examination of
results in such cases is none the less instructive and
interesting as showing the positions held by the
various families in different parts of the world, and
also as indicating to the breeders in those parts
how far they are deficient in this or that blood, for
it must be clearly understood that wherever the
running families do not come up top it is due to
but one reason, and that is that the country in
question is short of mares belonging to those
families.
Australian Statistics
1 now proceed to give the statistics of Austra-
lian stock ; and in this connection I have to thank
140
-ocr page 168-
FIGURES IN OTHER COUNTRIES
Mr. A. W. Hutton, of New South Wales, who
wrote me the following letter explaining the
statistics :—
The Tboffs, February 17, 1898.
W. Allison, Esq.
Dear Sib — Knowing that several horses have been
bought for England from Australia through you, and that
any information concerning Colonial running is likely to
interest you, I herewith forward you a table, which shows
which have been the most successful families, as winners of
classic races. I have given them their numbers on the same
principle that the late C. B. Lowe did the English horses.
I have given both numbers in the table, viz. Colonial and
C. B. Lowe's number for the same family. As an example,
the Colonial No. / family is C B. Lowe's No. 3. This
family has won 6 Champion Races, 4 Victorian Derbys, 2
Victorian Oaks, 9 Victorian Legers, 1 Caulfield Guineas,
4 A.J.C. Derbys, 6 A.J.C. Legers, 1 A.J.C. Oaks, and the
A.J.C. Plate 4 times—total, 37 wins. I hope this example
will enable you to read the table. Where there is a »J« de-
notes a family that has no number with C. B. Lowe. You
will notice that " Newhaven " has >%* against his family in C.
B. Lowe's line, but in the Colonial line he has No. 9. I
have given you a few representatives of the different families.
Of course this is not as fair a test as Bruce Lowe gave the
English horses, as out here we cannot go back as far; the
year 1859 was the year the first Champion Race was run, so
we only go back 39 years. Another thing to be considered
is the mares that have been imported. In the early days
Messrs. Fisher imported several, and they had splendid
chances, in fact, the best, and several of these mares were
Lowe's No. 13. Another family that did well in the early
days was Lowe's 26 ; of late none have won a classic race,
although good performers. Bruce Lowe's No. 17 family has
been a great success as a sire family; both Yattendon and
imported Snowden belong to it. In season 1889-90 stock
by sons of Yattendon won £31,227 in stakes; in season
1890-91 they won J?13,110, and have always been well up.
In 1891-92 stock by Chester (son of Yattendon) won <£9282
in stakes. Yattendon's daughters are also a success at the
stud. Lady Trenton, Trenchant, Paris, Brockleigh, Oxide,
141
'•
-ocr page 169-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Strathmore, Vespasia, and numerous others are out of Yat-
tendon mares. — Trusting the above will interest you, I
remain, dear Sir, yours faithfully,
Arthur W. Hutton.
The Thoffs Station, Trundle,
via Parkes, N. S. W.
The Running Families working to the
Front
It will be observed that even in a young colony
like Australia the best families are working to the
front, and that 2, 3, and 5 are pretty nearly in their
right places, while / and 4 are fairly well up. The
star family, No. 13, stands high, and No. 10 attains
a dignity more in accordance with the merits of
Queen Mary in rising to fifth place. No. 18 comes
up to seventh place, as well it may, seeing what
a priceless branch of it exists in New Zealand,
through the great brood mare Frailty, dam of
Trenton and other great horses.
Families undoubtedly Thoroughbred that
have lost Touch of our Stud Book
On the other hand there are various families in
the Australian Stud Book whose records have not
been carefully preserved, and who cannot therefore
prove absolutely their original connection with the
first volume of the English Stud Book. That they
are so connected is morally certain, but in the early
days of a colony men have other things to consider
than stud book returns, and it is not suggested by
any authority that any of the thoroughbreds im-
ported to Australia were mated with stock outside
the English Stud Book for the purpose of breeding
racehorses, as is admittedly the case in America.
On this subject Mr. Archibald Yuille, of the
142
'ft-.
-ocr page 170-
FIGURES IN OTHER COUNTRIES
Australian Stud Book', wrote on February 21,
1899, as follows :—
If you refer to Volume II. of our Stud Bool; p. 474, you
will see a number of imported mares of whose progeny there
are no records whatever. Blood stock, from about 1835 to
1855, was of little or no value, and few records were kept;
but some of the stubborn old squatters, who had no books,
very often kept their studs pure by sending their mares to
advertised stallions, or by buying a pure bred colt. It was
not until 1860 that racing and breeding commenced to go
ahead. When the first volume of the Australian Stud Book
was published, it had the effect of greatly enhancing the
value of pure stock, and I got a lot of abuse from old
breeders for " showing up" their mares (or some of them).
However, Mr. Dakin and myself will not allow anything in
the book unless it comes up to a certain standard. Although
I cannot prove it, I am certain that Newhaven and Maluma
are pure bred, and there is no doubt in the minds of old
Colonists that knew their ancestors.
The American Racehorse not within the
Figure Group
Turning next to America, we find a very different
condition of things prevalent, for from the days of
the pilgrim fathers downwards there were constant
exportations of horses to that country, and racing,
though from time to time repressed, came into some
vogue before the first volume of our General Stud
Hook
was published. Consequently there are in the
American Stud Book a large number of families
tracing to a source admittedly outside our book,
and the figure system, which is based entirely on
results obtained from pure British thoroughbreds,
naturally cannot be applied in America, as fully
half the animals bred there do not trace to our
Stud Book at all, though likely enough their origin
from early importations was more often than not
of the best possible class.
143
-ocr page 171-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Quarter Racing in Virginia
There was racing of a formal character in
Virginia and Maryland in the early years of the
eighteenth century. In that period' "quarter
racing " was favoured, and a traveller in that section
of the country wrote : " In the southern part of
the Colony, and in North Carolina, they are much
addicted to quarter racing, which is always a match
between two horses to run one quarter of a mile
straight out, being merely an exertion of speed;
and they have a breed which perform it with
astonishing velocity, beating every other for that
distance with great ease, but they have no bottom.
However, I am confident that there is no horse
in England, nor perhaps in the whole world, that
can excel them in rapid speed, and these likewise
make excellent saddle horses for the road."1
We may judge from this that the early American
breeders had a good foundation to work on, and
must therefore keep an open mind as to any
American racehorse of to-day which does not trace
to our own Stud Book.
American Statistics
We now come to the tabular statistics most
kindly compiled for me by Mr. W. H. Rowe, whose
knowledge of American blood-stock is second to
that of no man in existence. And first it will be
convenient to give his own introductory letter lead-
ing up to his admirably complete statistics :—
February 21, 1899.
Dear Sir—Enclosed please find the table of American
races which I promised you. It is perhaps a bit bulky, but,
I think you will agree, quite comprehensive. I have taken
the careers of fourteen of our three-year-old fixed events,
1 American Turf, p. 18.
144
-ocr page 172-
FIGURES IN OTHER COUNTRIES
five of our Cups (taking their careers until most deplorably
abandoned), the famous Excelsior Sweepstakes at Saratoga
(now abandoned), and the Grand Champion Stakes at Mon^
mouth (also abandoned). These come as near, it seems to
me, being a reasonably fair test as could be arranged. I
would say that I have coupled the Coney Island Derby and
its successor, the Realisation, as one race, as also the Jersey
Derby and Lorillard, when the latter was run as the sup-
planter of the former at Monmouth Park. Before begin-
ning the task, I had declared my belief that the three winning
families would be probably 12, 4, and 23—and my only
qualification of the accompanying table is expressed in my
opinion that a summary of our complete history for the last
thirty years would (utilising all of our stake events, I mean)
land 23 in third place, and, almost certainly, increase the
lead of 12 and 4. Indeed, as I have before written you, I
consider our branch of 12 the best branch of the family in
the world.
I must say, in relation to the tap-roots outside of the
numbers of the Figure Guide, that these are so blindly
recorded in our Stud Book that I am not going to wager my
existence as to the above groupings, albeit I believe them
correct in view of what information we have. But I am
sure it is interesting and important to note that Families 12
and 4 supply in themselves 33J per cent more winners than
all the " native " tap-roots or " native families,1 put together,
bearing in mind that the Harrison of Brandon Mare (believed
in some quarters to belong to Family 6) was imported.
I must say that I do not attach any particularly great im-
portance to such a table as the accompanying, for, after all,
the great families of the Figure Guide are the mainstay of the
whole matter. I have had great interest in working out the
table, however, and feel certain that in itself the fact of
there being no less than 455 winners tabulated is an earnest
that it represents some slight labour. I would say that I
have considered the Melody family (whence Spendthrift) as
of 40, and the Minerva Anderson family (whence Duke of
Magenta) as of 6, in accordance with a late dictum of the
Stud Book. Should the Harrison of Brandon Mare go to
the credit of Old Bald Peg, her place would be third in the
list, but I think ib better to leave the matter as I have.
The Eclipse majority is certainly a safe one, and will
probably surprise your readers. In only two races does
145                             £
%
-ocr page 173-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Herod lead, both Cups. I hope I have not made the table
too bulky and cumbersome, but I felt that I must get in the
Cups, especially in order to represent the comparative old-
timers.
I am sure it is unnecessary for me to offer the reminder
that the moderate showing of the great families of the Figure
Guide, other than 4 and 12, and possibly 8 and 24, is due to
the fact that they have been very sparsely represented in
our land. But, even at that, they are ever and anon doing
their work in the production of our great winners, and it is
only by these potencies that our so-called native lines are
kept alive. The Stud Book is eloquent concerning this.
I wish you the greatest measure of success with your new
book. If you have in mind to use this table or any portions
of it, you are, of course, at perfect liberty to do so, submitted
as the table is with this end in view, as per your request.—
Very truly yours,
                                            W. H. Rowe.
Value of the Table to American Breeders
It will be seen from the above that there is such
a " mix up" in America that out of fifty-three
families represented in the table, twenty-seven trace
to our Stud Book and twenty-six to native American
sources. The table will be of considerable value
to American breeders, as showing them where they
are short of the best English blood. Thus No. /
family would never be down where it is if there
were not lamentably few mares of that line in the
country. There have been a few recent importa-
tions, such as Sundown, whose son, Peep o' Day,
did good service, and Chacornac, the Futurity
winner, is out of a No. / mare, by Juvenal 5;
but this and the other best English families should
be much more largely represented in American
studs, always excepting Nos. 12, 4, and 6, which
have done very well indeed.
146
-ocr page 174-
FIGURES IN OTHER COUNTRIES
The Puke English Blood goes up top
It will be observed that, though the competition
between the native blood and the pure English
origin is almost equally balanced, viz. twenty-six
to twenty-seven sources, the English blood holds
the first seven places, as judged by winning results,
and practically dominates the position.
No. 12 Family takes the Lead
I have already in a previous chapter alluded to
the famous American branch of the No. 12 family,
which traces through a daughter of the Cullen
Arabian and Lady Thigh, imported some time
between 1760 and 1770. We lost this line in
England, though her eldest daughter produced
Conductor. In America she established the two
prolific lines to which I have specially referred in
the previous chapter.
No. 4 Family eight there
The No. 4 line in America is mainly a branch of
No. 4d, which traces through imported Myrtle, by
Mameluke out of Bobadilla, foaled in 1834. The
great success of this line has resulted from mating
with Leamington.
It is unnecessary to go at further length into the
subject, but we may just advert to the satisfactory
position of No. 24 family, which is more distin-
guished in England than its mere number would
indicate. No. 6 family has done well, and signs
are not wanting—such as Holocauste and Forfar-
147
I
-ocr page 175-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
shire — that in Europe also this blood is again
beginning to tell.
One thing is clear from these American tables,
if we are to base our judgment on results, and it is
that the best stock in the States is bred from mares
tracing to the English Stud Book:
Mixed Blood in all Old American Pedigrees
All American results, however, must be tem-
pered with this fact, that although half the im-
portant winners as set out in the foregoing tables
trace in tail female to the English Stud Book, and
therefore receive their Bruce Lowe figure, this does
not mean that they are pure bred all through ; for
many American sires have intervened between the
original imported ancestress and the progeny of
to-day. You will find the name of Lexington in
most American pedigrees ; yet Lexington, strictly
speaking, has no right to figure in the English
Stud Book,
nor has any animal with a cross of
Lexington in it. The reason is simple, for Timo-
leon and Ball's Florizel, in the pedigree of Lex-
ington's sire, traced to sources foreign to our Stud
Book,
and those sources, whether bad or good, are
outside the ken of Messrs. Weatherby. This state
of affairs will be more clearly shown by setting
out the pedigree of Lexington, and marking with
a ^* the "wrong drops."
148
-ocr page 176-
FIGURES IN OTHER COUNTRIES
fDiomed 6 (im]>.)
(Ch. 1777)
(Florizel S
I Dau. of Spectator
f Rockingham 24
(Tabitha
(Eclipse 12
t Virago
(Symmes' Wildair 40
I Dau. of Driver
f Florizel 5
\ Dau. of Spectator
(Shark (imp.) >f<
| Dau. of Harriss' Eclipse
fPot-8-os38
t Lady Bolingbroke
(Glockfast (imp.) 19
i Dau. of Symmes' Wildair
f Beningbrough 7
( Evelina
(Stamford 30
I Dau. of Whiskey
f Vandyke Jr. 12
(Azalia
f Dick Andrews 9
( May
fDiomed 6 (imp.)
( Castianira (imp.)
(Robin Redbreast (imp.) 3
I Dau. of Obscurity (imp.)
(Royalist 28 (imp.)
I Belle Maria
f Melzar 40
(Dau. of Highflyer
SirArchy ' £."■ i"'/
Ttn*
i «n-\ Castiamra (imp.
18(B.180o)( (Brl79^ e
f Sal tram 7 (imp.
I (Br. 1780)
Daughter of
Dau. of
BJ
rs
o
•*
o
Q
2S~
lO
-4-i
ffi 00
GO
m
>>
o
4
■SB
' '
<& I
t Diomed 6 (imp.)
I (Ch. 1777)
I Daughter of
f Alderman 26
I (imp.) (B. 1787)
| Daughter of
'Ball's
Florizel ►}•
(Ch. 1801)
Dau. of
(B. 179
I (Ab. 1791)
f Orville 8
S rEmilius28 | (B. 1799)
r2»
(B. 1820) | Emily
{ (Ch. 1810)
/The Flyer 17
Icaria
          | (Br. 1814)
(B. 1824)1 Parma
I (Br. 1813)
T3S3
("Sir Arehy 13
(B. 1805)
rSumpter -^
-
I (Ch- 18")|RoWn Mare
[ Robin Grey 15
Lady Grey | (Gr. 1805)
(B. 1817)1 Maria
{ (1802)
eft SS
a «
3 co
£ '"H
l«6
Bruce Lowe's Mistakes about Lexington's
Pedigree
In connection with Lexington's pedigree, the
author has to thank Mr. Birley for having first
called his attention to a serious mistake made by
Bruce Lowe, which, it is confessed, had given cause
for considerable misgiving. Mr. Birley's com-
munication on the subject is given here, and it
necessarily called for immediate attention, and
proved to be, like everything else from the same
authority, absolutely accurate :—
When you were dealing with last year's two-year-olds on
the figure system, with a view to their chances in this year's
classic races, I noticed that in Myakka's pedigree you put
41 against Sarpedon, sire of Alice Carneal.
149
*
-ocr page 177-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Bruce Lowe puts both Sarpedon and Sir Archy into this
41 family.
I have traced their pedigrees, giving references to the
latest editions of the Stud Book, and you will see that, if I
am right, they belong to 13. Grey Royal (vol. i. p. 10) is
the first matron of this family given in the Stud Book, and
it seems clear that her daughter by Blunderbuss was dam of
Makeless Mare (Black) (vol. i. p. 13), who was dam of
Hartley's Blind Horse.
As American horses are likely to be prominent in our
races, and as Lexington's name is always present in their
pedigrees, I thought vou might like your attention called to
this, seeing that Sir Archy and Sarpedon have so much to
do with Lexington.
Bruce Lowe gives several members of 13 family to
others:—
Hartley's Blind Horse .            .            .                 p. 54.
Bellina (Oaks), John Bull (Derhy)           .            . p. 25.
Don Quixote and Alexander         .            .            . p. 55.
I see that on p. 207 Bruce Lowe puts 13 to Alexander's
name.
Sir Archy is 41 everywhere in his book, I think, except
in Emperor of Norfolk's pedigree on p. 217, where he
appears six times as 11. He may have been 11, but he
cannot have been 41.
I am afraid all this is not very interesting and not of
importance, but I am sure you like to be right in your figures;
and if you should ever care to look into the matter, I have
given page references to make your task as easy as I can.
Koyal Mare (Bruce Lowe's No. 13)        .            .            .     vol.  i. p.    10.
Mare by D'Arcy's Yellow Turk .                        .            .          i. p.    10.
Grey Royal by D'Arcy's White Turk    .            .            .      ,,   i. p.    10.
D'Arcy's Mare by Blunderbuss .            .            .            .         i. p.    10.
Sir R." Milbanke's Makeless Marel        .            .            .           i. p.    13.
Gipsey by King William's Barb             .            .            .       ,,   i. p.    13.
Mare by Stanyan's Arabian .            .            .            .      ,,   i. p.  200.
Charming Molly 1742 by Second           .            .            .         i. p.    57.
Mare by Bustard (son of Crab) .            .            .            .       ,,   i. p.    58.
Mare by Coalition Colt . .            .            .                      i. p.    61.
1 This Makeless Mare was dam of Mare by Soreheels ; and this is the line
from which come all other classic winners of this family, all the sires of
classic winners, and such horses as Ely, Albert Victor, Salvator, and
Ravensbury.
150
-ocr page 178-
FIGURES IN OTHER COUNTRIES
vol.
i.
P-
61.
17
i.
P-
232.
77
i.
P-
364.
i9
i.
P-
364.
>>
i.
P-
364.
?>
i.
P-
77.
17
i.
P-
195.
9i
ii.
P-
43.
ii.
P-
122.
>>
ii.
!>■
129.
m
iii.
P-
188.
it
iv.
P-
109.
>)
iv.
P-
109.
Sister to Grecian Princess by Forester '
Mare by Bosphorus 2 .
Tabitha 1782 by Trentham
Mare 1790 (Castianira in U.S.) by Rockingham
Sir Archy 1805 by Diomed .
Diana 1740 by Second ....
Sophia 1764 by Blank3
Cricket 1776 by Herod
Primrose 1788 by Mambrino .
May 1804 by Beningbrough
Parma 1813 bv Dick Andrews .
Icaria 1824 by The Flyer
Sarpedon 1828 by Emilius
The line from which Sir Archy and Sarpedon come is not
the best line of this family, but it is better than 41 family.
The fact that these two horses belong to No. 13 family
makes Lexington's success less remarkable; and, seeing that
Sir Archy is grandsire of Lexington's sire, and great-grand-
sire of his dam, while Sarpedon is sire of his dam, it would
almost have justified Bruce Lowe in saying, as he said of
Australia: " This family may be said to have done excellent
service for America."
This is just one of the things that make one
regret the untimely death of poor Bruce Lowe. It
is certain that his whole idea of Lexington would
have been changed could he have known him to
be so closely inbred to No. 13 family instead of to
41 ; and then, Robin Grey, on the dam's side,
whom Bruce Lowe marks with a >J«, was really of
the No. 15 family, which has produced many excel-
lent stayers, such as Hornsea, Foxhall, and Chaleu-
reux. On the other hand, Bruce Lowe gives undue
credit to Shark, the maternal grandsire of Ball's
Florizel. He was not of the No. / family, though
he can be found in vol. i. of the English Stud
Booh.
The Natural Barb Mare, his ancestress,
1  Grecian Princess was dam of Alexander, sire of Nike (Oaks) and
Hepha:stion (2000 Gs.). She was also dam of Don Quixote, sire of Sancho
(St. Leger). Alexander was also sire of the dam of Castrel, Selim, and
Rubens. . Grecian Princess was grandam of John Bull (Derby).
2  This Bosphorus Mare is ancestress of Friponnier and Macheath.
8 Sophia's sister 1757 was great-grandam of Bellina (Oaks).
•-'
-ocr page 179-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
was not the J\o. / mare, but a matron who did
not establish a family, and Shark, therefore, should
be marked with a ►p.1
How impossible it is to gauge American pedi-
grees with any certainty by the figure system may
be further shown by the case of Foxhall, whose sire,
King Alfonso, traces to a source outside the English
Stud Book,
and whose dam is by Lexington, with
his two crosses of native American blood as already
stated. Foxhall was of the No. 15 family, but it is
obvious that we cannot hope for any certainty on
the figures, even in aggregate results, where cross
breeding of this sort intervenes. Nevertheless the
good blood does sometimes fight its way to the
surface against all disadvantages, with the result, as
we have seen, that the first seven winning families
in America trace in the direct female line to the
English Stud Book, notwithstanding the fact that
between imported mares and native mares the com-
petition is numerically equal, or nearly so.
Appreciation or Australia and America
It is difficult to describe what pleasure it gives
the writer to study as best he can American and
Australasian pedigrees; for the subject is not merely
absorbing in itself to a lover of blood-stock, but it
recalls so many pleasant memories of good sports-
men in both countries with whom even the cable
seems a very insufficient means of communication.
Thought-reading in such cases may often become
an accomplished fact—to this extent, at any rate,
that you may read your cablegram through your
knowledge of the mind of the man who sent it.
1 See Shark, vol. i. (revised edition), General Stud Book, also Marl-
borough Mare, vol. i. p. 123.
152
-ocr page 180-
FIGURES IN OTHER COUNTRIES
There is a great art in cabling, especially when code
words are to be used, and sometimes your friend,
taking the best of such words that he can find,
sends you a message which would be far from
satisfactory coming from a stranger: you must
read into it your friend's thoughts, and there is or
ought to be no difficulty in doing this, though it is
not so easy to satisfy any one else on the subject
when you lay the plain, bald message before him.
It has been the good fortune of the writer to
see racing in America, including three events won
by the immortal Hanover, and one never-to-be-
forgotten meeting at Jerome Park. He will
always remember those as halcyon days, all too
few and too fleeting ; while the good sportsmen he
met, some alive and well, like Mr. James R. Keene,
some, alas! gone to the majority, such as Mr.
Leonard Jerome, and Mr. D. D. Withers, and
Colonel Buck (of the Spirit of the Times)—these
and others have served to form an opinion which,
though at first unpopular, is now accepted, that we
are not quite the Boss of Creation of all that
pertains to racing and riding.
As to Australia less must needs be said. The
writer has never seen a Melbourne Cup run for,
and when, after landing Merman, Maluma, Aurum,
Trenton, Carnage, Patron, and many other Anti-
podean thoroughbreds in this country, he has been
approached with the query, " Of course you have
seen them race in Australia ?" the reply has been,
" No, but my friend W------has, and I see with his
eyes just as if they were my own." The benefit
that will be derived from these Australian importa-
tions may be dealt with in a later chapter, and
perhaps we are at present too far astray from what
should be merely statistical details.
153
-ocr page 181-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
German Statistics and Mr. Hermann Goos
Turning now to German statistics, we find the
following results of the various principal races in
that country; and though it is palpable, from the
brief period during which many of them have been
instituted, in addition to the chance and variety of
importations, the figure system can afford no real
test, or rather it cannot be tested by the results, it
is nevertheless a curious fact that the five first
families hold their own, while No. 12 (first in
America) comes right up among the best, and No.
10 is better still, thanks mainly to German apprecia-
tion of the Queen Mary family. Before launching
the general statistics, let us give here a letter of the
first importance from that eminent authority Mr.
Hermann Goos, whose " Tables " are a necessity
for every student of blood-stock. Mr. Goos shows
how the various families are represented in the
German Stud Book, and from this we can at once
measure to some extent their relative values as
judged by the returns of racing results.
I can give you the following table :—
German General Stud Book, vol. xi. 1897.
About 900 brood mares.
Family No.
Mares.
Family'No.
Mares.
9
Family No.
Mares.
17
1
72
13
25
2
98
14
33
26
1
3
61
15
12
27
16
4
126
16
29
28
8
5
53
17
10
29
8
6
35
18
27
30
0
7
23
19
30
31
3
8
54
20
25
32
2
9
28
21
8
33
0
10
40
22
13
* * *
* * *
11
26
23
7
42
7
12
37
24
5
*
6
154
-ocr page 182-
FIGURES IN OTHER COUNTRIES
Family 4 is represented in Germany by 126 mares, and
by mares from the very best branches of that family, for
instance, the Alice Hawthorn (Rebecca) family 4c, the
Manganese family 4b, the Veilchen family 4 (Graditz Stud).
In Austria the matters are similar, especially the Mer-
maid family 4a (Kincsem).
This leads directly to our statistics, which follow.
Note.—On the left is the number of the family. Other
figures denote the number of winners of the respective races
credited to the family in the same line, the total of winners
being added on the extreme right.
GERMANY
c
CO
U
6
*d
c3
S i
ti
s3
a
>~,
O 0>
7, 1-------1
1 6
SI
CD 0J
^3 r«
%
i
a
QQ
■fiM
f Q
fa
o
/
4
4
2
3
13
2
7
3
6
10
(!
32
3
6
6
5
4
5
20
4
4
6
4
8
5
27
5
5
6
8
2
9
30
6
...
2
2
(i
2
12
7
1
...
1
2
8
3
1
1
2
1
8
9
2
2
2
0
10
5
7
2
3
1
18
11
1
1
1
2
3
8
12
4
7
2
0
a
27
13
...
1
1
i
3
14
3
2
1
i
7
lo
1
1
...
2
1(>
1
1
17
2
1
i
4
18
4
3
1
3
11
1!)
1
...
3
4
20
...
1
...
1
2
21
1
2
...
3
22
2
2
2
2
3
11
23
1
...
...
...
1
155
-ocr page 183-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
.....
GERMANY
d
V
03 •
(3 W B
Diana,
n.
t3 a
3
g
nners.
t
'a
3*3
Irfj
fe
Fan
C
H
pq •g.m
02
U
■5 °
"a
-to
o
Eh
24
l
2
2
l
(i
25
i
1
4
6
26
2
2
27
i
1
28
0
29
0
30
0
31
...
0
32
l
...
1
2
33
..
0
34
..
0
35
0
36
1
1
37
.,
..
0
38
..
0
3!)
..
0
40
...
0
41
,.
..
0
42
,.
...
0
43
1
1
44
0
45
..
0
4(i
..
...
..
0
47
i
...
••
1
156
-ocr page 184-
FIGURES IN OTHER COUNTRIES
GERMANY
6
eis,
oo
^
W .- -
ers.
1
W §>SL
o> „ bo
1-e.s
Q W
a a
<U Sh t,
■SIS
q
-w
IB
£
O
H
/
1
2
3
(>
2
1
3
5
...
1
10
3
2
1
1
1
.5
4
3
4
3
fi
4
20
5
2
3
5
1
11
(5
1
1
1
3
7
1
1
2
4
8
2
1
3
9
1
1
10
5
3
2
2
...
12
11
1
3
4
12
1
2
2
5
13
...
0
14
1
2
1
4
15
...
1
1
10
1
1
1
3
17
1
...
1
18
2
3
3
8
19
...
1
1
20
1
...
1
21
0
22
1
2
3
23
0
24
1
1
2
2.5
0
28
1
1
27
1
...
1
28
0
29
1
1
.30-42
...
. . .
0
43
1
1
157
-ocr page 185-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
GERMANY
Family
No.
Berlin,
Grosser
Preis.
Berlin,
Jubilaums-
preis.
Berlin,
Hoppe-
gartener
Ehrenpreis.
Baden-Baden,
Prince of
Wales' Stakes.
Total
Win-
ners.
/
2
3
4
5
6-9
10
11
12
13
14
15-18
19
20 and 21
22
23
24-41
42
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
1
2
1
:- •
L
t
6
2
1
2
1
0
5
1
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
1
0
1
158
-ocr page 186-
FIGURES IN OTHER COUNTRIES
i
GERMANY
2
■rs
<£.
Wl
o
£
'S ^
to
f
o .
k &
— —
erner S
Berlin
osser P
Hanove
rsten P
Breslai
h
jH
5
23
-rH
£>H
oo
m
of
U
• 3
QJ
9 ■
fl
a
-2 S3
1e
-u
-»5
m
O
H
/
3
...
1
4
2
1
1
3
r,
3
13
3
1
2
4
5
12
4
3
5
4
4
16
5
5
2
7
5
19
6
1
...
1
7
2
1
1
4
8
1
2
2
5
9
1
1
2
10
1
4
2
1
2
10
11
1
1
2
4
12
1
...
1
1
3
13
1
1
2
14
2
2
4
15
1
2
3
16
2
2
17
...
1
]
18
1
1
2
19
3
1
2
6
20
1
...
1
2
21
...
...
0
22
2
"2
1
4
9
23
0
24
1
1
2
25
1
1
"l
3
26
1
1
27
1
2
3
28
"...
1
1
29-42
0
43
2
2
159
-ocr page 187-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
GERMANY
Family
No.
Gr. Sachsen
Gr. Teutonia
Grosser
Guelphen
Total
Preis,
Preis,
Preis,
Rn.,
Win-
Dresden.
Leipzig.
Leipzig.
i
Hamburg.1
ners.
1
/
1
2
1
2
3
3
1
2
2
7
12
4
1
2
2
2
7
5
1
2
1
1
5
(i
1
1
7
1
1
8
1
1
2
9
1
1
10
1
1
2
11
2
2
12
4
4
13
2
, 2
14
1
1
15-17
0
18
1
1
19-24
0
25
2
2
Grosser
Gr. Preis
Amsinek
Borsteler
Total
Family
No.
Hansapreis,
von
Memorial,
Gold Pokal,
Win-
Hamburg.
Hamburg.
Hamburg.
Hamburg.
ners.
6
/
2
1
1
1
2
2
2
3
0
4
1
1
5
1
1
■2
6
0
7
1
1
8
1
1
0
0
10
1
1
2
11-22
o
23
1
1
2
1
1 Last race, 1866.
160
-ocr page 188-
FIGURES IN OTHER COUNTRIES
The following is the summary of all the fore-
going German results :—
GERMANY
Family No.
Total Winners.
34
Family No.
Total Winners.
/
25
11
2
62
26
4
3
.56
27
5
4
73
28
1
5
68
20
1
6
17
30
0
7
12
31
0
8
1!)
32
2
9
10
33
0
10
40
34
0
11
10
35
0
12
40
36
1
13
7
37
0
14
17
38
0
15
6
30
0
16
6
40
0
17
6
41
0
18
22
42
1
19
12
43
4
20
.5
44
0
21
3
45
0
22
24
46
0
23
4
47
1
24
10
AtTSTKO-HuNGAKIAN STATISTICS
We have now to deal with results in Austria-
Hungary, where Prince Louis Esterhazy, Count Ivan
Szapary, and other fine judges of the thoroughbred,
have for some long time past been selecting stock
for importation with such success that horses of
the very highest class have been bred there. It is
needless to go beyond such names as Kisber and
Kincsem.
161                              m
-ocr page 189-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Here then are statistics of the various principal
races, showing how many animals of the various
families have respectively won them.
AUSTRIA AND HUNGARY
Family No.
Pressburg-Wien
Pest
Pest
Wien
Total
Trial Stakes.
Hazafi-Preis.
Oaks.
Derby.
2
Winners.
/
2
4
3
11
2
5
6
4
1
IIS
3
2
2
3
4
11
4
2
8
10
2
22
5
4
1
3
8
0
1
5
4
4
14
7
2
2
2
1
7
8
3
4
2
3
12
9
1
1
2
10
1
2
3
11
2
2
1
1
0
12
1
3
4
13
1
1
14
0
15
2
2
16
1
2
1
4
17
1
i
2
18
1
l
1
3
19
0
20
1
l
2
21
0
22
1
1
l
1
4
23
2
2
24
1
...
1
25-27
...
0
28
1
1
2
29
1
1
30-33
0
34
1
1
35-41
0
42
3
3
8
43
...
2
...
2
162
-ocr page 190-
"
FIGURES IN OTHER COUNTRIES
AUSTRIA AND HUNGARY
Family No.
Wien
Wien
Wien
Wien
Total
Win- •
ners.
Stutenpreis.
Residenz P.
Jubilaums P.
Austria P.
/
1
1
2
2
1
1
2
3
1
1
2
4
3
1
4
5
1
4
.5
6
...
...
0
7
1
1
8
2
2
9
1
1
10
0
11
i
1
...
2
12
1
1
2
13 & 14
0
1.5
l
...
1
10
...
0
17
l
1
18
1
1
19
1
1
1
3
20
1
1
21
...
0
22
...
1
1
Family No.
Pest
Alager Preis.
Pest
St. Stephans
Preis.
Pest
Jockey Club Preis.
Total
Win-
ners.
3
/
3
2
...
1
2
3
3
0
4
1
3
4
5
2
...
2
0&7
...
...
...
0
8
1
...
1
2
9
1
1
1
3
10
1
1
11
1
1
2
12
1
1
13-18
...
0
19
1
1
20
...
1
...
1
21 &22
...
0
23
1
1
24
1
...
1
163
-ocr page 191-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
AUSTRIA AND HUNGARY
Family Tu>.
Pest
Staatspreis.
Pest *
Staatspreis.
1
Wien
Buccaneer R.
Pest
St. Leger.
Total
Win-
ners.
1
2
2
1
(i
2
5
2
2
3
12
3
2
2
1
1
<;
4
4
6
2
3
15
5
3
1
1
2
7
6
2
1
1
2
6
7
1
1
2
4
8
3
3
9
1
1
10
1
2
3
11
1
2
1
4
12
2
1
1
4
13
1
]
14
1
...
1
2
15
1
1
16
1
1 .
17
1
1
2
18
1
1
19
...
1
1
20
2
...
2
21
...
...
0
22
1
1
2
23
...
1
i
2
24
1
2
3
25-27
0
28
1
1
...
2
29
1
]
2
30-42
...
...
0
43
1
1
* Discontinued after 1893.
164
-ocr page 192-
FIGURES IN OTHER COUNTRIES
AUSTRIA AND HUNGARY
Summary
Family No.
Total Winners.
Family No.
Total Winners.
/
22
18
5
2
33
19
5
3
19
20
0
4
45
21
0
S
22
22
7
6
20
23
5
7
12
24
5
8
19
25-27
0
9
7
28
4
10
7
29
3
11
14
30-33
0
12
11
34
1
13
2
35
0
14
2
36
0
15
4
37-41
0
16
5
42
6
17
5
4,3
•3
1
SCANDINAVIA
Family No.
Derby, Kopenhagen.
Total Winners.
1
2
2
2
I
1
3
1
1
4
2
2
5
1
1
(!
...
0
7
...
0
8
2
2
9
0
10
.3
3
11-13
...
0
14
2
2
15-20
...
0
21
1
1
22-27
0
28
1
1
29-35
0
30
1
1
165
'f
-ocr page 193-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
From the summary of the foregoing results in
Austria-Hungary, it will be seen that the pre-
ponderance of No. 4 family alluded to by Mr.
Hermann Goos in his letter, which leads up to the
German statistics, has resulted in that figure going
to the top ; but the first five families, nevertheless,
well maintain their supremacy, while 6, 7, 8,10, 11,
and 12, are also well represented. Indeed, it will
be observed that of the first twelve families ten
have gained the only double figure results in the
summary, whilst Nos. 9 and 10 families, which score
seven each in the summary, are not surpassed by
any other family after No. 12.
Belgian Statistics of Dr. Eugene Carlier
We come lastly to Belgian statistics, and here
again comes in the aid of a most able and enthusi-
astic sportsman, Dr. Eugene Carlier, who shows
most plainly not only how the families stand in
Belgium, but the reason for their various positions.
Let Dr. Carlier speak for himself—
Dear Sill—Herewith the information you asked for
respecting Bruce Lowe's method as applied to results
obtained in racing in Belgium.
The subject, I must tell you, has been most extensively
studied by Mr. Paul Van Derton, son of Mr. Emile Van
Derton, President of the Belgian Jockey Club. Mr. Van
Derton, a thoroughly competent authority on horse breeding,
was much struck by the marvellous results obtained by Bruce
Lowe's system, and in my earliest effort to make it known I
was immensely helped by finding in him, not only a fervent
convert but an active auxiliary. He made it his business at
once to study the system as applied to Belgian races, and
the table I send you was entirely his work. It is most
conscientiously executed; breeders in general have but to
glance it through to draw conclusions which (though some-
166
-ocr page 194-
—,------
r
FIGURES IN OTHER COUNTRIES
BELGIQUE, BELGIUM
F.nnly No.        ^Belge j p^/^s, \ Total Winners,
.5
.5
1
3
2
2
3
1
4
.5
2
2
3
)
2
/
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
ia
14
lo
16
17
18
I!)
20
21
^
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
.32
33
34
3-5
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44-.50
Hi
1
5
.->
5
7
1
3
1
2
I
i
31
64
33
1(57
' y
-ocr page 195-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
what hard for the present state of things) would certainly
stimulate them to wiser and better selections in their future
purchases.
Our only classical races in Belgium, established since a
period when any note was taken of such, are the " Poule des
Produits," corresponding to the 2000 Guineas, and which was
run for the first time in 1868, and the Belgian Derby, dating
from 1865.
One sees at once that, in spite of the recent introduction
of important races in Belgium, the / family is already
quite in the first rank, although (as the author of this table
very justly remarks) when the Belgian Stud Book commenced
there were only four mares of this family in the country—
Clemanthe, Willis, Tempete, and Mademoiselle de Caiseix.
It is remarkable that, with the exception of the 6 family,
which takes the second place, all Bruce Lowe's first families
lead here. No. 2 only is left in the rear, but the reason of
this is clear; Evening Star, dam of Evaporee, is the only
mare to represent this family. We thus see that the author,
not satisfied with figures only, seeks the reasons for the few
anomalies which his researches bring to light, and explains
them most conclusively.
May I be allowed to add a few personal considerations to
this interesting study ? I must firstly draw your attention
to the very low standing of our Belgian horses, this being
itself an absolute confirmation of the Figure System, for here
(more than anywhere else) we have numbers of mares of out-
side families, and this alone amply suffices to explain why
our best horses are only second rate in other countries.
Fortunately of late years all this seems to be entering
upon a new era. We have already several sires on whom
great hopes are founded. It is to be hoped that our owners
of stud farms, when once thoroughly convinced of the neces-
sity of the mares1 pedigrees being up to mark, will attach
higher importance to this question, and realise the urgency
of proportionate sacrifices. Both our climate and our soil
give us ample encouragement for indulging in high hopes on
the subject.
By dint of proper care and severe and judicious selection
we have produced in Belgium a race of heavy cart-horses,
which are world-renowned for their energy and endurance.
Why should Ave not succeed in the field ? We need but to
realise that it is absolutely essential to combine in our choice
168
-ocr page 196-
FIGURES IN OTHER COUNTRIES
of purchases the following three indispensable items, in their
order of importance.
1st. An unexceptionable pedigree.
2nd. Turf performances.
[3rd. The necessary characteristics of a well-built horse.
Yours faithfully,
                                 Dr. Eugene Caelier.
This concludes Australian, American, and
European statistics so far as it has been thought
reasonable to follow them for the present, and it is
claimed that students of breeding in general, and
breeders of the various countries in particular, will
find a very great deal of useful information in these
facts and figures.
169
-ocr page 197-
CHAPTER X
The Theory of Saturation
Inequalities in breeding — Nothing but inbreeding can fix type —
Excessive inbreeding fatal—Outcrosses essential — Truth of the
figures not dependent on Saturation — The figures deal with
average, not individual results—Scientific authorities on Satura-
tion—The Penycuik experiments—No decision as yet—The one
important fact : Not to mate repeatedly with same sire—Cases in
point—Was Silvio a result of Saturation ?—Practical conclusion.
Bruce Lowe's Inaccuracy ; Dependence on
Saturation
At the beginning of the chapter, under the above
heading, Bruce Lowe writes:—"However much
pedigree students may differ as to the causes which
produce good or bad effects in the various breeding
problems submitted yearly by breeders for their
consideration, I believe I am correct in saying that
all our theories and systems are powerless in the
face of the unpleasant fact that two full brothers
are rarely equal in racing powers." Now, in so far
as any theory or system of breeding claims to be in
the nature of an exact science, no doubt the above
remark holds good, and Bruce Lowe explains
at considerable length how discrepancies in results
are brought about by Saturation—so called. As
to this I shall have something more to say. But
for my part I see no reason in the nature of things
why equality of results from certain crosses should
170
-ocr page 198-
SATURATION
be expected with any pretence to certainty. _The
jdosera type is fixed by inbreeding, the greater, of
course, is the certainty as to what the produce will
be like; but even so, I take it, the germ cells are
apt to represent different ancestors, and the health
and condition of the parents must always exercise
a grave influence over their offspring. It is only
by exeessivejinbreeding that we can arrive atlany
rear certainty of type—and then not always. This
method may avail to produce prize cattle.
No Certainty of Type possible except by
Excessive Inbreeding, and this pre-
judicial to Horses.
Thus the famous 1000 guineas bull, Comet, was
the result of a combination so incestuous as to be
bewildering ; but inbreeding in the case of animals
which require vitality, constitution, and nerve force
like racehorses, may soon be carried to excess,
especially in the more delicate families. Professor
Ewart says on this point:—" Neither is it difficult
to understand how the offspring of closely related
parents sprung from closely related ancestors should
be almost the image of their parents. But it is not
so evident why inbreeding should lead to loss of
vitality or to senility. The explanation seems to
be that the stuff of which animals and plants are
made—the living clay or protoplasm—has a limited
lease of life, is only capable of giving rise to a
limited number of generations unless revived or
rejuvenated,—unless 'fresh blood' is introduced."1
Now, in view of the above, which commends
itself to common sense as well as scientific know-
ledge, it is tolerably manifest that breeders can
1 The Pmycuik Experiments) xlviii.
171
*
-ocr page 199-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
never expect with any degree of certainty, equal
results from their blood stock. The point beyond
which inbreeding must not be carried forbids that.
I am, in short, by no means in accord with
Bruce Lowe in thinking that, but for Saturation,
we should always attain equal results from certain
approved crosses. The knowledge that we do
nothing of the kind does not, however, in the
slightest degree, alter my faith in the figures.
The Figures are simply a Guide as to
Average Pror abilities, and are not
affected by individual failures.
In real truth the whole point is that the figures
are merely a guide to what is a mathematical
certainty on the average of results, but have no
pretensions to any such certainty in any individual
instance. In a similar way it does not follow that
the two best whist players in the world will beat
two moderate ones, or even two bad ones, in any
single rubber, but in a series of rubbers skill would of
course prevail. This simile is an apt one, I venture
to think, for the so-called lottery of breeding does
not preclude the influence of study and science,
any more than the luck of holding good or bad
cards at whist prevents the best players from
winning in the long run.
Many Circumstances conduce to Variable
Results of Breeding
I am quite satisfied that even disbelievers in
the Saturation theory have no sound cause for
carping at a system of breeding for the mere reason
that own brothers and sisters are rarely alike or of
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SATURATION
equal merit. Apart from the question of in-
breeding, it is perfectly clear from the stud record
of almost any famous stallion that he varies
immensely from one season to another. Professor
Ewart, in a letter which he was kind enough to
send me this year, writes: — "1 believe that
inbreeding is a most potent agent for good as well
as evil, and further, that by a change of sur-
roundings, i.e. by influencing the nutrition of the
parents, the offspring suffer or receive benefit."
Quite so, and that is just why some of us are
sending our mares to Ireland, after being covered
by horses in England, so that the foals during
gestation may have the full benefit of the limestone
land.
A Backer or the Figures bound to Win,
with greater certainty than the
Administration at Monte Carlo.
All these considerations, however, touch indi-
vidual cases only. The great root fact which the
figures prove is that the backer of the first five
families from year end to year end is backing an
absolute certainty; and the proprietors of the
tables at Monte Carlo have nothing like such a
margin in their favour. Occasionally, as we know,
luck may run against the tables, and so too a No. /
horse may be beaten by one of an outside family,
but this is a mere incident. The average result in
favour of the tables on the one hand, and of the top
figures on the other, is certain.
Modified Belief in Saturation
Having arrived at this point, however, let me
hasten to state that I do not wish to dissociate
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
myself from Mr. Bruce Lowe's views on Saturation,
though whether telegony can really be reckoned
with as a constant factor in breeding, must be
doubtful even to those of us who have met with
many instances of it in breeding dogs or other
stock. Certainly there is something which com-
mends itself to common sense in the view that
during the period of gestation the dam must absorb
from the foetus certain elements of the sire; but
scientists in England have for some years been
largely influenced by Weismannism—inclined to
believe that the parents have no more influence
on their offspring than a basket has on the eggs it
carries to market. This view, however, is no
longer held by the best authorities.
Possibility ov Saturation proved by
M. Charrin
In fact, the intimate connection between the
foetus and the dam has been placed beyond dispute
by M. Charrin, who found that " diphtheritic toxins
injected into the embryos of a pregnant rabbit
caused the death of the mother on the fifth day," l
and further, that a rabbit could be rendered
immune by injecting protective toxins into the
embryos. M. Charrin infers from his experiments
that the characteristics acquired by the mother
from one set of embryos, could be handed on to
other embryos by a different sire.
Now, it seems palpable at any rate that this ex-
periment carries us right beyond the idea of germ
cells being independent passengers, or luggage, so
to speak, as Weismann, Romanes, and others held;
but while it is circumstantial evidence as to the
possibility of the phenomenon which almost all
1 The Medical Press, 5th October 1898, p. 360.
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SATURATION
practical breeders have had experience of, it does
not as a matter of sound reasoning wholly justify
M. Charrin's inference. For it may be contended
that although the female absorbs some of the
" blood corpuscles " of the fetus, it does not follow
that a permanent change is thereby produced, any
more than in a case of blood poisoning, the effects
of which may pass entirely away.
Inflated Wiseacres at Variance avith
Scientific Authorities
Now, in writing this book I make no claim to
scientific authority on such subjects as the one
under notice, but inasmuch as some wiseacres,
inflated with that little knowledge which is pro-
verbially a dangerous thing, have scoffed at the
possibility of telegony and saturation, it may be as
well to note here that a different view obtains, and
has obtained, among men of light and leading.
Thus, in reference to the famous case of Lord
Morton's mare, which had been mated with a
quagga, Darwin wrote :—"There can be no doubt
that the quagga affected the character of the off-
spring subsequently got by the black Arabian
horse."1
In addition to Darwin, we have Spencer,
Agassiz, and Romanes, as more or less firm be-
lievers in telegony, the first-named being apparently
of opinion that as the embryo develops, germ-plasm
passes from it into, and becomes a permanent part of,
the body of the parent, and that, later, some of
this germ-plasm, everywhere diffused, reaches and
is incorporated in the germ cells.
Romanes, however, holds the simpler view that
the unused germ-plasm from the first sire directly
1 Animals and Plants, vol. ii. p. 15.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
infects, by gaining access to the unripe ova; and in
this, as Professor Ewart points out, he appears to
be in accord with Darwin.
On the other hand, Weismann and certain
German breeders do not believe in infection or
telegony, but as I have already stated, Weismann's
theory of the germ cells being merely eggs in a
basket, is no longer accepted in this country.
Such authorities as Sutherland and Tegetmeier
are clearly believers in telegony ;l and they quote
from Captain Hayes, who is quite in accord with
them. It may seem unnecessary to further labour
this point, which is manifestly, from what I have
already written, not based on mere ignorant gossip
and tradition, but it is desirable to add that
Professor Ewart has been for the last year or two
making a series of most interesting experiments,
by mating mares of comparatively pure ancestry
with a Burchell zebra, and in the following season
putting them to Arab or other horses.
PROFESSOR EwaRT's EXPERIMENTS REASONABLY
Conclusive
The Professor is not yet satisfied with the
result of his experiments, although the second foal
of the mare Mulatto, got by an Arab stallion,
showed numerous stripes, and one by the same sire
out of a pony that had bred a mule foal to a forest
donkey had a dorsal band and various stripes, and
also an absence of long hair on the tail till the
lower third of the dock.
But Professor Ewart having set himself to work
to arrive, if possible, at conclusions which cannot
be gainsaid, is not satisfied with his experiments up
to the present time. He possesses a yellow dun
1 Horses, Asses, and Mules, Horace Cox, Field Office, 1895.
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SATURATION
Norwegian pony, which has stripes on its face,
neck, body, and legs, and its dam never had the
opportunity of even seeing a zebra. Are these stripes
vestiges of ancestral markings ?—in short, had not
all horses a common origin in striped ancestry ?
Bearing on this point, it is to be noted that
the hybrids sired by Professor Ewart's Burchell's
zebra do not take after the pattern of their sire
in their stripes, but resemble in this respect the
Somali and more primitive zebras, and this would
seem to be a clear case of reversion to an older
type, suggesting most distinctly that an outcross of
a pronounced sort can never be resorted to with
any well-founded anticipation as to the result, the
probability, if any, being that the disagreement of
the parents will bring about reversion to some
ancestor who resembles neither.
The Professor will make Further Trials
before coming to a decision
This being so, it is clear that Professor Ewart is
quite right in continuing his experiments before
committing himself to a decision. He has mated
a Clydesdale mare twice with the zebra, and the
second produce is more of a zebra than the first,
and he asks, " Is it more a zebra than the first
because the mare has been saturated by her zebra
mate, or can the difference be otherwise accounted
for?"
On the other hand he gives a portrait1 of a
zebra hybrid (bred by Lady Meux), the stripes on
which are "few and obscure." He does not seem
to have thought of this case when dealing with the
Saturation question, but it is very much to the
1 Penycuilc Experiments, p. 119.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
point all the same. The hybrid referred to is the
third foal of a zebra mare who had produced striped
foals on the two previous occasions, one to a bay
and the other to a brown pony. " Why the third
foal was obscurely striped," writes Professor Ewart,
"is an interesting problem, which need not be here
considered"; but, with all deference, I would submit
that to any one who, like the professor, regards the
Saturation theory with an open mind, the very
question he dismisses is worthy of the most atten-
tive consideration. Certain it is that on the third
mating with an ordinary pony the zebra produced a
foal only obscurely striped.
Telegony Matter of Common Knowledge.
Explanation of it may be left to
Scientists.
I could multiply instances in my own experience
of the breeding of dogs as well as horses, in proof
of the existence of telegony, but as no practical
breeders whom I have ever met have any doubt on
the subject, it may be well to leave the scientists to
find out as best they can and in course of time
what really is the explanation of the phenomenon.
Those of them who, as a result of their researches,
find that telegony does not in point of fact exist,
are like sea captains who get out of their reckoning,
and believe that a rocky coast is a hundred miles
away at the moment when they are running on to
it. This thing exists, by common consent of
experienced men, and the wise man's part is to
explain, and not, from inability to explain, to deny
its existence,—any fool can do the latter.
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SATURATION
As a Matter of Fact, frequent Mating
WITH SAME SlIlE PREJUDICIAL
For practical purposes, however, the scientific
aspect of the matter is of no great account. Judg-
ment by results is our motto, and here again
we are brought absolutely into accord with Bruce
Lowe, be the reason what it may. In other words,
we find as a matter of fact that no mare can be
repeatedly mated with the same horse without
"deterioration of the produce, and whether this be
due to Saturation or to a thousand and one other
causes does not, after all, matter much so long as
you know the fact.
Lord Falmouth's System
It was this knowledge, coupled with his insight
into the merits of the No. / family, which led to
the great successes of the late Lord Falmouth.
Some foolish persons imagine that he mated his
mares on no method, but there could be no greater
mistake. I have unimpeachable authority for
stating that he changed the matings of his mares
by deliberate design, and those who were familiar
with his methods will remember that he liked
above all things to strike the No. / family through
Partisan, when arranging the alliances of such No. /
mares as Queen Bertha and Silverhair.
Three Mares to some extent Exceptions to
the Foregoing Rule
I may here recall two or three famous mares
which were repeatedly mated with the same horse
and show the results. I will purposely take those
that have, so far as I know, come nearest to con-
tinuous success, such as Princess of Wales,
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Devotion, and Cherry Duchess. Here are their
stud records:—
Princess of Wales (1862) by Stockwell out
of The Bloomer, by Melbourne
1868.  Ch. c. Album Victor, by Marsyas.
1809.   Ch. f. Louise Victoria, by do.
1870.   Ch. f. Victoria Alexandra, by do.
1871.   Ch. c. George Frederick, by do.
1872.   Ch. f. MaRd Victoria, by do.
1873.   B. f. by Lord Clifden.
1874.   Ch. c. Albert Edward, by Marsyas.
187B.
   Ch. c. George Albert, by do.
Devotion (1869) by Stockwell out of Alcestis,
by Touchstone
1875.   B. f. Iphigenia, by Young Melbourne.
1876.   Ch. f. Madrida, bv Adventurer.
1877.   B. c. Zeal, by do."
1878.   Ch. f. Thebais, by Hermit.
1879.   Ch. f. St. Marguerite, by do.
1880.   Ch. c. Clairvaux, by do.
1881.   B. c. (dead) by Sterling.
1882.   Ch. c. St. Honorat, by Hermit.
1883.   Missed to do.
1884.   Ch. f. Heloise, by do.
188.5.
   Ch. f. Devote, by do.
1887.
   Ch. c Grand Prior, bv do.
1889.
   Ch. f. Adoration, by do.
Cherry Duchess (1871) by The Duke out of
Mirella, by Gemma di Vergy
1876.   Br. c. King Cherry, by Musket.
1877.   B. c. (dead) by Sterling.
1878.   B. f. Wealth, by do.
1879.   Br. c. Cherry Duke, bv do. (sent to the Cape).
1880.   Ch. c. Energy, bv do."
1881.   Ch. f. Cherry, b'y do.
1882.   Missed to do.
1883.   Ch. f. Duchess of Hampton by Hampton.
1884.   Ch. c. Cherry Ripe, bv Sterling.
1885.   Ch. f. Dorothea, by do.
1886.   Ch. c. Enthusiast, by do.
1887.   Ch. c. Heckberry, bv"do.
1888.   Missed to do.
1889.   B. f. by Sterling.
1890.   Br. c. Encounter, by do.
1891.   B. c. Cherry Stone bv do.
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SATURATION
Even these Makes did best in their
Earlier Mating s
Now, though the three mares dealt with above
gave fair results even when mated repeatedly with
the same, it can hardly be disputed that the earliest
of such results were the best. Albert Victor did
not win the Derby, but he was nevertheless, I
venture to think, the best son of Princess of Wales,
and though such an outcross as that with Marsyas
held on successfully for four seasons, culminating
with George Frederick, the stock after that went
down to third class.
Thebais, the first born of Devotion to Hermit,
was far and away the best, as was St. Marguerite,
the second born, the second best. Clairvaux, who
came third, was very speedy, but practically im-
potent as a stud horse, as also was Grand Prior, a
later son. None of the lot was in the same street
with the first two.
The record of Cherry Duchess reminds me that
Mr. Young Graham is a believer in Saturation, but
the belief sways him to a theory of mating diametri-
cally opposite to that adopted by Lord Falmouth.
Mr. Graham, in short, holds that a good cross
should be scrupulously adhered to, and that the
mare should on no account be changed to another
horse. More than once he told the late Lord
Falmouth that by changing his mares from sire to
sire he was poisoning the breed. Yet even Mr.
Graham will not deny that Cherry Duchess scored
her greatest triumphs with Sterling in the earlier
years, Energy and Cherry to wit, and though
Enthusiast came much later there had been an
intervening outcross of a most thorough description
with Hampton.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Innumerable Instances or Decadence of
Stock when Mares frequently Mated
with same Sire.
These three mares are extreme cases. It would
be easy to enumerate scores of instances where
repeated mating with the same horse has resulted
in disappointment or utter failure. Lily Agnes,
for example, whose first foal by Bend Or was
Ormonde; Rouge Rose, whose first by Doncaster
was Bend Or; Bribery, whose first by Stockwell
was St. Albans; Casuistry, whose first by Sterling
was Paradox; Violet Melrose, whose first by
Master Kildare was Melton, and so on; but it
would serve no useful purpose to labour this point
here, for it is very well recognised that when once
a success has been achieved by a certain cross,
whether it comes at the first time of asking, or the
second or third, it is long odds against that success
being repeated unless a change of mating be tried.
Exceptional cases, such as Lord Lyon and Achieve-
ment, brother and sister in two successive years,
may be cited, but these are rare indeed.
Young Giantess may be mentioned as having
bred eight foals successively to Whiskey, and three
of them were good brood mares, but none compared
with Eleanor, who came second of the family,
Clarina, the eldest born, having died as a three-year-
old. Eleanor won the Derby and Oaks, and was
the dam of Muley.
Penelope was mated repeatedly with Waxy,
but no one will maintain that her greatest success
was not her first—Whalebone—or rather I should
say, as in the case of Young Giantess, her second,
for a filly, own sister to him, preceded Whalebone.
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SATURATION
The most successful Matrons mated with a
Variety of Sires
On the other hand, the mares who have made
the greatest stud names in the last fifty years or so,
have been more or less catholic in their alliances.
It needs only to turn up in the Stud Book such
names as Beeswing, Martha Lynn, Alice Hawthorn,
Pocahontas, Queen Mary, and Queen Bertha, to
see that this is so. Beeswing, of course, mainly
favoured Touchstone, but she visited three other
sires, Sir Hercules, Galanthus, and Birdcatcher in
her eight productive years.
These cases are not put forward as in any sense
exhaustive, but as specimens, so to speak, and
breeders will easily think of many others.
Silvio and Saturation
Were it necessary to supplement Bruce Lowe's
arguments on the subject of Saturation, the record
of Silverhair might be turned to, and it will be seen
that she produced a filly to Macaroni in 1871, and
a colt, Fetterlock, to Parmesan in 1873 ; then, in
1874, Silvio by Blair Athol. Silvio took so entirely
after the Partisan type that it used to be a common
jest that he was got by Macaroni and not Blair
Athol, both of the horses being at that time at the
Cobham Stud. Lord Falmouth himself could
hardly be persuaded that it was not so, though his
own man went with the mare and stayed with her
at Cobham. 1 mvself saw her covered by Blair
Athol.
Now was this a case of Saturation by the Sweet-
meat blood of Macaroni and Parmesan or not ? In
itself the case is not in the slightest degree con-
clusive, for Blair Athol inherited Gladiator blood
183
H
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
through Queen Mary, and the "nick" of this with
the Kingston, in Silverhair, may have made Silvio
what he was, but the facts are worth recording,
more especially as Lohengrin, own brother to
Silvio, but one year younger, was quite of a
different type, being a thorough Elair Athol to
look at, a big blaze-faced chestnut.
Practical Conclusion
As already stated, however, practical horsemen
will do well to leave the question of Saturation for
the present to the men of science. It is enough for
ordinary purposes to know that mares should not
T)e mated more than two or three years running
with the same horse.
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CHAPTER XI
THE FIGURE GUIDE EXAMINED
No exact science claimed—Bruce Lowe more "exact" than "Beacon"
—Mr. Doyle on inbreeding—Fillies and colts—Sire and dam in-
fluence—King Tom and Stockwell, striking difference explained—
Touchstone's sons—Inbreeding to horse or mare—Sires of brood
mares—Mr. Doyle's Memorandum.
No Exact Science in Breeding
Ale the diatribes we hear or read against so-called
scientific breeding, are based on the hypothesis that
some person or other claims to haA'e reduced breed-
ing to an exact science, whereas no practical man
has ever made such a claim, and the arguments
piled up in opposition to it are simply futile. All
practical students of breeding admit as an axiom
that scientific certainty is impossible, and not only
is the element of chance always to be reckoned
with, but under any circumstances the merit of the
animal bred is a matter of opinion rather than of
absolute fact. 3lost pedigrees, moreover, are illus-
trations of several laws, and it is difficult therefore
to determine the actual cause of excellence, though
generally we may take it that the more correct
conditions are fulfilled the greater is the chance of
excellence.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Mk. Doyle's Tests
" Two tests," writes Mr. J. A. Doyle, " apply to
every theory."
1.   Does it fit certain ascertained facts better than any
other theory ?
2.   Is the proportion of success to failure decidedly greater
than it would be normally ?
" Beacon," who, in his long life, has written much
and well on the breeding of bloodstock, is a notable
example of how test No. 2 may be disregarded, for,
while he points out that a great many good horses
are bred in conformity with a certain system, he
never approaches the question, AVhether they are
in excess of the proportion of horses so bred that
we might naturally expect.
" Beacon " and Bruce Lowe
Bruce Lowe, on the other hand, in his mode of
dealing with the question of " sire blood," illustrates
the correct method, for his discovery that not more
than half a dozen successful sires can be found in
the past or present who do not show sire figures in
the first three removes of their pedigrees,—that is to
say among their eight great-grandparents—indicates
a result so much below the normal proportion,
having regard to the fact that there are only five
sire families out of the fifty, that it is most im-
probable that it is a mere coincidence.
Inbreeding
Mr. J. A. Doyle furnishes some Araluable notes
on Inbreeding, of which I give the substance.
Generally speaking, he maintains, inbreeding is
most effective through opposite and not corre-
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FIGURE GUIDE EXAMINED
sponding quarters, as in Galopin and Orville, and
he might have added Orme and Flying Fox.
Whalebone blood may be in some measure an
exception to this view if we call to mind the
success of Stoekwell with Touchstone mares, both
of those horses being tail-male descendants of
Whalebone, but Stockwell's dam, Pocahontas, was
closely akin to Touchstone, being made up of
Selim, Orville, and Whalebone, all bound together
by Highflyer, so that it was through Pocahontas
and Touchstone in all probability rather than
through The Baron and Touchstone that the blood
nicked. In corroboration of this view it may be
noted that sons of Stoekwell did not succeed in
anything like the same degree with mares by
Touchstone or his sons, the Pocahontas element
having been removed to the upper quarter of the
pedigree in such cases.
Coi/rs and Fieeies ; Diffehent Lines of
Blood Nicked
We shall see later on that there is beyond
question a vast difference in the " nicks " that pro-
duce good fillies and colts respectively, and there
can be little doubt that the general tendency is of
fillies to favour their sires arid~~~coIfs their damsr
Thus It is that we have the plain, common-sense
view that to enable a horse to get a good colt you J
should mate him with a mare who returns the best
blood of his dam, while to produce a good filly you
should return through his mate the best blood of /
his sire, but, pace Starkweather, we have not yet
been able to regulate the sex of foals, and if what
should have been a phenomenal colt happens to
come a filly it may probably be quite moderate or
vice versa.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Mr. Doyle considers that bad temper is a, result
of inbreeding through corresponding quarters, viz.
through the two top ones or the two lower ones,
and he instances Digby Grand, to whom might be
added many others in this connection, such as Bar-
caldine, closely inbred on the maternal side of both
sire and dam.
Inbreeding Intensifies Influence of Dam,
Crossbreeding that of Sire
We next come to the proposition that inbreed-
ing intensifies the influence of the dam, cross-
breeding of the sire. As to this Mr. Doyle says—
If a farmer uses a pedigree bull in a herd of common cows,
he at once improves his stock. The better and better bred
the bull, the more the improvement. Yet shorthorn pedi-
grees are reckoned all through females. Jersey breeders will
tell you also that the cow is more important than the bull.1
Again, physiologists agree that variation is transmitted
far more readily through the male than the female. But
cross-breeding and variation always coexist, just as do pure
breeding and permanence. If, then, paternal influence coexists
with variation, so also must it coexist with cross-breeding,
and vice versa. This also means that we have to consider
primarily the individual qualities of the sire and the blood
of the dam, which is quite in conformity with Bruce Lowe's
teaching.
Deductions from the Above
From these premises it is to be conjectured that
whenever a horse gets stock distinctly better than
himself the influence of the dam's blood preponder-
ates. As a matter of fact we find that in practically
all such cases either the horse himself is strongly
inbred or the progeny is—usually both. Take, for
1 Shorthorns and Jersey cows being of course pedigree and more or
less inbred animals.
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FIGURE GUIDE EXAMINED
example, Wisdom, Partisan, and Parmesan. " Such
horses," writes Mr. Doyle, "can only get great
winners from mares of the best blood and near akin
to them. All the mares who hit well with them
were of great families inbred to Whalebone."
Cadland, Bendigo, Border Minstrel, and Robert
the Devil may be mentioned as proofs of this
theory. On the other side Velasquez and Sig-
norina are decidedly cross-bred animals, and there
we find great individual excellence in the sire.
Better Colts ok Better Fillies ?
And this leads us to what Mr. Doyle calls the
very puzzling phenomenon of some sires getting
better colts and others better fillies respectively.
If we take Starkweather's view that the influence
of the superior parent is stamped on the offspring,
which comes, however, of the opposite sex, the
difficulty is a good deal simplified, and we see a
reason at once why St. Simon, in his early years at
the stud, sired high-class fillies, uniform in their
type, and colts of much lower class varying accord-
ing to the types of their dams, In later years his
vitality being not so great, while owing to his
fashion and fame he has been visited by the best
possible mares, the fact of his siring good colts is
exactly in accordance with Starkweather's teaching,
and it is to be noted in this connection that Per-
simmon is anything but a typical St. Simon, for he
shows all the size, power, and substance of the
King Tom, Rataplan, Stockwell, and Melbourne
(2 crosses) blood, which he inherits entirely—ex-
cept for King Tom—through his dam.
Mr. Doyle, however, has a good deal to say on
this same subject. He gives the following two
lists:—
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Colt Getters.
Fii.lv Gettefis.
Partisan.
Sweetmeat.
Touchstone.
St. Simon.
Birdcatcher.
Scottish Chief.
Newminster.
Adventurer.
Sterling.
Hampton.
Wisdom.
Petrarch.
Pyrrhus I.
King Tom.
Parmesan.
Blacklock.
Teddington.
Sir Hercules.
Weatherbit.
Voltigeur.
St. Albans.
He commences by pointing out, in regard to the
above, that Parmesan, Partisan, and Wisdom,
already mentioned as illustrating the law that an
inbred sire will get stock better than InmseTfT"
were all colt getters, and he accepts "the physio-
logical assumption" that a good colt is the son
of his dam, a good filly of her sire. Further,
he suggests, with some confidence, that a good
" chance-bred" colt is a much commoner pheno-
menon than a chance-bred filly. These views are
substantially in accord with Starkweather, who
was in many respects the mentor of Bruce Lowe.
Examining the lists of horses just given, we
find Petrarch, St. Simon, Sweetmeat, and Scottish
Chief all brilliant horses. Again, Sweetmeat,
Scottish Chief, Adventurer, Pyrrhus L, and
Petrarch were all out of closely inbred mares.
This latter condition does not hold good with
any on the list of colt-getters, except Blacklock
and Hampton, and Blacklock, being deficient in
sire blood, would be readily subservient to the
influence of suitably bred mares who would pro-
duce good colts to him.
As a whole, the comparison suggests that a
horse who is out of an inbred mare, and who
inherits individual vitality, will probably get good
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FIGURE GUIDE EXAMINED
fillies ; and vitality seems, as a rule, to coexist with
preponderance of the dam's influence.
No Certainty about this Question
It is not quite clear, as Mr. Doyle admits, why
Hampton should have got good colts and Petrarch
fillies, so far as these theories go, but of course
temperament and individual character have some-
thing to do with it, and on this ground we find
own brothers producing entirely different results,
as, for instance, Blair Athol and Breadalbane. No
doubt, in this connection, and especially where
there has been no close inbreeding, own brothers
may be absolutely dissimilar, and the resultants of
entirely different germ cells, so that their relation-
ship is far from being so close as it appears.
Something, Mr. Doyle suggests, may be learned
from considering what kind of mares breed good
fillies. As a rule, it would seem that good mares,
inbred, only throw good colts ; for example,
Crucifix, Alice Hawthorn, and Cobweb. Queen
Bertha seems to be an exception to this rule, but
she was decidedly less inbred than Cobweb or
Alice Hawthorn. Wheel of Fortune and Spin-
away, both out of Queen Bertha, were both by
pronounced filly getters, and in either case the sire
got the best blood of his sire strongly returned,
which exactly bears out Bruce Lowe's view. The
same is to be said of Busybody, who was the third
Oaks winner in direct descent from Queen Bertha
(including the latter). It was only natural that
Busybody, when given an outcross like St. Gatien,
should have produced a wonder in Meddler, who,
while inheriting his sire's constitution, took after
his dam in quality and general appearance.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
King Tom and Stockweij.—Striking Example
IN REGARD TO FlIXIES AND Coi.TS
Further examples on the same lines can be
found in King Tom and Stockwell, the latter of
whom was fairly equal in regard to his stock of
either sex, the preponderance being in favour of
the colts; nor should it be forgotten that this
preponderance increased with his age, and his
latest successes were the colts Doncaster and
Gang Forward.
King Tom, on the other hand, was dis-
tinctly a filly getter. This seems plainly due to
the fact that while Pocahontas was (in point of
blood) no more than a match for The Baron, she
clearly outweighed Harkaway, who, good though
he was, as an individual, was very lacking in sire
elements.
Touchstone's Sons a further Proof
Again, if we take three of Touchstone's most
famous sons—Newminster, Orlando, and Surplice—
we find that Newminster hardly eArer got a good
mare (Squire Heathcote's Beeswing being perhaps
the best). Orlando's record for colts and fillies
came out fairly equal. Teddington was his best of
either sex, but Imperieuse, Eurydice, Theodora,
and Melissa were better than most of the others.
Surplice, on the other hand, got better fillies
than colts. Boman Candle was his only good
son, but Wild Bose, Simony, and Homily were
all good fillies.
Here, points out Mr. Doyle, of the dams of the
above three Touchstone horses, Crucifix, dam of
Surplice, was the best bred, and Beeswing, dam of
Newminster, the worst, and he cites it as an
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FIGURE GUIDE EXAMINED
instance of what is substantially Bruce Lowe's
view, viz., that ^Jiorse inherits vitality from his
dam, and that he reproduces in his male offspring
~1iis dam's qualities. It is, indeed, almost a matter
of common knowledge that in all kinds of breed-
ing sons are apt to take after their mothers and
daughters after their fathers.
This Doctrine not to be Applied too
Rigidly
It would be a great mistake, however, to apply
this doctrine too rigidly, or otherwise we should
expect to find as a matter of course the tendency
to get good colts or fillies alternate from genera-
tion to generation. A, being deficient in indi-
vidual vitality, would of necessity get good colts,
while B, whose dam has an excess of vitality, must
by virtue of this inheritance from his dam, get
good fillies. Such considerations must never be
allowed to unduly sway our judgment, though on
an average of the results they will always be justi-
fied, and they serve to explain why St. Simon in
his best years of stud life got good fillies, almost
exclusively, while his sister Angelica produced
good colts.
Inbreeding to a Horse is to the Individual •
to a Mare to the Blood
Another point connected with inbreeding may
be stated thus: If you inbreed to a horse you
inbreed to the individual; if to a mare to the
blood. Thus, says Mr. Doyle, we find horses of
inferior families but of exceptional individual merit
such as Herod Pot-8-os, Waxy, Emilius, Panta-
loon, and Gladiator, to any of whom inbreeding
193                            o          h
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
answers. But the mares to whom inbreeding
answers are such as Prunella, Pocahontas, Rebecca,
Young Giantess, all belonging to first-class families.
It has not yet been fully demonstrated whether
inbreeding to Queen Mary or Agnes will answer,
though the success of the combination of Hampton
and Blair Athol has been repeatedly demonstrated
—a success which may be due to Rataplan and Stock-
well rather than to the double lines of Queen Mary.
Another curious fact noticed by Bruce Lowe is
that in the pedigree of a great winner there is
almost sure to be very close (often incestuous)
inbreeding, not necessarily in the dam herself, but
on her side, in the female line. Moreover, this
inbreeding is almost always to a great sire. We
have it to Blacklock in numerous cases, such as
Rhedycina, Governess, Kilcock, Galliard, Sweet-
meat, Common, and Throstle (to some extent),
Bendigo, and Kilwarlin ; to Pot-8-os, in Blacklock ;
to Whalebone, in Cotherstone and Torment; to
Birdcatcher in Kisber and Apology ; and very many
others might be mentioned; but we do not find
parallel cases with Mandane, Prunella, etc.
Again, it is noted that in great brood mares we
seldom find successive crosses of the same family.
Thus we do not find Blacklock hitting with Selim
mares, or Sir Hercules with Blacklock mares; nor
did Melbourne succeed with Glencoe or Bay
Middleton mares,—that is to say, in getting brood
mares. What exceptions we do find are in families
No. 3 and 6. Successive crosses of No. 3 are found
in the pedigree of Princess of Wales.
I As a rule, however—and here Mr. Doyle writes
absolutely to the point—the influence of a family
is felt, not by strong inbreeding to any individual
members of it, but by a persistent recurrence
throughout the whole pedigree.
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FIGURE GUIDE EXAMINED
Sires of Brood Mares, a Point omitted by
Bruce Lowe
We now turn to a very interesting point which,
in a large measure, escaped the attention of Bruce
Lowe. He lost himself somewhat among subtleties
as to horses that were likely to sire good fillies
rather than colts, and his reasoning on this head is
at times confused. He pointed out, rightly enough,
that some of the families were more feminine in
their character than others, but he never dealt
boldly with the question of horses of a given family
siring good brood mares. It is true that, as the
figure system is based on the female line of descent,
it was not quite in the purview of Bruce Lowe's
scheme to consider the sires of brood mares other-
wise than in the general count of the figures in a
pedigree, but we do beyond all doubt find the
horses of certain families siring great brood mares,
while failing markedly to perpetuate themselves in
the male line. The Melbournes and the Hermits
are cases in point, while, on the other hand, there
are horses like Stockwell, Bend Or, Galopin, and
Hampton, whose sons and daughters do equally
well. Bruce Lowe himself went out of his ground
when he discovered the sire families, and had
he lived no doubt he would have carried this
inquiry to the logical conclusion by determining
not merely what families produce the best sires of
race-horses, but what produce the best sires of
brood mares. Such an inquiry is by no means
inconsistent with the supreme importance of the
root figures of any given mare, for it is a pretty
well-known fact that a really bad producing family
can hardly be built up into a good one, but the
influence of the sire's figure, if he is fairly mated,
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
must needs be great, and we have proof positive
from such horses as those already mentioned—and,
say, Scottish Chief, Macaroni, and Rosicrucian—
that some horses do, in fact, get good brood mares
while failing to get good stallions. On this subject
a most interesting memorandum has been received
from Mr. Doyle, which is given here, and will be
commented on later.
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MEMORANDUM
THE FAMILIES
Their capacity for getting good brood mares a distinct
factor not considered by Lowe.
As a rule, the good brood mares got by any particular
horse fall under some definite head1 more than the good
runners do.
This fits in with what I have already said as to the per-
manence of the female influence.
For convenience, I will call an animal got by a 2 sire a
II. animal, adding (when necessary) the other figure.
Thus—
Queen Mary, XXII. (10).
Prunella, XIII. (/).
St. Simon, III. (11).
and so on.
I would start by saying that I do not think there can be
any doubt as to the identity of 11 and 13. The Stud Book
seems to make it quite clear.
The two strains have noticeably the same qualities, i.e.
tendency to get successful brood mares and also to breed in.
Regulus, Highflyer, and Alexander mares might almost
be said to be worth the whole Stud Book put together.
Highflyer's dam 11 and 13.
Alexander's sire 11, twice in his four grand-parents.
I shall therefore treat them as identical, and call them 11.
No. /
Moderately good in getting brood mares.
Largely dependent on alliances with 3 (especially Sir
Peter), 8, and 11.
1 I mean by this they correspond to some fixed rule of crossing.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Whiskeh
Liverpool (11) by Tramp (3). Inbreeding to Pot-8-os.
Cotherstone and Moiverina, by Touchstone.
Touchstone has Orville (8) in the third remove. He has
also 5 crosses of (3)—Bruce Lowe never notices this—and also
3 separate Highflyer mares, 2 Alexander mares, and Sir
Peter twice, and Squirt and Regulus each 5 times through
Eclipse.
Adamas (a very good horse) on the same lines. Tramp (3),
then Bay Middleton (8, 3, 11), then Touchstone.
Euclid, by Emilius (Orville and Sir Peter) and Sir Peter
behind.
Ladye of Silverheld Well by Velocipede (3), with more
Sir Peter.
Also Euclid's sister Equation follows on with Orlando,
cram full of 11.
Marsyas by Orlando.
Gaiety Orville and Walton on dam's side.
Gaiety by Touchstone.
Miss Foote by Orlando.
Poetess. I cannot see anything specially noteworthy in
her pedigree.
Worra
Rowton, grandam by Brush (11).
Amato by Velocipede (3).
Augustus by Sultan (8), with 3 through Buzzard and Sir
Peter. Grandam by Rubens (Buzzard combined with 11),
and another cross of Highflyer.
Care. Rubens behind, and carries on with Velocipede and
Bay Middleton.
Whalebone
Myrrha (grandam of Queen Mary). Highflyer blood
behind.
Plenipotentiary exceptionally full of Highflyer.
Alea, dam by Orville, carries on with 8 and 11.
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MEMORANDUM
PlONEEIt
Galata (a very brilliant mare) by Sultan. Dam by
Buzzai-d from a (3) mare, a strong instance.
FlTZ-RoLAND
Craig Millar gets Sir Peter combined with 8 through
Sultan, and four times through Emilius.
Queen's Messenger
Emmeline Marcia, full of Touchstone, each way, with 3 near
in King Tom.
Rockingham
(Himself by Humphry Clinker (8) with two Sir Peter
crosses.)
Teddington by Orlando, great-grandam by Stamford (son
of Sir Peter).
Glencoe
Himself by Sultan (8 and Sir Peter). Dam by Tramp (3).
Pocahontas (3), dam by an Orville (8) horse.
Bay Middle-ton
Himself by Sultan, dam by Phantom (grandson of Sir
Peter).
Wild Dayrell by Ion, grandam by Malek (own brother to
Velocipede, i.e. 3), a strong cross of Sir Peter; two more
crosses of Sir Peter through Y. Gouty and Sir H. Dimsdale.
Ion goes straight back to Sir Peter through three No. 8
horses—Cain, Paulowitz, and Sir Paul.
Saunterer, grandam by Velocipede.
Jdamas. See page 198.
Ishmael
Fandango by Barnton, who has three crosses of Sir Peter;
also Don John is full of Sir Peter, and Nickname has
another cross of it.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
All this seems to me to show that the success of No. /,
though brilliant, is limited by very strict conditions.
In no case does No. /, combined only with 2, 4, 5, 7, 9,
12, or any of the inferior strains, succeed.
No. 2
Selim and his two brothers, very successful mare getters.
Their sire         is I. (3).
„ dam         „ XI.
„ grandam „ XI.
Their own successes almost entirely in conjunction with
Highflyer blood.
Blacklock not conspicuously successful. His best results
are in the pedigrees of Vedette's dam, Asteroid's dam, and
Sweetmeat's dam, by breeding back to Highflyer and No. 6.
Sir Hercules, Teddington, and St. Albans, none of them
good brood mare getters.
So far as Teddington has done any good, it has been
breeding back to Highflyer and No. 3, strains of which he
himself is full through Orlando and Humphry Clinker.
Voltigeur mares have not done very much. The blood
does not seem to go on.
Kingcraft, King Lud, and Sir Hugo, all stud failures.
Lord Clifden mares not successful in proportion to their
numbers.
No. 3
Quite the best.
Six great brood mare getters :—
Sir Peter.                              Stockwell.
Tramp.                                  King Tom.
Velocipede.                            Galopin.
Minor lights:—
Lanercost, Rataplan, Glaucus, Flatcatcher, Toxophilite,
Flying Dutchman, Malek, Buzzard.
In fact, every good horse of this blood has transmitted
his goodness to his daughters' stock.
Hits well all round.
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MEMORANDUM
No. 4
From this point of view a poor strain.
Matchem mares come in many good pedigrees, but there
is generally close inbreeding to No. 6, of which he had a
good deal.
Thormanby mares do well in conjunction with No. 3
blood. His sire is a No. 3 horse.
Ion again overwhelmingly inbred to 8.
No. 5
A good receptive strain—that is, it does well where there
is inbreeding to some of the better families.
E.g. Hermit, strongly inbred on dam's side to Orville.
Sultan (both No. 8), and to Y. Giantess.
Rosicrucian the same.
Defence, the best mare getter of this family. He is
strongly inbred to Highflyer, and there is also some marked
inbreeding to Marske in his dam's pedigree.
No. 6
From my present point of view about the most important
strain, because
(1)  It is the one whose peculiarities Bruce Lowe has
specially overlooked.
(2)  It is the one whose merits in indirect transmission are
most out of proportion to its merits for direct transmission.
(3)  Because it inbreeds specially well.
To begin with it must be remembered that Flying Childers
and Bartlett's Childers were produced by strong incestuous
breeding to No. 6 as their tap-root.
This starts the blood.
Then Cade comes of it.
Coming further, we have two main starting-points, King
Fergus and Y. Giantess.
Follow up each.
I. Beningbrough's dam is by Herod, dam by Matchem;
Herod out of a Childers mare ; Matchem by Cade.
Beningbrough's successful daughters are—
(1) The dam of Reveller. Childers' blood close at hand
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
in her dam. Reveller by Comus. Comus by Sorcerer (6),
grandam by King Fergus (6).
(2) The grandam of Royal Oak. Royal Oak's dam is by
Smolensko, and his best son is from an Orville mare.
Johanna Southcote closely inbred to Herod.
Orville, again, gets Muley from a 6 mare, and Emilius gets
Priam and Plenipotentiary from 6 mares. Orville blood in
the female line hits well with Sorcerer and with Blacklock
(inbreeding to King Fergus).
There is very strong inbreeding to King Fergus at back
of Voltigeur's pedigree.
Also in Vedette through Comus, Blacklock, and Lisette.
Hambletonian has much No. 6 through Highflyer, and
his grandam too is by Matchem.
Voltaire and Buzzard are both bred back to King Fergus,
and Voltaire's dam is by a 6 horse.
Brutandorf gets his best son, Hetman Platoff, from a
Comus mare, and he gets Cossack from a mare by Priam (6),
gr. grandam by Soothsayer, son of Sorcerer (6).
Young Giantess, be it remembered, is a double No. 6.
The three grandsons of Young Giantess, Phantom, Priam,
and Muley, have inbred conspicuously well.
Again, Comus gets Humphry Clinker from a mare by
Clinker (6), and Melbourne shows a most marked preference
for Blacklock and Orville blood.
It should also be noticed that the presence of King Fergus,
especially Blacklock, seems the one condition which makes
inbreeding to Sorcerer practicable.
We have seen this already in The Cossack. We see it
again decidedly in Solon and Barcaldine, and in all the Maid
of Masham family, such as Peter, Queen Adelaide, and
Peregrine. West Australian's two best sons, Wizard, from a
Cure (6) mare, descended from Orville also, and Solon, from
a granddaughter of Hetman Platoff.
Faintly we see it in Donovan, Memoir, and La Fleche,
and more emphatically in Persimmon, St. Frusquin and
Matchbox.
Also, it is noticeable that Bay Middleton and Velocipede
always hit well (Sorcerer on both sides).
Otherwise, inbreeding to Sorcerer or his descendants has
been generally a failure.
The affinity of King Fergus and Sorcerer is further
illustrated by Canezou, by the daughters of Melbourne, and
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MEMORANDUM
Stitch (Sorcerer blood through Hornsea and Don John), the
dams of St. Mungo, La Toucques, and Thunder, also by
Kilwarlin and Kilcock, and in a measure by Bendigo.
The Cure is a (6) horse, with King Fergus in male line,
and through other sources.
Ormonde's excellence can be explained by inbreeding to
6, but not, as far as I can see, otherwise, by Lowe's theory as
it stands.
Plenipotentiary essentially a good brood mare getter.
Also Langar.
It is hardly necessary to go thi-ough the instances of
inbreeding to the three daughters of Young Giantess.
Weatherbit, The Palmer, Rosicrucian, Seclusion, Thebais,
Eager, Marie Stuart, Fandango and Lioness and King of the
Forest, all cases in point.
No. 7
A very bad strain from this point of view.
West Australian, Cotherstone, Diophantus, Wild Dayrell,
hardly ever got a good brood mare.
Parmesan very seldom.
I shall be surprised if Wisdom or Donovan mares are
successful.
Walton and Ditto and Beningbrough mares have done
fairly well. The two first named are very inbred to Regulus
(11), and it is mainly by carrying on this strongly through
Highflyer, etc., that any good results have been got.
Speaking generally the family has relied largely on 3, 6,
and 11.
I have already noticed this in connection with Bening-
brough.
One peculiarity of the strain is, that in later days the
good sires have been bad runners, and vice versa — West
Australian and Diophantus, Wisdom and Parmesan.
Beningbrough's successes all got by continued inbreeding
to Herod.
No. 8
Not as good for mare breeding as 6, 3, or 11.
Comes, I think, about next.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Its merit very permanent.
Inbreeding to a good No. 8 horse always answers, e.g.
Orville, Sultan, and Marske.
In Ion, too, there is very persistent inbreeding to 8.
Of great value as an element in the pedigrees of great
sires.
It is hardly an exaggeration to say that all great sires
have been built up by crosses of Orville and Sultan.
Ohvili.k
Adventurer.                            Touchstone.
The Baron.                              Sweetmeat.
Sultan
Hermit (twice).
Sterling and Stockwell reunite in Isonomy.
Galopin.                                      Wild Dayrell.
Rosicrucian.
Young Melbourne.
Fisherman.
That is to say, the lines of Blacklock, Touchstone, Bird-
catcher, Ion, Tramp, Melbourne, and Heron, have been kept
going by crosses with Sultan. Again, we have Cervantes in
Melbourne.
The two Orville and Sultan combined in Hermit, Stock-
well, Scottish Chief, Sterling, and Rosicrucian.
No. 9
A very bad sire strain, both for getting runners and brood
mares.
Partner occurs often, but it is only really in conjunction
with the Farewell family (No. 4).
In no family have so many good horses absolutely died out
without leaving any mark. Remembrancer, Nutwith, Daniel
OHourke, Scroggins.
Nothing would induce me to breed from a daughter of
Peter, Bendigo, or Kilwarlin.
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MEMORANDUM
The one exception, Muley Moloch. He is inbred to
Beningbrough, and only succeeds when crossed with Bening-
brough. (Alice Hawthorn and Wasp.)
No. 10
Hardly enough data for a decision.
It has only lately come conspicuously to the front.
From Hampton we have Persimmon. From Blair Athol,
Ladas. From Beauclerc, Nunthorpe and Queen's Birthday.
In every case there is inbreeding to some good blood.
In Persimmon to (2) through Blacklock, Selim, and
Castrel, and through St. Albans. Also, to some extent
to / and 6.
In Ladas to Touchstone, Emilius, and Queen Mary (full
of / and 6).
In Nunthorpe to Touchstone.
In Queen's Birthday to Gladiator and Pocahontas.
Meddler, again, from a Petrarch mare is strongly inbred to
Touchstone.
Practically, I should say that mares by (10) horses, e.g.
by Beauclerc or Hampton, should be always worth trying,
but that one should inbreed to some high-class strain.
Friar's Balsam also points that way. So does Flying Fox.
His pedigree is very instructive, strong inbreeding to
Galopin (3) and to Pocahontas (3). Also he has 3 through
Flatcatcher. He illustrates the doctrine that 7 and 19 must
be strongly crossed with the great running lines.
I should like to see Galliard mares put to Blue Green or
Or me.
No. 11
I have already spoken of this.
It is impossible to overrate the value of Highflyer blood.
Also it must be remembered that Regulus is the common
element in Eclipse and Highflyer.
It inbreeds specially well.
Orlando, a strong case of inbreeding to Highflyer and
Alexander.
St. Simon (11) gets two of his best sons from mares by
Plebeian (11). Plebeian himself is descended from Orlando, so
is the grandam of Matchbox.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Blacklock has two Highflyer mares in his pedigree.
Touchstone has three and two crosses of Sir Peter. No
strains have inbred better than Touchstone and Blacklock.
It is also to be noticed that Touchstone could not get a
good brood mare without Sir Peter blood. His daughter
from xVlice Hawthorn did no good.
Per contra, Lady Macdonald, who had Pantaloon instead
of Muley Moloch, bred a first-class mare in Brigantine.
The excellence of the following cannot be explained by
Bruce Lowe's theory as it stands, but can if we allow special
merit to Highflyer:—
Coronation, Pantaloon, Plenipotentiary, Emilius, Fleur
de Lis.
Again, 11 is the predominant partner in Eclipse.
Scottish Chief, another case of inbreeding to 11. Little
Known (11).
Lord of the Isles gets 11 strongly through Touchstone,
Pantaloon (Highflyer and Alexander), and Cervantes (son of
Don Quixote).
Scottish Chief hits well with Thormanby, inbreeding to
Rebecca (11).
Also, Yellow Jack by Birdcatcher (11) dam by Liver-
pool (11).
No. 12
Another of the receptive strains.
Adventurer (the rest of whose pedigree is weak) does not
get good brood mares.
Barcaldine tends to illustrate what I said before about
the effect of close inbreeding, that it makes amends for
deficiencies.
Scottish Chief gets good mares when crossed with high-
class running blood. They also have to be mated in the
same way.
Sheet Anchor, Weatherbit, Filho da Puta, and Muley, as
mares1 sires, do respectably, not brilliantly.
No. 14
As with No. 10, we have very narrow grounds for
generalising.
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MEMORANDUM
Trumpator mares have done well. Also, of course,
Touchstone mares. But then it must be remembered Touch-
stone is full of (a) No. 3—Sir Peter (twice), Master Henry,
Buzzard, Pot-8-os. (b) No. 11—Highflyer (5 times), Alex-
ander (twice).
Pipator was sire of many good mares.
The only other strain worth considering in detail is No. 19.
One feature of this family, that it can produce first-class
horses when it is crossed with the best running strains, but
not otherwise.
Nothing, in my opinion, shows more clearly the truth of
Bruce Lowe's view, that /, 2, 3, 4 have some special quality
about them.
Vedette inbred to Blacklock.
Alarm
, „ Prunella.
Sir Hugo
, „ Stockwell and Voltigeur.
Cambuscan
, „ Whalebone.
Monarque
, „ Whalebone and Whisker.
Isonomy
, „ Sir Hercules.
Of Reveller I have already spoken under No. 6.
Of all the above the only ones who have ever got a good
brood mare are Alarm and Cambuscan.
Torment strongly inbred to Whalebone.
Douranee „
           „ „ Defence.
It is rather premature to discuss Isonomy in this
connection.
As to all the other strains I think the only point to
notice—a very important one—is this :—
You may get an individually good horse of an inferior
family, who becomes, by his individual merit, permanently
valuable.
The outside blood, as Lowe would call it in his pedigree,
ceases to be detrimental. Noticeable examples of this are—
Herod.                                       Emilius.
Pot-8-os.                                   Pantaloon.
Waxy.                                       Gladiator.
If we insist on a strict adherence to the figures, any one
of these names would be a source of weakness in a pedigree,
and the repetition of any one would be fatal.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
As a matter of fact, we see that every one of them inbreeds
well, and is an element of strength in a pedigree.
This does not really interfere with the essence of Lowe's
theory. It only shows that he has not made enough allow-
ance for individual variation. It is also evident that the
effect of such individual variation cannot be predicted.
We have, for example, Sweetmeat, a brilliantly successful
sire, but whose blood evidently has very little permanent
value. It is quite possible that as time goes on we shall
find that Barcaldine and Ormonde are cases similar to
Lmilius, etc.
I think the same law of individual variation operates
among some of the families already dealt with. E.g.
Touchstone and Highflyer in a pedigree are worth more
than the figures they represent. Touchstone is certainly
worth more than Launcelot, and Stockwell more than
Rataplan.
What are the Practical Deductions
1. That in certain families excellence is extinguished as
soon as it has to be transmitted through a male. This is
absolutely the case with No. 9, and to some extent so with
7 and 19.
To put it in Bruce Lowe's language, the blood cannot be
brought to the surface again after it has got below it.
In other strains the effect seems to be actually strengthened
by passing through a male, so that the figure system literally
applied breaks down.
Also, the capacity of a strain for inbreeding is in some
measure distinct from its actual merit.
These two last conditions seem to go together, and to
apply specially to 3, 6, and 11.
Applied to existing conditions this means :—
Have as little as may be to do with No. IX. mares.1
If you must have VII.,1 IV.,1 or XIX.,1 take care that it
is well sandwiched in between first-class running blood.
Remember that Emilius, Gladiator, and Pantaloon are as
valuable as much higher figures.
1 Refer back to p. 197.
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MEMORANDUM
Look out for sires full of No. 8, especially in the dams,
e.g.
Isinglass. V., X., XII. depend for their value on their
accompaniments more than themselves.
Keep together the 6 and 11 lines respectively, remembering
that inbreeding to No. 6, especially to the three daughters of
Young Giantess, is as good as inbreeding to /, 2, or 3.
Lastly (and perhaps this is the most important), remember
4that* while, cwteris paribus, a No. / or 2 mare is better than a
No. 11 one, yet a mare got by a No. 11 horse is better than
one by a No. / or 2 horse.
To put it in concrete form, a sister to Oberon or Carbine
would be more valuable than a sister to Royal Hampton or
Blue Green. But, cwteris paribus, a daughter of Royal
Hampton or Blue Green is more valuable than a daughter
of Oberon or Carbine.
Perhaps I ought to make it clearer what I mean by
" keeping together " 6 and 11.
No. 6
Inbreed to the 3 Young Giantess sisters; connect Rosi-
crucian, Galopin, and Scottish Chief.
No. 11
Connect St. Simon, Blue Green, Royal Hampton, and
Scottish Chief, with back inbreeding to Touchstone, especially
through Orlando, and to Lottery.
It is hardly worth reopening the question of Galopin's
pedigree. I firmly believe he is by Vedette. But I would
notice that when doubts were first expressed (which was, I
think, before he won the Derby), it was always said that he
was by Lacydes. Now Lacydes was a No. 3 horse, dam by-
Plenipotentiary. His Touchstone blood might account for
the colour. Anyway, if we had to accept him, it would not
knock a single apple out of Bruce Lowe's cart or mine
either.
When I reviewed Lowe in Bailey, I said that the success
or failure of Isinglass and Orme would be a fair test of the
system.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
I might have added the failures of Common, Bendigo,
and Donovan.
I shall be agreeably surprised if Flying Fox or Persimmon
does great things at the stud.
Brief Comment on the Above
There is but little reason to comment here* at
any length on the foregoing Memorandum, which
presupposes a general knowledge of the Stud Hook,
and is not written for novices. The same may,
as a matter of fact, be said of this whole work, the
readers of which are assumed to possess Bruce Lowe
and Herman Goos's Tables.
On this question of the capacity of male members
of the families for getting good brood mares, Mr.
Doyle's reasoning is, within certain limits, absolutely
sound, and, from whatever cause, it is quite certain
that some horses, Hermit, for example, get good
brood mares, though they fail utterly to get good
sires ; but a little careful thought will show us that
the figures at this point can hardly be a guide. It
is admitted on all hands that colts take after their
dams and fillies after their sires as a general rule,
and for that reason we learn from Bruce Lowe—
what indeed many already knew—that to breed a
good colt you should select a mare who returns the
best strain of the dam of the sire with whom she is
mated. In all this we must keep in mind the
doctrine of Polarity as dealt with by Starkweather
and explained here in a later chapter.
Now, as Bruce Lowe has shown by many ex-
amples, great horses are in almost all cases due to
this " nicking " of the blood of the paternal grandam
with that of the dam ; on the other hand, great
fillies come from the converse "nicking," of the
paternal grandsire with the dam. It is not for a
moment contended that this rule is not subject to
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MEMORANDUM
many exceptions, but Bruce Lowe's examples, and
many others that could be mentioned, show it to be
sound in a general sense.
The Family Number no Safe Guide to
Sires of Brood Mares
i
If this be admitted then Mr. Doyle must see
that we get out of our depth in trying to ascribe to
the families, as such, a quality which enables the
sires who are members of those families to get good
brood mares ; and for this reason—that when a
horse gets a good filly the presumption is that the
" nick " has been found with his sire's side and not
his dam's, and that the figure of his sire rather than
of his dam is responsible for it so far as he goes. On
the other hand the dam of the filly has, for choice,
supplied the connecting current for that " nick"
in the lower half of her pedigree, and her family
number is thus fully entitled to hold on.
It is only by keeping constantly in view the
tendency to change and change about of sex that
we can grapple clearly and strongly with this
problem.
A Horse gets good Colts by virtue of his
Dam ; Fillies by virtue of his Sire
To state the case concisely. A horse may
become a successful sire of colts by virtue of his
dam, if her best blood is returned in his mates, and,
as a further result, those colts may make good
stallions and their sire's root figure is entitled to
the credit of their production—in conjunction, of
course, with the dam's figures.
But a horse gets good fillies by virtue of his sire,
whose blood is " nicked" by that of the dam, and
the filly so bred is outside the horse's family figure
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
in reality, and that family figure has no valid claim
to the credit for her if she becomes a good brood
mare. It would be absurd to labour this point in
any dogmatic sense, but it is contended that the
general trend of generations and creation points to
its truth.
Flying Fox and Persimmon
In considering stud horses as apart from brood
mares it is very necessary to have regard to the
central quarters of the pedigree, and, as some horses
have been bred of late years, we must take names
almost more than figures into account. Mr. Doyle
expresses doubts as to the stud careers of Persimmon
and Flying Fox. The writer would not for a
moment doubt their success—especially Flying Fox
—for though No. 7 family is not in itself anything
remarkable, we have in the case of Flying Fox to
reckon with the predominance of Galopin, with
Speculum also and Blacklock in the central part of
his pedigree, and this combination is strong enough
to override all the other elements. So too in
Persimmon with his treble measure of Pocahontas,
through King Tom, Rataplan, and Stockwell, in the
middle of the pedigree, and his double lines of
Melbourne, which blood has always shown affinity
for St. Simon. It is there where the horse got his
character and individuality, and it is from this blood,
and not from No. 7, that he will make his sire
success. We may believe to the full in the power
and permanence of a female line that shows vitality ;
also that the fillies of the family are made as a rule
from the top and bottom quarterings of their pedi-
grees ; but with colts it is different. ^A tremendous
central inbreeding to individuals of theTTighest class
may lift a horse right away from his root figure.
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CHAPTER XII
THE LAW OF SEX
Starkweather's theory—"Superior" parent stamps opposite sex —
Polarity the cause—Transmission of resemblances—Galopin and The
Dutchman—St. Simon and Angelica—M. Giron's tables—Practical
utility of the theory—Experiments with ewes—Deductions from
them—Ormonde, Orme, Flying Fox—Mating stock and keeping
healthy.
Whether there be a law of sex or not it is not for
one moment pretended to determine here ; yet it is
suggested, with all deference to high authorities,
that no one has come so near to a discovery of
such a law as Mr. G. B. Starkweather, F.R.G.S.,
whose book on the subject was published by
Messrs. J. & A. Churchill, 14 New Burlington
Street, London.
Starkweather's Definition. " Superior "
Parent produces opposite Sex
His contention is that sex is determined by what
I shall designate as the " superior " parent; also that
the " superior " parent produces the opposite sex.
Causes of " Superiority "
Later on (p. 151), he says : "Among the deter-
mining causes of ' superiority' cerebral development
and activity hold the first place, and in order to
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
ascertain the nervous status of an individual re-
gard must be had to the manifestations of energy,
of which temperament is perhaps the most import-
ant. To these must be added various transient
influences, the most impoi'tant of them being the
state of health. Physical vigour, habits of life, state
of nutrition, mental condition, circumstances, recent
occupation, all are factors in determining superiority
of an individual at different times, and of course
the mere lapse of time, and the consequent change
of constitution, will have an important influence.
Seniority in age is usually an element of 'inferiority,'
and other things being equal, the younger parent
will assuredly be the 'superior' and will therefore
produce the opposite sex in the offspring."
So far, we have a statement of what most of us,
if not all, have no reason to disagree with, and
perhaps as we are content to judge by results and
not worry into causes the matter might rest here,
for that females are apt to take after their sires and
males after their dams is really a matter of common
knowledge. This of course presupposes that the
parents are, in a sense, opposites.
Electricity and the Nervous System produce
Negative and Positive Results
Starkweather, however, bases his conclusions on
the dependency of vitality on electricity and magnet-
ism, or some kindred force, which, as he well argues,
controls the nervous system. There is no space
here to go into the detailed argument which is
carefully elaborated. The main point is indicated
by the following quotation 1:—" It is well known
that when any magnetic substance is subjected to
1 Starkweather, p. 99.
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THE LAW OF SEX
the influence of electricity, instead of diffusing itself
equally throughout the mass, this subtle fluid
assumes what is termed a positive and a negative
position, or polarity, the distinctive principle to which
attention is now called. We know several of the
peculiarities of this phenomenon, but why such a
condition should instantly result none can explain.
The North Pole of the earth is positive, and the
South negative, yet the north pole of every balanced
needle is negative and the south positive. . . .
Reichenbach and Ashbumer And that the human
body possesses the same positive and negative
property. They find that in human beings males
and females are polarised in precisely the same way,
the general polarities being in the right and left
sides, in the hands and feet, besides countless minor
points. They find the whole left side of the human
body positively, and the right side negatively
charged irrespective of sex. Quite in harmony
with the foregoing is the fact that an injury to one
side of the head causes paralysis of the opposite side
of the body."
Physiologists account for the above phenomena
by some hypothesis of a decussation or crossing of
nerves near the base of the brain, but there appear
to be grave doubts on the point, and the idea that
" polarity" is the root cause seems to be well
founded. But, says Starkweather, " Though it may
or may not be due to ' decussation' of the nerve
fibres, I think that no one can doubt that this
' crossed action' does really exist in the human
frame, and to my mind it has a most significant
import for our subject, as it gives us what I
believe to be a glimpse of the great land of sexual
equilibrium. Friction evolves the two electricities,
and it is now known that the quantity of negative
electricity thus generated is always precisely equal
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
to the positive." Following on this comes the
definition of the law of sexual equilibrium as—
That ever-visihle principle of all orders of animal life
possessing a division of functions by which the one having the
preponderance of vital endowment turns the scale in casting
the sex and bestows upon the embryo the gender of the other
weaker parent; the offspring being thus endued approximately
with the force of the superior, an abiding equality of the sexes
is ensured to each species.
Transmission of Resemblances
The above theory is well supported by the
general transmission of resemblances, thus stated by
JDr. Hough (Starkweather, p. 191):—
" 1. Children resemble their mothers more than
their fathers.
" 2. Males resemble their mothers and females
their fathers.
" 3. When children do not resemble their
parents but their grandparents, males resemble
their maternal grandfather and females their paternal
grandmother." M. Giron gives the following
table:—
Fihst Generation
Gt. Grandfather. Gt. Grandmother. Gt. Grandfather Gt. Grandmother.
I                                                                    i
Second Generation
I                                                                     I
Grandmother. Grandfather. Grandmother.         Grandfather.
I                                                                     I                                                              I
Ihirji Generation
I                                                   I                                             I
Father.                  Mother.                    Father.                Mother.
I                                                !                                                  I                                              I
Daughter.                  Son.                      Daughter.                 Son.
"From this," says Starkweather, "'we gather that,
first, the daughter tends to resemble her father;
second, as he again resembles his mother, they must
both resemble his mother; third, that the daughter
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THE LAW OF SEX
chiefly resembles her father's mother's father—for
there is a blending of two natures in each genera-
tion. Even Aristotle noted the principle of oppo-
site resemblances."
A little thought on this subject will serve to
show most of us that while there must always be
a large middle class of nondescripts—males that
might have as well been females and vice versa
yet, on the average of results the doctrine of
recurrent opposites holds good, and it is by gaining
a firm grasp of it that we can approach the study of
breeding with some confidence.
Transmission of Resemblance in the Case
of Galopin
Take, for example, the long since exploded canard
that because Galopin showed the fire and excessive
vitality of The Flying Dutchman, he was therefore
not by Vedette but by Delight. To anyone con-
sidering the point in the light of the foregoing
observations and tables, the explanation is simplicity
itself. Galopin took after his dam, and she was
by The Flying Dutchman ; therefore he took after
that horse.
St. Simon and Angelica
Again, touching for a moment the successes of
St. Simon and his sister Angelica, the former has
only preserved the Galopin and Flying Dutchman
attributes through his fillies, his best colts being
produced by returning to him the blood of his dam
through Pocahontas, with Melbourne and other
heavy types. These colts, grand in themselves, are
not by any means of St. Simon type. Angelica,
on the other hand, threw good colts in Orme and
Ulue Green, quite true to the Galopin family, while
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
her daughters were of no account on the turf. Orme
having the Galopin blood of his dam returned to
him in desperate strength, sired a phenomenal colt
in Flying Fox.
Practical Good derived from Starkweather
Deeply interesting as the study of Starkweather's
book is, it would not be introduced here if there
were no practical suggestions which may help Stud
Masters to arrive at useful conclusions in the
management of their stallions and brood mares.
He deals mainly with the human race, and shows,
for instance, that while the families of clergymen
are about equal in regard to sex, those of hotel-
keepers show a large excess of sons, "the habits of
men of that class being such as to render them far
' inferior' to their wives."
More to the point, or to the present purpose, are
the statistics which he quotes from M. Charles
Giron, who took a flock of 270 ewes, and dividing
it equally, made experiments, with the following
results :—
Sex of Lambs.
Age of Ewes.
                       Males. Females.
2  years         . . 7          3
3 years         . .15 14
4  years         . . 33 14
A
Total . 55 31
5 years and older 25 24
Total . 80 55
Two strong rams, one 4 and the
other 5 years old, were with their
flock, and all were kept on a scanty
supply of food.
Total . 3fi 76
6 years and older 18
          8
Total . 53 84
There were two rams with this
flock — one 15 months and the
other nearly 2 years old. Rams and
ewes were all placed in the richest
of pasturage—were highly fed.
On this Starkweather observes: " Two young
rams that have gained their normal weight, and that
are in fact in the very prime of their existence and
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THE LAW OF SEX
sufficiently well nurtured to meet almost every
drain upon life's fund, are placed among a flock of
sheep dull and inactive from overfeeding and there-
fore 'inferior'; the young rams are not deteriorated
in this way, as their food is only sufficient for them,
owing to the heavy drain on their reproductive
system. Again, two rams past their prime are
turned in with sheep that have to work for a living,
that is, to wander about the pasture in search of
food, which elevates them by stimulating them to
activity. The rams have not only to search for
food, but also to meet the drafts inseparable from
the circumstances, and thus perhaps deteriorate
somewhat, while the ewes are kept in the most
favourable condition for ' superiority'; that is, with
the nervous system in the ascendant. The total
result is not different from what I should have
predicted."
Deduction from the above Tables
Now, without going so far as Starkweather does,
and holding that the sex of offspring can be abso-
lutely controlled, we may take it from the above
statistics, and from numberless other cases which
will occur to most of us, that the doctrine of
" superiority" has a very large influence over the
sex and character of any stock, and that a mare
which produces a succession of fillies or a horse who
gets an abnormal proportion of colts, should be
given a change in their method of life so as to bring
them to a more healthy condition. It is an
undoubted fact that old stallions sire better colts
than fillies, though in their youth the reverse was
the case, but their best colts do not take strongly
after them. On the contrary, when a son is very
like his sire in appearance, he is generally only the
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
simulacrum without the vital merits. It used to be
often remarked that none of Stockwell's best sons
were really like himself, and that if any Stockwell
colt did in fact closely resemble his sire in substance,
size and power, it was odds against his being a race-
horse.
Ormonde, Orme, Flying Fox, alike but
Different
It is not suggested that sons may not resemble
their sires in a general sense and be good horses, for
if the sire is the son of his dam in character, and the
dam's blood is returned to him in his mates, the
colts so bred are extremely likely to show similar
character, but in a modified degree. Thus Orme
is a-refined edition of Ormonde, and Flying Fox
an improved Orme, both son and grandson being
completely clear of the heavier attributes of the
grandsire.
Value of Law of Sex in Mating Stock
From a practical point of view we can use Stark-
weather's discovery as a key to the mating of blood
stock and also as showing us whether a colt or a
filly from a given alliance is likely to be the better.
Thus it can easily be demonstrated that an own
sister to Flying Fox is not in the least likely to be
of equal class on the turf, for in getting a filly out
of Vampire, Orme would not do so by virtue of his
dam on a Galopin mare, but for reasons extraneous
to that part of the combination. While, however,
it is highly probable that Flying Fox will commence
by siring great fillies, it is also to be expected that
his sister will be the dam of good colts. In this
connection a letter from Mr. Doyle to the Sportsman
may be usefully quoted :—
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THE LAW OF SEX
ST. SIMON'S STOCK
TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPORTSMAN"
Sir—It may be that, as your correspondent " Stud Book,"
thinks, I overstated my case when I said that St. Simon was in
his earlier days " reputed exclusively as a filly-getter." But, at
all events, there remains the fact that during his first four
years he got no colt of the class of Persimmon, St. Frusquin,
or even Matchbox, while since then he has got no filly of the
class of La Fleche, Signorina, or Memoir.
May I explain that either I made a clerical error or the
" Special Commissioner " misquoted me in coupling Macaroni
with St. Simon ? It should have been Sweetmeat.
I should also like to explain to " Stud Book " that I was
not considering the relative number of each sex together, but
simply their excellence.
The " Special Commissioner's" contention that an
" impressive" female is likely to produce a good male and
vice versa, is I think, strengthened by the undoubted fact that
inbred mares have been, on the whole, decidedly more success-
ful in producing colts than fillies. The terms " inbred " and
" crossbred," as applied to bloodstock, are, of course, relative.
But the following is, I think, a fairly exhaustive list of success-
ful animals whose dams have been bred from any of the
following unions :—Half-brother and sister, uncle and niece,
nephew and aunt, whole first cousins—by which I mean the
produce of own, not half, brother and sister. Colts : Flying
Childers, Highflyer, Diamond, Smolensko, Blacklock, Election,
Liverpool, Orlando, Sweetmeat, Weatherbit, Pyrrhus I., West
Australian, Andover, Gamester, Oxford, Kisber, Wenlock,
Hampton. Fillies: Matilda, Miami, Governess, Apology,
Lady Elizabeth.
Other good horses whose dams were exceptionally inbred
are Isonomy, Peter, Walton, Ditto, Melton, and Eager. In
the following cases we have close inbreeding a generation back
in the direct female line—Staveley, Chorister, Saunterer, Craig
Millar, Bendigo, Kilwarlin, and Kilcock. Anyone who turns
to the eleventh chapter of Mr. Bruce Lowe's book will find a
number of instances from the American Stud Book. It will
be seen that the good result of inbreeding is almost always
felt in the production of a colt.
Turning to the great mares of the Turf, we find that the
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
following were all the produce of distinctly crossbred mares :—
Crucifix, Alice Hawthorn, Virago, Blink Bonny, Brown
Duchess, Brigantine, and Plaisanterie. The only marked
instances that I can find on the other side are Queen of
Trumps and Fleur de Lis.
The only very distinguished horses that occur to me as
bred from decidedly crossbred mares are Surplice, Blair Athol,
Gladiateur, and Cremorne. But in the two last-named cases
there was close inbreeding further back, and in the other two
there was great individual merit in the dam.
I do not put forward this view dogmatically, but rather as
a suggestion for the consideration of those interested in such
matters. It seems to me that the evidence distinctly points
in one direction, and in so complex and uncertain a matter as
breeding one must not expect certainty. It is a good deal
for practical purposes if one can distinctly detect tendencies.
—Yours, etc.
                                                              Oxonian.
January 12, 1899.
Breeding Stock must be kept Healthy
Perhaps the most important point of all to be
derived from the statistics of the sheep is that
females for breeding purposes should not be overfed
and should have plenty of exercise. The male, on
the other hand, cannot be too well done, but to keep
him in proper health and vigour plenty of exercise
is also necessary. It would be absurd to attempt
to breed an excess of fillies by overfeeding the mares
and generally lowering their nervous activity. It
would be equally absurd to try for an excess of colts
by keeping a stallion like a stalled ox and so bring-
ing him to a condition of inferiority to his mates.
The aim should be to elevate both sides by treat-
ment that conduces to bodily health and well-being,
not to bring the superior down to the inferior, but
so far as possible to raise the latter. Then in mating
stock it is well to look out for a combination which
has elements in it suitable for a " nick " with either
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THE LAW OF SEX
the paternal or the maternal side of the sire, so that
whether the produce be colt or filly there may be a
good prospect before it.
Causes of Variety in Sex of Offspring of
same Parents
Before concluding this chapter it will be well to
give one more quotation from Starkweather on a
point which many people will think needs clearing
up. He says (page 224) : " The fact that in about
one-third of the families tabulated an equal pro-
portion of both sexes was found, may seem to
militate against my whole theory. The reader may
ask how do I reconcile my idea of 'superiority,'
which I have shown to be temperamental and so far
therefore permanent, with this evident alternation of
the sexes, and the concurrently necessary alternation
or change of the determining cause ?
"At first sight the doubt appears strange, but,
like many other difficulties, it will be found on
examination to be really a confirmation of the theory
it seems to oppose. Where the parents are in
temperament and character nearly equal, very slight
causes will suffice to turn the sexual scale at the
critical moment, and hence one will be likely to be
' superior' for the time being to the other, both being
affected by the same causes of change, whether sub-
jectively from change in themselves or their state
of health, or objectively from without in the form of
fatigue or other lowering causes. Those who have
followed me through the preceding chapters will
have no difficulty in understanding how slight causes
may suffice to determine the balance."
The above brief outlines of the law of sex may,
it is hoped, prove of some service to Stud Masters
as well as to students of pedigrees.
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CHAPTER XIII
DESCENT IN TAIL MALE
Caprice of fashion regulates tail male descent—Eclipse, Matchem,
Herod—Reasons for Herod's collapse in England—His far stronger
position on the Continent—Necessity for Herod revival—Sources
of supply—Upas, Hanover, Fisherman—None but great racehorses
wanted as stallions—Actual position of Herod in England—Small
chance of further developing Eclipse without Herod importations.
Reasons for Careful Attention to Descent
in Tail Male
While it is clear enough that pedigrees should be
studied to their roots in the female lines if we wish
to attain to any comprehensive knowledge of them,
it is not to be forgotten that certain lines live on
in male descent much more vigorously than others.
This may no doubt be ascribed to the potencylxTa
great ancestress, as, for instance, Pocahontas; but
the phenomenon is one which prudent Stud Masters
must never lose sight of. Especially should they
bear in mind that descent in tail male is largely
dependent on the caprice of fashion, and therefore
does not work out the same natural results as
descent through the female line. Nearly every
thoroughbred mare of fair size and quality is given
a chance at the stud, but of horses only a com-
paratively small number are patronised, and that
not through any process of natural selection, but
according to the oftentimes ill-grounded fancy of
224
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DESCENT IN TAIL MALE
breeders. Bearing this in mind we must not hastily
conclude when there is a deficiency of certain blood
in the male line that it is dying out for lack of
potency. It is well, in such cases, to look to other
parts of the world, and if this same blood is flourish-
ing there, then we may be sure that its decadence
here is due simply to our own neglect of it.
It has for a good many years past been an article
of faith with most breeders that the Eclipse line in
tail male is destined to wipe out both Herod and
Matchem, and that it is in fact useless to persist in
breeding from horses of either of the last-mentioned
lines. Certainly if we judge from English results
alone there would seem at the first glance to be
sound reason in this contention, and it may be at
once admitted that so far as Matchem goes statistics
are dead against him all the world over, but a careful
examination of the figures leads to a different con-
clusion in regard to Herod.
A very able French writer in Le Stud Hook de
la Race Pure
has compiled a most valuable table
bearing on this question. He takes successive
periods of twenty years from 1778 to 1897, and
notes the proportion of English Classic winners
(Derby, Oaks, St. Leger, 2000 Guineas and 1000
Guineas) descending respectively from Eclipse,
Herod, and Matchem, during each period. Here
is the table :—
Periods.
Family of Eclipse.
Family of Herod.
Family of Matchem.
From 1778 to 1797
„ 1798 to 1817
„ 1818 to 1837
„ 1838 to 1857
,, 1858 to 1877
„ 1878 to 1897
39-28 per cent.
4.5-69
46-
64-
72-28 „
88 11 ,,
48-21 per cent.
38-88 „
42-
21-
23-76 „
5-94 „
12'5 per cent.
1.5-27 „
12-
1.5-
3-96
.5-94 „
225
«
'\
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Great Success of Eclipse due to Sir
Hercules, Camel, and fashion
Now it will be seen from the above that Herod
at one time ranked actually higher than Eclipse, and
that although the latter went ahead at the beginning
of the nineteenth century, the difference between
them was inconsiderable up to 1837. Then com-
menced a great change which was undoubtedly
due to the successes of the Whalebone blood
through Camel and Sir Hercules, which, to all
intents and purposes means Touchstone and
Birdcatcher. Breeders of bloodstock are very
much like sheep in following one another almost
blindly into any fashion or craze of the moment,
and if that fashion leads on to successes, as in
the case of Touchstone and Birdcatcher blood,
they naturally hold on to it. But between
1858 and 1877 Herod was still far from swamped,
thanks to Buccaneer and Sweetmeat blood, which
was well to the fore at that period: indeed the
whole aspect of affairs would very likely have been
changed if Buccaneer had not been sent abroad,
which, following on the previous exportations of
Gladiator to France and Glencoe to America, de-
prived the family of its most substantial mainstays.
The Flying Dutchman, too, was secured for France,
and this again seriously depleted Herod.
Advent of Galopin and Swamping of Herod
The last period, from 1878 to 1897, takes in the
epoch of Galopin, who added yet another successful
and fashionable branch to the Eclipse family, and
this success was in no sense gained at the expense of
Touchstone or Birdcatcher, both of which lines con-
226
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DESCENT IN TAIL MALE
tinued as thriving as ever, if not more so. Under
the circumstances, as shown in the foregoing table,
Herod dropped right out of the running, and fell
back into the company of Matchem, while Eclipse
began to bid fair to monopolise the tail male
ancestry of all our blood stock. That this was due
almost entirely to the caprice of breeders in this
country there can be little doubt, and it also
appears certain that our breed of horses at large will
deteriorate if we continue in this way to restrict the
sources of supply.
Collapse of Herod due to Caprice or Fashion.
His Position in France, Germany, and
Austria.
It may be admitted that Eclipse had in him the
elements of sire potency to a greater degree than
Herod, but the records of other countries prove
that Herod, granted a fair chance, makes an
excellent show, even during this very period when
he has collapsed so utterly in England.
The winners of the principal races in France from
1878 to 1897 work out inthe following proportions:—
Descendants of Eclipse . . .58 per cent.
Herod . . . 38 „
            Matchem. . . 4 „
In Germany and Austria the record is more
remarkable, for, taking the winners of German and
Austrian Derbys from 1878 to 1897, we find Herod
to be absolutely in the ascendant thus :—
Descendants of Eclipse .        .    4634 per cent.
„ Herod . .        .    5122 „
„ Matchem .        .      243 „
227
-.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Herod Male Line should be Revived in
England
Thus, while it is evident that Matchem in the
male line is a failure all the world over, the cause
of Herod is by no means a lost one, and prudent
breeders will do well to seriously consider the
desirability of bringing back to this country some
of the best representatives of this blood so as to give
fresh vitality, soundness, and constitution to our
home-bred stock.
Of the five sires that have made the greatest
mark in the French Stud Hook, viz., Vermouth,
Dollar, Fitz-Gladiator, Plutus, and Monarque, the
first three are descendants of Herod, and there is
Le Sancy (grandson of Thormanby) making a great
success. The German and Austrian results are
due mainly to Buccaneer and his sons—especially
Kisber—and the imported French stallions,
Chamant and Verneuil, both of whom were de-
scendants of Herod. Good horses of any of these
lines would be of great service in England, but, as
previously stated, it might and probably would be
better still to go further afield and bring back the
Herod line from Australia and America through the
Fisherman and Glencoe branches respectively.
That this will be done in ordinary course, so far as
Glencoe 1 is concerned, is quite probable, for, among
the various American owners racing in England,
some one is likely to find a son of Hanover good
enough to remain here at the stud, but we shall not
get a horse of the Fisherman line without going to
Australia for him. It is to be hoped that some
breeder will be sufficiently far-seeing to do this.
In such matters personal profit combines with public
1 Handbaix, a first-rate son of Hanover, has been imported to Eng-
land since the above was written.
228
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DESCENT IN TAIL MALE
benefit. No one is expected to import stallions
from purely philanthropic motives, and it is no
reproach whatever to the importer that he had the
stud fees in view when he brought such and such
a horse to this country. Of course he had, and the
advantage conferred by him on our breeders may
be roughly measured by the freedom with which
those stud fees are paid.
None but First-Class Horses wanted. They
must have stood the racecourse test
In this connection it is taken for granted that the
first care is to secure a horse of the highest class,
not to secure a " flatcatcher" at a low price and
exploit him among a somewhat gullible public.
Any such attempt as this may succeed for a season
or two, but the quality of the horse is bound to be
discovered before long, and then the owner finds
out that not only is his temporary success not
maintained, but that he has forfeited the confidence
of those who, if fairly treated, would have been con-
stant clients. Of all mistakes in breeding there is
none greater than to endeavour to convert a mod-
erate racehorse into a fashionable stallion. In one
or two exceptional cases, such as that of Wisdom,
it has been done, but in ninety-nine cases out of a
hundred the result is and will always be utter failure.
The racecourse is the crucible through which the
pure metal is disclosed, and great winners must
always be preferred as stallions to those who have
not passed the test. Many a fine-looking, well-bred
stallion is offered at a tempting fee, and it is said
that he never ran " owing to an accident in training."
This usually means that he was tried and found
wanting, or that his legs were not good enough to
229
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
stand a preparation. Occasionally the excuse is a
really genuine one, as, for instance, in the case of
Young Melbourne or St Simon-mimi, but the safe
rule is to follow great winners as sires and avoid
others.
Herod and Matchem as Makers oe Brood
Mares
It is pretty generally believed in this country
that although Herod and Matchem in the male line
are fading away, their value in the making of brood
mares is maintained, but this is true only in a limited
degree, for the French authority already referred to
gives us the statistics of English Classic winners from
1878 to 1897, so far as their dams are concerned, and
finds the following proportion in the male descent
of those dams :—
Descendants in the male line from Eclipse 71 per cent.
Herod 19
                                           Matchem 10 „
Thus, although Eclipse is not so completely " out
by himself" as in the tables of actual tail male
descent of the winners themselves, it is clear that
Herod and Matchem are in a by no means flourish-
ing condition, and this although Melbourne and
Young Melbourne mares were in their day so good,
while as for Herod it is impossible to dispute his
value in connection with brood mare descent when
we think of daughters of Thormanby, Glencoe, The
Flying Dutchman, Gladiator, Macaroni, etc., such,
for example, as Rouge Rose, Violet, Feronia,
Sunshine, and Lady Morgan, all by Thormanby;
Flying Duchess, Pocahontas, Queen Mary, Miss
Gladiator, Lily Agnes, and many others that could
be mentioned.
230
-ocr page 258-
DESCENT IN TAIL MALE
What Herod Representatives Remain in
England, and Whence can they be
Reinforced ?
Under all the circumstances it becomes import-
ant to ascertain what lines of Herod blood really
remain in England, and how they are represented.
A brief enquiry will show that they are lamentably
few and feeble. The Woodpecker branch through
Thormanby seems to have died out, though in
France, Le Sancy, grandson of Thormanby, com-
mands a 500-guineas fee. Nor does Woodpecker
live on here through Selim, though in America the
Glencoe line, as represented by the stock of Hanover,
has for five seasons past been at the top of the
tree, while in France Bay Middleton's descendants
through The Flying Dutchman are many and good,
too many to be given in any detail here, though the
great stallion Upas, by Dollar, may be mentioned
specially as his reputation is world-wide, and his
sons Omnium II. and Elf II. have given us in
England a taste of their quality. Perhaps the most
promising young sire of the Dutchman family is
Callistrate, whose yearlings made large prices at
Deauville this year (1900). There are very many
other horses, however, of this blood doing well in
France.
Highflyer Branch through Partisan
Nearly Extinct in England
The Highflyer branch of Herod is not quite
extinct here, but very nearly so, whereas in France,
Austria, and Germany it abounds. In England
several of Partisan's best sons have died out,
Glaucus, for instance, who is nevertheless very
strong in France through the descendants of
231
-ocr page 259-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Vermont. Glaucus himself was a first-rate horse,
winner of the Ascot Cup, and Vermont beat Blair
Athol for the Grand Prix, while his son, Boiard,
defeated an extraordinarily good field for the Ascot
Cup. Perplexe, however, another son of Vermont,
proved somewhat the better stud horse.
Time was when Partisan's son, Venison, was
much esteemed as a stud horse, and deservedly so,
for he sired such as Alarm, Joe Miller, and Kingston,
but the line appears to have collapsed throughout
Europe, though it is not without representatives in
Australia—of no great account however. This is
the more remarkable when we call to mind the
efforts which the late Mr. Blenkiron made to develop
Kingston into a stud success. Not satisfied with
the comparative failure of Kingston, he followed on
by persistently using that horse's son, King John,
but all to no purpose. Ely, " the beautiful,'' failed
to perpetuate the Kingston line, which, with the rest
of the Venisons, quickly went under. In this case
there is no reason for regret, for the failure was
certainly not due to lack of opportunity, but must
have come about from some natural deficiency.
The only Partisan blood which still maintains a
precarious existence in England is that of Gladiator,
and it is well to remember that the late Lord
Falmouth set immense store by Partisan. It just
manages to survive among us through one or two
descendants of Parmesan of whom Morglay, Primrose
League, Bosphorus, and Favonian may be named,
with Royal Flush still to come on, while through
Sweetmeat's other better known son, Macaroni,
we get Macheath,1 Macmahon, Craig Royston, and
Marioni,—the last named a really beautiful horse
but used as a hunter sire. There may be one or
two grandsons of Carnival remaining, such as
1 Recently dead.
232
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DESCENT IN TAIL MALE
Exning and Scene Shifter, but it is clear that all
the above-named form but a weakly support for the
once great house of Gladiator, and that so far as
they are concerned the line is not likely to live for
more than another generation or two.
Gladiator Line Strong in France
In France, however, and in Germany and
Austria-Hungary, Gladiator lives on in proper
houses. His son, Fitz-Gladiator, established the
line in tremendous strength through his sons
Compiegne (sire of Mortemer), Orphelin and Vertu-
gadin, and it is through one of these sources that
our deficiencies in England should be made good.
It is not quite correct, by the way, to say that
the Gladiator blood in England exists only through
the channels mentioned above. There is just one
more, that of Ventre St. Gris, whose grandson
Poulet has from time to time sired winners in
England, including an Oaks heroine, but no son of
his is likely to continue the male line successfully.
The Sir Paul Branch oe Highflyer through
Wild Dayiiell
Thus far we have been dealing exclusively with
the various branches of the Walton division of
Highflyer. The Sir Paul division now claims
attention, and it is only through Wild Dayrell that
it is represented in any part of the world. The
exportation of Buccaneer deprived us of the main
channel through which this blood has succeeded,
but we retain it to a certain extent through See-
Saw's sons, Despair, Ocean Wave, and E)og Rose.
Then The Rake (by Wild Dayrell) comes down to
us through Pepper and Salt and Grey Leg. Wild
233
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Oats left a still surviving son in Waterford, but it
is only through Gozo (in Australia) that there can
be any chance of the Wild Oats line living. Indeed
the whole Wild Dayrell family in England is in a
shaky condition, and unless Grey Leg, thanks to his
exceptional chances at the Eaton Stud, has sired a
colt good enough to make a high-class stallion, we
are not likely to see many descendants of Wild
Dayrell here after another generation or two, unless
some are brought back to fill up the depleted ranks.
There are plenty of good sires in France through
Bruce and Little Duck (sons of See-Saw); but
better still in Austria-Hungary, through Buccaneer's
sons, Waisenknabe (sire of Stronzian), Kisber (sire
of Hardenberg, Sperber Trollhetta, etc.),—by the
way we have a Kisber horse, Grafton, in England,—
Talpra Magyar (son of the peerless Kincsem),
Kisberocscse (sire of Buzgo) Budagyongye, Fenek,
Elemer, Vederemo, and others. It is clear then
that on the Continent this line of blood is in a much
more flourishing condition than in England, and
such a horse as Talpra Magyar would probably do
great good were his services available here. Kisber,
curiously enough, did not succeed very well in
England, but carried all before him when he returned
to the Continent, and this is but one of a large
number of similar cases in which change of air and
surroundings has wrought marvellous improvement
in horses.
Matchem Hakdlv AVokth Attention
It is hardly necessary to deal here with Matchem,
who seems to be failing all over the world, and but
for Solon would have even now been practically
extinct in England, but it may be noted that the
West Australian line has attained to some strength
234
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DESCENT IN TAIL MALE
in France, mainly through the sons and grandsons of
Bagdad and Ruy Bias. There are also in existence
some descendants of Smolensko through the line of
Nutwith, but these appear to he of small account.
At the Antipodes Australian Peer made something
of a success and imported Australian occurs in many
American pedigrees.
Revival of Certain Eclipse Lines
As for the Eclipse family it should be added here
that some of its branches might be revived with
advantage. This has already been done for the
Musket branch by bringing Trenton, Carbine, and
Carnage from Australia, and for The Colonel line of
Whisker by the importation of Patron, Abercorn,
and Merman. We are, however, very short of
Orlando blood, of which Victor Wild is one of our
few representatives ; but in France, mainly through
Flageolet and other sons of Plutus, there is enough
of the sort and to spare. In France, too, Chattan-
ooga (son of Orlando) established a pretty strong
line mainly through Clover, whose best son Arreau
should continue it.
Blair Athol Wanted
We have an excess of Stockwell through Don-
caster, but far too little through Blair Athol, whose
great son Prince Charlie is powerfully represented
both in America and Australia—in the former
country by Wagner (sire of the famous mare Imp),
Haydn Edwards, Pirate of Penzance, Prince
Rudolph and Salvator; in the latter by Lochiel—
head of the list of winning stallions for seasons
1899-1900—and Clan Stuart (sire of Georgic). In
Australia, too, St. Albans, another of Blair Athol's
sons, was very successful, mainly through Malua.
235
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Small Chance of Further Developing
Eclipse without Revival of Herod
The Orville family has all but died out in all
countries, more is the pity ! and there is but little
left us of the once all-conquering Weatherbit
line. Lanercost also has ceased, unless some son
of Carnelion should come to the rescue, which is
improbable. In short, there are but few remaining
chances of developing Eclipse, and we must look to
some descendants of Herod, and that quickly, to
prevent the family from degenerating.
236
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CHAPTER XIV
AUSTRALASIAN BLOOD-STOCK
" Walers " desirable in England—Messrs. Wealherby and their Stud
Hook
—Advantage of change in Animal life—Revival of lines
extinct in England—How to mate Trenton—Comparison with
Carbine and Carnage—Herod line deficient in England—Wanted
a descendant of Fisherman—Other successful Australasian lines—
No Hermit among them—Fisherman most needed here—Professor
Ewart's views.
Soundness and Stamina of Australasian
Horses
There have been and will always be many contro-
versies as to the exact racing merit of the Austral-
asian racehorse compared with those bred in England,
but it is almost beyond dispute that the " Waler "
is the hardier animal, be the reason what it may.
Their legs and feet are on the average a great deal
better than what we find in England ; they have,
as a rule, more power and bone; and wind in-
firmities are almost unknown among them, More-
over, thanks to the system of racing which still
prevails there, they can mostly stay over compara-
tively long courses. It seems to be obvious then,
that to refresh our own native stock we should turn
to the Antipodes, more especially as certain lines of
blood have flourished there which have died out in
England.
237
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Messes. Weatherby and the Stud Book.
Unfair Treatment of Australasian
Horses as compared with Americans.
It cannot too clearly be understood, ill this con-
nection, that the Australasian thoroughbred is true
throughout to our own Stud Book, while the
American so-called thoroughbred is not. There is
no wish to say one word against the American horse ;
only it should be realised that he is at various points
outside our Stud Book altogether, though Messrs.
Weatherby in their wisdom, or rather, to put it
more clearly, their unbridled licence, have thought
fit to welcome any outbred American to the hospi-
tality of their Stud Book, while excluding Aus-
tralians such as the great racehorse Newhaven, in
whom they cannot find the slightest flaw. This sort
of thing will go on no doubt until the Jockey Club
Stewards rise to a sense of their duty and take the
matter into their own hands. The serious point
is not merely that Messrs. Weatherby favour the
United States as against our own Colonies, but that
the horses in the American Stud Book can in the
vast majority of cases be traced to sources extraneous
to our own, while in the Australian book there is
nothing that can be proved outside the English Stud
Book.
In the early days of the colony mistakes and
omissions in returns were no doubt made, and there
were not a few instances of blood-stock being carried
off by bushrangers who, of course, were not likely
to make returns, but that these animals were really
blood-stock is certain, however much they may have
been mixed up, and Mr. Yuille of the Australian
Stud Book has written to the effect that although
it is impossible to accurately trace Newhaven
beyond a certain point, there is not the slightest
doubt he is a thoroughbred horse.
238
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AUSTRALASIAN BLOOD-STOCK
However, in selecting stallions from Australia to
stand in England any one well advised must of
course steer clear of all uncertainties so long as
Messrs. Weatherby control the Stud Book and the
Jockey Club. It is a Quixotic enterprise to run a
Newhaven or a Clorane at the stud here, for Messrs.
Weatherby will not register the produce, though
they have some twenty mares by the American-
bred Foxhall in the eighteenth volume of the Stud
Hook,
and Foxhall had no fewer than three stains in
his pedigree; that is to say, three lines that you could
not only not find in the English Stud Book, but
could prove by the American Stud Hook to be
outside it.
Necessity of Change in Animal and
Vegetable Life
It has long been admitted that change benefits all
animal and vegetable life, and the idea was mooted
a few years ago that the British thoroughbred, which
hitherto has been supplying the whole civilised
world with exports which have been the making of
cavalry remounts, and all active hardy horses as well
as those intended for the racecourse, needed freshen-
ing up, having been drawn on too much and too long
without a single drop of new vigorous blood being
brought back to the old stock.
Blood Stock at the Antipodes Absolutely
Puke, representing Lines Extinct in
England.
What could be better than to resort to the
absolutely pure stock bred at the Antipodes ? This
would be like bringing seeds from another part of
the country to plant in your land, and not only that,
but many of the best lines in our Stud Book are
239
*
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
much more strongly represented in Australia than
here. We have seen in the pedigrees of Patron and
Merman how those horses bring back to us by far
the best line of Whisker, through The Colonel,
winner of the St. Leger in 1828 ; and Abercorn (son
of Chester) also represents the same male line.
That being so, we may fairly hope to see a revival
of this excellent blood.
Then there is the Fisherman family, of which we
have at present no direct descendant, but several of
the Australian importations have it on the dam's
side. Thus Trenton gets one strong dash of it, and his
son, Aurum, two. Patron also has two stout lines
of Fisherman on the dam's side and Abercorn one.
Musket made a vast success in Australia—or
rather to be precise, in New Zealand; but it is a
mistake to believe that Musket blood is really at
the root of Australian successes. Trenton is by
Musket, yet he is far more of the type of his maternal
grandsire Goldsbrough and his dam. Frailty was
of quite an old colonial breed—indeed you have to
go back six removes before arriving at the imported
mare. Frailty was the most famous mare that has
ever existed in Australasia. Trenton was her first
foal and her best, but practically all the rest of the
stock has earned distinction more or less, and her
sons, Zalinski—sire of Clean Sweep, winner of the
Melbourne Cup, 1900—Niagara, Havoc, and Cuiras-
sier, are all good stud horses outside Trenton, while
her daughter Cissy is already a very successful brood
mare.
How to Mate a Horse like Trenton
In utilising a robust colonial-raised family like
this for mating with English stock, it is interesting
to observe Iioav usefully Bruce Lowe's lead may be
240
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AUSTRALASIAN BLOOD-STOCK
followed. A glance at Trenton's pedigree will show
that he is the very horse for mares with an excess
of running blood, and those who would produce soft
stock to the regulation English sire would do far
otherwise when mated with Trenton. Especially
does it seem desirable in selecting his mares to find
one with a Fisherman touch in it, but that is not
easily done in England, except with mares by Brag.
Here are two instructive pedigrees of Trenton's best
son and daughter, up to date :—
Toxo-          ("Longbow 21
flthuriel.2
phUite*-!JB:^9>.
\Miss Bowe
is-
(B. 1855)
j Legerdemain         f Pantaloon 17
I. (B. 1846)           \ Decoy
Half-sister (West Australian 7 (Melbourne /
£m
\Mowerina
/Camel 24
(Dau. of Brutandorf
f Kelpie / (imp.)
\ Gaslight (imp.)
/Fisherman (imp.) 11
(Juliet (imp.)
fpyrrhua 1.3
I Colocynth
/Sir Hercules 3
(Flora M'lvor
( Heron 19
to Gen. | (B. 1850)
Peel's dam I Brown Bess
<i
(B. 1857)
Golds-
         I"
(Br. 1844)
Fireworks 10
broueli 13-1 „>'.         '
(B- 1S870) 1^1864)
New Warrior
!>S
CO
i-H
P5
5.
a
m
♦«
Flora               24 (imp.)
M'lvor - (B. 1851)
(Br. 1866) I. O.
(B. 1856)
ft* -K           f FlSHEKMAN 11
3 JjimP-) (Ch.l855)\Mainbrace
,W,
Jwllgi?fioi1 Rose de Florence (The Flying Dutchman 3
(.fir. iBbo) | (imp_j (B_ 1866jyBoarding-School Miss
rThe Premier 4 /Tory Boy 4
The Fawn J (imp.) (B. 1843) (Baroness
(B. 1865) 1 Melesina (imp.) /Harkaway 2
s .
\ (B. 1849)
(Poteen
/Touchstone ±i
(Beeswing
/Melbourne /
(Volley
/The Baron 24
( Pocahontas
/Don John 2
(Industry
Lord
(Newminster 8
Tneslavf
JbS1852)
(Stockwell 3
Sandal
        | (Ch. 1849)
(Br. 1861)1 Lady Evelyn
{ (B. 1846)
241
R
-ocr page 269-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
("Longbow 21
I (B. 1849)
] Legerdemain
I (B. 1846)
/'West Australian
I (B. 1850)
1 Brown Bess
l (Br. 1844)
fFireworks 10
I (B. 1864)
1 Sylvia
{ (B. 1864)
New Warrior 24
(imp.)
(B. 1851)
I. 0.
(Tthuriel 2
(Miss Bowe
/Pantaloon 17
\ Decoy
f Melbourne /
\ Mowerina
/Camel 24
/Dau. of Brutandorf
I Kelpie / (imp.)
/Gaslight (imp.)
/Fishehman 11 (imp.)
(Juliet (imp.)
J Pyrrhus the First 3
I Colocynth
/Sir Hercules 3
/Flora M'lvor
f Bustard 35
/Dau. of Orville
/Sheet Anchor 12
/Dau. of Bay Middleton
f Bay Middleton /
/ Barbelle
J Plenipotentiary 6
I Marpessa
/Orlando 13
(Dau. of Bay Middleton
/Touchstone 14
(Dau. of Lanercost
/Venison 11
(Southdown
I Clarion 6
(Rebekah
Toxo-
philite 3
(B. 1855)
au. of
(B. 1857)
2-
fGolds-
brough
13
(B. 1870)
Flora
M'lvor
(Br. 1866)
i ~
irf?
"B5
QUIVER
(-Fisher-
882)
M
r o £2
O <D
C CO <
man
11 (imp.)
(Br. 1853)
Rose de
32
*-
Marib
(Br!
Florence
(imp.)
i (B. 1855)
11
a*
Orest 7
Tremi
on (im
1874)'
(B. 1857)
ir
Emotion
. (B. 1856)
<!
(B. 1856)
/"Heron 19 I
I (Br. 1833)
j Mainbrace
[ (Br. 1844)
(Flying Dutchman
(Br. 1834) 3
Boarding-School
Miss
(B. 1841)
("Orestes 21
I (B. 1850)
\ Lady Louisa
{ (B. 1850)
("Alarm 19
| (B. 1842)
\ Dinah
l (Ch. 1844)
Both the above are very useful examples of
how to mate Trenton. Aurum and Quiver were
phenomenal performers. They were of No. 2 and
No. / families respectively, and each takes in the
Fisherman blood on the dam's side. Quiver's dam
does not count up quite so many running and sire
figures as Aurum's, but it will not escape observation
that in the limited number of quarterings given she
has two crosses of No. 19 blood, one of No. 13
through Orlando, and two of No. 6.
Now let us turn to another illustration of the use
of the figure guide. When the yearling colt by
Trenton out of Golden Agnes was bought at
Don caster for over 1000 guineas, Mr. Peard, the
242
-ocr page 270-
AUSTRALASIAN BLOOD-STOCK
well-known veterinary surgeon, said that on the
figures he could not be a racehorse, though he might
win a Grand National. Here is the pedigree :—
/Ithuriel 2
\Miss Bowe
/Pantaloon 17
^ Decoy
7 (Melbourne /
\ Mowerina
/Camel 24
\ Dau. of Brutandorf
/Kelpie / (imp.)
/Gaslight (imp.)
f Fisherman 11 (imp.)
\Juliet (imp.)
j Pyrrhus the First 3
I Colocynth
/ Sir Hercules 3
/Flora M'lvor
/The Baron 24
\ Pocahontas
/Teddington 2
\
Dau. of Ratan
/Windhound 3
\ Alice Hawthorn
/Redshank 15
/Delhi
/Gladiator 22
\_ Lolly pop
f Pantaloon 17
\ Banter
/Sir Hercules 2
\Guiccioli
/Clarion 6
/Annette
{Longbow 21
(B. 1849)
Legerdemain
(B.1846)
{West Australian
(B. 1850)
Brown Bess
(Br. 1844)
(■Fireworks 10
I (B. 1864)
T Sylvia
{ (B. 1864)
'New Warrior 24
(imp.)
(B. 1851)
I. 0.
(B. 1856)
("Stockwell 3
(Ch. 1849)
Marigold
(Ch. 1860)
Thormanby 4
(Ch. 1857)
~) Ellen Home
I (Ch. 1844)
{Sweetmeat 21
(Br. 1842)
Jocose
(B. 1843)
{Birdcatcher 11
(Ch. 1833)
Agnes
(Br. 1844)
Toxo-
philite 3
(B. 1855)
Dau. of
(B. 1857)
Golds-
brough 13
(B. 1870)
Flora
M'lvor
(Br. 1866;
Doncaster
5
(Ch. 1870)
Rouge Rose
(Ch. 1865)
Macaroni
14
(B. 1860)
Miss Agnes
(Br. 1850)
%
pa
1A v
i?fe
'pa
-p
r t- t*.
QO
O oo
T3 ,<
' S*
g jo
& 4
pa 2.
Sfl
5 ,
So fe
a
<j -S
V O
_ ,S2
a t~
,2 "~* -I
3 CO
•a
TJ ■
o
S »Q
O
.'kT'O
^■*
It will be seen from the above pedigree that the
now three-year-old gelding not only comes of the
No. 16 family but counts only 17 running or sire
figures in the 32 quarterings. He is good to look
at and a fine mover ; it was even thought he was a
possible Derby horse, but when fairly stretched he
is quite deficient in dash and vitality.
On the other hand, and in the light of the figures,
Polly Eccles was bought as a suitable mate for
Trenton. Here is the pedigree of the produce, a
vastly better colt than anything the mare had bred
243
-ocr page 271-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
before. It will be noted that the mare is of No. /
family and is also very full of that blood at other
points:—
/Ithuriel 2
\Miss Bo we
/Pantaloon 17
( Decoy
7 (Melbourne /
\Mowerina
/ Camel 24
(Dau. of Brutandorf
(Kelpie / (imp.)
\Gaslight (imp.)
/Fisherman 11 (imp.)
\Juliet (imp.)
J Pyrrhus the First 3
1 Colocynth
(Sir Hercules 3
\Flora M'lvor
/Birdcatcher 11
\ Honey Dear
fFlatcatcher 3
\ Silence
/Sir Hercules 2
\ Yard Arm
/Surplice 2
\ Bridget
/The Baron 24
\ Pocahontas
/Melbourne /              ,
\ Queen Mary
(Orlando 13
\ Stamp
{Hesperus 6
Mangosteen by Emilius 28
Toxo
{ Longbow 21
-
(B. 1849)
Legerdemain
(West Australian
(B. 1850)
Brown Bess
(Br. 1844)
-
fGolds-
b rough 13
| (B. 1870)
("Fireworks 10
I (B. 1864)
1 Sylvia
£§
{ (B. 1864)
{New Warrior 24
(imp.)
(B. 1851)
I. O.
(B. 1856)
/"Oxford 12
Sterling 12 | (Ch. 1857)
5-
o
CO
CC CO
OJ r-f
(B.
| Whisper
I (B. 1857)
/"Lifeboat /
Sea Gull
(Bl.
Blair
Athol 10 ■
(Ch. 1861)
Miss
Roland
(B. 1863)
(Br. 1855)
Wild Cherry
I (Bl. 1853)
/"Stockwell 3
| (Ch. 1849)
I Blink Bonny
[ (B. 1854)
["Fitz Roland /
(Ch. 1855)
Miss Bowzer
A
S3
-as i>
>Q-
, (B. 1856)
1900
Winner of Molyneux Stakes, Liverpool
Winner of Sandown Park Produce Stakes, Sand own
. £463
. £2540
£3003
The above pedigrees form but a few object-
lessons in the mating of Trenton, who brings back
to this country what may almost be described as a
primeval pedigree. It was three years before the
late Duke of Westminster could be induced to
realise the value of the blood, but when he did so
he sent Sandiway, half sister to Carbine's dam, to
244
-ocr page 272-
AUSTRALASIAN BLOOD-STOCK
the son of Musket, with the result that the now
yearling filly thus bred was sold for 5500 guineas,
and bids fair in any event to make an invaluable
brood mare. Similarly, other breeders did not take
to Trenton at first, but they came with a rush in
his third English year and have followed him up
ever since. It is a curious fact that in England it
always takes about three years to make people
appreciate anything new.
Carbine, Carnage, and Trenton compared
The position of such a horse as Carbine has been
somewhat more dubious, for, being by an imported
horse out of an imported mare he hardly brings back
to this country the same revivifying change as does
Trenton. Nevertheless signs are not wanting that
Carbine is going to make a Stud success ; only his
stock require plenty of time. Carnage, three parts
brother to Carbine, and a truer-shaped horse, has
been bought by that excellent judge Count Lehn-
dorff for the Imperial Stud, Graditz, where no
doubt he will do good service, but Carnage has two
Stockwell crosses and is himself a chestnut. Carbine,
though missing one of the Stockwell crosses, and
being himself a bay, sires not a few chestnut colts
and fillies. Trenton, on the other hand, has never
sired a chestnut and never will. These peculiarities
as to colour are difficult to account for, but the
sires which are true to their male line in such a
matter are generally the best. Thus we get a
sequence through Vedette, Galopin, and St. Simon,
siring no chestnuts, while Galopin horses which do
sire chestnuts, for instance Galliard and Donovan,
are not a patch on St. Simon.
Therevival of British blood-stock by importations
245
-:f
-ocr page 273-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
from Australasia is as yet only in its infancy, but
already the success of the scheme is beyond question,
and several of the best known breeders, such as
Mr. James E. Piatt, have been importing some of
the best Australian mares, as well as using the
Australasian horses. That they will do thoroughly
well when mated with sires of St. Simon or Bend Or
descent, has been made clear by the victories of the
stock of the few St. Simon horses in Australia.
Male Line of Heeod Deficient in this
Country. Wanted Descendants of
Fisherman.
But we have by no means drawn sufficiently on
the Antipodes to make good our deficiencies. It
has been noticed over and over again that in this
country we are allowing the Herod line to die right
out, and yet it is very strong in other parts of the
world. Very probably our own blood-stock is being
deteriorated in soundness, stamina, and courage by
continuous inbreeding to Whalebone and other
members of the Eclipse line. Well then, what
better representative of Herod ever lived than rare
old Fisherman ? His sons bred in Australia obtained
very great fame, and whether through Maribyrnong
or Robinson Crusoe, or the brood mare Sylvia, you
will always find Fisherman well to the fore in
Australian pedigrees, and if he comes in twice, so
much the better. Now we unquestionably are
suffering for the dearth of Herod blood in England,
and it would be a fine move to bring back here one
or two good stallions of direct Fisherman descent.
There is positively only one horse in England of
this line, and that is Auriferous, a half-brother to
Aurum, by Robinson Crusoe out of Aura by
246
-ocr page 274-
AUSTRALASIAN BLOOD-STOCK
Richmond (son of Maribyrnong), thus combining
the two best Fisherman lines. Auriferous, who
accomplished a smart performance in winning the
Williamstown Cup before coming to this country,
has for some reason, presumably an accident, been
taken out of training ; but he is an ideally bred one
to give us back the stout Fisherman blood, and his
dam is the best brood mare in Australia, so that we
ought to hear of his going to the Stud. At present
his whereabouts is unknown. However, though
Auriferous is the only direct descendant of Fisher-
man in England, there are plenty more of them in
Australia, including such a horse as The Officer who
twice beat Newhaven in their three-year-old career.
The Officer's dam is by Gang Forward, who
strangely enough never made any headway to speak
of in Australia, though he would surely have been a
fashionable sire in England.
It would be a mistake to bring home to England
certain lines which were " soft" here before exporta-
tion, such as Gozo (son of Wild Oats). This blood
may ultimately do permanent good in Australia in
the way of sharpening up and "leavening" the
whole; but we have plenty of it, and what we
want from them is their own special brand of
stay-for-ever, never-say-die stock, as exemplified
by Merman through seven seasons on the turf.
That is what we want from our Australasian friends,
and they have plenty of the right type of horses,
though not many of the Merman sort.
Other Successful Lines in Australasia.
No Hermit among them
Doncaster blood has succeeded very well in New
Zealand through St. Leger, and on the whole things
247
"f
-ocr page 275-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
are looking well; a great cause of success being
perhaps that there is little or no Hermit blood in
the Colonies. It can hardly be disputed that
Hermit's ascendancy as a stud horse in this country
did immense damage to the breed at large. Hermit
mares may be all right when mated with the most
robust stayers it is possible to find ; but if you want
really sound constitutions the less Hermit the
better.
In Australia and New Zealand I think there is
not one single Hermit horse at the stud, and it is all
for the best. It would be possible to bring back
from Australia descendants of Tim Whiffler, but it
may be doubted whether that horse, good as he was
in himself, was sufficiently truly made for a desirable
stallion. On the other hand, the Pantaloon blood,
through Traducer, can still be found, and its value
does not admit of question, but the best representa-
tive of it, Sir Modred, though bred in New Zealand,
is located in America. Stockwell blood, which in
this country has gravitated too much into the single
channel of Honcaster, is thriving in Australia
through the Blair Athol line as represented by
Lochiel, Clan Stuart, and Malua. It also lives on
there through The Marquis branch, Newminster, son
of that horse, being the sire of, among others,
Newhaven, who is at the stud in England and likely
to do well if Messrs. Weatherby, by refusing to
admit him to their Stud Book, have not prejudiced
breeders against him. On the whole, however, it
may be concluded that the next importation from
Australia to this country had better be a horse
or horses of the Herod line, a descendant of
Fisherman for choice. Such a horse, if of good
class individually, could hardly fail to make a
success with the speedy but delicate mares which
we have here in abundance.
248
-ocr page 276-
AUSTRALASIAN BLOOD-STOCK
Professor Ewart's Views on the Use of
Australasian Stallions
Before closing this chapter it will be well to
quote from two letters obligingly written to the
author of this by Professor Ewart, whose authority
on all that concerns breeding is unsurpassed and
almost unrivalled, though he does not claim to
have any special knowledge of blood-stock. It
will be seen that the Professor is watching with
keen interest the experiment of using imported
Australasian stallions. His reference to eighty years
in the first letter is on the subject of Trenton, who,
on the dam's side, traces back through six genera-
tions of colonial-bred stock before reaching the
imported tap-root:—
Pknycuik, February .5, 1899.
Dear Sir—I am very much interested in the experiment
with Australian horses. I hope, if it proves a success, you
will by and by tell me. Even eighty years is a short time
in the history of a race or breed, but it may count for much.
Theoretically, having the pure English blood is not so im-
portant. Sentimentally, it probably is. In intercrossing I
imagine the maximum results will not be obtained during the
first generation. Unless Trenton and Patron are prepotent,
their offspring are likely to take as much after the dams as
the sires, and not to vary greatly either way. If, however,
the sons and daughters of—say Patron—are interbred with
their half sisters and brothers, something new may be expected.
For example, I crossed white and wild rabbits, and got as
offspring rabbits that are often mistaken for wild. When
the half breeds are bred with each other I get all colours—
black, white, brown, yellow, and yellow and white—which
means variation is at work, and may produce something
better than either parents or ancestors.
Your object, I think, should be to get mares differing
widely in blood, but as like as possible in make and action
and record on the Turf to your imported horses. I have an
idea that horses that agree in colour should agree in mind.
249
*
-ocr page 277-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Does your experience point to this ? It may mean something
and deserve consideration when selecting a sire for any given
mare, for, after all, courage counts even in horses.—Yours
truly,
                                                               J. C. Ewabt.
In the above letter Professor Ewart had per-
haps hardly realised the immense value of pure
English blood, which is recognised all over the
world as the vital necessity in the breeding of
active horses of any sort. He was not aware when
writing that many lines of English blood, which
have absolutely died out here, are flourishing in
other countries, and are in effect quite fresh when
brought back here; nor had his attention been
called to the curious phenomenon that all other
countries have to come back to this for reinforce-
ments of our native stock, as otherwise their horses,
after a few generations, begin to deteriorate, no
matter how good the first produce may have been.
It is very rarely indeed that in any country a good
racehorse is found who is not closely related to
imported stock on one or both sides. In reply to
a communication on this subject, Professor Ewart
wrote:—
Pknyciik, February 8, 189!).
Your letter is quite encouraging. It is pleasant to hear
that the foreigner has always to come back for the original
blood. Why Australia and New Zealand (where for a time
at least the thoroughbred undergoes a kind of rejuvenescence)
should have to come for fresh blood, is not so easily under-
stood. Probably with horses as with people, a complete
change of surroundings for a limited period or for some
generations may prove most beneficial, though a permanent
stay in the new environment may lead to a kind of degenera-
tion. You doubtless know that in England we for some
years have been largely influenced by Weismannism—in-
clined to believe inbreeding can do no harm, and that the
parents have no more influence on their offspring than a
basket has on the eggs it carries to market. On the con-
250
-ocr page 278-
AUSTRALASIAN BLOOD-STOCK
trary, I believe inbreeding is a most potent agent for good
as well as evil; and further, that by a change of surround-
ings, i.e. by influencing the nutrition of the parents, the
offspring suffer or receive benefit. When we understand
things better, it may not be necessary to send our horses,
like our rum, to the West Indies.
You must consider me a novice in search of explanations.
If what I have written leads people to think more for them-
selves and less liable to follow in the wake of fashion, it
won't matter if it sometimes misses the mark.—Yours truly,
J. C. EWART.
W. Allison, Esq.
P.S.I meant to say that your letter especially interests
me, because it supports the conclusion arrived at some time
ago, that the effectiveness or prepotency, or whatever you
like to call it, may remain latent; that we have it in our
power, e.g. to diminish or increase the prepotency of a sire
or a dam to a very considerable extent. I don't think this is
sufficiently realised, partly for want of experimental evidence.
Breeders have hitherto, I imagine, put too much faith in
blood, and paid too little heed to what for want of a better
name may be called the nutrition of their stock. In the
case of the racehorse blood is doubtless everything, but it
may be robbed of its virtue.
                                   J. C. E.
Change of Climate and Surroundings
results in Rejuvenescence
This letter is deeply interesting, and not the
less so because Professor Ewart, with the modesty
of true wisdom, recognises the limitations of his
own knowledge. He is a practical man, and would
never himself have fallen into the eggs-in-a-basket
theory, for the damage done by inbreeding after a
certain point is really a matter of common know-
ledge among those who have actual experience to
guide them. Phenomenal results, such as Flying
Fox, have often followed from very close inbreed-
ing ; but these are generally cases of one incestuous
251
-ocr page 279-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
mating, which is a different matter altogether from
going on generation after generation harping on
the same string, as we have been doing for the last
fifty years with Whalebone and Blacklock. Pro-
fessor Ewart's postscript deals with the peculiar
fact that horses very generally gain in stud potency
when they are sent to a new country, or, like
Melton, brought back to their own after a stay
abroad. It needs only to mention a few instances
—Diomed, Pyrrhus I., Leamington, and Prince
Charlie—exported to America; Silvio to France ;
Kisber to Austria - Hungary; Fisherman, The
Marquis, and Musket, to Australasia, where also
Bill of Portland and Haut Brion have made truly
remarkable successes. Quite second-class horses
have developed into high-class stallions when sent to
Ireland ; and, in America, Juvenal and The Sailor
Prince have done exceedingly well, which it is
hard to believe they would have done in England.
On the other hand, there is every reason to expect
that the Australian and New Zealand sires now in
England will equally verify the common-sense
doctrine that change and interchange are the main-
springs of creation.
Local Influence on the External Charac-
teristics of Blood-stock. The Grafter
Professor Ewart had perhaps not studied the
strange phenomenon of local influence on the
external characteristics of a breed, however pure.
It is well known, however, that in India even the
British thoroughbred will degenerate to the level
almost of the country-bred if imported stock is not
constantly used; and as for Australia and New
Zealand, the characteristics of the typical " Waler "
are rarely if ever seen in an English-bred horse.
252
-ocr page 280-
AUSTRALASIAN BLOOD-STOCK
A portrait of The Grafter was forwarded to Pro-
fessor Ewart, and it was pointed out to him that
such a horse could hardly by any possibility have
been bred in England, and yet " His Ugliness," as
even the Australian papers called him, was got by
an imported sire out of a mare whose sire and dam
were both imported. He is therefore not only
pure English, but almost as close as possible to
imported stock. Nevertheless, he possesses the
" Waler " characteristics almost to the extent of a
caricature. This, surely, is vastly significant, as
showing the commanding influence of change be-
tween this country and the Antipodes. We can
draw from these not only strains of blood which
we have lost, but horses and mares, born again, so
to speak,'and admirably suited to strengthen and
regenerate our home stock.
-ocr page 281-
CHAPTER
XV
HORSE BREEDING AND BUYING ON THE CONTINENT
German methods—The racing puhlic pays for improving bloodstock—
Count Lehndorff takes racing merit as the only true test—His
fine judgment and purchase of the Australian racehorse Carnage
—Full details from Austria-Hungary—State-aided horse-breeding
—Prince Louis Esterhazy's success—British Governments supine
and useless—Where are our remounts ?—Russian details—Keen
appreciation of the British thoroughbred.
No Organised Horse-breeding in England
It is a matter for extreme surprise that although
this country, by some fortunate process of evolution,
has produced the thoroughbred horse, which is
admitted on all hands to be the most valuable in
the world, we do less than any other country to
make adequate use of the treasure which we have
acquired. Our cavalry remounts are purchased
haphazard and without regard to pedigree, the
purchasing officers being often quite incompetent,
and, as a result, our unfortunate troopers find them-
selves condemned to ride faint-hearted hackney-
tainted brutes, which lie down and die when pressure
is put on them. The following explanation from a
valued authority in Germany will show how horse-
breeding is managed and encouraged there :—
January 27, 1899.
With the exception of Graditz the German Government
possesses no other stud where thoroughbred stock are reared,
but there are several studs, " Hauptgestute,'" as they are
254
-ocr page 282-
BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
called, where half-bred stock is produced, viz., Trakelmen,
Keberbeck, and Neustadt. In the two former studs, a great
number of thoroughbred stallions are located; half-bred
stallions, of course, predominating. These are mated with
mares, often by a thoroughbred sire out of a dam, also by a
thoroughbred horse. The produce, if mares, and having no
hereditary defect,
are at four years of age drafted into the
stud ; if colts, are during the autumn of their third year
drafted into one of the numerous stallion depots (of which
there are a great number), and early in their fourth year are
sent to one of the towns or villages in the district compris-
ing the depot, and there cover mares the property of farmers
and others at a fee of 5 shillings to £9,:10s. according to
the class of sire. Neither sire nor dam having any hereditary
defect (except for some very exceptional reason), are
retained in the Government studs. They must also walk
tjuite straight as seen from in front and behind, turning
their toes neither inwards nor outwards either in walking or
standing. Defective colts are unmercifully added to the list
and sold as four-year-olds by the different studs, together with
those mares not drafted into the stud. From these animals
which come up for sale yearly, the Emperor's carriage horses
and hacks are for the most part derived. A number of
stallions are also selected for the Emperor's use, such as have
passed the Commission and suitable as sires, but not having
covered. These are chosen before the sale, consequently are
not put up ; so from this you can judge that a great number
of more than useful animals are drafted yearly. I forgot to
mention that the stallions, before being sent to the various
depots, have to pass a Commission appointed by the Govern-
ment for the purpose. Any failing to pass are castrated.
The stallions are sent to that depot where they are most
suited to the mares in the district. For instance, East
Prussia prefers well-bred stock, whereas Westphalia and
Nassau mostly demand Percherens, as being more adapted to
the country.
Now as to the ways and means. The Government
yearly votes a certain sum of money. This is, at the dis-
cretion of the Oberlandstallmeister (H.E. Count Lehndorff),
applied in the purchase of stallions, both thorough and half
bred, for the different studs, as well as to secure brood mares
for our stud here, so that one year he may buy several mares
for here and no stallion, whereas another year he buys a
255
-ocr page 283-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
stallion and no mares. Of course the Count has to put in
vouchers for his expenditure to the Minister of Agriculture.
The same rule as to hereditary taint applies in the case
of thoroughbred as it does to the half-bred animals, but in
instances where an animal has shown great form an exception
may be made, but should the produce show the same defect,
as a general rule the animal (sire or dam) is drafted. For
this reason we have had few, if any, cases of ringbone, curb,
spavin, roaring, etc., among the animals. There are, of
course, some exceptions. No stud in the world possesses
such a collection of brood mares—about sixty—in regard
to soundness, make and shape, as does Graditz, and our
stallions are selected on the same principle. The fees for
our sires range from £5 to £15, and for other than German
breeders double fees. German breeders take precedence.
There are five stallions at Graditz at present—Le Justicier,
Delphos, Pumpernickel (a winner of three Legers, in one
year of course), Carnage (who only gets three or four mares
in consequence of his illness), and Habenichts (Derby
winner, '98).
With the exception of Fulmen, who belongs to Count
Redern, fee, I believe, £100, and Saraband (Mr. von
Bleichroder), fee unknown to me, all fees in this country
are very low—Valauris and Kirkconnel, for instance, serving
mares at £5 each, so you see private owners have no great
expenses as in England. Then again, brood mares and
foals travel at reduced rates, labour is cheap, also hay and
corn, so that a stud-owner is not crushed by expenses.
Now as to what you call "that lottery business.'"
When the Middle Park Stud was brought to the
hammer, it was thought a fitting time to secure some of the
mares for Germany. A lottery was organised (a concession
for the same obtained), people bought the tickets; with the
money a number of mares were bought and these subse-
quently were drawn for by the purchasers of the tickets.
In this way (few prizes and lots of blanks), a number of
mares were imported. Out of this the " Norddeutscher
Zuchtverein" (North German Breeders1 Union) originated,
but as to where they got the " needful" I cannot ascertain,
nor does any official manuscript exist as to the foundation of
the Union.
In 1887 the Breeders' Union turned over its duties to the
Import Society, consisting of three members, elected annually
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
by the members of the Union Club. At present these
members are—H.E. Count Lehndorff, Count Tschirschky
Renard, and Mr. Ulrich von Oertzen, and they have been the
same for some years. The income of the Import Society
is, I believe, derived entirely from the sums wagered in the
Totalisator (pari-mutuel).
The Union Club at Hoppegarten (and all other Stake-
holders and Clerks of Courses in the country act on the
same plan) deduct, if I am correctly informed, 7 per cent
of all moneys betted at the machine to defray expenses.
After payment of these expenses, 20 per cent of the clear
profits are handed over to the Import Society for the
purchase of mares. This has averaged from i?4000 to c£6000
yearly.
The members of the Society then buy mares when oppor-
tunity offers; these are brought to Germany and resold to
private breeders (Graditz is prohibited) at prices ranging
from a half to two-thirds of their cost in England or France,
thus a private individual (German) becomes possessed of a
mare very much under her market value. A few cases have
occurred where a mare has brought as much or even more
than her original cost price, but this is not the purpose of
the Society. They prefer selling cheap so that breeders
reap the advantage. The price for which the mares sell
here is added to the credit of the Society so as to effect
further purchases. In cases where a private owner purchases
a very expensive stallion, as, for instance, in the case of
Kisber, Charibert, Gouverneur, the owner receives (if applied
for) a subvention from the Society on consideration of
granting a certain number of mares free service to the horse
for a certain number of years, or as long as he lives. Ap-
plication for these free services have to be made to the
Society by a given date annually, the Society selects the
mares, and the owner of the stallion has to accept these
mares without payment of any covering-fee. Of course,
the most suitable mares are selected.
You will see from the foregoing that private breeders
are greatly assisted (subventioned I may say) by the Society;
still, it is not a State subvention, but in reality a general
(betting) public one, as every one who puts his " bit" on the
machine supplies also a bit of the needful to the Society,
the country in the long run deriving the benefit of imports.
In France, I fancy a certain sum is deducted for the hospitals
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
or almshouses ; here, the deduction is not a State one but
gratuitous by the various clubs, and serves a purpose not
directly connected with racing.
January 31, 1899.
Since writing you a few days ago I have learned that
the Norddeutscher Zuchtverein, out of which the Import
Society evolved, was formed by a number of gentlemen each
of whom subscribed a certain amount, the interest on the
sum so subscribed being applied in the annual purchase of
mares. In consequence of judicious purchases (the re-sale
resulting in a profit in many cases), the income increased
and further purchases were effected. The Verein did good
work during the years while pari-mutuel (Totalisator) betting
was forbidden. Soon after permission (by Government) was
re-granted, the Norddeutscher Zuchtverein was dissolved and
the Import Society formed, the income of which, as I wrote,
is derived from the deduction made to cover expenses on all
bets at the Totalisator. If necessary, I think I could furnish
a fairly complete list of mares imported during the last ten
years.
How they Breed their Horses in Germany,
and Encourage Breeders
Count Lehndorff, to whom the writer of the
above more than once refers, is almost as well known
in this country as in Germany, for he is a constant
visitor here, and there is no breeding stud of any
consequence where he has not frequently put in
an appearance. No better judge of the British
thoroughbred exists, nor is there any one more
scrupulously careful when making a purchase.
He has thus stated his views on the subject of the
blood horse with singular lucidity.
Count Lehndoref's Views on the British
Thoroughbred and the Racing Test
The principal requisite in a good racehorse is soundness,
again soundness and nothing but soundness ; and the object
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
of the thoroughbred is to imbue the limbs, the constitution,
and nerves of the half-bred horse with that essential quality,
and thereby enhance its capabilities.
The thoroughbred can, however, fulfil its mission only
provided the yearly produce be continually subjected to
severe trials in public. The only appropriate test, proved by
the experience of two centuries, is the racecourse. The last
struggle for victory, in which culminates the exertion of the
race, results from the co-operation of the intellectual, the
physical, and the mechanical qualities of the horse, the develop-
ment of which combined power is higher and more reliable
than any that can be obtained in the same animal by other
means. The combination of those three qualities forms the
value of the horse destined for fast work : the mechanical, in
respect to the outward shape and construction; the physical,
as regards the soundness and normal development of the
digestive organs and motive power; the intellectual, or the
will and the energy to put the other two into motion and
persevere to the utmost. The attained speed is not the aim
but only the gauge of the performance.
The grand ideal principle which places this test so
incomparably higher than any other, based on the individual
opinion of one or more judges, is the absolute and blind
justice, personified in the inflexible winning-post, which alone
decides on the racecourse; and the irrefutable certainty that
neither fashion nor fancy, neither favour nor hatred, neither
personal prejudice nor time-serving—frequently observable in
the awards at horse-shows—have biassed the decision of hotly
contested struggles, as recorded in the Racing Calendar for
the space of 170 years. This it is that gives the English
thoroughbred horse a value for breeding purposes unequalled
and looked for in vain in any other species of animal creation.
. . . In the production of our half-breds it has become an
absolute necessity to use thoroughbred stallions not only with
performances of a high order, but also that our cavalry horses
may answer certain conditions and forms about make and
shape laid down in order to prevent their deterioration.1
The above quotation will suffice to indicate
Count Lehndorff's very sound views on racing and
the British thoroughbred, and it is sincerely to be
1 Horsebreeding Recollections, by G. Lehndorff. London: Horace Cox.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
hoped that no puritanical wave will ever sweep
over our country, stop racing, and thereby ruin our
unrivalled breed of horses.
Count Lehndorff anticipated Twenty Years
ago the Necessity for Fresh Blood, and
has now bought carnage.
It is nearly twenty years since Count Lehndorff 's
book was published, but he had at that time per-
ceived the danger of continued inbreeding to a very
limited number of strains of blood and the probable
necessity of, " at perhaps a not distant period, the
infusion of new blood by occasionally importing
into England sires of pre-eminence from other
countries." At that time he looked to America as
"the source from which to draw in future the
regenerating fluid," but he had not fully realised
then how many elements there are in the American
racehorse quite foreign to our own Stud Hook, and
on approaching the question more closely he has
recognised the superiority of the purely bred
Australasian horses for stud use in Europe. As a
result he two years ago bought the famous Aus-
tralian racehorse Carnage, for the Imperial Stud
Graditz, and as this son of Nordenfeldt and Mersey
(dam of Carbine), in addition to his fine performances
on the turf, is difficult to beat for either blood or
symmetry, there is small reason to doubt that
Count Lehndorff's experiment will prove successful.
The Plans adopted in Austria and Hungary
Turning now to Austria-Hungary, the writer is
enabled by the courtesy of a gentleman intimately
acquainted with the subject to give some most
interesting details of the horse-breeding in those
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
countries. There is but little occasion to apologise
for the English, which is perfectly clear and to the
point.
Dear Mk. Allison—Referring to your letter from three
weeks before, I shall try to give references as to the state
of breeding thoroughbreds in Austria-Hungary, and the
governmental support given to breeders. I beg you to dis-
tinguish correctly between Austria and Hungary. Although
they have common ministries for Foreign, Treasure and War
affairs, all Internal affairs are separate, and so breeding
and racing too. My references will not be written in correct
English, I am sorry of it, but I hope you will understand it.
Please forgive.
Austria
Austria is the industrial part of the Monarchy, and only
the " crownlands,'" Bohemia, Moravia, and Galicia, are apt
for horse-breeding in large measure.
The government has 37 studs and a great many
sire depots. In the governmental studs they don't breed
thoroughbreds, they have " Lipizzaners" (descendants of
Spanish horses), Norfolks, Arabs, Trotters, etc. The govern-
ment had last year 2199 sires, of these only 96 thorough-
breds, 16 pure Arabs, the others were half-breds, Norfolks,
Trotters, etc. Of the 96 thoroughbreds, 21 are located in
Bohemia, 13 in Moravia, 53 in Galicia, and 9 in other
" crownlands.'1 Most of these are a common lot, used to
breed half-breds ; only Matchbox (St. Simon—Matchgirl),
Stronzian (Waisenknabe—Mile. Giraud), Or Vert (Bend Or
—Vertumna), Morisco (Insulaire—Mascotte), and a brother
to Goodfellow, viz. Prince Louis, are good enough to cover
thoroughbred mares. It is a well-known complaint of
Austrian breeders that the government pockets the incomes
of Totalisator, but does nothing, or almost nothing for
thoroughbreds; it is an old Austrian policy, to take all,
but to give nothing. Last year the government bought
Balmoral in England, but at the beginning of this season
we searched in vain for an advertisement of the horse, we
don't know whether he is covering thoroughbreds or not.
It is not astonishing that this state of affairs compels
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
the Austrian racing men to settle their studs in Hungary
as do Baron Springer, Mr. Dreher the brewer, Mr. Wiener
von Welten, and others. Notwithstanding, there are some
private studs that can hold their own.
Count Kinsky's Stud at Chlumetz in Bohemia, with 30
mares and 5 sires. The greater majority of these represent
a poor class, and oidy 5 or 6 of the mares produce stock fit
for racing purposes.
Count Apponyi's Stud at Angern, near Marehegg, 10
mares and the sire Triumph, a very good horse of Buccaneer
descent. Formerly the Count was one of the greatest
racing-men, but financial disturbances compelled him to sell
his yearlings at the sales during the Vienna Summer Meet-
ing. He retains only 1 or 2 horses, and so he has this year
(1899) a dark candidate to the Vienna Derby, St. Salvatore
(St. Simon—Adria).
Caitain T. Fhankel's Stud, Marienhof, 12 mares, but the
sire Beauminet died in 1899 and nearly all the mares are
going to the Royal Stud Kisber (Hungary). The gallant
Captain sells annually his yearlings, the animals not sold go
into training in Hungary.
Alu. Aristtde Bautazzi's Stud, Napagedl in Moravia, is
the largest breeding establishment of the Monarchy. Be-
sides the governmental sires, Matchbox and Stronzian, at his
stud there are Tokio, now the property of the Austrian
Jockey Club, winner of the Austrian Derby, and Grand
Prize of Baden-Baden and Grand Prize of Berlin, a horse of
Buccaneer descent; Baron de Rothschild's Zsupan (Peter—
British Queen), winner of Vienna Derby and Hamburg
Derby, and Mr. Baltazzrs own horses, Master Kildare and
Althorp, both bought in England. Mr. Baltazzi has 37
mares of his own—he breeds for the yearling market, and of
his yearlings I shall give further particulars at the discussion
of yearling markets. So as to give an idea of the import-
ance of Napagedl, I mention that Matchbox will cover this
season 46 mares; Tokio, 24 ; Zsupan, 15 ; Stronzian, 7 ;
Master Kildare, 6 ; and Althorp, 4. These numbers gener-
ally increase with two or three more subscriptions taken
during the covering season. The mares of Mr. Baltazzi are
a mixed lot, some first-class mares, but there are very bad
ones also. Every two or three years he goes to the winter
sales at Newmarket for " bargains,11 and he seldom gives a
large sum for a mare.
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
In the crownland Galicia there are some studs of only
local interest, breeding horses for the use of cavalry officers.
You see, the Austrian government does not do much for
the breeding of thoroughbreds, as horse-show premiums are
not only for thoroughbreds but for all horses, and thorough-
breds are only a class among many others. On the railway,
horses are treated like cattle, and complaints against the
governmental direction of railways and against the railway-
societies are not rare. Some three years ago, the govern-
ment bought one of our best racehorses, Turul (Barcaldine
—Thorgunna), and sent him to his new quarters in Galicia.
It was winter-time, and the box in which the horse was
placed was waiting at a little station half a day for the
train with which he could continue his route. The horse
caught a cold and died of pneumonia ; the government had
a loss of j?7000, but all is now as it was, and complaints
have no success. It is Austria, as it was, and will be ever,
A.E.I.O.U. (Austria est in orbe ultima).
Hung ah y
The agricultural part of the Monarchy. The Hungarians
or Magyars, coming on horseback from Middle Asia some
1000 years before, were always fond of horses, and horse-stock
represents to-day a mighty factor of national wealth. No
wonder to see the government trying to give as much assist-
ance to horse-breeding as the financial state of Hungary
allows, and especially the breeding of thoroughbreds was
always favoured by the Ministers of xVgriculture.
The assistance of the government consists of the follow-
ing :—(a) governmental prizes for racing purposes; (/;)
the governmental studs and sire depots for breeding pur-
poses ; (c) the incomes of the Royal Commission of nine, for
the import of thoroughbreds ; (d) horse-shows and premiums ;
and (e) railway arrangements.
(a) The Hungarian government gives yearly the sum of
nearly cfTOjOOO as added money to the meetings of the
Metropolis Budapest, and about £2000 to the provincial
meetings.
At Budapest we have three meetings :—(1) the Spring
Meeting, ten days, with i?7250 as governmental support,
including the Kings Prize of i?5850 and an object of art,
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
value £200 ; the first receives £5000 and the object of art;
the second, £500; the third, £250; the fourth, £100 : for
three-year-olds and upwards bred on the Continent with the
exclusion of the French horses. Distance, one mile and a
furlong. (2) The Summer Meeting, ten days, with £200
governmental support. (3) The Autumn Meeting, ten days,
with £2550 as support, among the prizes being the Prize of
the Ministry for Agriculture ; £1500 to the first; £350 the
second; £150 to the third: for continental colts (except
French) of four years and upwards, one mile and a half;
the Minister has the right to claim the winner for the extra
sum of £500 or to claim each of the starters for £2000.
The other events with governmental prizes are of minor
interest; the value of these nine races are £200 to £500.
In the surroundings of Budapest, at a distance of fifteen
minutes by the railway, are the training quarters of Alag,
where the Hungarian Jockey Club has a new racecourse,
leased to the " Association of Gentlemen Riders " ; there we
have a First Spring Meeting, five days ; Second Spring Meet-
ing, two days ; First Summer Meeting, three days ; Second
Summer Meeting, three days; September Meeting, four
days ; and November Meeting, two days. The races are flat
and hurdle races and steeplechases (on the Budapest race-
course only flat races are legitimate sport), for gentlemen-
riders, but some are for steeplechase jockeys and apprentices.
A part of these races are International, and I think an
expedition of an English stable could be arranged with
considerable profit.
As I mentioned, £2000 to £2500 is given by the
government as support to the provincial meetings at
l)ebreczen, Kassa, Pozsony, Sopron, Siofok (on the lake
Balaton, with capital yachting sport), Arad and Kolvzsvar.
(b) Governmental Studs.—The Hungarian government
has four studs:—(1) Kisber, for thoroughbreds and half-
breds of English descent; (2) Babolna, for Arabs, pure-
breds and half-breds; (3) Mezohegyes, for half-breds of
English and other descent; (4) in Transylvania, Fogarus,
for horses accustomed to the mountains and severe climate
of Transylvania. I shall describe them in reverse order.
Fogauas.—Founded 1874. In Transylvania (we say
Erdely, and I shall use further this Hungarian name), as in
most parts of Hungary, we have had the original Hungarian
horse, a descent of those on which our ancestors came from
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
Asia. Of small size, they are the most easily satisfied
animals, with remarkable endurance. In the years 1550-1750
Erdely was a Turkish province, and so there was a chance
to use the horses of the conquerors, and these horses were of
Oriental descent, so the native stock received much Oriental
blood. After 1750, the Turks having been expelled, the
Austrian cavalry located in Erdely has had horses of Spanish
descent, and the native stock received now Spanish blood.
The infusion of Oriental and Spanish blood to the original
blood produced a type of horse we name " szekely horse."
The infusion of Spanish blood did not last very long, as at
the beginning of this century appeared the English blood.
This crossing without any system caused a deterioration,
and seeing this, the Hungarian government resolved to
found the Royal Stud Fogaras, where half-bred sires of
English descent, horses without fault, were covering mares
at a price of 3 to 10 shillings. It did not answer, as
the English blood was not quite suitable to the native
stock; the products were of a larger size, but showed a
marked tendency to softness. So the stud was reconstructed,
and as sires there are now a type we call " Lipizzan horses."
Lipizza is a stud near Trieste, in the mountains of Karst,
founded 1580, where Spanish and Neapolitan horses were
crossed, and produced the families Pluto, Conversano,
Neapolitano, Favory, and Maestoso, these all forming the
" Eipizzaner." At Fogaras are covering this season,—
Toreador, thoroughbred, by Waisenknabe, out of Thor-
gunna; Zivatar, a half-bred of English descent; and seven
Lipizzans—the thoroughbred at a fee of £2Q, Zivatar and
the Lipizzans at a fee of £2 each.
Mezohegyes.—Founded 1785 for military purposes, was
the chief " remount" stud of the Monarchy, supplied yearly
about 1000 remounts for the cavalry. In the year 1810 no
less than 13,326 horses formed this stud. The number
has been reduced considerably, but now the number of the
inmates is between 1300 and 1600. The stud is composed
of four families, viz.—the tall Nonius, the small Nonius,
the Gidran, and the English half-bred Furioso—North
Star.
In the French Stud Rosieres, the Austrian officers found
(in the year 1815) a horse, Nonius senior, by Orion (by
Marmetin). The sire of this Nonius senior, you see, was an
English horse, said to be thoroughbred, the dam was a
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Norman mare. This horse was brought as spoil to the
remount stud Meziihegyes, and there became founder of the
Nonius stock. This stock increasing in number was
divided : those who were 167 centimetres or higher composed
the tall Nonius ; those smaller than 167 centimetres composed
the small Nonius stock. They had rams' heads, were docile,
and the most useful harness-horses. They are all chestnuts.
In the last three decades they have been crossed with
English thoroughbreds with the intention to exclude the
pronounced ram's head.
The Gidran stock derives its origin from a pure Arab,
Gidran, imported in 1818. They are seldom grey, of
a highness of 165 centimetres. In the last two decades
they were crossed also with English thoroughbreds, and so
we can say they are Anglo-Arabs.
The English half-bred stock springs from Furioso senior,
foaled in 1836, and founding as a five-year-old sire the
stock now called Furioso, or rather Furioso—North Star, as
he was aided by North Star, a thoroughbred horse foaled in
1844, by Jaques (by Touchstone, as I find in a history of the
stud), out of Ringlet, by Whisker. Ringlet is of the
Family VIII., according to Bruce Lowe, a further proof of
" sire-blood." The Furioso—North Stars are ideal troopers,
the best harness-horses, and remarkable weight-carriers.
This season covering in Mez:>hegyes are :—
Durczas, th.-bred (by Doncaster—Nezsa), th.-bre.ds, £10 ; h.-breds, £5.
Algy,
          „ (Verneuil—Little Jemima) „           ,,         ,,         
Huseg,        ,, (Craig Millar—Becses) „         £8                  £4.
And at a fee of £2 the following :—Gidran XXXVI., Furioso XXIII.,
XXV., and XXVI., North Star V., Nonius XXIX., XXXVI., XXXIX.,
XLII.,and L.
The three thoroughbreds each cover yearly from 5 to 15
thoroughbred mares, the property of the stud-owners in the
surroundings of Meziihegyes.
Baholka was founded 1789 as a branch of Meziihegyes
and became only in 1806 an independent stud. The first
stock was of Spanish descent, which I mentioned as " szekely
horses" (.see Fogaras). The first Arab came in the year
1817 to Babolna, it was a son of Gidran; the next year
came from the French Stud Rosieres the horses Pyrrhus,
l'hibon, and Ulysso, and from Constantinople Mustapha and
Tharck. From Arabia was imported in 1818, Koheil; in
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
1823, Shamham; and 1825, the pure Arabs Anaze, Durzy,
Nedjibaba, and Abechi. Between 1835 and 1837 the English
horses Acorn and Butcher Boy were used, and an expedition
arranged in 1836 brought from Arabia the sires Shagya,
Dahaby, and Treleby. In 1856 a new expedition was under-
taken to Arabia, and 15 sires, 32 mares, and 1 foal of pure
Arab blood imported. From these mares they formed the
pure Arab stock, which number now from 20 to 26 pure
mares and 150 half-bred Arab mares. The last expedition
was undertaken 1895, when the Colonel Fadlallah el Hedad
(he came as an Arab boy to Hungary, was educated by the
King, and is now serving in the Army) brought the sires
Maneghie, Hadbon and Hamdani Semri, besides some
original mares.
The Arabs of Babolna are light harness-horses, and
beautiful hunters for ladies.
This season covering at Babolna are:—
Saklavy Jedran, original Arab, at a fee of £10.
Maneghie „                            £10.
Hamdani Semri „                            £10.
Hadbon „                               £10.
O'Bayan „           .,                      £5.
O'Bayan I. pure        ,,                      £4.
Shagya XI. half-bred                     ,,      £2.
Shagya XII. „                                 £2.
From this stud three years ago, Count Lehndorff
bought some half-bred Ai-ab mares, and the pure-bred sire
Young O'Bayan, and tried to breed Anglo-Arab stock in
Germany. I remember he has sent two or three thorough-
bred mares of the Royal Stud Graditz to Young O'Bayan,
with the intention to race the produce of these mares.
They must be now yearlings, and I hope we shall see one or
another of them, or better said, we shall hear of one or
another of them next year.
The Royal Stud Kisber
After the suppression of the War of Independence in 1849,
Count Casimir Batthyanyi, brother of the minister-president,
Count Louis Batthyanyi, emigrated with Kossuth, while his
brother was caught by the Austrians, and, after a short im-
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
prisonment, shot. The large estates of Count Casimir were
confiscated, and the incomes of these estates went to the
benefit of the victorious Emperor. Four years after the
military government of Hungary found that the number of
remounts decreased, as they did not have suitable half-bred
stallions. They decided to found a stud with the intention
to breed thoroughbreds and half-breds with a view as to get-
ting good stallions. To this purpose the most apt estate
seemed to be the estate Kisber, confiscated property of Count
Casimir Batthyanyi, and next year the then " Governmental
Stud Kisber" was founded. From MeziShegyes and Lipizza
were brought 12 half-bred stallions; from England the
thoroughbreds Chief-Justice, Tupgill, Grapeshot, Revolver,
and Wilsford. The number increased yearly, and in 1860
there were at Kisber 33 thoroughbred mares, and besides
the mentioned thoroughbred stallions the following:—
Clincher, Fernhill, Oakball, Valois, and Amati.
Three years after a great fire occurred at the stud, and 13
mares were burnt, but next year new importations enlarged
the number of thoroughbreds ; among these were the stallions
Teddington, Nordstern, Confidence, and 35 mares, bought
from Sir Tatton Sykes in England. And again a year
after were bought for the stud the unforgotten Buccaneer
(by Wild Dayrell), Ostreger, and the French Bois-Roussell.
Buccaneer was twenty-two years an inmate of the stud, and
died in 1887. During his long stud-career he served nearly
260 thoroughbred mares of the stud, 500 private mares, and
about 200 half-bred mares.
In the year 1867 the Emperor Francis Joseph was crowned
King of Hungary, and an universal amnesty preceded this
fact. The Stud Kisber was bought from the heirs of the
late Count Casimir Batthyanyi at a price of £170,000,
and became the Hungarian Royal Stud Kisber, with 10-17
stallions, 40-45 thoroughbred mares,100~120 half-bred mares.
In 1872 came to Kisber the stallion Cambuscan, sire of the
unbeaten mare Kincsem. In 1879 was bought Verneuil ;
later Doncaster, Sweetbread, Ruperra, Dunure, Goodfellow,
and last, but not least, Bona Vista, not to mention Gun-
nersbury and the French Galaor. Beside these imported
stallions always the best native stallions are covering at the
stud, such as Balvany, Brother to Kisber, Piisztor, Fenek,
Kozma, Gaga, etc. The fees of the stallions are very modest,
and Hungarian breeders receive further support.
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
This season the following stallions are covering at the
1.   Bona Vista, imp. (Bend Or—Vista), fee for mares of native owners,
£50 ; foreigners, £80.
2.   Dunure, imp. (St. Simon—Sunrise), fee for mares of native owners,
£30; foreigners, £40.
3.   Gunnersbury, imp. (Hermit—Hippia), fee for mares of native
owners, £20 ; foreigners, £30.
4.   Primcis II. (Donoaster—Budagyongye), fee for mares of native
owners, £20 ; foreigners, £30.
5.   Fenek (Buccaneer—Helene Triomphante), fee for mares of native
owners, £20 ; foreigners, £30.
(>. Brother to Kisber (Buccaneer—Mineral), fee for mares of native
owners, £10 ; foreigners, £20.
7.   Galaor imp. (Isonomy—Fideline), fee for mares of native owners,
£30 ; foreigners, £40.
8.   Filou (Gunnersbury—Fidget), thoroughbreds, £20; half-breds, £10.
9.   Montbar (Buccaneer—Duhart), thoroughbreds, £10; half-breds, £o.
10.  Kozma (Balvany—Kisboske), fee for mares of native owners, £20 ;
foreigners, £30.
11.   Culloden (Doncaster—Caledonia), fee for mares of native owners,
£10; foreigners, £20.
12.   Guerrier, imp. as foal (Galopin—St. Kilda), fee for mares of native
owners, £10 ; foreigners, £20.
13.   Ganache, imp. as foal (Galopin—Red Hot), fee for mares of native
owners, £30 ; foreigners, £.50.
14.   Deutscher Michl. II. (Ueutscher Michl. I—101 Furioso XII.),
halfbred mares, £o.
1.5. Newsmonger, imp. (Saraband — Scandal), native owners, £10;
foreigners, £20.
16. Gaga, imp. as foal (Galopin—Red Hot), native owners, £80;
foreigners, £100.
Gaga is the property of Count Elemer Batthyanyi,
nephew of the late Count Casimir, and now chairman of the
Hungarian Jockey Club. Gaga won the Vienna Derby, and
his son Aruld last year won the same race. His list for next
year is already full at a fee of ,£100, an unprecedented fact
in the history of the Hungarian Turf.
At the acceptance of the nominated mares in first line
come the mares of native owners, and only failing full sub-
scriptions come the mares of foreigners. The mares by
native sires that have won governmental prizes, or that are
dams of such winners, are covered by imported sires at half
fees, by native sires at a third fee. Native mares, without
regard to their running form, are covered by the native sires
at a half of bhe fee.
On these conditions Bona Vista will cover 2 mares of the
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
stud and 41 private mares — among them Arcadia and
Cortegar, the property of Mr. C. D. Rose ; Red Hot, the
mother of Gaga and Ganache; Budagyongye, a daughter
of Kincsem; Zanzibar (Sterling—Lady Paramount); the
sisters Podagra and Romanee (Galopin—Burgundy) ; Petrel
(Peter—Electric Light), etc.
To be short, I include a page of the paper Vadasz and
Verseny Lap,
the official organ of the Hungarian Jockey
Club, where you can see the acceptances. I hope you will
find some mares you have seen in England. The sires of
the Royal Stud Kisber will cover this year 17 thoroughbred
mares and 192 half-bred mares, the property of the stud,
and 243 thoroughbred mares of other owners. These
numbers increase generally during the covering season, and
I can say confidently that at the Royal Stud will be covered
this season 475-480 mares !
As to the own mares of the stud they number only
13, as Lady Brooke died last year. You can find their
names and short pedigrees on the same table, where the
acceptances to the Kisber sires are published. There have
been times when the number of thoroughbred mares at the
Kisber Stud was 30-35, but under the regime of the just-now-
broken-down minister, Baron de Banffy, it decreased to the
present number; but I hear, we can hope, it will be fixed on
20, and new imports are to be expected shortly. The produce
of these mares are generally sold as yearlings during the
Budapest May Meeting.
The governmental support given to breeders by the Royal
Stud Kisber is, you see, considerable. The sires—some of
them are quite first-rate sires—are cheap, and yet cheaper
is their service in some instances, as I shall show to you
instantly. Let us say, for instance, Baron Uechtritz's mare
Kisbiiske is on the list of Bona Vista. Kisbiiske is the dam
of Kozma, also a stallion of the stud, who has won during his
career on the Turf a governmental prize. Now, Kisbiiske is
entitled to an allowance of half fee using imported stallions,
and the third of the fee when covered by a native sire. She
is on Bona Vista's list, and as the fee of Bona Vista is ^P50,
Kisbiiske, as the dam of a winner of a governmental prize,
will be covered for only £%5. Do you think ever to receive
the service of a stallion like Bona Vista for such a ridiculous
fee as £CZ5 ? As the horses imported as foals with their
dams are considered as native horses, Kisbiiske could be
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
covered by Fenek at £11, by Ganache at £\0, and by
Guerrier at £2^ !! As another instance, look to the list of
Guerrier; there you find among the first mares Count
Festetic's Bonnie Aggie; her dam, Black Agnes, is the dam
of a winner of governmental prize (Duncan by Doncaster),
and so she will be covered at a fee of £3$ ! And yet another
example. On the list of Primas II. you can find Mr. Wahr-
man's mare, Mrs. Langtry, by Brother to Kisber (or Kis-
beroescse, as is said in Hungarian), out of Lady Anglesey,
and so Mrs. Langtry is a mare by a native sire; for this she
is entitled to be covered by the native sires for half fee ;
and Primas II., a native sire, at the fee of £20, will cover
this mare for only i?10 !
That is the support given by the government to Hun-
garian breeders, and it is considerable.
The yearlings of the stud are all sold under " Kisber con-
ditions." These are : only citizens of the Monarchy can buy
the yearlings, foreigners are excluded. The buyer is obliged
to never start the horses in selling races, and never sell to
foreigners, neither the horses (colts and fillies), nor the pro-
duce of fillies, when they are sent to the stud.
As the mares of the Royal Stud are a select lot, and are
covered by first-rate stallions, the produce are generally very
good, and as they cannot be sold to foreigners, quite a lot
of good thoroughbreds are saved for the Monarchy.
The Royal Stud has a lot of 200 half-bred mares. They
are located in the small farm Batihyan. They have much
Melbourne blood in their veins, and many of them the
characteristic cow-ears of Melbourne. The half-bred marcs
are more than half-breds; some of them have -ij-i- pure
blood, some \%, and man}' " thoroughbreds" in America
are less thoroughbreds than the half-breds of Kisber. The
produce " of these mares (the mares will be covered always
by thoroughbreds) are in the paddocks till their third year,
when they are put into training. In autumn are the home-
trials, or rather races ; the best colts are reserved for the
governmental sire depots, the best fillies for the stud, the less
distinguished animals are sold at public auction as four-yeai-
olds. Many foreigners come to these auctions, as the half-
breds can be sold to foreigners too, and Russia, Germany,
Roumania, and Italy are constant buyers. The prices of the
Kisber half-breds are at a rate of i?80 to £90. Mr. Haggen-
macher, a friend of mine, bought last year three of them at
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
a price of i?105, i?120, and i?125. He hunted them with
the pack of Mr. Dreher the brewer, and all have been quite
equal to Mr. Dreher's Irish hunters.
The Governmental Sire Depots
Hungary is divided for the above purpose into four parts,
each part having a sire depot. These depots are at Szekes-
fehervar, Nagykoros, Debreczen, and Sepsi St. Gyorgy.
These depots have only sires as inmates. These sires are bred
either at the Governmental Studs of Kisber, Babolna,
Mezohegyes, and Fogaras, or are bought from private breeders,
and these again are bought either as horses of full age, or as
yearlings. Each sire of these depots can be leased, the lessee
is obliged to accommodate carefully the leased sires and to
not cover more than fifty mares a season. The sires not
leased are distributed to the sections; of these each depot
has five, only the Sepsi St. Gyorgy depot in Transylvania has
three sections. These sections again distribute the horses
between the different stations, each station having from one
to six sires. I enclose a tabulated summary of these depots,
there you can see the sire depot at Szekesfehervar consists of
the sections (1) Szekesfehervar, with 87 stations ; (2) Babolna
with 57 stations; (3) Nyibrabayna with 39 stations; (4)
Nagyatad, with 91 stations; and (5) Palico with 56 stations.
So the Szekesfehervar sire depot is composed of 327 covering
stations, and in these stations 889 sires are covering, etc.
These tabulated statements are for last year (1898), the
government publishes them in May; I shall send a full copy
to you at appearance of the statements for 1899.
As to origin these governmental sires are thoroughbreds,
half-breds, pure Arabs, half-bred Arabs, Noniuses, Gidrans,
Norfolks, Lipizzans, and Nors. The fee is varying from
1 florin to 6 or 8 florins (1 florin equal to If shillings). So
for instance Baldur (by Doncaster—Freia) is covering at the
station Csaba of the sections Bekes-Csaba of the depot
Nagykoros at a fee of 1 guinea, and he is the dearest stallion
of the depot. Bulgar, a winner of the Baden-Baden Grand
Prize, at the station Mako of the section Bekes-Csaba of the
depot Nagykoros at a fee of 8 florins (£§) and as he is by
Eberhard—Princess Beatrice, he is a very cheap horse. The
English-bred Sturminster (by Exning—Sweet Nina) at the
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
station Balkany of the sections Turia-Remete of the depot
Debreczen at a fee of 5 florins. Another English-bred horse
that will be interesting to you is Mount Giffbrd (Lord
Hastings—Blue Ruin), he is standing at the station Sepsi St.
Gyorgy of the section Sepsi St. Gyorgy of the depot Sepsi St.
Gyorgy at a fee of 10 florins.1
Among the leased sires I find the following imported from
England :—Persistive (Fitz James—Persistence) of the depot
Szekesfehervar leased to Count Geza Apponyi (at Palfa) for
800 florins. Feher Hollo (formerly Strathvaich), a 21-year-
old son of Strathconan out of Poinsettia, of the section
Babolna, leased to Count Olivier Vay (at Berkesz) for 500
florins. Goodfellow of the section Dorvzsona of the depot
Nagykoros, leased to Baron Ivan Baich (at Bocsar) for 800
florins, but next season, as I heard from the Commander-in-
Chief, he will stay at the Royal Stud Kisber.2 Another
English-bred is Balvarran (by Uncas—Lady Grace), I think
once the property of poor Mr. Abington, of the depot
Debreczen, leased to Count Alec Forgach (at Maridok) for
500 florins.
The number of stallions leased to private breeders is
decreasing from year to year, as breeders are conceiving that
they pay, for a horse leased for 500 to 800 florins yearly, too
much, and for 2700 to 3000 florins they can buy a stallion of
their own. So a Mr. von Kovacs said to me, he leases a horse
for 600 florins yearly, and the government bought this horse
for 2400 florins, now he has paid during four years exactly
the sum paid by the government; next year he will buy a
stallion of his own, as the lease is too much.
At the station the sires are proportionally cheaper, as the
dearest of them serves at a fee of 15 florins per mare.
So the Hungarian government has 2948 sires, of these
317 are thoroughbreds.
These sires covered last year 128,676 mares ! and the
government had an income of 507,175 florins (about i?50,000).
The number of stations shows from the year 1890 an increase
of 177, the number of covered mares an increase of 17,365,
and the income an increase of 120,678 florins.
1  Mount Gifford is a direct descendant of Orville.
2  Goodfellow has died since the above was written,
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
The Royal Commission of Nine
Early in the sixties, when the estates of Count Casimir
Batthyanyi were confiscated, and the incomes of these estates
flew into the Treasury—or rightly to say, enlarged the
income of the Emperor—the then commander of the new
Kisber stud proposed to the Emperor to give a part of these
sums for breeding purposes. The Emperor agreed, and gave
~C25,000 as a capital sum, only the interest to be used. A com-
mittee of nine members of the Jockey Club was named, they
elect one of them as chairman, and when a seat is by death
or abdication vacant, they can elect any worthy man for this
seat, without outward influence.
The committee has decided to have always an own
stallion, who was formerly in the stud-farm, Kapostasz
Megyer, but when breeders did not like this stud-farm it
was leased to the Rakos Harriers, and since then the stallion
is leased yearly to one or another of the studs in Hungary.
The first stallion was, if I remember rightly, Carnival.
After him, the R, C. of Nine has had as stallion, Waisen-
knabe (Buccaneer—Kathleen), after his death they have
bought in England, Orwell (Bend Or—Lizzie Agnes), and he
is the present sire of the Committee. Orwell is leased for
this year to the stud Monostor, where he has a full list of
!30 mares.
More prominent are the successes of the R. C. of Nine
with the import of thoroughbred mares. The mares are
bought generally in England by a commissioner of the
Committee. As such commissioner the late Mr. Cavalliero
used to go, but since his death Count Ivan Szapary and
Mr. Luczenbacher have acted, and the latest gentleman
authorised by the Commission is Prince Louis Esterhazy.
The Prince has bought many excellent mares acting for
the Commission ; the mares are generally of first-class
origin, and with foals by the best sires, and covered by such
ones. These imported mares come with their foals to the
sales during the Budapest October Meeting, and are sold to
breeders under the condition never to sell them out of the
country. At the auction a reserve is put on each mare,
sometimes considerably less than the price paid for them,
and if they do not reach the reserve the mare is withdrawn,
sent to the stud on account of the Commission, and next
year, during the Budapest May Meeting or October Meeting
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
is again on the sale-list, and so on. It happens sometimes
that these mares are sold with profit, this profit is given
to the income of the fund. Generally they arrange such
sales every second year, but when the mares are sold at good
prices, and the Commission has money in abundance, they
can arrange such sales each year.
The fund of the Commission increased during the years
and has now reached a total of ,£30,000.
I have before me the original protocol of the sales of
1892, when five inares were imported. They were:—
(1)  Greensnake (1883), by Robert the Devil out of Ever-
green, bv Thormanby, covered by Hawkstone. Bought in
England for £420. " Reserve, £300. Sold to the stud
Nagyut for £305.
(2)  Bead-Roil (1886), by Barcaldine out of Rosary, by
Surplice, covered by St. Honorat. Bought in England for
£600. Reserve, £450. Sold to the Royal Stud Kisber for
£455.
(3) Fortune's Wheel (1886), by Petrarch out of Spinaway,
by Macaroni. Not covered, but had a colt foal by Minting.
The price paid in England for foal and dam was £1400.
Reserve, £1200. Sold to the Royal Stud Kisber for £1205.
(4) Agneta (1885), by Muncaster out of Agnes la Frere,
by Friponnier; not covered, but had a colt foal by King-
Monmouth. The price paid for them was £800. Reserve,
£600. Sold to the stud Nagyut for £605.
(5) Pleamunce (1883), by Cremorne out of Kingcup, by
King Tom; covered bv Bend Or, and with a filly foal by St.
Honorat. Price, £892. Reserve, £700. Sold to Count
St. Genois for £815.
You see the Commission gave that year £4112 for five
mares, and sold them for £3387, so the Commission has had
a loss of £727, which was made good from the income of
the fund ; and the other expenses, as railway, insurance,
etc., are not yet counted! After such years as was 1892,
regularly during one or two successive years, nothing is heard
about importations. As I mentioned previously, Austro-
Hungarian breeders are cautious, circumspect people; to
buy dear mares in England with the possibility that they
can die during the transport, is no thing for our people.
The Commission buying such mares and importing them,
has a great influence on the breeding in the whole
country, and it is a pity that the Commission has not the
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
means to effectuate these imports yearly. Militarism wants
money, and Mars eats taxes to such an extent, that the
government is obliged to spare in all other directions, and
so we have no money to augment the funds of the Com-
mission, and must be satisfied with what we have.
Hopeless Apathy of British Governments,
though all remounts could be bred at
Home.
It is melancholy to read the above, and think
of the absolute neglect of our Government to do
anything on the same or any other lines for the
benefit of horse-breeding. No wonder we have
to resort to Hungary for horses in war time, and
in a war with the Boers this may be a simple
matter ; but how would it be if our trouble was
with a continental nation ? We should then have
bitter reason to regret not having been wise in
time, for there is no doubt that we could with
Government support breed all our necessary horses
in Great Britain and Ireland; our mules, too, for
the matter of that.
Prince Louis Esterhazy's Successes in select-
ing Stock for Austria and Hungary
Prince Louis Esterhazy is the Military Attache
to the Austrian Embassy in London, and he is
almost as well known here as Count Lehndorff.
In the notes given above, his good work in pur-
chasing blood-stock for the Royal Commission of
Nine is specially referred to, and he has also been
very successful indeed in his selection of stallions
for the Kisber Stud and the Austrian Government.
The following is a list of what the Prince has from
time to time bought in England :—
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
Brood Mares.
1889.
Response by Queen's Mes-
senger.
Saxon Queen by Sir Bevys.
1894.
Our Mary by Wisdom.
Gladia by Charibert.
The Summit bv Autocrat.
Red Hot by Isonomy.
Bel Esperanza by Beauclerc.
Thorgunna by Bend Or.
Shall We Remember by
Isonomy.
St. Kilda by Macheath.
1896.
Alicia by Robert the Devil.
1897.
Isabelle by Isonomy.
Adornment by Beau Brum-
mel.
Petrel by Peter.
Shotunder by Satiety.
Creeping Jenny by Peter.
Camiola by Saraband.
Glengowan by Mask.
Elspeth by Sterling.
1898.
Diva by Barcaldine.
Fleurette by Royal Hampton.
Crownthorpe by Tibthorpe.
Blissful by Wisdom.
Mint o' Money by Rosebery.
Dereen by Barcaldine.
Stallions.
1893.
Dunure by St. Simon.
| Goodfellow by Barcaldine.
1894.
Matchbox by St. Simon. | Persistive by Fitz James.
1895.
Mount Gifford by Lord Hastings.
1897.
Bona Vista by Bend Or.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
All the mares but Elspeth had foals at foot, and
one of those foals was Gaga. The produce in the
first and second generations of the mares, bought
in 1889 and 1894, had, up to last year, won fully
£100,000, including four Derbies, and all the
principal races in Austria and Hungary. Of the
stallions on the above list, Matchbox was bought
for the Austrian Government, and all the others
for the Hungarian Royal Stud Kisber.
Russian House-breeding
In Russia, as in other continental countries,
far more has been done by the State to promote
horse-breeding than has ever been attempted in
England. Russia had the advantage from the first
of being closely in touch with the East, and no
doubt this would lead to the general improvement
of the native breed of horses, though few measures
for the organisation of horse-breeding were taken
until the time of the Czar Nicholas, father of
Peter the Great. He founded various studs, the
necessary stallions being bought in Asia, Livonia,
and Estonia.
Peter the Great's Attention to
Horse-Breeding
Peter the Great himself established several
studs for higher breeds of horses in the govern-
ments of Kieff, Kasan, Astrachan, etc., each stud
being managed by equerries of the court. He
procured mares and stallions in Prussia and Silesia.
In 1722 he, with enlightened prudence, issued a
proclamation, recommending the institution of
horse races with a view to improving the breed
through emulation and comparison.
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
So little is really known about Russia in this
country that no excuse is needed here for giving
information in some detail of their horse-breeding
history up to date.
After the death of Peter the Great horse-breed-
ing was neglected for a while ; but in the reign of
the Empress Anne (1730-1740) special attention
was again paid to it, and under the management of
Volinsky (Grand Equerry) most active measures
were taken for the improvement of the quality of
horses in the Empire and the proper organisation
of horse-breeding. Many new studs were formed
during that period, containing a great number of
English, German, Neapolitan, Persian, Holstein,
Arabian, and Circassian horses.
Foundation of the Russian Trotting Horses
During the reign of the Empress Catherine II.
(1762-1796) the studs in Russia, both Government
and private, were flourishing. The moving spirit
at this time was Count OrlofF Tchesmensky, who
in 1778 founded his famous Chrienovoya Stud, the
real origin of the Russian breed of trotting horses.
He had in his stud Danish, Dutch, Mecklenburg,
Normandy, Spanish, Arabian, and thoroughbred
English stallions and mares, and being the Admiral
of the Russian fleet in the Archipelago he had
opportunities—of which he availed himself—for
obtaining good Eastern horses. In 1778, as re-
corded in the Racing Calendar of 1782, p. 321, he
presented Lord Pembroke with a high-class Arab
stallion. After his death the Government in 1845
purchased the stud from his daughter, and it then
consisted of no fewer than 2124 head, among which
there were 59 stallions and 570 brood mares. Count
OrlofF developed the breed of trotting horses by
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
using thoroughbred English or Arab stallions on
Danish and Dutch mares.
Among other Russians who about this period
founded studs and paid large sums for English
thoroughbred horses were Count Rosstopchin,
Count Rasumovsky, Count Gondovitch Mouravieff,
Count Scheremetieff, Prince Golitsen Rayeffsky,
Prince Gaganne Skariatin Golochvastoff, Count
Zavadoffsky Zouboff Ladyjensky, Prince Lop-
ouchin Boutourlin Ismailoff Prozaroffsky Tcher-
koff, Count Platoff, Count Bravitsky, etc.
Early Purchases from England.
Query—Diomed !
The end of the eighteenth and beginning of the
nineteenth century witnessed a very great develop-
ment of horse-breeding in Russia, and the purchases
of blood-stock from England increased in a marked
degree. Curiously enough, it is maintained in
Russia that Diomed, our first Derby winner, was
taken there and not to America at all, the official
record being that he was bought in 1799 by Count
Mouravieff for 25,000 roubles. How would Messrs.
Weatherby deal with this question, supposing they
had issued a pedigree certificate which had gone
to Russia while Diomed went to America ? They
have recently shown, in the case of the mare Pente-
cost, that they would, under such circumstances,
have obstinately contended that Diomed, divorced
from his pedigree certificate, was no longer Diomed,
and that whatsoever animal that erratic docuinent
might be affixed to was the Simon Pure.
It would be tedious here to go through the
long list of early importations of English thorough-
breds to Russia; but among them several Derby,
Leger, and 2000 Guineas winners may be named
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
in Diomed (?), Noble, Tartar, Dsedalus, Symmetry,
Soothsayer, Nectar, Middleton, Memnon, Bir-
mingham, Coronation, Van Tromp, Andover, and
Caractacus.
At that period, however, much of the value of
all these importations was sacrificed in futile ex-
periments in crossing with a view to creating new
and distinct types of horses, without regard to
keeping the blood-stock intact, much as we nowa-
days start hunter stud-books and spend fortunes
on worthless hackneys. In Russia, as a corre-
spondent there quaintly phrases it, " such trials
very often produced not comforting results " ; but,
nevertheless, so much good blood was, in more
or less haphazard fashion, now distributed among
Russian horses, that there was a fine foundation
of mares for future developments if any one should
come forward who understood the use and value
of the thoroughbred horse as distinguished from
all others.
The Thoroughbred Understood and
Appreciated at Last
Fortunately for Russian horse-breeding, men
with the necessary intelligence were at this period
not found wanting. The pioneers in the move-
ment which recognised the thoroughbred horse, pure
and simple, as the basis from which to reinforce all
others that need activity and endurance—F. S.
Mossoloff, Miasnoff, Pietrofsky, Lounine, Dashkoff,
Wojeikoff, Shichareff, L. Grabowski, and others.
The name of Miasnoff will always remain cele-
brated in the history of Russian blood-stock, not
only as that of a breeder and lover of horses, but
also a thoroughly practical and enlightened judge
ofth em. He it was who established the Moscow
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
racecourse, and his works about the thoroughbred
and the necessity of races, written in the years 1824
and 1833, were founded on such a thorough and
broad-minded knowledge of his subject, that even
now they may be consulted with advantage.
Influence of Miasnoff
Under the wise influence of Miasnoff and the
others mentioned above, studs of thoroughbreds
were formed and regular races instituted so as to
bring about improvement of the breed by uncom-
promising tests. The first racecourse was established
at the town of Lebedjan in 1825. This no longer
exists. Afterwards, in 1833, came the Moscow race-
course. There had been races in Moscow at the
end of the eighteenth and beginning of the nine-
teenth century, but these had no official sanction
and ceased with the death of Count Orloff. Another
course was made in 1841 in Tsarskoje Selo, where
the Emperor resides, near St. Petersburg.
For about sixteen years after that time the de-
velopment of thoroughbred stock in Russia rapidly
advanced, but then there came a set-back, owing to
the new economic conditions following on the
liberation of the serfs, and for a considerable time
there was not sufficient financial encouragement to
make breeding or racing pay even a reasonable
return.
During this period there naturally were mooted
schemes for breeding horses cheaply without going
to i the expense of blood-stock, but again, after an
interval of seventeen or eighteen years Russia was
favoured with the assistance of a man of influence
and authority who had the good sense to brush away
these flimsy cobwebs and make good against all
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
comers that the thoroughbred horse is the one and
only " stand-by " for those who desire to improve
any other breed intended for active and, at times,
exhausting work.
Dashkoff takes Charge
This man was Count Woronzoff-Dashkoff, the
Director of the Russian Imperial Horse-breeding
Board. He exerted his utmost energy to promote
the breeding of blood-stock in Russia, and under his
patronage several new studs were established, while
numerous horses and mares were bought in England
and France. Of the former it may be interesting
to mention Braconnier 1873, Warcraft 1878, Vien-
nois 1883, Cade 1887, Salvator 1872, Hengist
1867, His Majesty 1870, Ziitzen 1874, Energique
1889, Kaiser 1870, Consul 1866, Lara 1881, Boiard
1870,   Christmas Carol 1862, Le Sarrazin 186.5,
Marshall Scott 1876, Melbourne 1885, Merry Sun-
shine 1870, Le Nord 1887, Montanvert 1890, Owen
1873, Paganini 1870, Pennistone 1889, Peut-etre
1871,   Radieux 1881, Roehampton 1873, Roitelet
1884, Typhceus 1865, Faugh-a-Ballagh 1879, Idle
Boy 1891, and others.1
Count Woronzoff was also keenly alive to the
ways and means question in improving the breed
of horses, and it was through him that the betting
(pari mutuel) was taken under official control, so
that a proper quota might be levied which went
to the credit of race funds and horse-breeding.
Everything went on well under his regime, and his
services will always be gratefully remembered in
Russia.
1 These are the birth dates.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
The Grand Duke Dimitri and Galtee More
In 1897 H.I.H. The Grand Duke Dimitri Kon-
stantinowitch succeeded Count Woronzoff-Dashkoff
in the direction of the Horse-breeding Board. The
Grand Duke is an uncle of the Czar Nicolas II., and
is a really practical horseman and excellent judge.
With rapid insight into the condition of blood-stock
in Russia he concluded that an absolutely first-class
horse was wanted, and he signalised his accession to
office by the purchase of Galtee More for 20,000
guineas. This purchase was effected through the
medium of the International Horse Agency and
Exchange, Ltd., 46a Pall Mall, under circumstances
which may be best described by quotation from
contemporary journalism.
(From The Sportsman, Saturday, 14th May 1898.)
And now to deal with the sensation of the moment,
which is the sale of Galtee More. The announcement on
the subject in yesterday's Sportsman was not quite accurate,
especially in one important particular. I have been favoured
with full details as to the transaction, and am in a position
to state that so far from the great horse being sent away
to Russia without fulfilling his Ascot Cup engagement, the
present intention is that he should run for that race in the
name of the Grand Duke Dimitri, aide-de-camp to the Czar.
General Arapoff, Count Nierod, and M. Dorojynski accom-
panied Mr. Gubbins to Beckhampton yesterday (Thursday),
for the purpose of seeing Galtee More at exercise. He did
his work before them at about 3 p.m., and General Arapoff,
who had full powers from the Grand Duke to act in the
matter, left instructions for S. Darling to go on with the
horse and to run him if he can be satisfactorily prepared for
the big race.
In this connection a letter which I have seen, and which
completed the negotiations on behalf of Mr. Gubbins, con-
tains a passage which is of more than merely sporting
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
interest. After stating that Mr. Gubbins would sell Galtee
More with his engagements, the writer went on to say:—
I say without hesitation, that if he should run for the Ascot Cup in
the name of the Grand Duke, or some other illustrious Russian per-
sonage, his victory (which is already assured) would do more than all
the efforts of diplomacy to promote between the two nations that good
fellowship which ought never to have been interrupted. Such a
victory would be hailed with enthusiasm here, reviving as it would the
august traditions connected with this particular race, making it once
more in very truth, The Emperor's Cup.
My readers are most of them aware that, for nine years
prior to the Crimean War, the Ascot Cup used to be given
by the Czar, and now, after all these years of diplomatic
doubts and suspicions, the fact that the idea given in the
above extract has been adopted and acted on, shows a
thoroughly sportsmanlike wish on the part of Russia to meet
us as friends and forget past disputes.
The horse, it must be understood, was bought simply as
a stallion, and, of course, unless Darling can feel quite sure
that he has him right he will not go to the post; but the
present intention is what I have stated, and I do not suppose
there is a man, woman, or child in this country who would
not be delighted to see Galtee More win the Ascot Cup
under such unique circumstances. I have always contended
that Sport and the British thoroughbred will beat all the
diplomatists and politicians in bringing nations together,
and I am quite sure that this particular incident of Galtee
More and the Ascot Cup goes very far indeed to prove the
truth of my contention.
Few people have fully realised what a wonderful horse
Galtee More really is. I have the authority of his trainer
for stating that last spring, as a young three-year-old, he
was the equal of Kilcock at even weights, and in the autumn
he was able to give the old horse 14 lb. What this means
let any one try to imagine who saw the very bold show
Kilcock made under 9 stone 7 lb. for the Jubilee Stakes last
week. Watts thinks that had the going not been so hard,
Galtee More would just about have won the Cambridgeshire,
and as for his other races they speak for themselves. Not
only did he earn the " triple crown,11 but he missed none of
his intermediate engagements, which proves him to have an
unusually good constitution and sound limbs. That he is
the best horse ever sold away from England admits of no
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
doubt, for Ormonde and Prince Charlie, being roarers, must
rank below him. Mr. Gubbins was not, any more than he
has ever been, desirous of selling, and if his stud were in
England within the radius of high fees, he certainly would
not have sold, but as it was he decided that Galtee's brother,
Blairfinde, would serve his turn very well at Knockany, and
so he let the celebrity go. Twenty thousand guineas is the
largest price ever given for a horse in training, and it must
not be forgotten that Mr. Gubbins also obtained the equiva-
lent of 20,000 guineas for Kendal, the sire of Galtee More.
What a fortune in two horses !1
Though, in common with all who are interested in our
blood-stock, I am very sorry to t*hink of Galtee More leaving
the country, I cannot but feel some satisfaction that my old
favourite has been valued according to his deserts. My
readers are well aware that from the moment I first set eyes
on him I never varied in my belief that he must of necessity
make a better horse than Velasquez, and it does not need
here to recapitulate the story, of how again and again he
asserted that superiority, beginning with his smashing
victory in the Middle Park Plate and ending with the
Derby. There were, no doubt, valid excuses for Persimmon's
rather slovenly victory in the Eclipse Stakes, but the fact
must always remain that on that occasion he had vastly
more difficulty in shaking off Velasquez than ever Galtee
More experienced. Comparison of two such admittedly
great horses is unnecessary and unprofitable. It is enough
that the trainer of each considers him 21 lb. superior class
to this year's three-year-olds, and both of them have trust-
worthy data to go by. Galtee More will leave for Russia
as soon as possible after Ascot, and he will stand at one or
other of the Royal Studs there. Other good horses have in
times past gone to Russia, but never one like this. At
present Le Nord is about the best class stallion in the
country. Kaiser was very successful there, I hear. From
this time forward, however, there will be a great advance in
blood-stock breeding and racing in Russia, and as our friends
over there get to know us better, and we them, through the
pleasant medium of sport, all clouds and doubts that obscure
the political horizon should lift and float away, like mist-
wreaths that part and leave in the full light of day the peak
of Galtee More, from which the famous horse takes his name.
1 The above was written before the sale of Flying Fox.
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
(The Sportsman, Monday, 16th May 1898.)
Vigilant's Note-Book.
The Sale of Galtee Moke, by Vigilant.
It is somewhat curious that when the first announcement
of the sale of Galtee More was made, that sale had not in
fact been completed. There is no secret about the matter
now, and as it is something to the credit of The Sportsman
that two of its representatives should have brought about
this record deal, I make no apology for giving the facts.
Some while ago the Russian Government entered into
business relations with the International Horse Agency and
Exchange, of which the Special Commissioner is Manager.
The object was to secure high-class stallions, and in due
course, M. Dorojynski came over from Russia on a visit of
inspection. He saw Disraeli, Cyllene, Ninus, Wildfowler,
Dieudonne, Ormathwaite, Jeddah, Phoebus Apollo, Ardeshir,
Orzil, Vesuvian, The Owl, Ayrshire, St. Serf, Raeburn, Car-
bine, St. Simon, and many others, including Shaddock and
Kilcock, but all these sank into insignificance in his estima-
tion when he saw Galtee More. He went back to Russia
determined that Galtee More must be bought. The difficulty
now was that Mr. Gubbins had no desire whatever to sell his
horse, and no intention of offering him for sale at all; and
here came in the part played by Ashplant, for it was he who
persuaded Mr. Gubbins (who was to the last an unwilling
seller) to accept the Russian offer which the Special Com-
missioner was in due time authorised to make.
General Arapoff, Count Nierod, and M. Dorojynski then
came over from Russia, and the combined forces went down
with Mr. Gubbins to Beckhampton last Thursday, where
they saw Galtee More do a nice canter led by Shaddock, and
left directions with his trainer. Mr. Lawrence, M.R.C.V.S.,
of Swindon, was instructed to examine the horse for sound-
ness, and send up certificate next day. Then the party
returned to town, and Mr. Gubbins entertained them at
dinner at the Princes' Restaurant. The settlement was to
take place on Friday, and on that morning the news of the
sale appeared prematurely.
Mr. Lawrence's certificate arrived in the course of Friday
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
morning, and the other papers were now all in order. Mr.
Gubbins was so little concerned about the details that he
had gone off' to Ireland at seven o'clock that morning, leav-
ing his receipt for the purchase money with Ashplant, to be
handed over when the settlement took place. It was not
until after 4 v.m. that this ceremony was gone through in the
presence of a notary, and there were present General Arapoff,
Count Nierod, M. Dorojynski, Ashplant, the Special Com-
missioner, and Mr. R. P. Mortlock. The sum of £22,500
was there and then handed over to the Special Commissioner
by M. Dorojynski, this amount including the insurance
premium for one year and the journey to Russia. Mr.
Gubbins1 receipt and the other papers were on this delivered
to the Russian representatives, and the thing was done. It
remained only to get the money safely located at Lloyd's
Bank (16 St. James's Street), which kept open after hours to
receive it. Then a cheque was drawn by the International
Horse Agency and Exchange in favour of Mr. Gubbins.
This was duly signed by the Special Commissioner and
handed to Ashplant, who paid it into Mr. Gubbins' bank on
Saturday morning, and that is the full, true, and particular
account of how Galtee More was bought and paid for.
General Arapoff brought over with him plenary powers
from the Grand Duke Dimitri to run Galtee More at Ascot,
to enter him in other races in the Grand Duke's name, and
generally manage him at discretion. The General was also
empowered "to invest others with the same right." The
document lies before me as I write, and endorsed upon it is
the following:—
London, 13th May 1898.
I hereby invest William Allison of 4(!a Pall Mall, London, with the
rights conferred uj>on me overleaf.
              Jean Arapoff, General.
General Arapoff and M. Dorojynski visited the Cobhani
Stud on Saturday, and were well pleased with Trenton and
Carnage. Thanks to the rains, the belated spring grass has
now come along beautifully, so that mares and foals are in
almost all cases doing well. Count Nierod had gone to
Paris on Saturday morning, and the other two departed for
Russia on Saturday night, leaving all who had met them
anxious to meet them again, for though we had much ado
to make ourselves mutually understood, a sense of good-
fellowship was established from the very first.
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
(From The Sportsman, Monday, 13th June 1898.)
By Vigilant.
The scratching of Winkfield's Pride for the Ascot Cup
coming almost simultaneously with the departure of Galtee
More to Russia, serves to remind us of what the race might
have been had the fates been propitious, though plenty of
approved stayers remain to give us an exciting show next
Thursday.
As to Galtee More, I went to Harwich on Saturday to
see the last of him, and at Manningtree hit off the train to
which his box was attached. We shortly afterwards reached
our destination, and the box being shunted into a siding it
was soon manifest that all had gone well so far, for the horse
began to despatch a feed of black oats with his accustomed
zest. Leaving him with his boy, Pearce, I went with
McLean to see what manner of accommodation was reserved
for him on board the s.s. Berlin. On the starboard quarter
of the main deck there are stalls for three horses; the whole
of these three were given up to Galtee More, and the par-
tition between two of them being taken out, he was provided
with an amply sufficient box, which was well padded to
guard as far as possible against injury. The deck, besides
having the usual foot-holds, was thickly strewn with ashes,
and then straw laid over all. So soon as the horse was on
board, tarpaulins were ready to close in the space where he
was and prevent his seeing a number of dealers' horses which
were going over. None of these, however, were allowed to
stand anywhere near him. McLean is the most experienced
man in Lurope for travelling valuable blood-stock between
this country and the Continent, and it interested me greatly
to see how complete and orderly were all his arrangements.
It is not often that accidents occur, but the business is not
devoid of danger. He will carry as long as he lives the
marks of the injuries inflicted on him some years ago by
Privateer, who, on being shipped, knocked out both his boy
and McLean, and broke his own leg. A good many years
before that a mare, whose name I forget, managed to break
away and jump overboard when they were shipping her.
She swam about for three hours before she was secured and
brought to land, and she lived to be a famous matron in
Germany.
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*
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
The tide was not high enough to permit of horses walk-
ing on board until after 4.30 p.m., and there was nothing to
do now but wait patiently and watch the various steamers
taking in or discharging cargo. The latter operation
appeared to be confined as regards its subject-matter to
Dutch cheeses, which seemed quite innumerable ; at any rate
the monotonous counting of them never ceased throughout
the afternoon. At last the time came when Galtee More
was to be unboxed. All engines and other alarming
machines were as far as possible stopped; the box was
opened, and out he came amid these strange surroundings
with the calm, confident eye which always distinguished him
so clearly from the class of animal who cannot bear to be
saddled in the paddock. McLean led him and Pearce
scrambled on to his back ; so they progressed among the
network of railways, and through the shed at the quayside
to the ship. Pearce got down and ran on board to the box
to be ready for him there, and now for only a few moments
we saw Galtee More for the last time in England. Never in
his life did he look so well, for having been eased in his work
for some weeks he has begun to let down and develop into
the magnificent stallion he will ultimately become. Not a
hair did he turn, but stood there placidly awaiting whatever
was to come next, and when asked to go on board he walked
along the gangway without the smallest hesitation. They
soon had him in his box with his head tied down on either
side and Pearce there to let him know that it was all right.
The partition was slipped into its place alongside him, the
tarpaulins were fixed up to shut him off from view, a
sufficient opening being left for air, and there he was safe
and sound. Two bags of oats and three trusses of hay, the
very best that money could buy, were shipped with him, also
some green food, and then it only remained to say good-bye
to my old friend, whose record of 14 lb. better than Kilcock
last autumn can seldom have been surpassed.
I was sorry to leave him, for he is such a kindly, honest
horse, so different from the rogues and rags which abound on
and disgrace the British Turf. However, there can be no
doubt that he will be well looked after in his new home, and
it is only to be hoped that there are mares in Russia good
enough for him.
o                                   ...                         .                      .
While I was writing this on Sunday morning the follow-
ing telegram reached me :—
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
"Rotterdam, 12.6, 9.30 a.m. Reached here at 11.23 a.m. Galtee
More arrived safely.—McLean'."
So far so good, and if all goes well the big horse will be at
Berlin this (Monday) evening, where General Arapoff and
the Russian veterinary surgeon will be waiting to meet him.
Of course, he has a special horse-box to travel in from
Rotterdam, the ordinary Continental ones being far from
what they should be.
It goes without saying that the Grand Duke
Dimitri has done good service to his country
in securing such a horse. It is very seldom,
indeed, that anything of such class is to be bought
at any price whatever. Since then the Board and
also private breeders have been making various
iudicious purchases, which include Clover (French
Derby), Carlton, Endurance, Bendigo, Magus,
Fordham, Marshal Saxe and Shaddock—the last-
named by far the best of the lot, excepting Galtee
More himself, for Shaddock is ideally bred to make
a stallion, and the Duke of Westminster refused
10,000 guineas for him during his three-year-old
career.
The Board of Imperial Horse-breeding in Russia
has passed through the following stages :—In 181!)
the Emperor Alexander I. founded a committee
of cavalry and artillery for the management and
control of studs. In 1833 this committee was re-
constituted by a decree of the Emperor Nicholas II.,
and became the official Committee of Russian Horse-
breeding. In the year 1836, this Committee edited
and issued the first Russian Stud Hook. In this
year, too, Imperial Prizes were instituted for a
certain class of races. In 1843 the Imperial
Horse-breeding Board was instituted, and in 185!)
that was changed to the Head Imperial Horse-
breeding Board, under which name the organisa-
tion still exists.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
The Government Studs
There are now in Russia the following Govern-
ment Studs :—
Chrenovoy. — Founded in 1778 by Count
(Mow Tchesmensky, and bought in 1845 by the
Government. The stud consists of 712 head, viz.
17 trotting stallions, 138 mares, and 194 young
stock coming on ; and of other breeds, such as
Suffolks, 33rabants, and Ardennes, 16 stallions, 170
mares, and 177 young stock. The stud is well
situated in the government of Woronesh, where
the pasture is good.
Strieeetozky.—Founded in 1813 for breeding
remounts.
Limauewaky.—Founded in 1819 for breeding
saddle-horses of Orlow Rostoptchin type.
Nowo-Alexandrowskij.—Founded in 1823
for breeding horses of heavy cavalry type.
Derkulsky.—Founded in 1750, mainly for
thoroughbreds.
The four last-mentioned studs are situated in
the government of Charkow, in a plain, with a dry
climate, and there seems to be a disposition on the
part of the Government to extend the area of these
studs.
Janowski.—Founded in 1817 for thoroughbred
and half-bred horses, but the half-breds now have so
little outside blood in them that they can be ranked
as thoroughbreds for practical purposes, for during
at least seven generations only thoroughbred
stallions have been used at that stud.
The whole six Government Studs contained
last year 2784 animals.
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
Stallion Depots
Besides those, however, there exist thirty-three
stallion depots, where Government stallions are
sent for the purpose of improving the local breeds.
In these thirty-three depots the Government has
about 4000 stallions, and these cover yearly about
90,000 mares. This is no great number for the
whole of Russia, but shows a vast improvement on
our inert methods. There are 1500 thoroughbred
mares now registered in the Russian Stud Book,
which is edited by the Horse-breeding Board, and
there are no fewer than thirty-two racecourses
with 220 days' racing in the year.
Racing in Russia
The last return gave 1209 flat races during that
period, and 265 steeplechases ; the stakes altogether
amounting to 1,515,000 roubles (£160,000).
Russia understands the Thoroughbred and
makes the most of him
It will be clearly seen, from the foregoing state-
ment of facts, that the Russian Government is
keenly alive to the value of the British thorough-
bred and to the necessity of the racecourse test.
Government Assistance to Horse-breeding
in France
In France, as in other Continental countries,
horse-breeding is regarded as an affair of State
importance, and is encouraged and aided by
Government accordingly. I have received from
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
a high authority in that country the following
particulars :—
ABOUT GOVERNMENT STALLIONS
Twice or three times a year an appointment is given by
" la Direction des Haras," a special branch of " Ministere de
l1 Agriculture.1' Owners are invited to bring the best horses,
with good performances; three or four "Inspecteurs des haras,"
with all particulars and performances in hand, make a choice
for size, soundness, and good looks amongst the horses shown.
An offer is made to an owner, who can accept or refuse it.
Horses are so bought at prices ranging from JP200 to £6000.
Such horses are sent, if offer accepted, to one of principal
Government Studs (Depot d'Etalons), very often to Haras
du Pin in Normandy. But before a fortnight is elapsed, the
horse can be returned to the owner, without any explanation,
if the horse is found unsound for stallion purpose—wind, eyes,
wind-sucking, etc. etc. Owner cannot ask any reward for a
horse returned and so valueless.
Horses kept are sent some time afterward where wanted in
Government studs ; there are something like ten or twelve
of those studs. All horses are advertised at low fees—one
sovereign, two sovereigns. The best advertised at =£"4, never
over £i.
Marks are put in different categories, according as
they have won more or less money on Turf; are balloted by
categories. Best stallions serve only mares of " first cate-
gories," having won at least £"1600 in stakes.
What are Government stallions is explained above. Four
or five subscriptions are reserved for half-bred mares.
" La Direction des Haras" also encourages breeding by
allowing special sums called "primes" to thoroughbred
stallions and to some half-bred brood mares.
If you put the subscription of a stallion at a fee of ,£"4 or
under £4>, you can ask the allotment of a " prime." Prime
ranges from i?20 to i?100 yearly. If the horse is really good
the higher prime is conceded to him. But to receive total
amount of prime allotted the horse must have covered at least
thirty mares ; between fifteen and thirty mares a proportion
of the prime is given, under fifteen mares nothing:
Breeding for remounts is promoted also by different primes
given to the best half-bred brood mares.
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BREEDING ON THE CONTINENT
The above gives a brief outline of the way in
which horse-breeding is promoted in France, in
the south-west part of which country numbers
of the best light cavalry horses in the world are
produced. Indeed everywhere but in England,
the home of the blood horse, the importance
of horse-breeding to the State is officially recog-
nised. Here we do nothing except to distribute
Queen's Premiums to stallions, without any regard
to their pedigrees or performances, and when
cavalry remounts are badly wanted we employ
purchasing officers, on whom clever dealers foist the
worst animals at the highest regulation prices, not
only in Great Britain and Ireland, but, worse still,
on the Continent. The Hungarian horses bought
for our Government during the Transvaal war were
the most sorry wretches which that country could
spare, though being well bred they did better than
the commoners from South America. It is a fact
that in Austria-Hungary the fact that we were
buying thousands of their horses was at first viewed
with alarm, and a Commission was sent to enquire
into the matter with a view to the exportation being
stopped if thought necessary; but when the members
of the Commission saw the class of horses that was
being bought they reported that no interference
was necessary. As one Serene Highness observed,
" We shall not have any more bad horses in
Hungary. The British Government has bought
them all ! "—and this, be it remembered, at a price
exceeding the market value of the best!
However, there is no need to pursue this subject
further here, more especially as we are on the eve, it
may be hoped, of sweeping changes at the War
Office. But in concluding this very insufficient work
on the British Thoroughbred the writer cannot but
emphasise two wishes—the one that blood and
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
blood only shall be used for getting remounts,
hackneys being strictly " taboo" ; and the other
that the Remount Department of the War Office
shall be cleared away, root and branch. Its evils
are far too ingrained for any partial remedy.
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-ocr page 324-
NOTE
As Mr. Bruce Lowe unfortunately died before his
book was ready for press, and it was very hastily and
imperfectly edited, it has been thought well to make out
a list of the errata for the benefit of all those who have
the book.
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-ocr page 325-
- - _^
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APPENDIX
ERRATA.—Breeding Race Horses by the Figure System, by
Bruce Lowe.
In' Preface
PAGE
5.   In Herod's pedigree, for "Melora" read "Meliora.1'
6.   Line 5, for " Two Oaks winners" read " Three Oaks
winners.1'
Line 6, for " from the 8 family " read " from the 3 family."
7.   In Gladiator's pedigree, for "Mermen" read "Merman."
In The Barb's pedigree, for " Galnure " read " Gulnare."
8.   In Prince Rudolph's pedigree, for " Alice Haw" read
" Alice Hawthorn."
In the Body of the Work
7.  Line 28, " there is an attempt to prove that the Byerly
Turk Mare, dam of the Two True Blues, is descended
from Burton's Barb Mare."
The Stud Book merely says that the dam of the
Two True Blues is " conjectured to have been the same
as the above mare," i.e. Surley's dam, who was descended
from Burton Barb.
8.   Line 9, leave out the word " other." These three families
have won more than one-third of all the classic races,
or more than half of all the other families combined.
15.   Line 26, for " Trumpator " read " Trumpeter."
16.   After "Tregonwell's Natural Barb Mare," add Great-
grandam of Ramsden's Byerly Turk Mare.—Stud Book.
vol. i. 5.
17.   After " Burton's Barb Mare," add Stud Book, vol. i. 4.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
PAGE
18. Iii tables, insert after " Angler,'" Briar Root (1000); after
" Voltigeur," Yellow Filly (Oaks).1
18.   Add after " Dam of Two True Blues," Stud Boole, vol. i. 5.
19.   In tables, add after "Bridget," Camelia (1000, Oaks); after
" Favonius," add Flatcatcher (2000) ; after " Memoir,"
Mentmore Lass (1000). Take out Volante.
19.   Add after " The Lavton Barb Mare," Stud Book, vol. i. 12.
20.   After " Daughter of Massey's Black Barb," add Dam of
Old Ebony.—Stud Book, vol. i. 9.
20. In tables, add" to " Gladiateur " (2000); alter " Reine " to
read (Oaks, 1000). Take out Pretender, wrong family.
20.   After "Old Bald Peg," add Dam of Old Morocco
Mare.—Stud Book, vol. i. 14.
21.   In line 5 take out " Musjid," insert " Caractacus " ; alter
" 1859 " to 1862.
21. In tables, add after " Fidget Colt," Green Mantle (Oaks),
Hernandez (2000); add after " Tarrare," Volante
(Oaks). Omit Phosphorus, wrong family.
21. After "Black LeggedRoyal Mare," add SW#oofc,vol.i. 16.
21. In tables, alter "Cotherstone " to read (2000, Derby) ; add
after him Diophantus (2000).
21.   "Bustler Mare (dam of Byerly Turk Mare)," to read
" dam of Byerly Turk Mare, and fourth dam of Coney-
skins Mare.—Stud Book, vol. i. 7."
" I cannot help regarding this line as being one of the
most valuable sire families in the Stud Book, not except-
ing No. 3."
"One of the most . . . not excepting." Presumably
this means that it is the most valuable.
N.B.—There is an omission in the Stud Book under this
Coneyskins Mare. " F. by Bay Bolton " ought to be
added to her foals. She appears on page 3 as Bay
Bolton Mare (bred by Hutton). It was stated on high
authority in 1895 that this Bay Bolton Mare was
daughter of the Coneyskins Mare. It is from this mare
that Chester (Australia), Newminster, Melton, Ayr-
shire, St. Serf, and other good horses come.
22.   In tables, insert after "Nunnykirk," Octavian(L.). Take
out Camelia, wrong family. Alter " Young Mouse " to
(1000).
22. Add after " The Old Vintner Mare," Stud Book, vol. i. 17.
1 This makes an alteration necessary on p. 17 of Forty-five Classic.
Seventeen Oaks.
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APPENDIX
23. In tables, alter " Lady Oxford " to " Lady Orford."
23. Add after "Daughter of (rower Stallion, dam of Childers
Mare," Dam of Snap mare.—Stud Book, vol. i. 188.
23.   In tables, alter "Vesta" to " Vespa."
24.   Add after " The Sedbury Royal Mare " Dam (perhaps)
of the Pet Mar-e.—Stud Book, vol. i. 15.
25.   In tables, add after " Enamel," Enterprise (2000). Take
out Bellina and John Bull, both of 13 family.
25.   Add to " Royal Mare (dam of Brimmer Mare)," Great-
grandam of Montagu Mare.—Stud Bool; vol. i. 13.
26.   Add to tables, Wizard (2000); alter " Cadland " to read
(2000, Derby).
27.   Take out " Dam of Mare by Darcy's White Turk," insert
Grandam of Grey Royal.—Stud Book, vol. i. 10.
27.   In tables, add after " Beadsman," Bellina (Oaks); after
" Geo. Frederick," John Bull (Derby).
28.   Add after "The Oldfield Mare," Great-grandam of Lady
Mare.—Stud Book, vol. i. 11.
Lines 27, 28, 29, "The 14 line has done still further service
in the States, for has it not given them that greatest of
all winning horses, 'Tammany' (from Tullahoma 14) ? "
Note.—Tullahoma belongs to No. 12.
29.   Alter "Royal Mare (dam of Old Whynot)" to read
" (dam of Grey Whynot).— Stud Book, vol. i. 18."
29.   Add to " Sister to Stripling by Hutton's Spot," Grandam
of Y. Marske Mare.—Stud Book, vol. i. 317.
30.   Note re error in Ormonde's pedigree. Don Juan traces
to Old Coquette, daughter of Curwen Old Spot Mare.—
Stud Book, vol. i. 17.
31.   Alter " Byerly Turk Mare (dam of mare by Carlisle
Turk)" to (dam of Wharton Mare).—Stud Book,
vol. i. 18.
Grandam, according to the Stud Book, but there is
a note questioning the accuracy of one step in the
pedigree.
32.   Add after " Daughter of Old Woodcock (dam of daughter
of Old Spot)," Fourth dam of Bartlet's Childers Marc.
Stud Book, vol. i. 2.
32. In tables alter " Formosa " to read " (2000, 1000, Oaks,
Leger)." Take out Sir Thomas, 38 family.
32. Add to " Daughter of DavilFs Old Woodcock," Great-
grandam of Counsellor (Wood's) Mare.—Stud Book,
vol. i. 8.
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
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33. Add to " Daughter of Gascoigne's Foreign Horse,'" Dam
of (Grey) Favourite.—Stud Book, vol. i. 9.
33. Lines 13, 14, "More largely represented to-day in last
volume of the Stud Booh than Nos. 15, 16, 17, 18,
and 19."—B. L.
In vol. xviii. family 19 is far ahead, and family 16
has about thirty more mares than this family.
33. Add after " The Moonah Barb Mare of Queen Anne,"
Stud Book, vol. i. 14.
35. Add after " Belgrade Turk Mare (dam of Bay Bolton
Mare)," Grandam of Flora.—Stud Book, vol. i. 86.
35. Line 17, take out " Barcarolle (1000)," she belongs to 45
family, insert " Aphrodite (1000).''
35. Add after " Piping Peg (dam of the Hobby Mare),"
Stud Book, vol. i. 11.
35.   Add to No. 23, Pitsford (2000).
36.   Add to " Helmsley Turk Mare (dam of Bockwood Mare),"
Grandam of Old Lady (Bolton's).—StudBook,\o\.\. 15.
37.   Add to " A Brimmer Mare (dam of Old Searboro'
Mare)," Stud Book, vol. i. 16.
37. Line 16, take out " Bourbon (L.)," wrong family, insert
"Azor(D.)."|
37. Add to " Daughter of Merlin (dam of Mare by Darley
Arabian)," Great-grandam of Salome (or Selima).—
Stud Book, vol. i. 16.
37.   Line 26, Augusta did not win the 2000. In addition to
those mentioned, Teetotum won the Oaks in 1780 ;
Patron the 2000 in 1829 ; Augustus the 2000 in 1830 ;
and Potentia the 1000 in 1841.
38.  Add after" A Spanker Mare (dam of a Byerly Turk Mare),"
Grandam of Farmer Mare.—Stud Book, vol. i. 9.
38. Lines 6 and 7, alter "Pero Gomez (D.)" to Pero Gomez
(L.) ; " Phosphorus (L.)" to Phosphorus (D.)
38. Add after "Daughter of Places White Turk (dam of
Coppin Mare)," Stud Book, vol. i. 7.
38.   Add after " A Natural Barb Mare (dam of a Basset
Arabian Mare)," Great-grandam of Fox Mare (Van-
essa's dam).—Stud Book, vol. i. 89.
39.   Add to " Daughter of Due de Chartres' Hawker," Gran-
dam of Golden Locks.—Stud Book, vol. i. 10.
39. Add after " Dick Burton's Mare (sometimes called a Barb
Mare)," Dam of Son of Brimmer Mare.—Stud Book,
vol. i. 4.
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APPENDIX
PAGE
39.   To " Barb Mare (dam of Dodsworth)," add Royal Mare.—
Stud Book, vol. i. 15.
40.   To " Sister to Honeycomb Punch,'1 add Dam of Makeless
M. (Devonshire's).—Stiul Bool; vol. i. 13.
40. Add to " Daughter of Hautboy (dam of Coneyskin's
Mare, progenitor of Hutton's Daphne)," Grandam of
Surlev Mare (dam of Hutton's Spot).—Stud Book,
vol. i'. 205.
40.   To " Daughter of Bustler (the dam and grandam of
Byerly Turk and Bay Bolton Mares),1' add Fifth dam
of Clio (Morley's).— Stud Bool; vol. i. 240.
41.   Add to "Daughter of Curwen Bay Barb," Dam of
Young Greyhound Mare (Miner's dam).—Stud Bool;
vol. i. 97.
41. Add to "Sister to Old Merlin," Great-grandam of Make-
less Mare (Pierson's).—Stud Bool; vol. i. 13.
41. Add to "Thwaits' Dun Mare," Stud Bool; vol. i. 380.
No. 38. " I can find no horses of any note, save Pot-8-os,
in this line."
Sir Thomas (D.) by Pontac out of Pot-8-os'dam.
41.   To " Bonny Black (from a daughter of Persian stallion),'"
add Dam of Cyprus Arabian Mare.—Stud Bool; vol.
i. 9.
42.   Add to " A Royal Mare (dam of Brimmer Mare),'"
Grandam of two Castaway Mares.—Stud Bool; vol. i. 6.
42. Add to " A Grasshopper Mare (dam of Hartley's Blind
Horse)," Grandam of Traveller Mare (Rouths).—Stud,
Bool:,
vol. i. 215.
42. Add to "A Spanker Mare (dam of mare by Pulleine's
Arabian)," Fourth dam of (Bolton) Patriot Mare.—
Stud Bool; vol. i. 155.
42. Line 11, for "Cestus" read " Cetus."
42. Add to " Natural Barb Mare (presented by Emperor of
Morocco)," Great-grandam of Cardigan Colt Mare.—
Stud Book, vol. i. 54.
46. Line3,For"Sedbury(12),"read"Sedbury (*)." "Sedburv
was son of Old Montagu, Stud Book, vol. i. 14, and
does not descend from Montagu Mare, Stud Bool;
vol. i. 13. He may descend from the same Royal mare,
but there is nothing to show that he does. Both
J. Osborne (4th edition) and Stonehenge (17th edition)
have confused these two mares in their pedigrees of
Eclipse, giving Mother Western's dam as bv " Wood-
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
PAUE
cock " instead of by " (Old) Montagu." There are no
descendants in female line of Sedbury's dam. She
only produced one daughter, who was dam of two
colts.
46. Line 17, "Blair Athol (9)" should be "Blair Athol (10)."
46. Line 20, " Hampton (9)" should be " Hampton (10)."
49.   "Hutton's Royal Colt (11)" in Eclipse's pedigree. Hutton's
Royal Colt was from a Sedbury Royal Mare, but not
necessarily 11.—Stud Book, vol. i. 381.
50.   In Herod's pedigree, take out " No. 15 " after Why Not.
Why Not was sire of Grey Why Not and of Old
Snail. His dam was a Royal Mare, of which there is
no other record in the Stud Book (see vol. i. 384).
52. In Herod's pedigree, for " Selina " read " Selima."
52. In Bridget's pedigree, alter " Jemima (8)" to " Je-
mima (3)."
52.   In Faith's pedigree, " Curiosity" was out of Sister to
Miss Belsea.
53.   Line 11, "Fox (7)" should be "Fox (6)."
54.   In Marotte's pedigree, for " Traveller (25)" read
"Traveller (37)"; and for "Hartley's Blind Horse
(41)" read " Hartley's Blind Horse (13)."
54. In Mayfly's pedigree, " Daughter of Grasshopper (2) by
Crab (9)" should read " Daughter of Grasshopper 4*
by Byerly Turk."
Mayfly's dam was daughter of Look-at-me-Lads by Bristol
Grasshopper. Grasshopper by Crab was foaled in
1731, the same year as Look-at-me-Lads.
54. In Matchem Middleton's pedigree, read instead of
" Bay Bolton (37)," " Son (*) of Bay Bolton."
54. For " Rarety " read " Rarity."
54. Pedigree of Giantess, alter number of Hartley's Blind
Horse from (41) to (13) in Babraham's pedigree. For
" Daughter of Hartley's Blind Horse (41) by Holder-
ness Turk," read " Daughter of Coles' Foxhunter (5)
by Brisk (*)."
54. Footnote, " I have stated at page 25 it is more than
probable Grey Royal, grandam of Hartley's Blind
Horse," etc'.
Grey Royal was gvcfl^-grandam of Hartley's Blind Horse.
54. Take out words " Inbred to Hartley's Blind Horse"
above Giantess.
Giantess was not inbred to the Blind Horse. Her fourth
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APPENDIX
PAGE
dam was sister to Roxana, and Cade, sire of Matchem,
was son of Roxana.
55. In Soldier's pedigree, "Omar (10)" should be "Omar (9)."
55. In Miss Hervey's pedigree, " Daughter of Starling (28)"
should be "'Starling (24)."
55. In King Fergus' pedigree, as above.
55. In Don Quixote's pedigree, " Grecian Princess (9) "
should be " Grecian Princess (13) " ; for " By-
Forester (*)" read "By Forester (23)"'; for "Daughter
of Coalition Colt (*)" read " Coalition Colt (9)."
55. In Joe Andrews' pedigree, for "Omnium (9)" read
" Omnium (4).""
55. In Pot-8-os' pedigree, for " Oroonoko (6) " read
" Oroonoko (7)."
58. In Whalebone's pedigree, " Brunette, by Squiriel (4), bv
Traveller (24) " should be " Traveller (37)."
58.   In Whalebone's pedigree, for " Dove by Matchless ("i") "
read "Matchless (13)."
Dove's dam was daughter of xVncaster Starling (4), not
daughter of Starling (28).
59.   Pedigree of Gladiateur, for " Comus (24) " read
" Comus (25)."
62. Pedigree of Chester, " Harkavvav out of Daughter of
Nabocklish (9)" should be "Nabocklish (4).'"
65. Pedigree of Isonomy, " Oxford (12), by Birdcatcher (11),
Sir Hercules (2) out of Guiccioli (2)." Take out
figure 2 after Guiccioli; she is 11.
67. In Peter's pedigree, for " Dr. of Tomboy (8) bv Ardrossan
(2)," read " Dr. of Ardrossan (2) by John'Bull (13)."
75.   Pedigree of St. Simon, for " Lacertia " read " Lacerta,"
by Zodiac (/), by St. George "(9)," not " (15)."
76.   Pedigree of Speculum, for " Langar (7) " read
"Langar (6)."
76. Pedigree of Speculum, for " Walton (6) " read
" Walton (7)."
76. Pedigree of Speculum, for " Merlin (7) " read
" Merlin (8)."
76. Lines 7 and 8, " Progress, dam of Penton, a good race-
horse, by Speculum, is in the No. 8 line."—B. L.
Speculum got several better horses than Penton. His
elder brother, Advance, was better. It is a mistake
to bring such a horse as Penton into the argument.
Speculum, sire of—
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
PAGE
cock" instead of by " (Old) Montagu." There are no
descendants in female line of Sedbury's dam. She
only produced one daughter, who was dam of two
colts.
46. Line 17, "Blair Athol (9)" should be "Blair Athol (10)."
46. Line 20, " Hampton (9) " should be " Hampton (10)."
49.   "Hutton's Royal Colt (11)" in Eclipse's pedigree. Hutton's
Royal Colt was from a Sedbury Royal Mare, but not
necessarily 11.—Stud Book, vol. i. 381.
50.  In Herod's pedigree, take out " No. 15 " after Why Not.
Why Not was sire of Grey Why Not and of Old
Snail. His dam was a Royal Mare, of which there is
no other record in the Stud Book (see vol. i. 384).
52. In Herod's pedigree, for " Selina " read " Selima."
52. In Bridget's pedigree, alter " Jemima (8)" to " Je-
mima (3)."
52.   In Faith's pedigree, " Curiosity" was out of Sister to
Miss Belsea.
53.   Line 11, " Fox (7)" should be "Fox (6)."
54.   In Marotte's pedigree, for " Traveller (25) " read
"Traveller (37)"; and for "Hartley's Blind Horse
(41)" read " Hartley's Blind Horse (13)."
54. In Mayfly's pedigree, " Daughter of Grasshopper (2) by
Crab (9) " should read " Daughter of Grasshopper 4"
by Byerly Turk."
Mayfly's dam was daughter of Look-at-me-Lads by Bristol
Grasshopper. Grasshopper by Crab was foaled in
1731, the same year as Look-at-me-Lads.
54. In Matchem Middleton's pedigree, read instead of
" Bay Bolton (37)," " Son (+) of Bay Bolton."
54. For "Rarety" read "Rarity."
54. Pedigree of Giantess, alter number of Hartley's Blind
Horse from (41) to (13) in Babraham's pedigree. For
" Daughter of Hartley's Blind Horse (41) by Holder-
ness Turk," read " Daughter of Coles' Foxhunter (5)
by Brisk (4-)."
54. Footnote, " I have stated at page 25 it is more than
probable Grey Royal, grandam of Hartley's Blind
Horse," etc.
Grey Royal was great-graxid&m of Hartley's Blind Horse.
54. Take out words " Inbred to Hartley's Blind Horse"
above Giantess.
Giantess was not inbred to the Blind Horse. Her fourth
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APPENDIX
PAGE
dam was sister to Roxana, and Cade, sire of Matchem,
was son of Roxana.
55. In Soldier's pedigree, "Omar (10)"should be "Omar (9)."
55. In Miss Hervey's pedigree, " Daughter of Starling (28)"
should be " Starling (24)."
55. In King Fergus1 pedigree, as above.
55. In Don Quixote's pedigree, " Grecian Princess (9) "
should be " Grecian Princess (13) " ; for " By
Forester (*)" read "By Forester (23) "'; for "Daughter
of Coalition Colt (*) " read " Coalition Colt (9)."
55. In Joe Andrews' pedigree, for " Omnium (9)" read
" Omnium (4)."
55. In Pot-8-os' pedigree, for " Oroonoko (6) " read
" Oroonoko (7)."
58. In Whalebone's pedigree, " Brunette, by Squirrel (4), by
Traveller (24) " should be " Traveller (37)."
58.   In Whalebone's pedigree, for " Dove by Matchless ("h) "
read "Matchless (13)."
Dove's dam was daughter of Ancaster Starling (4), not
daughter of Starling (28).
59.   Pedigree of Gladiateur, for " Comus (24)" read
" Comus (25)."
62. Pedigree of Chester, " Harkaway out of Daughter of
Nabocklish (9)" should be " N'abocklish (4):'
65. Pedigree of Isonomy, " Oxford (12), by Birdcatcher (11),
Sir Hercules (2) out of Guiccioli (2)." Take out
figure 2 after Guiccioli; she is 11.
67. In Peter's pedigree, for " Dr. of Tomboy (8) by Ardrossan
(2)," read " Dr. of Ardrossan (2) by John'Bull (13)."
75.   Pedigree of St. Simon, for " Lacertia" read " Lacerta,"
by Zodiac (/), by St. George "(9)," not "(15)."
76.   Pedigree of Speculum, for " Langar (7) " read
" Langar (6)."
76. Pedigree of Speculum, for " Walton (6) " read
" Walton (7)."
76. Pedigree of Speculum, for " Merlin (7) " read
" Merlin (8)."
76. Lines 7 and 8, " Progress, dam of Penton, a good race-
horse, by Speculum, is in the No. 8 line."—B. L.
Speculum got several better horses than Penton. His
elder brother, Advance, was better. It is a mistake
to bring such a horse as Penton into the ai'gument.
Speculum, sire of—
305                                x
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
PAGE
pedon (13)" ; for " Robin Grey (*)" read " Robin
Grey (15)"; for "Daughter "of Shark (/)" read
" Daughter of Shark (*)."
Shark (4*) is grandson of Marlborough Mare.—Stud
Book, i. 123.
In the female line of Timoleon Bruce Lowe ends up
with pedigree of Symme's Wildair, whereas he ought to
give the pedigree of the daughter of Symme's Wildair.
123. In Miriam's pedigree, for " Sir Archy (41) " read
" Sir Archv (13)."
123. Line 7, for "Sir Archy (41)" read "Sir Archy (13)";
for " Sarpedon (41) " read " Sarpedon (13)."
123. Line 10, for " Robin Grey (*)" read " Robin Grey (15)."
123. For " Duke of Magenta " read " Magenta."
" Duke of Magenta" is by Lexington out of
Magenta, by Yorkshire out of Miriam by Glencoe.
125.   In the pedigree of Reel, for " Gohanna (28)" read
"Gohanna (24)"; for " Florizel (6)" read " Flori-
zel (5)."
126.   In Henry Basset's pedigree, for " Sarpedon (41) "
read "Sarpedon (13)"; for "Brown Javelin, by
Javelin (41)" read "Javelin (13)."
128. In Sir Modred's pedigree, for " Langar (7) " read
" Langar (6)."
133. Table 2, for "(3) Oiime (3)" read "(11) Orme (3)."
133. Table 2, for "(14) Tammany (11)" read "(12) Tammany
(H)."
133.   Table 4, for "(16) Muncaster (8, 14)" read "(16) Mun-
caster (14, 11)."
134.   Line 12, for " (10) Petrarch (13, 9)" read " (10)
Petrarch (13, 19)."
134.   Line 10, for " (8) Newminster (37, 3)" read (8) New-
minster (37, 2)."
135.   Line 11, for "(2) Voltigeur (5, 8)" read "(2) Voltigeur
(5, 12)."
135.   Line 11, for "(2) Hetmari Platoff (25, 3)" read "(2)
Hetman Platoff (25, 6)."
136.   Line 10, for "(2) Harkaway (9)" read "(2) Hark-
away (4)r
136.   Line 14, for " (3) Abercorn (13, 4)" read "(3) Abercorn
(13, 3)."
137.   Line 6, for "(/) Woodpecker (6, 4)" read "Wood-
pecker (6, 4-)." Woodpecker's maternal great-grand-
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APPENDIX
PAGE
sires were the Lonsdale Bay Arabian and the Godolphin
Barb.
137. Line 9, for "(17) Pantaloon (3)" read "(17) Pantaloon
(27)."
137. Line 11, for "(4) Ion (8, 8)" read "(4) Ion (12, 8)."
137. Line 12, for "Dutch Skater "read "(5) Dutch Skater
(22, /)."
137. Line 17, for "(11) Sir Archy (28)" read "(13) Sir
Archy (24)."
137. Line 17, for " (11) Fisherman (12, 12) " read " (11) Fisher-
man (12, /)."
137.   Line 20, for " (12) Lexington (22, 4)" read " (12) Lex-
ington (13, <)."
138.  Line 2, for "(6) Cade (*)" read "(6) Cade (15)."
138. Line 12, for "(23) Barcaldine (12)" read "(23) Bar-
caldine (22, 12)."
138. Line 14, for " (27) Arbitrator (8)" read " (27) Arbi-
trator (6)."
138.  Line 15, for "(9) Kilwarlin (12, 3)" read "(9) Kilwarlin
(12, 5)."
139.   In pedigree of Kincsem, for " Newcourt (8)" read
"Newcourt (35)."
140.   Pedigree of Little Ladv, for " Langar (7) " read
" Langar (6)."
145.   Pedigree of Peregrine, for " Langar (7) " read
" Langar (6)."
146.  Pedigree of Fireworks, for " Priam (5)" read " Priam
(6) "; for " Daughter of Muley (7) " read " Muley (6)."
148. " Nutwith (9), bv Jerry? in pedigree of Hilarious,
should read " Nutwith (9), by Tomboy (8)."
148. In same pedigree, add Brown Bread's figure, viz. (16).
153.  Line 25, from Bridesmaid by "Mattendon" read
" Yattendon."
154.  Pedigree of Abercorn, for " Lelia (2) by Emilius
(28)" read "Zelia by Emilius (28)." For "Juliet
(11) by Touchstone," read "Juliet (13)."
155.  Lines 13 and 14, "Regulus (12)" should be "Regulus (11)."
156.  For note at top of page read—" The figure underlined
is the sire's or dam's own line, the left-hand one that
of his or her sire, and the right-hand figure his or
her maternal grandam."
159. Line 4, for "Daughter of (31) Gladiator" read
" Daughter of (22) Gladiator."
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THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
PAGE
159. Line 6, "(8) Redshank" should be "(15) Redshank."
159. Line 9, for "Imp. Jim Whiffler" read "Imp. Tim
Whiffler."
159. Line 21, for " Daughter of (3) Camerino " read " Daugh-
ter of (24) Camerino."
159. Line 25, for "Pietas by Pelion {4, 2)," read "Pietas
by Pelion (11)."
163. Line 1, for "Hermit by Newminster (8, 6)" read
" Hermit by Newminster (8, 5)."
163. Line 1, for "(18) Tadmor" read "(12) Tadmor."
163,  line 9. "Madame Pelerine (26)" should be "Madame
Pelerine (31)"; same line, for "Raline" read "Baleine."
164.   Lines 9, 10, 11, "Reve d'Or (Oaks) is bred by a nick
of her sire, Hamptoiis Melbourne and Touchstone
blood in Lord Clifden, her third dam a West
Australian mare."
Reve d'Or's second dam is by West Australian.
169. Lines 11,12, " His figures are—Emilius by Orville (8)—
(28) from Emily (30) by Stamford."
Read " by Orville (8) from Emily (28), by Stam-
ford (30)."
172.   In Miss Woodford's pedigree, for " Daughter of
Phantom (7) " read " Daughter of Phantom (6)"; for
"Knight of St. George (/)" read "Knight of St.
George (26)."
173.   In the pedigree of Firenze, for "Venison (10)" read
" Venison (11)."
178. In the pedigree of Gladiator, alter "Little Folly (3)
by Highland Fling" to "Little Folly by Highland
Fling (12)." "Daughter of Smolensko (15)" to read
" Daughter of Smolensko (18) " ; " Vauxhall Snap
Mare (/)" to read " Vauxhall Snap Mare (20)."
In the same pedigree alter " Canary Bird by
Sorcerer (7) " to read " Canary Bird by Sorcerer (6) ";
" Morgiana (/)," take out figure—she is No. 12;
"Muley (7)" alter to " Muley (6)."
181. In Domino's pedigree, alter "Sir Archy (41)" to read
"Sir Archy (13)"; take out figures "37" after
" Lizzie G."; alter " Gabriella (3) " to Gabriella (*) " ;
"Sarpedon (41)" to read "Sarpedon (13) " ; "Mulev
(7) "to read "Muley (6)."
183. Line 18, " His fifth dam by Kitty Fisher was by—"
alter to read " His fifth dam by Young- Kitty Fisher."
310
-ocr page 338-
APPENDIX
185.  Line 33, "Seventh dam by Mebzar,11 alter to read
" Seventh dam by Melzar.11
186.  In Bendigo's pedigree, " Y. Melbourne (26)" should be
" Young Melbourne (25).11
187.  Line 2, alter " Mebzar11 to "Melzar.11
190. In the pedigree of Morello, " Sir Archy (41) " appears
twice; should be "Sir Archy (13).'"
192. Alter in Ormonde's pedigree, " Muley Molock (6)" to
" Muley Moloch (9) "; " Voltaire (18)" to " Voltaire
(12) "; " The Cure (21) " to " The Cure (6) "; " Phy-
sician (6)" to "Physician (21)"; "Clarion (6) by
Catton (2) or Sultan (8)," to read "Clarion (6) by
Sultan (8)." Clarion was foaled in 1836; Catton
died in 1833.
192.  Footnote, "*Won Prince of Wales's Stakes and seven-
teen other races.11
Lily Agnes won twenty-one races, including walks
over ; among them were the Northumberland Plate,
Doncaster Cup, and Ebor Handicap. This Prince
of Wales^ Stakes was an unimportant two-year-old
race at York, value j?230.
193.   Lines 26, 27, and 28, "I have not taken the trouble
to go through the last volume (XVI.), but it may be
taken for granted that /, 2, 3, and 4 have forged
still further ahead.11
In Vol. XVIII. of the Stud Book there are 6128
mares, excluding those classed as Arabians. Of these—
540 are of No. / family.
753 „        2
510 „ „ 3 „
131 „ „ 4 „ not through Expectation.
309 „ „ 4 „ from Expectation.
2243 The other families have gained slightly.
206. Lines 26 and 27, "' The Druid' has described Wood-
pecker as a coarse, gross, lop-eared horse, who only
made a good hit
with Buzzard's dam, Ado (3).11
Buzzards dam was Misfortune (3).
" The Druid,11 in Silk and Scarlet, p. 192, says:
" He was a large, coarse horse, with wide lop ears,
311
-ocr page 339-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
PAGE
almost like a prize rabbit, which descended in a
marked way to his stock."
On p. 193, he says: " His greatest hit was with
Buzzard, who was out of a mare by Dux."
217. Pedigree of Emperor of Norfolk, alter "Sir Archy
(11)" (appears six times), to read "Sir Archy (13)";
"Sarpedon (11)" to read "Sarpedon (13)"; "St.
Nicholas (10)" to read " St. Nicholas (6)." Also alter
" Priam (16) " to " Priam (6)"; alter "Mary Randolph,
by Alexandria imp.," to read " Mary Randolph, by
Gohanna, by Sir Archy."
219. In Sir Modred's pedigree, alter " Langar (7)" to
"Langar (6)"; "Daughter of Trumpator (3)" to
" Daughter of Trumpator (14) " ; " The Doctor (/) "
to " The Doctor (23)."
226. In pedigree of Persephone, alter " Priam (7)" to
"Priam (6)"; "Plover (26) by St. John (9), by St.
Nicholas (6), from an Emilius mare," should be " St.
John (9), by St. Nicholas (6), by Emilius (28), out of
a Thunderbolt mare" ; for " Pricilla" read " Pris-
cilla." Take out "Daughter of Dover, sister to
Partisan," insert " Proserpine, by Dover (15), by
Patron."
235. For "Prover by St. John," read "Plover by St. John."
237. Line 8, for " the sire of his (8) dam Juliet," read " the
sire of his grandam Juliet."
237. Line 12, for "quite the type of his sire Melbourne,"
read "quite the type of his grandsire Melbourne."
312
-ocr page 340-
SPECIAL APPENDIX
It cannot fail to be of interest to readers of a work like this
to extract from The Sportsman statistics which were compiled
for that paper by the writer of this at the end of each of the
last two seasons—1899 and 1900.
At the end of these, by the courtesy of the Hon. W. A.
Long, the writer is enabled to publish a table compiled by
him for the Australian Pastoralists'' Reviezo, showing the
amounts won in Australia, during season 1899-1900, by the
descendants in tail male of the various lines. It will be seen
that despite the success of Gozo and some other Herod horses,
Eclipse is " out by himself," while Matchem, as in all other
parts of the world, is hopelessly in the rear.
WINNING SIRES OF SUCCESSFUL BROOD MARES
This is the season of statistics, and endeavouring to keep
" in the swim," so to speak, I have compiled the records of
winning stallions for the past season, so far as regards the
successful produce of their daughters. It occurred to me
that these figures would be particularly useful, as they will
show intending purchasers of brood mares the results actually
obtained in 1899 from daughters of the various sires, and I
therefore give in brief summary to-day those results as touch-
ing the first fifty sires. These results will be stated in fuller
detail in a later issue.
WINNING SIRES OF SUCCESSFUL BROOD MARES
In this table the place-money is added in the following- races : Two
Thousand Guineas, One Thousand Guineas, The Derby, The Oaks,
Ascot Gold Cup, Ascot Stakes, Princess of'Wales's Stakes, Newmarket,
Eclipse Stakes, Sandowu, St. Leger Stakes, Jockey Club Stakes,
Cesarewitch, and Cambridgeshire.
313
-ocr page 341-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Name and Bruce
No. of
No. Lowe figures. races won. Value.
1. Galopin3.....48 .£51,609 0
2. Isonomy 19 .
42
21,246 0
3. Hampton 10
46 (1 d.
h.):
18,754 0
4. Bend Or / .
44 (1 d.
h.).
18,175 0
5. Springfield 12
45
16,654 8
6. Rayon d'Or 3
.
15
14,929 0
7. St. Simon 11
24
14,858 0
8. Hermit 5
52 (1 d.
h.):
14,607 0
9. Mortemer / .
14
11,493 0
10. Barcaldine 23
23 (2 d.
h.):
10,885 0
11. Rosicrucian 5
42
8,977 0
12. Rosebery 22
28
8,177 0
13. Wisdom 7 •
23
7,969 0
14. Galliard 13 .
30
6,821 0
15. Beauclerc 10
11 (1 d
h.)'
6,497 0
16. Muncaster 16
26 (1 d
h.)
5,382 0
17. Cceruleus / .
13
5,305 0
18. Albert Victor 13 .
19
5,197 0
19. Doncaster 5
11
4,771 0
20. Uncas /
16
4,709 0
21. Melton 8 .
16
4,673 0
22. The Palmer 5
4
4,556 0
23.   Speculum / .
24.   Hagioscope 23
20 (1 d
,h.)
4,268 0
10
4,241 0
25. Peter 9
20
3,877 0
26. Alvarez 27 .
10
3,724 0
27. Lowlander 23
9
3,507 0
28. Sterling 12 .
18
3,376 0
29. Camballo 2 .
22(1 d
.h.)
3,119 0
30. George Frederick
13
7
3,032 0
31. St. Albans 28
3
2,980 0
32. Victor 3
3
2,802 0
33. Sir Bevys 10
15
2,751 0
34. Mask .2"
13 (1 d
'.h.)
2,738 0
35. Robert the Devil
/
. 7
2,728 0
36. Minting / .
. 6
2,568 0
37. Tibthorpe 16
. 3
2,550 0
.38. Wenloek 4 .
9
2,533 0
39. Scottish Chief 12
8
2,530 0
40. Reverberation 14
. 11
2,498 0
41. Thurio 2 .
. 12 (1 d
'.h.)
2,480 0
42. Glendale 11
. 18 (1 d
.h.)
2,287 0
43. Discord 27 .
. 13
2,238 0
44. Chippendale 24
. 13
. 2,153 0
45. Kisber 4
. 11
2,130 0
46. Balfe43
. 9
. 2,091 0
47. Onondaga 12
6
2,043 0
48. Coltness / .
8
2,043 0
49. Necromancer 9
8
2,029 0
50. Charibert / .
. •
. 16
2,017 0
[In all instances of dead-heats the full value of the stake is credited
to each horse. ]
314
-ocr page 342-
SPECIAL APPENDIX
It will be seen that old Galopin easily heads the list, and
the worth of mares by him has long since been acknowledged,
but of course by far the greater part of his total is made up
by the produce of one mare, Vampire, whose son, Flying Fox,
and daughter, Vane, put together well over ^40,000 in stakes.
There was for a while some doubt as to whether Isonomy
mares were going to be a success, but after the advent of
Cyllene no further doubt was felt on that score, and it will
be seen that Isonomy has finished second in the foregoing
list. Hampton and Bend Or mares have for some years past
been accepted as unimpeachable, nor have they belied their
reputation during the past season. Springfield mares are,
indeed, of distinctly increasing value, and buyers who can
secure young ones by him are lucky. The dam of Democrat
is mainly responsible for the high place gained by her sire,
Rayon d'Or; and after her, in order, we find St. Simon and
Hermit, each one a good safe " stand-by " for the making of
brood mares. St. Simon's daughters are only just coming
forward, but they promise uncommonly well. It needs only
to mention St. Elizabeth, the dam of Forfarshire, and Saintly,
the dam of Longy, to substantiate this statement. As to
Hermit, I have never hesitated to say that I think his blood
in the male line worse than useless except for siring jumpers,
but at the same time its value on the dam's side of a pedigree
is quite another matter, and the success of Hermit mares at
the stud has always been pronounced. Barealdine hardly
stands so high as some might anticipate, nor have Rosi-
crucian's daughters held their own very well in point of value
of stakes, though in number of races won they make a good
show. These mares, however, are now getting on in years,
and must in ordinary course give us fewer winners. There
are pretty clear indications that Galliard mares have been
underrated, and it will be well to bear this in mind when any
daughters of the expatriated son of Galopin come up for sale.
Galliard would himself have been a far greater immediate
stud success but for the great excitability of his stock, but
the mares by him mated with horses of sober temperament
like the Australians may likely enough take very high place.
I will, however, let the statistics speak for themselves.
I promised in my last to give the statistics as to the sires
of winning brood mares in greater detail, and I now proceed
to give the first twenty-four sires, in order of merit, as judged
315
-ocr page 343-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
by the stakes won in 1899 by the produce of their daughters,
and the full particulars now set out cannot, I think, fail
to be of interest and of use to a very large number of
persons.
THE FIRST TWENTY-FOUR WINNING SIRES OF SUCCESS-
FUL BROOD MARES, SEASON 1899
Galopin 3, sire of
Total.
Vampire, dam of Flying Fox, winner of £4250, £5450,
£7190, £9285, £4050, £7190.....  £37,415    0
Ditto, dam of Vane, £400......          400    0
Emita, dam of Emotion, £2660, £510, £3,30, £340, £186 .       4,026    0
Flyaway, dam of The Wyvern, £900, £220 . . .       1,120    0
Ditto, dam of Stealaway, £914......          914    0
Mare out of Miss Foote, dam of Sir Hercules, £1097 .       1,097    0
Queen of the Riding-, dam of Hulcot, £1080 . . .       1,030    0
Sunny Queen, dam of Tovaros, £195, £195, £255, £195 .          840    0
Ditto, dam of Le Blizou, £460, £175 ....          635    0
Sunshine, dam of Baldur, £188, £100, £100, £245 . .          633    0
Queen of Hearts, dam of Veroscope, £.515 . . .          515    0
Galloping Queen, dam of Cottesloe, £437 ....          437    0
Mare out of Braw Lass, dam of Esmeralda II., £136, £196          332    0
Charmian, dam of Canopus, £244 .....          244    0
Ditto, dam of Sati, £148.......          148    0
Bouvardia, dam of Batifolia, £185 .....          185    0
Ditto, dam of Hartsholme, £100, £100 ....          200    0
Cerisette, dam of Swears, £100, £100, £100 . . .          300    0
Satchell, dam of Wantage, £123, £100 ....          223    0
Mare out of Dee, dam of Carbinia, £231 ....          231    0
Vaurienne, dam of Titsey, £184 .....          184    0
Balornoek, dam of Mornock, £100 .....          100    0
Red Shoes, dam of Alan Rufus, £100 ....          100    0
Podagra, dam of Plethora, £100, £100 ....          200    0
Marguerite, dam of Hedge Warbler, £100 . . .          100    0
£51,609    0
Isonomy 19, sire of
Arcadia, dam of Cyllene, winner of £672, £3210
Ditto, dam of Messene, £l00 .
Protocol, dam of Proclamation, £1635, £1375
Ditto, dam of Ultimatum, £262, £440
Heartsease, dam of Refractor, £2.520
Ismay, dam of Simon Dale, £950, £900
Ditto, dam of Dismay, £225 .
Seabreeze, dam of Tom Cringle, £1680
Chloe, dam of St. Lundi, £191, £780
316
£3,882
0
100
0
3,010
0
702
0
2,520
0
1,850
0
225
0
1,680
0
971
0
-ocr page 344-
SPECIAL APPENDIX
Mon Droit, dam of Dieudonne', £935
Isone, dam of Hadrian, £187, £207, £420, £100
Phantassie, dam of Gyp, £830 ....
Cheap Loaf, dam of Vara, £169, £555
Partition, dam of Gairloch, £100, £137
Queen of Pearls, dam of King of Pearls, £130, £100
Isoletta, dam of Matoppo, £225
Domiduca, dam of Jack Spinner, £134
Ditto, dam of Monks Eleigh, £100 .
Ditto, dam of Little Chit, £100
Avilon, dam of Avidity, £185, £194
Bonnie Garry, dam of Glencoe, £135, £192, £100
('intra, dam of Marialva, £241 ....
Elsa, dam of Netta, £100, £100
Countess Lillian, dam of Counsellor, £192
Ferrara, dam of Crowborough, £185
Insomnia, dam of Peripatetic, £100 .
Rose Maylie, dam of Heir Male, £147
£21,240
Hampton 10, sire of
Maid Marian, dam of Ercildouiie, winner of £2105, £200
. £2,505
II
1,902
ii
1,950
1,540
0
1,200
(1
898
0
500
<l
597
II
1,071
0
877
0
430
0
535
II
1,214
II
530
II
443
0
100
II
385
II
380
0
400
(1
185
0
102
II
130
0
100
(1
100
(1
£140.........
Herminia, dam of Herminius, £175, £1787
St. Pride, dam of Choson, £1000, £950 .
Ditto, dam of Griffon, £050, £890 ....
Perdita II., dam of Diamond Jubilee, £1200
Lady Clarendon, dam of Middleton, £185, £351, £302
Ditto, dam of Villiers, £135, £100, £125, £200
Ditto, dam of Headpiece, £137, £400
Summersdale, dam of Summer Gale, £121, £810, £140
La Vierge, dam of Innocence, £500, £177, £200
Ditto, dam of Sir Geoffrey, £430 ....
Wedding Bell, dam of Rice, £535 ....
*Kissing Cup, dam of Goblet, £1214
Hampton Rose, dam of Victoria May, £530
Sprightly, dam of Afrit, £443 .....
Ditto, dam of Brightly, £100.....
Berigouium, dam of Bright Idea, £190, £195 .
Lily Asphodel, dam of Lily Surefoot, £185, £195
Woodhampton, dam of Ormeau, £400
Lettice, dam of Salad, £185 .....
Cambushinnie, dam of Feddal, £162 .
Zariba, dam of McNeil, £130 .....
Homespun, dam of Highland Plaid, £100
Kylesku, dam of Orkney, £100         ....
* Dead-heat; full amount of stake credited.
317
-ocr page 345-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Total.
£100    0
100    0
100    0
100    0
100    0
£18,754    0
Liebershede, dam of Clean Gone, £100
Mereden, dam of Esparto, £100
Muscat, dam of Full Flavour, £100 .
Saucy Lass, dam of Salina, £100
Sweetwater, dam of Simbach, £100 .
Bend Or /, sire of
Saltire, dam of Scintillant, winner of £100, £840, £1700,
£1030........
Disorder, dam of Epsom Lad, £1214,* £2400 .
Quetta, dam of Frontier, £1250, £500
Ditto, dam of Ameer, £305 .....
Golden Morn, dam of Morning Dew, £437, £785
Aureoline, dam of Aureolus, £100, £100, £223, £272
£439.........
Palisandre, dam of Palmira, £292, £235, £195, £175
£100.........
Ditto, dam of Paladore, £280 .....
Gold Crest, dam of Gold Jug, £100, £195, £435, £145
La Croise Doree, dam of Jeunesse Doree, £821
Ditto, dam of Hougoumont, £281 ....
Field Azure, dam of Admiral Dewey, £466
Orlet, dam of Scimitar, £295, £185 ....
Golden Diana, dam of Miss Diana, £100, £196, £100
Caithness, dam of Latheronwheel, £395 .
Bye and Bye, dam of Pastmaster, £100, £224 .
Gold Foil, dam of Golden Wishes, £270 .
Ornament, dam of Labrador, £261 ....
'Pressure, dam of Sybaris, £198
Marsh Marigold, dam of Souci, £136
Chatelaine, dam of Silver Chain, £100
Freedom, dam of Devil May Care, £100 .
Pluied'Or, dam of Golden Rain, £100 .
13,670
0
3,614
0
1,750
0
305
0
1,222
0
1,134
0
997
0
280
0
875
0
!!2J
0
281
0
466
0
480
0
396
0
395
0
324
0
270
0
261
0
198
o
136
0
100
0
100
0
100
0
£18,175 0
Dead-heat; full amount of stake credited.
Sprixgfikij) 12, sire of
Thistlefield, dam of Bettyfiehl, winner of £575, £427,
£1055, £848:10s., £535, £997.....    £4,437  10
Ditto, dam of Landrail, £272, £441, £469, £175, £540 .       1,897    0
Wild Ivy, dam of Irish Ivy, £105, £105, £270, £850,
£855, £1620........       3,805    0
Daisy Chain, dam of Simouswood, £885 ....          885    0
Ditto, dam of Simonside, £755......          755    0
318
_____
-ocr page 346-
SPECIAL APPENDIX
£775
0
270
0
■>< i
0
173
0
510
o
400
0
2! 15
0
L06
0
374
0
364
0
333
0
200
0
147
0
141
0
100
0
100
0
Sunrise, dam of Greenan, £775
Ditto, dam of Knockdon, £176, £100
£175
Queen of the Spring, dam of Orviepano, £195,
£100,
£107. . .....
Ditto, dam of Spring Hare, £173
Caserta, dam of Carbiston, £510
Briar Root, dam of Brio, £235, £171
Golden Light, dam of Helianthus, £195, £100
Ditto, dam of Golden Hope, £106
Hazelbush, dam of Orris Root, £149, £225
Dorothy Draggletail, dam of Miss Tailor, £174, £190
Eileen O'Meara, dam of Meschina, £150, £183
Hop Pole, dam of Melanyl, £100, £100
St. Helen, dam of Fair Huguenot, £147
Fretwork, dam of Sir Fretful, £141 .
Asphodel, dam of Kicksy Wicksy, £100
Cockeye, dam of Dark Eye, £100
£16,656 10
2 2
Less 2 gs. over-credited to Irish Ivy on two Plates
£16,654 8
Rayon d'Or 3, sire of
Equality, dam of Democrat, winner of £1826, £1135,
£4357, £1310, £715, £2305, £1432 ....   £13,080    0
Ditto, dam of Bloomer, £460 . ....          460    0
The Belle, dam of Rensselaer, £367, £245, £205, £167,
£145, £100........       1,289    0
Astor, dam of Etoile, £100......          100    0
£14,929 0
St. Simon 11, sire of
St. Elizabeth, dam of Forfarshire, winner of £1095, £685,
7
£5,374 0
2,800 0
522 0
1,643 0
1,724 0
1,171 0
437 0
390 0
365 0
232 0
200 0
£14,858 0
£1025, £2569.....
Charm, dam of Fascination, £200, £2600 .
Ditto, dam of Dun Dum, £522
Simena, dam of Chevening, £463, £880, £300
Simonetta, dam of Sinopi, £1724
Saintly, dam of Longy, £172, £100, £122, £77
Imogene, dam of filly by Orvieto, £437
Sileue, dam of Ardeer, £100, £174, £116 .
Ditto, dam of Ugolino, £265, £100 .
Democracy, dam of Georgiana, £232
St. Bees, dam of Hivite, £100, £100
819
-ocr page 347-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Hermit 5, sire of
Heresy, dam of Merry Methodist, winner of £177, £169,
£108, £160, £439, £1725 ....
St. Marguerite, dam of Sweet Marjorie, £875, £733
Maize, dam of Mazagau, £500, £500, £580
Fleur de Marie, dam of Champ de Mars, £940, £197, £19
Nun Nydia, dam of St. Nydia, £980 ....
Silver Sea, dam of Silver Fox, £175, £107, £136, £350
£100 . . . . .
Astrology, dam of St. Celestra, £100, £100
Ditto, dam of Star and Garter II., £100 .
Aigill, dam of St. Jacques, £100, £167, £430 .
Ditto, dam of St. Valentine II., £294
St. Cicely, dam of Chon Kina, £430, £226
Lonely, dam of Plauudes, £480
Pauline, dam of Paul Kendal, £140, £100, £144
Eglentyne, dam of Egmont, £147, £137 •
Vesta, dam of Vestalin, £100, £182 .
Spoleta, dam of Misterman, £100, £140 .
Canoe, dam of Funny Boat, £100, £137 •
In Bounds, dam of Hall Caine, £224
Nellie, dam of Guava, £195 ....
Rosamonde, dam of Dinorah, £184 .
Sad, dam of Court Mourning, £175 .
Ditto, dam of Childwickbury, £100 .
Alibech, dam of Soliman, £147
Ditto, dam of Osbech, £140 ....
Evangeline, dam of Acadian, £134 .
Alone, dam of Sheather, £100 ....
Bavarde, dam of Bogatir, £100 . . .
St. Mary, dam of St. Maur, £100
Total.
£2,778
0
1,608
0
1,580
0
1,334
0
986
0
80!!
0
200
0
100
0
697
0
294
0
050
0
480
0
884
0
284
(1
282
0
240
II
237
0
224
0
195
0
184
0
175
0
100
(1
147
II
140
0
184
0
100
0
100
0
100
0
£14,607
0
6200, £955,
. £6,007
0
300
0
3,641
0
877
0
526
o
142
0
£11,493
II
Moktemeh /, sire of
Saluda, dam of Sibola, winner of £325, £3800, £200, £955,
£390, £337.....
Ditto, dam of Siloah, £300
Dolores, dam of Dominie II., £3196, £445
Belphoebe, dam of Berzak, £877
Darya, dam of Doric II., £164, £165, £197
Perception, dam of Podsnap, £142 .
Barcaldine 23, sire of
Mare out of Symmetry, dam of O'Donovan Rossa, winner
of £690, £1084, £1080, £850.....
Snood, dam of Millennium, £2200, £640 ....
Maid of Ixtrne, dam of Elopement, £714, £650, £867
320
£3,704
2,840
2,231
-ocr page 348-
SPECIAL APPENDIX
Total.
£439 0
200 0
186 0
200 0
186 0
177 0
176 0
146 0
100 0
100 0
100 0
100 0
£10,885 0
Polynesia, dam of Phoebus Apollo, £439* .
Geraldine, dam of Long and Low, £100, £100
Ditto, dam of Gerolstein, £186 .
Mimi, dam of Simonsbath, £100, £100
Adele, dam of filly by Juggler, £l8G
Barbarina, dam of Zetlios, £177
Allan Water, dam of Regal Record, £170*
Barbara, dam of Petit Vizir, £146
Arabella Stuart, dam of McAlpine, £100 .
Biondina, dam of Sardine, £100
Bonnie Een, dam of Veduta, £100 .
Lady Lucy, dam of Lady Macheath, £100
Dead-heat; full amount of stake credited.
Rosicrl'cian 5, sire of
Mary Anderson, dam of Stage Villain, winner of £245,
'£160, £473, £445, £825......
Rose Marion, dam of Little Grafton, £100, £100, £100,
£2,148 0
1,165
o
0(1
1,214
0
900
0
£197,
£142
70!)
0
£147
342
o
300
0
285
0
310
0
277
o
100
0
187
0
145
0
135
0
100
0
100
0
loo
0
100
0
100
0
100
0
100
0
£8,977
0
£100, £220, £100, £265, £180 .
Bonnie Morn, dam of Kilcock, £174, £940, £100
Rose d'Amour, dam of Goosander, £900 .
Doreuse, dam of Bedlight, £195, £100, £135, £197,
Eastern Rose, dam of Prince Charming, £195, £14'
Maude, dam of Vallota, £100, £100, £100
Kenegie, dam of St. Kenelm, £285 .
Evanthe, dam of Canadense, £310 .
Rosy Cross, dam of Allesby, £177, £100 .
Ditto, dam of Zanoni, £100
Dot, dam of Jarrah, £l87....
Criosphinx, dam of Simplify, £145 .
Still Water, dam of Still True, £135
Rose Root, dam of Clontra, £100
Ditto, dam of Roseshoot, £100 .
Illuminata, dam of Corposant, £100 .
Lady Cadeby, dam of Roscrea, £100 .
Outcry, dam of Evius, £100
Rosy Morn, dam of Breuda, £100
V'asouviana, dam of Full of Life, £100
Rosebery 22, sire of
Lady Primrose, dam of Harrow, winner of £728, £222,
£2425.........    £3,375    0
Ditto, dam of Paigle, £355, £839.....       1,194    0
Rose Madder, dam of Bonarosa, £752 ....          752    0
321                           y
-ocr page 349-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Total.
£236    0
582    0
100    0
295    0
291    0
237    0
247    0
100    0
194    0
137    0
100    0
137    0
100    0
100    0
Rose Madder, dam of Alizarine, £136, £100
Tirnova, dam of Boris, £142, £100, £240, £100
Ditto, dam of Ammunition, £100
Rosedew, dam of Death Duty, £100, £195
Chasse Cafe, dam of Blend, £191, £100 .
Rosalure, dam of Rosiphele, £137, £100 .
Eau Sucree, dam of gelding by Despair, £147, £100
Ditto, dam of Stolen Sweets, £100 .
Lady Why, dam of Over Norton, £194
Harton Rose, dam of Riccarton, £137
Lady Clifton, dam of Minskip, £100
Noble Rose, dam of Rose Deep, £137
Romola, dam of Pantheon, £100
Rose Rose, dam of Karnes, £100
£8,177
0
£2,785
0
1,034
0
925
0
536
0
805
0
285
0
274
0
249
0
135
0
100
0
200
0
185
0
140
0
116
0
100
0
100
0
£7,969
0
Wisdom 7, sire ox
Tact, dam of Manners, winner of £1900, £885 .
Catterina, dam of Gollaufield, £100, £934
Swiftsure, dam of King's Messenger, £925
Ditto, dam of filly by Janissary, £536
Guiding Star, dam of False Step, £365, £182,* £258
Mods, dam of Downham, £185, £100
Tiutara, dam of Chillagoe, £274
Miss Ethel, dam of The Beetle, £100, £149
Cowslip, dam of filly by Haut Brion, £135
Ditto, dam of Edna Lyall, £100
Lady Candahar, dam of Lammergeier, £100, £100
Frivoli, dam of gelding by Derringer, £185
Nandine, dam of filly by St. Angelo, £140
Florence, dam of Baden, £116 ....
Silent, dam of Silent Watch, £100 .
Thessaly, dam of The Flying Greek, £100
Dead-heat; full amount of stake credited.
Gaixjard 13, sire of
Lorette, dam of Santa Casa, winner of £651, £1180 .
Cailleach, dam of Lackford, £186, £137, £284 .
Ditto, dam of Risby, £271         .....
Ennerdale, dam of Sweet Balsam, £263, £175, £142
Your Grace, dam of Our Grace, £463
Heartless, dam of Celada, £460         ....
Dame Masham, dam of Fairy Gold, £392 .
Gill Beck, dam of Boy of Egremoiid, £100, £100, £100
Silverleaf, dam of Sylvestris, £100, £142 .
Black Duchess, dam of Lictor, £230....
322
. £1,831
0
607
o
271
0
580
0
463
0
460
0
392
0
300
0
242
0
230
II
-ocr page 350-
SPECIAL APPENDIX
Barmaid, dam of Handmaid, £100, £100 .
Merry Widow, dam of Gay Consul, £100, £100
Fling, dam of Meteor, £185 ....
Miyanoshita, dam of Kiga, £185
Sahara, dam of Rosaires, £175 ....
Mare out of Concilia, dam of filly by Fullerton, £100
Gaillardia, dam of colt by Saraband, £100
Galaxy, dam of Peseta, £l00 ....
Galoche, dam of Dry Foot, £100
Lady Heron, dam of Sevillanas, £100
Beauchsrc 10, sire of
The Empress Maud, dam of Knight of the Thistle, winner
of £2215, £185.....
Ditto, dam of Sir Reginald, £198
Matilda, dam of Uncle Mac, £2080 .
Jersey Lily, dam of Easthorpe, £276, £1000
Cydonia, dam of Dule Tree, £191, £102 .
Hinton, dam of Fencote, £100,* £100
Miranda, dam of Boreas, £100 .
Dead-heat; full amount of stake credited.
Muncastbb 16, sire of
Ladv Loverule, dam of Trident, winner of £633:15s.,
£758........
Luck, dam of Lucknow, £100, £274, £442
Lunelle, dam of Polvcrates, £154, £435 .
Red Duck, dam of Dulcemoua, £100, £100, £]88
Ionia, dam of Bridge, £182,* £100 .
Lalage, dam of colt by Despair, £230
Ditto, dam of Hope On, £100, £125 .
Proof, dam of Fioriuo, £100, £100 .
Ditto, dam of Overbury, £195 ....
White Veil, dam of Hortoti, £197
Lady Beatrice, dam of Connoisseur, £185 .
Bayonne, dam of gelding by Veracity, £144
Bauble, dam of Lord Molescroft, £140
Ashdovvn, dam of Urania, £100
Caudle, dam of Darwener, £100
Floranthe, dam of Florist, £100
Tarantella, dam of Heel and Toe, £100
£5,382 15
Dead-heat; full amount of stake credited.
323
-ocr page 351-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
GmituLEus /, sire of
Happy Day, dam of Caiman, winner of £300, £187, £670,
£"975, £800, £490, £750, £300 .
Mezzotint, dam of Le Buff, £196, £225 .
Wasp, dam of Vispera, £175 .
Special Wire, dam of Insulator, £137
Mare out of Gracht, dam of Blue Minting-, £100
Total.
£4,472
0
421
0
175
1)
137
0
100
11
£5,305 0
Albert Victor 13, sire of
Gaiety, dam of Light Comedy, winner of £137, £100,
£1,032 0
1,434 0
997 0
460 0
£186
322 0
265 0
172 0
115 0
100 0
100 0
100 0
100 0
£5,197 0
£335, £460 . . .
Albertine, dam of Sonatura, £757, £677
Aloara, dam of Flavus, £235, £317, £445
Alberta, dam of Alvescot, £460
Vale Royal, dam of .Justice Royal, £136, £186
Wenvoe, dam of Claudia, £265
Honey Cup, dam of Honey Pot, £172
Hawthorn, dam of Tawthorn, £115 .
Caroline, dam of Violet Agnes, £100
Cassia, dam of Hampton Light, £l 00
Philippine, dam of Lady Janet, £100
Squall, dam of White Nun II., £100
Doncaster 5, sire of
Sandiway, dam of Calveley, winner of £830, £702,
£590 ....'....
Farewell, dam of Good Luck, £600, £100, £460
Mara, dam of Quassia, £177 ....
Loversall, dam of Dewy Rose, £137 .
Neberna, dam of Prince of Poets, £100
Tingl Tangl, dam of Murillo, £100 .
ii'.y
!■>.
£3,097
1)
1,160
I)
177
0
J 87
0
1(1(1
o
100
0
£4,771 0
Uncas /, sire of
Noble Duchess, dam of Lord Edward II., winner of £87
£1,579
(i
1,195
0
656
0
315
0
100
0
225
0
100
l>
£700........
Photinia, dam of Pheon, £930, £265
Mazurka, dam of Fergus Belle, £100, £274, £282
Papana, dam of Merry Buck, £315 .
Ditto, dam of Lantwit, £100 ....
White Sleeves, dam of The Mistress, £100, £125
Ditto, dam of Black Cap, £100....
324
-ocr page 352-
SPECIAL APPENDIX
Total.
£197    0
136    0
106    0
100    0
£4,709 0
The Widgeon, dam of Kitty Knight, £197
Red Queen, dam of Queen of the Rivers, £130 .
May Bay, dam of May Gate, £106 .
The Squaw, dam of Black Bread, £100
Melton 8, sire of
Greeba, dam of Eager, winner of £980, £295, £290, £205,
)
£2,065 0
885 0
444 0
433 0
200 0
146 0
100 0
100 0
100 0
100 0
100 0
£295.......
Miss Mildred, dam of La Roche, £885
Tourniquet, dam of Bright Key, £444
Vulpecula, dam of Vulpio, £433
False Sight, dam of Spectrum, £100, £100
Hunting Queen, dam of Lady Hunter, £146
Cheveley Lassie, dam of Applegarth, £100
-Ditto, dam of Theopolis, £100 .
Hunt Ball, dam of Petrolia, £100 .
Pink Flower, dam of Flamenco, £100
Ramelton Lassie, dam of colt by Raeburn, £100
£4,673 0
The Palmer 5, sire of
Palmflower, dam of Musa, winner of £4150
Ditto, dam of Palmaro, £141 .
Evening Chimes, dam of Campauone, £165
Chaos, dam of Rummage, £100
£4,150    0
141    0
165    0
100    0
£4,556    0
Speculum /, sire of
Joan, dam of Bobbie Burns, winner of £400, £237
Bay Agnes, dam of Bar of Gold, £285, £29.;
Mermaiden, dam of Cutter, £437
Ditto, dam of Purse, £101, £100,* £100
Stethoscope, dam of Skopos, £465
Merry Duchess, dam of Gadfly, £450
Marit'ana, dam of Parcel, £100, £100, £100
Spice, dam of Pungent, £283 .
Venus's Looking Glass, dam of Dielytra, £245
Improvement, dam of Riches, £140 .
Phyllis, dam of Corie Lynn, £130
Carpet Slipper, dam of Quadruped, £100
Mirror, dam of Musetta, £100 .
My Lady, dam of Emsworth, £100 .
£637    0
580   0
437   0
301    0
465    0
450   0
300   0
283    0
245   0
140    0
130   0
100    0
100    0
100   0
£4,268   0
Dead-heat; full amount of stake credited.
325
-ocr page 353-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Hagioscope 23, sire of
Sweet Duchess, dam of Vain Duchess, winner of £485
£890, £1611, £445.....
Pannonia, dam of Styria, £195, £190
Loricula, dam of Manacle, £115
Fallow Chat, dam of Bird of March, £110
Mare out of Simony, dam of Fair Trade, £100 .
Scotch Brier, dam of Madame Roberto, £100 .
Total
4:11
0
385
0
115
(i
L10
ii
100
0
LOO
0
£4,241 0
To the best of my belief, statistics of the above nature have
never previously been published in similar detail, and they
might, of course, easily be amplified by giving the Bruce Lowe
figure of each mare, and also the sire of each winner. It is
correct, of course, as I stated on Wednesday, that Vampire is
mainly responsible for Galopin's high position, but a glance
at the list of his other successful daughters will show that
there has been considerable uniformity of excellence among
them, and two that are not in the Stud Book, Galloping
Queen and Queen of the Riding, have both succeeded in
producing winners. Fillies or young mares by Galopin can
hardly fail to prove a good investment if bought with reason-
able judgment and prudence.
There is somewhat more uniformity in the results obtained
from Isonomy mares, and though Cyllene did not win a tithe
of what fell to the lot of Flying Fox, he did equal credit to
his breeding in the opinion of many people. Isonomy, how-
ever, has been dead for some years, and as Galopin and
Hampton were alive until a comparatively recent date, their
daughters will be flourishing when Isonomy1s are getting
played out. There are still quite young Hampton fillies to
be bought, and they will always pay for keeping. It is much
to be regretted Perdita II. should have died in 1899, though
she has done more than enough for lasting fame.
Bend Or's daughters have given us some good winners,
including the Cesarewitch hero, Scintillant, who had his work
cut out to beat Ercildoune (son of a Hampton mare). Epsom
Lad, Frontier, and Ameer are all useful, and it may be taken
as certain that the grand old Doncaster horse stamps his
daughters as " gilt-edged " securities. Curiously enough, his
sons are almost equally successful at the Stud, but that of
course is another story.
320
-ocr page 354-
SPECIAL APPENDIX
Springfield mares or fillies have a fast-increasing value,
and though they have not totalled up such an amount as in
Galtee More's year, they have well held their claim to front
rank, especially with such matrons as Thistlefiekl and Wild Ivy.
Itayon d'Or's total is due mainly to Equality, the dam of
Democrat, but inasmuch as his stud career was passed in
America it is greatly to his credit to stand so high.
St. Simon is only just beginning to show what his daughters
can do, but St. Elizabeth, Saintly, Charm, Simena, etc., have
pretty well established him as a successful sire of brood mares.
There is little need to say much of Hermit. His daughters
are still doing well, though of course on the ?core of age they
must now be on the down line. St. Nydia, by St. Simon out of
a Hermit mare, is not unlikely to be the best filly of her year.
Sibola, Dominie II., and others have proved the worth of
Mortemer mares; but Barcaldine has not done quite so well
as might have been expected. A daughter of his, however, is
the dam of Elopement, and that may count for much next
season. Rosicrucian is in the ordinary course falling away,
but his youngest daughters have still a good many years of
stud life before them. Rosebery comes twelfth, and is
responsible for at any rate one really good brood mare in
Lady Primrose (dam of Harrow and Paigle).
Wisdom, thirteenth from the actual top, has hai'dly done
so well as might be expected. There are, however, a number
of magnificent mares by him, and he is likely to take higher
rank. Galliard, as previously noticed, shows very considerable
promise, and of the others Melton deserves most credit, for,
having been so long in Italy, he is at a great disadvantage
in regard to the number of his English daughters, who, how-
ever, include among them the dams of Eager, La Roche, and
Vulpio.—From The Sportsman of November 29th, December
2nd and 9th, 1899.
SIRES OF THE SUCCESSFUL BROOD MARES
1900.
I venture to think that the most useful statistics of all at
this particular season of the year, when breeders from all parts
of the world are considering what best to buy at the Paris
sales on Friday and Saturday, and at the Newmarket sales the
following week, are those which I published for the first time
327
-ocr page 355-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
last year, showing which sires have done best during the past
season through brood mares that are their daughters, and
giving the Bruce Lowe figure of all such sires,
I now give
the record of the first fifty for season 1900.
WINNING SIRES OF SUCCESSFUL BROOD MARES
In this table the place money is added in the following races: Century
Stakes, Sandown Park; 2000 Guineas, 1000 Guineas, the Derby, the
Oaks, Ascot Gold Cup, Ascot Stakes ; Princess of Wales's Stakes,
Newmarket; Eclipse Stakes, Sandown; St. Leg-er Stakes, and the
Jockey Club Stakes, Newmarket.
Name and Bruce Lowe
figures.
No. of
Races won.
Value.
Hampton 10 . . 56 (2d.h.) .
£46,836 15
Hermit S .
.52 (2 d.h.) .
31,044 10
Galopin 3 .
47
23,559 0
Isonomy 19
36
21,226 0
St. Simon 11
41
14,086 0
Wisdom 7 .
38 (1 d.h.) .
13,015 0
Melton 8 .
19
13,005 0
Rosicrucian S
32 (1 d.h.) .
12,263 0
Bend Or/ .
39 (1 d.h.) .
11,259 10
Rosebery 22
32
8,568 0
The Miser 7
6 . . .
6,952 0
Duke of Montrose 12
9
6,631 0
Tynedale 12
4 (1 d.h.) .
5,725 0
Robert the Devil /
14 (1 d.h.) .
5,704 0
George Frederick 13
11 (1 d.h.) .
5,531 10
Master Kildare 3
13
5,507 0
Musket 3 .
11 . .
5,497 0
Muncaster 16
24 . .
5,265 0
Speculum /
15
5,248 0
Mask 2
26 . .
5,201 10
Minting / .
20 . .
5,182 0
Charibert /
16 (1 d.h.) .
4,773 10
Springfield 12
27
4,672 0
Barcaldine 23
28 . : .
4,664 0
Camballo 2
21 . . .
4.588 0
Trappist / .
10
4,477 0
Coeruleus /
11
4,432 0
Reverberation 14
L
4
4,384 0
Beaudesert 8
6
4,137 18
Coltness / .
4
4,032 0
Ben Battle 4
12
3,894 0
Albert Victor 13
18
3,738 0
Discount / .
4
3,656 0
Kendal 16 .
16 (1 d.h.) .
3,593 10
Peter 9
20 (1 d.h.) .
3,435 10
Hagioscope 23
18
328
3,392 0
-ocr page 356-
SPECIAL APPENDIX
Name and ilruce Lowe
figures.
Galliard 13 .
Lowland Chief 23.
Sir Bevys 10
Beauclerc 10
Merry Hampton 22
Darby S
Necromancer 9
Sterling 12 .
Ravon d'Or 3
Petrarch 10 .
Paradox / .
Jolly Friar 16
Umpire 2
Chippendale 24
No. of
Races won.
Value.
23,386
10
3,338
0
3,337
0
3,203
0
3,181
(1
3,051
1(1
2,917
0
2,889
0
2,709
0
2,683
0
2,595
0
2,466
0
2,448
0
2,398
1)
16 (1 d.h.)
20  (1 d.h.)
14
17
!!
d.h.)
d.h.)
8(1
7
21  (1
7
11
7
!!
8
10
111 all instances of dead-heats only half the full value of the stake is
credited to each sire.
The previous year, the following was the order in which
the first twelve finished :—
1. Galopin 3 .
48
£51,609 0
2. Isonomy 19 .
. 42
21,246 0
3. Hampton 10
46 (1 d.h.)
18,754 0
4. Bend Or / .
44(1 d.h.)
18,175 0
5. Spriiigheld 12
45
16,654 8
(3. Rayon d'Or 3
15
14,929 0
7. St. Simon 11
24
14,858 0
8. Hermit 5
52 (1 d.h.)
14,(307 0
9. Mortemer /.
14
11,493 0
10. Barcaldine 23
23 (2 d.h.)
10,885 0
11. Rosicrucian 5
42
8,977 0
12. Rosebery 22
28
8,177 0
It will be seen that Galopin, Hampton, and Isonomy are
still well able to hold their own, and, strangely enough,
Hermit, who should be going downhill, makes an advance.
The accident of Flying Fox going to France has enabled
Hampton to change places with Galopin. St. Simon is begin-
ning to clearly demonstrate that brood mares by him are in
the first class, and Wisdom, whose position in this respect
some have considered dubious, comes up in no uncertain
fashion. On the other hand, Rayon d'Or drops out, as also
does Mortemer, and Springfield is not so high up as I should
have expected. Bend Or goes down to ninth place, but the
late Duke of Westminster's death accounts in some measure
for that. Rosicrucian still goes strong, and Melton is coming
329
-ocr page 357-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
up fast, while Roseberv more than holds his own. Barcaldine
is on the down line, though mares by him in Australia are
doing wonderfully well—for example, the dams respectively of
La Carabine and Maltster. Minting I take to be among the
most promising of the" young sires of brood mares, and his
advance from thirty-sixth place last year to twentieth this time
is sufficiently significant. However, my readers can judge for
themselves on looking over the preceding figures.
I now give further detailed statistics of the winning sires
of successful brood mares, the daughters of the first twelve
that have produced winners being set out, and each with her
own figure added, so that the combination of sire and dam
may be noted. Thus " Hampton 10 is sire of Perdita 7."
Hampton's total, it will be seen, is more than half made up
by Perdita II.'s son, Diamond Jubilee ; and Alibech has
contributed largely to Hermit's total. Bonnie Gal is Galopin's
greatest success, and Mary Seaton has done similar service for
Isonomy. St. Simon's successes are more equally distributed.
Wisdom has made a notable advance, more especially in the
quality of the stock produced, e.g. Princess Melton, Down-
ham, King's Messenger, etc. Miss Mildred and Greeba have
proved towers of strength to Melton ; and La Reine (dam of
Volodyovski) has been Rosicrucian's best card. The others
do not call for any special comment here, but I hope the
tables will be useful to intending buyers next week.
Hampton 10, sire of
Perdita II. 7, dam of Diamond Jubilee, £4700, £4088,
Total.
£30,148
0
1,665
0
1,520
0
1,086
0
2,050
0
1,737
0
932
5
1,161
0
932
0
£137
648
0
100
0
526
0
505
0
445
0
404
0
£5450, £1500, £9285, £.5125 .
La Vierge 5, dam of Innocence, £1665
Ditto, dam of Sir Geoffrey, £1520 .
Ditto, dam of Nono, £186, £900
Broad Come 3, dam of Glasalt, £1000, £1050
Maize 20, dam of Mazagan, £1570, £167 .
Ditto, dam of Veronese, £932 : 5s.
Missive 3, dam of Warning, £461, £700 .
Wedding Bell 3, dam of Rice, £162, £770
Fota 4, dam of Congratulation, £100, £100, £136,
£175 ... .....
Ditto, dam of Good-bye John, £100 .
Corday 7, dam of filly by Gallinule, £526 .
Lady Clarendon 18, dam of Headpiece, £505
Ditto, dam of Middleton, £445
Hamptonia 8, dam of Galveston, £157, £100, £147
330
-ocr page 358-
SPECIAL APPENDIX
Total.
Lily Asphodel 16, dam of Lily Surefoot, £142, £141
£100.........
Vivandiere 2, dam of La Figlia, £50,* £102, £100, £100
Sweet Lavender 42, dam of Sweet Sounds, £100, £174
£125.......
Glenara 3, dam of First Principal, £255 .
Saucy Lass 12, dam of Salina, £109 :10s., £10,
Ditto, dam of Leatherstocking, £100
Regatta 3, dam of Elands Laagte, £100, £100
Clarissa 13, dam of Leila, £187
Ditto, dam of Fitzclare, £100 .
Hostage 20, dam of Pledge, £194
Homespun 8, dam of Highland Plaid, £125
Dame Trot 8, dam of Ingeborg, £100
Drusilla 10, dam of Itavola, £100 .
Junket li, dam of Devon, £100
Lettice 3, dam of Birdforth, £100 .
Hampole 3, dam of colt by Winkfield, £70*
£383
0
352
0
399
o
255
0
212
10
10(1
0
200
0
187
0
100
0
19-1
0
L25
0
100
0
100
0
100
0
101)
0
70
0
6,836
1.-,
* Dead-heat; half the stake credited only.
Hermit 5, sire of
Alibech 9, dam of Osbech, winner of £925, £8550,
£500, £975, £050, £145 ....
Ditto, dam of Abruna, £885, £820 .
Astrology 9, dam of Star Shoot, £914, £1135, £2178
Ditto, dam of Star and Garter, £100
Queen Adelaide 9, dam of filly by Galopin, £2569
Silver Sea 13, dam of Lord Bobs," £1532 .
Fleur de Marie 8, dam of Sainte Nitouche, £1375*
Ditto, dam of Champ de Mars, £970, £197, £195
The Blvthe 4, dam of La Uruguaya, £417, £175,
£100, £100
         ......
Freia 4, dam of Tannstickor, £407, £186 .
Spoleta 2, dam of Petronius, £310, £231 .
Ditto, dam of Misterman, £186, £180
Bglentine 2, dam of F]gmont, £216, £175, £126
Nun Nydia 9, dam of St. Nydia, £495
Bouvarde 12, dam of Bogatir, £186, £219
Lonely 21, dam of Planudes, £195, £197 .
In Bounds 2, dam of Hall Caine, £l70, £170 .
Aigill 19, dam of St. Jacques, £196, £100
Ditto, dam of St. Aigill, £112 ....
Seraphine 10, dam of Alfar, £100, £100 .
Pauline 9, dam of Paul Kendal, £197
Canoe 2, dam of Funny Boat, £195 .
£285
£12,030
0
1,705
0
:10s.'
' 4,227
10
100
0
2,569
0
1,532
0
1,375
0
1,362
0
£100
892
0
593
0
541
0
366
0
517
0
495
0
405
0
392
0
340
0
296
0
112
0
200
0
197
0
195
o
Dead-heat; half the stake credited only.
331
-ocr page 359-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Total
£185
0
118
0
LOO
0
100
0
100
0
£31,044 10
Burgundy 22, dam of filly by Tyrant, £18.5
Priestess 12, dam of Nun Royal, £118
St. Cicely 7, dam of Chon Kina, £100
Shrift 14, dam of filly by Sempronius, £100
Star of Fortune 9, dam of Sidus, £100
Galopin 3, sire of
Bonnie Gal 10, dam of Disguise II., winner of £175, £245,
£200, £7190........     £7,810    0
Mare out of Miss Foote 19, dam of Sir Hercules, £197,
£925, £442, £880.......       2,444    0
Balornock /, dam of Ecton, £1750.....       1,750    0
Sunshine 4, dam of Baldur, £1675 .....       1,675    0
Minera 9, dam of Toddington, £195, £630, £785 . .       1,610    0
Emita 22, dam of Kilcheran, £1611.....       1,611    0
Sunny Queen 4, dam of Le BHzon, £400, £437, £100 .          997    0
Ditto, dam of Tovaros, £100......          100    0
Queen of the Riding, dam of Hulcot, £900 . .          900    0
Leveret 12, dam of Lord Quex, £196, £537 ...          733    0
Pindi 4, dam of Indian Ink, £117, £145, £100, £100 .          462    0
Corrie Roy 3, dam of Royaume, £457 ....          457    0
Flitters /, dam of Irish Idyll, £185, £185 . . .          370    0
Queen of Hearts, dam of Veroscope, £186, £136 . .          322    0
Ditto, dam of Queen of the Netherlands, £106, £136 .          242    0
Flyaway 14, dam of The Wyvern, £325 ....          325    0
Ditto, dam of Stealaway, £256 ......          256    0
Podagra 22, dam of Plethora, £102, £100, £100 . .          302    0
Bouvardia 10, dam of Dulot, £100, £100 ....          200    0
Cava /, dam of Keutshole, £100, £100 ....          200    0
Dimity 14, dam of Sam, £195 . . . . . .          195    0
Knob Kerrie 5, dam of Knobstick, £152 ....          152    0
Galliarde 8, dam of Haka, £146.....          146    0
Galathea /, dam of Galatz, £100 .....          100    0
Galinne 23, dam of Ichi Ban, £100.....          100    0
Glove 6, dam of Light Hand, £100.....          100    0
£23,559    0
Isonomy 19, sire of
Mary Seaton 5, dam of Merry Gal, winner of £200, £6790,
'£880, £935         ........
Ismay 9, dam of Simon Dale, £300, £2100
Isoletta 10, dam of Galicia, £l282 .....
Ditto, dam of Mahdi, £1725 ......
Avilon 4, dam of Avidity, £137, £227, £145, £270, £435
Chloe 12, dam of St. Lundi, £250, £423, £325
332
28,805
II
2,400
0
1,282
0
1,725
II
1,214
l)
998
0
-ocr page 360-
SPECIAL APPENDIX
Total.
£900    0
818    0
637    0
45,5    0
357    0
317    0
300    0
295    0
236    0
200    0
187    0
100    0
Mon Droit 2, dam of Dieudonne, £900
Income 2, dam of Revenue, £393, £425 .
Heartsease 11, dam of La Napoule, £175, £320, £130
Countess Lillian 4, dam of King's Lynn, £455 .
Curve 7, dam of Round Robin, £187, £170
Phantassie/, dam of Gyp, £217, £100
Bonnie Garry 20, dam of Dunbar, £100, £100, £100
Dancing Water 14, dam of Running Stream, £295 .
Antibes 4, dam of Sospello, £130, £100 .
Seabreeze 4, dam of Tom Cringle, £200 .
Ferrera 4, dam of Crowborough, £187
Alimony 9, dam of Winkfield's Dower, £100
£21,226 0
St. Simon 11, sire of
La Fleche 3, dam of Strongbow, winner of £417, £1196,
£430, £450.......
Ditto, dam of Sagitta, £955 .....
St. Elizabeth 6, dam of Forfarshire, £202, £850, £1000
Ditto, dam of Fifeshire, £100, £100 ....
Simena 8, dam of Chevening, £1325, £.500
Ditto, dam of Ardeer, £146, £301 ....
The Smew 5, dam of Duck Gun, £1275
Simonetta /, dam of Sinopi, £175, £284, £275 .
St. Reine /, dam of St. Louvaine, £207, £197, £100, £132
Sabra 13, dam of Sabrinetta, £142, £470
£395
£2,493    0
955    0
2,052    0
200    0
1,825    0
447    0
1,275    0
734    0
030    0
012    0
595    0
482    0
300    0
250    0
219    0
206    0
205    0
200    0
100    0
100    0
100    0
100    0
£14,086    0
Santa Maura 20, dam of Arta, £482 ....
Lady Flippant 31, dam of Winner, £100, £100, £100
Charm 2, dam of Dum Dum, £250 ....
Normania 10, dam of C.I. V. (late Creuzot), £219
Sanctissima 2, dam of Elena, £206 ....
Simoon 2, dam of Windbound, £205
Sanderling 2, dam of Sandbag, £100, £100
Ravensbourne 13, dam of Big Wheel, £100
St. Bees 4, dam of St. Bernard, £100
Santa Felice 2, dam of Quick Shot, £100 .
Sainttield 10, dam of Carabine, £100
Wisdom 7, sire of
Schoolbook 3, dam of Princess Melton, winner of £385,
£170, £545, £890, £685, £444, £400
Ditto, dam of Schoolgirl, £730, £240 ....
Mods 7, dam of Downham, £1664 .....
Ditto, dam of colt by Orion, £100 .....
Sweetbriar /, dam of filly by Queen's Birthday, £438, £885
Swiftsure 19, dam of King's Messenger, £100, £932 .
333
£3,519
0
970
0
1,664
(I
100
II
1,323
II
1,032
0
-ocr page 361-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Total.
Thessaly 2, dam of Flying Greek, £188, £188, £100, £144,
£195..........        £815    0
Profit 4, dam of Knighton, £100, £425 ....          525    0
Tact 2, dam of Manners, £500......          500    0
CatterinaZ, dam of Gollanfield, £395 ....          395    0
Lady Candahar 8, dam of Canderos, £294 . . .           294    0
None the Wiser 3, dam of Inquisitive, £200 ...          200    0
Miss Ethel 8, dam of The Beetle, £197 ....          197    0
Good Counsel 8, dam of Assault, £195 ....          195    0
Ripplestream 19, dam of Little Norah, £195 . . .          195    0
Tintara 5, dam of Chill'agoe, £190.....          190    0
Nadine 5, dam of United Langlaagte, £144 . . .          144    0
Silent 5, dam of Peopleton, £144.....          144    0
Cowslip 8, dam of Glacehury, £137 .....          137    0
Ditto, dam of Streptocarpus, £100 .....          100    0
Wise Devonian 5, dam of Lady Lundv, £126 . . .          126    0
Frivoli 5, dam of Cerehos, £100.....          100    0
Mark the Line /, dam of Marked Man, £100 ...          100    0
Star of the Magi 3, dam of Lofty, £50* ....            50    0
£13,015 0
* Dead-heat; half the stake credited only.
Melton 8, sire of
Miss Mildred 10, dam of La Roche, winner of £4150, £2553,
£590, £450....... .    £7,743    0
Greeba /, dam of Eager, £930, £290, £215, £197, £1000 .       2,632    0
False Sight 13, dam of Spectrum, £197, £612, £244, £722,
£139..........       1,914    0
Pink Flower /, dam of Flamenco, £100, £200, £100 .          400    0
Ramelton Lassie 23, dam of Palatia, £216 . . .          216    0
Miss Melton 4, dam of Gallant Grey, £100 ...          100    0
£13,005 0
RosicBUCiAN 5, sire of
La Reine 14, dam of Volodyovski, winner of £732, £1049,
£1235, £945, £839......■    £4,800    0
Bonnie Morn 31, dam of (rood Morning, £190, £532,
£1809.........    £2,531    0
Rose d'Amour 20, dam of Goosander, £147, £224, £1080       1,451    o
Rosalie 20, dam of Doricles, £780*.....          780    o
Rosy Cross 10, dam of Zanoni, £185, £147, £365 . .          697    0
Mary Anderson 19, dam of Stage Villain, £185, £100 .          285    0
Rose Marion 4, dam of Rosewarlin, £100, £100 . .          200    O
Lady Cadeby 23, dam of Roscrea, £100, £100 . . .          200    0
* Dead-heat; only half stake credited.
334
-ocr page 362-
SPECIAL APPENDIX
Total.
£100    0
19.5    0
142    0
147    0
130    0
103    0
100    0
100    0
100    0
102    0
100    0
£12,263    0
Lady Cadeby 23, dam of Swallowbeck, £100
Maude 10, dam of gelding by Tarporley, £1 9-5
Evanthe 3, dam of Spring Duke, £142
The Martyr 10, dam of Murthly, £147
Rosemarine 22, dam of Sweet Ulva, £130
Roseroot 2, dam of Roseshoot, £103 .
Ditto, dam of Devilkin, £100 .
Ditto, dam of Clontra, £100
Corby Witch 2, dam of Silver Bullet, £100
Doreuse /, dam of Bedlight, £102
Queen Berengaria 4, dam of Berida, £100
Bend On /, sire of
£2,504
0
715
10
1,914
0
891
o
830
o
775
0
700
0
336
0
434
0
300
0
28-5
0
271
0
200
0
200
0
176
(1
12,5
0
100
0
100
II
103
0
100
II
100
0
100
(1
Quetta 6, dam of Ameer, winner of £800, £87!), £825
Ditto, dam of Quest, £443, £272 :10s.* .
Field Azure 18, dam of Admiral Dewey, £1724, £190
Isis 13, dam of Inishfree, £100, £190, £141, £400 .
Ellaline 7, dam of Saliel, £830 . .
Fuse 22, dam of Strike a Light, £775
Saltire 13, dam of Scintillant, £700 ....
Ornis 13, dam of Bird of Paradise, £100, £130, £100
Ellen Gurney 7, dam of Brother Tom, £100, £137, £197
Aureoline 23, dam of Methelios, £100, £100, £100 .
Console 3, dam of Conform, £144, £141 .
Caithness 8, dam of Sheerness (late Latheronwheel), £271
Capri 9, dam of Capresi, £100, £100
Sundew 13, dam of Emily Melton, £100, £100 .
Golden Fleece 13, dam of gelding by Wellington, £17*
Gulbeyaz 3, dam of Excellenza, £125
Bye and Bye 11, dam of Pastmaster, £100
Golden Agnes 16, dam of Golden Times, £100 .
Gold Foil 14, dam of Golden Wishes, £103
(Met 8, dam of Amphlett, £100 ....
Orphaline 8, dam of Wildham, £100
Palisandre 14, dam of Charlton, £100
£11,2.59 10
Dead-heat; half the stake credited only.
Rosebery 22, sire of
Rose Madder 28, dam of Bonarosa, winner of £300, £2000     £2,300    0
La Rosiere 5, dam of Lord Melton, £438, £177, £417,
£335, £890........       2,2.57    0
Crowflower 4, dam of Cassine, £197, £185, £100, £261 .          743    0
335
-ocr page 363-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Total.
£737    0
516   0
100   0
495    0
291    0
287   0
200   0
185   0
157   0
100   0
100   0
100   0
£8,568    0
Primula 5, dam of Japonica, £100, £100, £437, £100
Rosalura 4, dam of filly by Childwick, £270, £240
Ditto, dam of Rosiphele, £100 ....
Miss Olivia 2, dam of Miss Bolter, £100, £295, £100
Acidalie 8, dam of filly by Sempronius, £106, £185
Chasse Cafe 10, dam of Blend, £100, £187
Noble Rose 2, dam of Rose Deep, £100, £100
Romola 4, dam of Partheon, £185 .
Tirnova 23, dam of Boris, £157
Harton Rose 15, dam of Riccarton, £100 .
Rosa Bonheur 23, dam of Boulsworth, £100
Rosedew 43, dam of Death Duty, £100 .
The Miser 7, sire of
Maid of Athol 14, dam of Floriform, winner of £2544
Merry Miser 49, dam of Boniface, £2421 .
Ditto, dam of Greenaway, £975
         ....
Ditto, dam of Ursula, £775 .....
Ianthe 14, dam of Maund, £137, £100 .
£2,544    0
2,421    0
975    0
775    0
237    0
£6,952    0
Duke of Montrose 12, sire of
Joy 23, dam of Jolly Tar, £525, £820, £435, £791, £1500,
£510, £415........
Ditto, dam of Jiffy II., £710, £925.....
£4,996 0
1,635 0
£6,631 0
Tynedale 12, sire of
Melody 3, dam of Winifreda, winner of £4150, £1375*
Lady Tvnedale 4, dam of Off Chance, £100
Wild Cat 4, dam of Red Hand, £100
£5,525    0
100    0
100    0
£5,725    0
* Dead-heat; only half stake credited.
Robert the Devil /, sire of
Velleda 4, dam of Veles, winner of £817, £443, £789,
£780,* £535........£3,364 0
Ditto, dam of Vatel, £510......510 0
Waistband 8, dam of Frank Buckle (late Armful) £100,
£481, £147........728 0
* Dead-heat; only half stake credited.
330
-ocr page 364-
SPECIAL APPENDIX
Total.
£155 0
465 0
282 0
100 0
100 0
Waistband 3, dam of Roseband, £155
Comette 8, dam of Captain Kettle, £465 .
Mrs. Veal 6, dam of Pearl Rover, £282 .
Diablesse 8, dam of Helen McGregor, £100
Ditto, dam of Lorenzacci, £100
£5,704 0
George Frederick 13, sire of
Berengaria 23, dam of Ian, £2178 : 10s.* .
Postscript 6, dam of Addendum, £460, £875
Dolores 16, dam of Crestfallen, £565
Grenadiere 3, dam of Recruit, £100, £100, £100, £197
Veronica II. /, dam of Kopely, £462
Gnat 3, dam of Nattie, £350 '.....
Lady Liberty 3, dam of Lord Kendal, £144
£2,178  10
1,335    0
565    0
497    0
462    0
350    0
144    0
£5,531 10
* Dead-beat; only half stake credited.
Master Kildare 3, sire of
Bridget 8, dam of Santa Brigida, winner of £2800, £062 .     £3,402
Ditto, dam of Ormskirk, £342......          342
Ditto, dam of Weybridge, £100, £184 ....          284
Irish Stew /, dam of Wild Irishman, £277, £172. £187.
£137, £251........       1.024
Rebecca 2, dam of Beckhampton, £100, £195 . . .          295
Rose of Kildare 10, dam of Lemuel, £100 . . .          100
(i
0
0
0
0
II
£5,507 0
Musket 3, sire of
Industry 4, dam of The Grafter, winner of £1672, £300,
£1820.........    £3,792
Cissie 18, dam of Altair, £185, £830 ....       1,015
Cartridge 24, dam of Amberite, £100, £107, £100, £107,
£176..........          590
Ricochet 2, dam of Chance Shot, £100 ....          100
0
0
0
0
__                                                             i
£5,497 0
MuiVcaster 16, sire of
Ionia 2, dam of Bridge, winner of £334, £115, £100, £865,
£100, £100........     £1,614    0
Luck 2, dam of Lucknow, £137, £735 ....          872    0
Lalage 19, dam of Designer, £215, £175, £187. . .          577    0
Lady Halle 7, dam of Broken Melody, £549 . .          549    0
337                             x
-ocr page 365-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Total.
£382    0
200    0
102    0
285    0
265    0
119    0
100    0
100    0
100    0
£5,265    0
White Veil 3, dam of Sister Angela, £184, £198
Ditto, dam of Horton, £100, £100 .
Ditto, dam of Dunkirk, £102 ....
Fury 45, dam of Waxflower, £185, £100 .
Touch-me-Not 4, dam of Foxhill, £205 .
Lunelle 10, dam of Polycrates, £11!)
Floranthe 20, dam of Florist, £100 .
Proof 2, dam of Fiorino, £100 ....
Tarantella 14, dam of Heel and Toe, £100
Speculum /, sire of
Stethoscope 12, dam of Skopos, £100, £1000 .
Merry Duchess 22, dam of Gadfly, £1405, £200
Ditto, dam of Sang- Bleu, £1046 ....
Joan 7, dam of Bobbie Burns, £272, £273
Mountain Belle 4, dam of Mountain Chief, £100, £100
Ditto, dam of Mountain Buck, £100.
Bay Agnes 16, dam of Bar of Gold, £192 .
Maritana 3, dam of Parcel, £100
Mermaiden 42, dam of Purse, £100 ....
Prospective 4, dam of Stratton, £100
Stiletto 3, dam of colt by Orvieto, £100 .
. £1,100
0
1,665
0
1,046
0
545
(>
200
0
100
0
192
<i
100
it
100
o
100
0
100
0
£5,248 0
Mask 2, sire of
Love in Idleness 2, dam of Leisure Hour, £340, £61
La Gitana 23, dam of Rigo, £880
Domino 20, dam of Masquerade, £100, £195, £195,
£100........
Ivy Mantle 4, dam of Battlemount, £273, £235 :10s
Ditto, dam of Ivybridge, £100 ....
Revel 17, dam of Newbury, £195, £100, £100 .
Mascara 6, dam of Carle Kemp, £100, £100, £117
Miss Jumbo 4, dam of Prim Alice, £100, £197
Assignation 14, dam of Redstone, £100, £160 .
Her Grace 3, dam of Consoler, £137, £100
Enamel 9, dam of Royal Enamel, £177
Dramatic 5, dam of W. Greet, £100
La Mascotte 3, dam of Little Sweetheart, £100
Venetian Girl 3, dam of Venetian Blind, £100 .
£955
l)
880
0
775
0
508
III
100
(1
395
(1
(1
297
(1
260
0
237
(1
177
(1
Kid
(1
100
(1
Km
(I
5
£18.'
£5,201 10
Minting /, sire of
Andromeda 19, dam of The Gorgon, £1719
Memne 9, dam of Melete, £100, £185, £525
Fanny Relph 18, dam of Rose Tree, £257, £2
338
£1,719 0
810 0
484 O
-ocr page 366-
SPECIAL APPENDIX
Total.
La Gloria 10, dam of Supper Dance £100, £147, £100,
£222.........
Galingale 3, dam of Water Lily, £167, £3-31
Lady Minting- 9, dam of Lady Min, £100, £102, £217
Santa Mana 2, dam of Santa Regala, £100, £147, £100
Vinery 3, dam of Vineyard, £195 ....
New Coin 10, dam of filly by Simontault, £141
£569
0
498
0
419
0
347
0
195
0
1 tl
0
£5,182 0
Chabibeht /, sire of
. £1,701
0
5 1,467
0
588
0
284
0
6 243
10
195
0
100
0
100
0
100
0
Under tlie Rose 12, dam of Nahlband, £738, £520, £443
Blue Bodice 9, dam of Joe Chamberlain, £142, £400, £925
Chatein 19, dam of Domain, £193, £390 .
Chemistry 2, dam of Argon, £100, £184 .
Decoration 19, dam of colt by Bona Vista, £57:10s. ,* £18(
Danvita 5, dam of Lord Danvers, £195
Gracie Ena 4, dam of Gracie Kendal, £100
Homeward Bound 19, dam of Studding Sail, £100
Meadow Sweet 4, dam of Klingsor, £100 .
£4,773 10
Dead-heat; only half stake credited.
Sprixgkiixo 12, sire of
Lass o' Springfield 11, dam of Bonnie Springfield, £252
£308..........
Dorothy Draggletail 7, dam of Miss Tailor, £370, £435
Ditto, dam of Giglio, £100, £187 ....
Queen of the Spring 4, dam of Spring Hare, £195, £195
£136.........
Ditto, dam of Orviepano, £100 .....
Hazelbush 11, dam of Orris Root, £190, £240 .
Briar Root 2, dam of Martnaham, £100, £100, £100
Cock Eye 12, dam of Dark Eye, £100, £100, £100 .
Lauriola /, dam of Matagon, £295 ....
Wild Ivy 4, dam of Hedera, £177, £100 .
Daisy Wreath 12, dam of Double Daisy, £100, £100
Fretwork 24, dam of Sir Fretful, £197
Daisy Chain 10, dam of Simonside, £195 .
Miss Decima /, dam of Mordicus, £100
Sunshade /, dam of Shady, £100 ....
£560
0
81)5
0
287
0
526
0
UK)
o
4311
0
MOO
o
300
o
295
o
277
0
200
0
197
0
195
0
10(1
0
loo
0
£4,672 0
839
-ocr page 367-
».
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Babcaldine 23, sire of
Maid of Lorn 13, dam of Elopement, £832, £100, £469,
£300..........
Caledonia 20, dam of The Scotchman II., £100, £179,
Total.
£1,701 o
£100, £102, £100, £100, £100, £140 ' .
Geraldine 15, dam of Gerolsteiu, £176, £197, £147
Adele 2, dam of Adelina, £100, £16-5
Myrtledene 17, dam of colt by Hazelhatch, £100, £100
Gravetta 23, dam of Dowf, £185
Mercy 2, dam of Lettre de Cachet, £142 .
Allan Water 16, dam of Virginia Water, £130 .
Blithe Agnes 16, dam of colt by Crafton, £100 .
Bonnie Een 2, dam of Veduta, £100
Creran 13, dam of Dunlaviu, £100 .
Stop Thief 14, dam of Fleeing Justice, £100
Mare out of Symmetry 8, dam of (('Donovan Bossa, £100
Vapour 2, dam of Castle in Spain, £100 .
921
0
.-)2H
0
265
0
00 .
200
0
185
0
142
(1
130
0
100
(1
100
0
100
0
100
(1
£100
too
0
LOO
(t
£4,664 0
It will be seen that all the above twelve are extraordinarily
close together, there being- little more than i?1000 between
the first and the last, and in some respects the last have the
advantage of the first, as the number of their successful
daughters is greater. Perhaps, of all the results now given,
that of Musket is the most creditable, for I should question
whether he has more than one, or at most two daughters
living in England, and is dependent almost entirely on stock
bred at the Antipodes and imported to this country.
BRUCE LOWE STATISTICS FOR 1900
I am now giving the record of the various families for the
past season, or rather of those whose members have won
^£"5000 or upwards in stakes. Here is the order in which
they finish, and I trust my readers will find the list both
interesting and instructive, for though it does not occupy
much space, it has, needless to say, taken a great deal of time
to prepare.
RACING SEASON 1900
{race Lowe No.
Ko. of Races Won.
Total.
Family 7
. 67
. £46,950 0
3
. 1.70(2d.-h.) .
45,672 0
9 .
. 74(ld.-h.) .
40,671 10
4
. 169(2d.-h.) .
39,176 0
» 2 .
. 194(2d.-h.) .
840
35,983 0
-ocr page 368-
SPECIAL APPENDIX
Bruce Lowe No.
No. of Races Won.
Total.
Family / ... 141 . £32,820 18
„ 10
. 70 (] d.-h.)
30,857 10
5
78
28,819 0
8
. 12,3 (1 d.-h.)
27,700 0
„ 12
106 (1 d.-h.)
27,052 10
19
53 (1 d.-h.)
19,280 10
» 1*
53
15,955 0
„ 13
56
14,084 0
6
48 (1 d.-h.)
12,872 10
» 11
43
11,865 10
„ 16 .
50 (1 d.-h.)
10,162 0
„ 20
41
9,671 0
„ 2-3
42 (1 d.-h.)
9,369 0
„ 22
27
8,866 10
„ 15
20(2 d.-h.)
5,895 10
27
17
5,704 0
„ 18 .
10
5,363 0
The produce out of mares tracing' to sources other than those
distinguished hy Bruce Lowe
Won 45 Races.
Stakes, £10,113.
No other families won £5000.
In the above table races in Ireland of the value of £100 and upwards
are included, and in cases of a dead-heat only half the net amount of
the stake is credited.
It was, of course, a matter of certainty that the great
victories of Diamond Jubilee would bring No. 7 family up to
the top in regard to the value of stakes, and Osbech has given
No. 9 a big lift, but the truer test is the number of races won,
and here we find that the first four Bruce Lowe families beat
all others, while the only other two which score as many as
100 victories are Nos. 8 and 12. More than this, the next
in order to them is No. 5 family with 78 wins. Then again,
there is this remarkable fact, that in the above list there are
only twenty-two families represented, none others having won
as much as =£"5000, and it will be found that all save one of
the first twenty Bruce Lowe figures are in this select class,
No. 17 alone standing out. The beauty of Bruce Lowe's
guide is that it is founded on judgment by results, and always
stands a similar test.—From The Sportsman, November 28th,
December 1st, 15th, and 22nd, 1900.
341
-ocr page 369-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
AuSTRO-HuNGARIAN STATISTICS FOR 1900
Shortly before this book goes to press the
author has, by the courtesy of Count Ivan
Szapary, received most interesting statistics of
the Austro-Hungarian racing season 1900. The
Count's explanatory letter leaves nothing to be
added:—
Budapest, Jan. 8, 1901.
Dear Mr. Allison—Having seen your very interesting
article in The Sportsman about the winnings of the respective
families, I tried the Bruce Lowe figure system on the result
of this year's racing in our country. As there is much less
money to be won in our country than in England, I took the
limit at about i?2500 instead of i?5000 as you did. In the
winnings all races are counted, also hurdle races and steeple-
chases, as in our statistics all are mixed together, and it would
have cost much tedious labour to go again over all the races
of the year. I don't think it would materially affect the
result, and finally it's of no great consequence in which way
the families show their good qualities.
I added also to the winnings and races won the number
of winners, as it makes clearer the whole.
No. 4 won with 73 horses 158 races, value £41,843
/
35
3?
4!)
" )
7<i
3?
}}
16,765
2
33
J?
4!)
33
88
53
)>
15,787
15
33
15
33
34
3 3
J 3
10,365
12
55
j*
■M
33
57
•'
* )
8,779
5
J3
33
■2r,
9J
53
33
33
8,709
7
33
J 5
15
7!
33
33
■ )
8,140
20
33
}9
1!)
J3
44
>y
33
5,551
22
•■■'
33
10
33
■Jo
33
3 5
5,387
28
a
53
2
JJ
2
• J
»3
5,096
3
f)
33
14
33
29
33
•',
5,070
10
33
>J
■It)
JJ
46
33
53
5,044
1!)
>>
M
10
33
21
33
33
4,654
26
}>
i)
9
>}
20
i>
33
3,861
6
33
33
15
>)
22
))
»3
2,882
23
•'
33
10
>>
L8
33
33
2,762
8
a
33
J!!
33
■iv,
9>
33
2,591
16
33
33
11
•'
23
33
33
2,518
In all respects No. 4 family has the highest position, so in
winners as in races won and in the amount won. At first
342
-ocr page 370-
SPECIAL APPENDIX
glance it seems perhaps that the result is not in accordance
with the Bruce Lowe system, as some outside families get a
very good place in the list, but it happens that with luck one
or the other horse wins a big stake, and so it is with No. 28,
whose offspring, Capo Gallo, won our Derby and credited the
family with about ,£5000, although he could win no other
race, and the family had only one other representative which
won a small race. When you go through the whole with
attention you will see that from the total of the winnings in
this list—about £156,701—more than half, £84,076, were
won by the 5 first families; of 386 winners 208, of 778 races
404, belong to the running families—everywhere more than
the moiety,—about the same as Bruce Lowe found out in
respect to the Derby, Oaks, and St. Leger. I think it's also
a proof of the reality of his system. I may add that Capo
Gallo, although of an outside family, is bred quite after his
wish, as he has in 32 quarterings 23 good strains (sire and
running), with one 19; on both sides he traces to Pocahontas
through Stockwell and King Tom, and on the dam's side
thei'e is a very close double cross of Pantaloon.
Ivan Szapauy.
343
-ocr page 371-
. . ......_............... . .........— ■-«
-ocr page 372-
INDEX
"Abercorn," 113, 235, 240
Abington, Mr., 273
"Achievement," 7, 182
"Adoration," 52
"Adventurer," 116, 190
Agassiz, believer in telegony, 175
" Agnes," 22, 194
" Agneta," 275
"Alarm," 232
"Albert Victor," 181
" Alderman," 131
"Alexander" Mare, 109, 110
"Alicante," 113
" Alice Carneal," 149
"Alice Hawthorn," 23, 155, 183,
191
" Alteruter," 116
"Althorp," 262
"Amati, 268
"Amato," 111
" Amazon," 112
America, appreciation of, 152-153
pedigrees, 130-133
statistics of stock, 143-152
"American Eclipse," 117
" Andover," 281
" Angelica," 193
transmission of resemblances
in case of, 217-218
Angern, Count Apponyi's Stud at.
262
Animals and Plants quoted,
175
" Antwerp and Lamplighter's"
tables, 10-11
Apathy of British Government,
276
Apponyi, Count, private Stud, 262
" Arcadia," 270
"Arcbiduc," 108
" Ardrossan," 111
" Armorica," 121
"Arreau," 235
" Aruld," 269
Ascot Cup, standard test for
horses, 34-39
Ashbumer, 215
"Asterie," 46
"Atalanta," 109, 110
stud triumphs of, (i
"Atlantic," 112
"Aura," 246
"Auriferous," 246, 247
"Aurum," 110, 153, 240, 246
pedigree of, 241
Australia, appreciation of, 152-153
blood stock, 237-253
Figure Guide System worked
by Mr. Frank Reynolds in,
19
introduction of new blood
from, into England pro-
posed, 239-240, 246-253
statistics of stock, 140-143
"Australian Peer," 235
Austria, brood mares bought in
England, 277
"Gladiator's" position in, 233
" Herod's " position in, 227
horsebreeding in, 260-263
statistics of stock, 161-166
" Avingtou," 113
"Ayrshire," 5
Baberbeck, Stud, 255
Babolna, Hungarian Government
Stud, 264, 266
" Babraham " Mare, 87
345
-ocr page 373-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
" Bagdad," 235
Baich, Baron Ivan, 273
" Ball's Florizel," 131, 148, 151
" Balrownie," 132
Baltazzi, Mr. Aristide, private
Stud, 262
"Balvany," 208
"Balvarran," 273
Banffy, Baron de, 270
" Banter," 43
" Barb, The" (Aust), pedigree of,
18
"Barb Mare" (dam of " Dods-
worth "), classic winners of
family, 84
" Barcaldine," 40, 188, 203
"Baron, The," 3, 187, 192
" Bartlet's Childers," 111, 112
Basset Arabian Mare, Dam of,
classic winners of family, 83
"Batt," 129
Batthyanyi, Count Casimir, 207
Count Elemer, 209
Count Louis, 207
" Bay Bolton," 112, 115
"BayCelia," 117
Bay Colt (by "Trenton"—"Polly
Eccles"), pedigree of, 244
Bay Gelding (by " Trenton " —
"Golden Agnes"), pedigree
of, 243
" Bay Middleton," 108, 194, 231
"Beacon," opinions on breeding of
blood-stock, 180
" Bead Roll," 275
Beaufort, late Duke of, speedy
mares essential for breed-
ing, 7-10
Bedout, L., Notes sur la methodc de
classification creee par Bruce
Lowe quoted, 12, 50-51
" Beeswing," 23, 115, 183, 192
foals of, 4-5
Belgium, statisticsof stock,100-109
"Belgrade Turk Mare," classic
winners of family, 79
" Bend Or," 121, 125, 130, 182,
195, 240, 201
" Bendigo," 189, 194, 291
" Best Man," 117
Biel, Baron C. von, Bruce Lowe's
figure system advocated by,
20
" Bill of Portland," 252
"Birdcatcher," 132, 183, 220
Birley, Mr. F. H., 08, 71, 70,149-
151
" Birmingham," 281
" Black Agnes," 271
" Black Legged Royal Mare,"
classic winners of family,
07-08
"Blacklock," 110, 120, 130, 138,
190, 194, 212
"Blair Athol," 0, 132, 183, 191,
194, 232, 248
descendants wanted, 235
successes of, 3
Blanc, M. Edmond, Figure Guide
System adopted by, 52
Bleichroder, Mr. von, 250
Blenkiron, Mr., 232
"Blue Gown," 108
"Blue Green," 217
" Blue Ruin," 273
"Blunderbuss," 150
"Boarding School Miss," 112,118
" Bobadilla," 147
"Boiard," 232, 283
"BoisRoussell," 208
"Bona Vista," 208, 269, 270
" Bonnie Aggie," 271
"Bonnv Black," 80
"Border Minstrel," 189
" Bosphorus," 232
" Boston," 130
" Braconnier," 283
" Brag," 241
" Bramble," 110
"Brandon Mare," 145
Bravitsky, Count, 280
" Breadalbane," 132, 134, 191
" Breadknife," 113
Breeding, see Horsebreeding
racehorses by the Figure
System, see Figure Guide
System
" Bribery," 182
" Bridget," 17
"Brimmer" Mare, classic winners
of family, 81
her dam, "A Royal Mare," 86
British Government's apathy, 276
" Brockleigh," 141
" Bronze," 111
"Bruce," 113, 234
346
-ocr page 374-
INDEX
Bruce Lowe's Figure System, cor-
rections of, 57-87
xee also Figure Guide System
" Buccaneer," 226, 228, 233, 268,
274
Buck, Colonel, 163
" Budagyongye," 234, 270
Budapest May Meeting, 270
" Bulgar," 272
"Burgundy," 270
" Burton's Barb Mare," classic
winners of family, 60-61
" Bustler," Daughter of, 85, 115
classic winners of family, 68-69
" Bustler" Mare, 87
" Busybody," 191
" Byerly Turk Mare," classic
winners of family, 76-77
" Cade," 283
" Cadland," 189
"Caiman," 122, 125, 130
pedigree of, 129
"Cain," 116
" Caller Cm," 132
" Callistrate," 231
Cambridge, Duke of, 47
" Cambuscan," 126, 268
" Camel," 226
"Camilla," 6, 111
Cannon, M., 46, 138
"Canvass Back," 46
"CapoGallo," 343
" Caractacus," 281
"Carbine," 45, 235, 244
compared with "Carnage"
and "Trenton," 245-246
"Carine," 113
Carlier, Dr. Eugene, confirmation
of Bruce Lowe's system
from France, 50-51
statistics of Belgian stock by,
166-169
"Carlton," 291
'' ( arlton Grange," 46
"Carnage," 45, 111, 153, 235, 256
compared with " Carbine"
and "Trenton," 246-246
" Carnelion," 236
"Carnival," 232, 274
"Cartouche III.," 46-47
"Castrel," 110
"Casuistry," 182
Cavalliero, Mr., 274
Cavalry remounts, purchase of,
254, 296
Cesarewitch won by "Merman,"
45-48
" Chacornac," 146
" Chaleureux," 151
"Chamant," 228
"Chanticleer," 132
" Charibert," 257
Charrin, M., possibility of satura-
tion proved by, 174-175
Chartres, Due de, Daughter of
"Hawker," classic winners
of family, 83
" Chattanooga," 235
"Cherry," 181
" Cherry Duchess," stud records,
179-181
" Chester," 141
pedigree of, 17
"Chesterfield," 110
" Chief Justice," 268
Childwick Stud Book, 1896, Pre-
face quoted, 19-22
Chlumetz Stud, Count Kinsky's,
262
Chrenovoy Stud, 279, 292
" Christmas Carol," 280
Churchill, Messrs. J. and A., 213
"Cinizelli." Ill
" Cissy," 240
"Clairvaux," 181
" Clan Stuart," 235, 248
" Claremont," 132
" Clarina," 182
Classic winners, in Australia, 141-
142
tables of English, 57-103
French, 52-54
" Clemanthe," 168
"Clincher," 268
" Clorane," 239
"Clover," 235, 291
" Cobweb," 108, 191
" Coelia," 17
"Colonel, The," 42, 235, 240
" Coltness," Alexandra l'late won
by, 44
"Comet," 171
"Comfrey," 46
" Common," 194
" Compiegne," 233
-ocr page 375-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
" Conductor," 147
" Confidence," 268
'•' Consul," 28.3
" Coronation," 281
" Corrie," 113
" Cortegar," 270
" Cotherstone," 194
" Countess of Albemarle," 132
" Cradle," 115
" Crafton," 234
" Craig Millar," 108
" Craig- Royston," 232
" Creeping Polly," 115
" Cremorne," 110
" Crinon," 115
" Crucifix," 110, 191, 192
" Cryfheia," foal of, 7
" Cuirassier," 240
"Cullen Arabian," 147
" Cullen's Arabian Mare," 117
" Curwen's Bay Barb, 116
daughter of, 85
"Deedalus," 281
Dakin, Mr., 143
Daly, late Mr. Marcus, 74
Darwin, Charles, believer in tele-
gony, 175
Dashkoff (Russia), 281
Dawson, late Mr. Matthew, 121
Debreczen (Hungary), 272
" Defence," 113
" Delight," 217
"Delphos," 256
" Democrat," 117, 123, 134-135
Derby, winners, 58-86
French, classification of win
ners in families, 50-54
standard test for horses, 30
33, 39
Derkulsky Stud, 292
Derton, Mr. Emile Van, 166
Mr. Paul Van, 166
Descent in tail male, 224-236
" Despair," 233
" Devotion," 23, 52
stud records, 179-181
"Diamond," see "Cullen'sArabiai
Mare "
"Dick Burton's Mare," classi
winners of family, 83
" Dieudonne," 129
"Digby Grand," 188
" Diomed," 252, 280
"Disraeli," 129
" Dog Rose," 233
"Dollar," 108, 228, 231
"Doncaster," 114, 134, 182, 192,
235, 247, 248, 268, 271
Doncaster Cup, standard cup for
horses, 34-39
" Don John," 110
"Donovan," 245
Doyle, Mr. J. A., letters to The,
Sportsman on Bruce Lowe's
book, 23; and on St. Simon's
Stock, 220-222
notes on inbreeding, 186-212
Dreher, Mr., 262, 272
"Driver," 112
" Duchess," see "Cullen's Arabian
Mare "
" Duke, The," 117
"Duke of Magenta," 145
" Duncan," 271
" Dunure," 268
"Dutch Skater," 114
" Duty," 110
■ " Eberhard, 272
" Echidna," 3
" Eclipse," 29, 112
descent in tail male from,
225-236
pedigree of, 16
tail male descent from, 10-11
"Economist," 42
" Ecossais," 115
"Editha," 113
-       "Eglentine," 111
" Eleanor," 182
-      " Electric Light," 270
Electricity, negative and positive
results produced by, 214-
216
" Elemer," 234
"Elf II.," 52, 231
"Elfrida," 112, 113
" Ellerdale," 132
" Eltham Lass," 131, 132
i " Ely," 232
" Emerald," 112
c " Emilius, 131, 198
" Emperor, The," 113
" Emperor of Norfolk," 150
" Empress Maud, 'Hie," 114
348
-ocr page 376-
INDEX
" Endurance," 291
"Energique," 283
" Energy," 181
" Enigma," 110
"Enthusiast," 181
" Esa," 134
Esterhazy, Prince Louis, 161, 274
purchase of " Red Hot" by,
109
successes in selecting stock,
276
" Eurydice," 192
" Evaporee," 168
"Evelina," 115
" Evening Star," 168
Ewart, Professor J. C, develop-
mentpf the individual, 13-14
opinion on inbreeding, 173
Penyeuik Experiments quoted,
171, 177
result of experiments in breed-
ing, 1, 176-178
views on use of Australasian
stallions, 249-251
" Exning," 232, 272
"Expectafion," 63
Falmouth, late Lord, 183, 232
age for brood mares, 4
system of breeding, 179, 181
Family records, 57-103
Family tables, by T. P. Frentzel,
24, 26
" Faugh-a-Ballagh," 283
" Favonian," 232
" Favonius," 112
" Fearnought," 130-131
" Feher Hallo," 273
" Feiiek," 234, 268, 271
" Feronia," 230
foals of, 5-6
Festetic, Count, 271
" Fetterlock," 138
Figure Guide System, allotment
of figures, 21-22
Austrian statistics, 161-166
Australian statistics, 140-143
Belgian statistics, 166-169
capacity of families for getting
good brood mares, 197-212
corroboration of, by French
figures, 50-54
examined, 185-196
Figure Guide System, explana-
tion of, 13-27
German statistics, 154-161
Hungarian statistics, 161-166
object lessons, 120-139
practical results, 41-48
revision and corrections of
Bruce Lowe's book, 57-87
Scandinavian statistics, 165
subdivision of families, 107-
119
tested and proved, 28-40
" Fille de l'Air," 113
Fisher, Messrs, 141
"Fisherman," 228, 240, 241, 242,
246-247, 248, 252
" Fitz-Gladiator," 228, 233
" Fitz .Tames," 273
"Fitzroy," 113
" Flageolet," 235
"Flambard," 121
" Fleada," 134
"Fleche, La," 111, 136, 137-138
"Flitters," 109
"Flora," 110
" Flying Duchess," 23, 230
" Flying Dutchmau/fhe," 113,217,
226, 230, 231
" Flying Fox," 134, 139, 187, 212,
218, 220, 251
pedigree of, 127
success anticipated from
figure analysis, 122-123,
125-130
Fogaras, Hungarian Government
Stud, 264
" Fordham," 291
"Forfarshire," 115, 147-148
success anticipated from
figure analysis, 123, 134-
136
Forgach, Count Alec, 273
" Fortune's Wheel," 275
" Fousi-Yama," 116
"Foxhall," 131, 132, 151, 152, 239
" Era Diavolo," 113
"Frailty," 142, 240
" Franc Tireur," 113
France, Figure Guide System
corroborated by figures
from, 50-54
Government stallions, 294
"Herod's" position in, 227
-ocr page 377-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
France, Horsebreeding in, 293
"Gladiator's" position in, 2,33
" la Direction des Haras," 294
Rosieres Stud, 265, 20(5
" Francesca," 116
Frankel, Capt. T., private Stud,
262
" Fre'gate," 116
Frentzel, T. P., family tables of,
24, 26
" Frontier," 11,5, 12.5, 130
pedigree of, 126
" Fulmen," 256
" Furioso," 265
" Furioso Senior," 266
" Gaga," 109, 268, 269, 270
" Galauthus," 183
" Galaor," 113, 268
" Galliard," 194, 245
" Gallinule," 128
" Galopin," 6, 109, 113, 122, 125,
126, 128, 139, 187, 212,
220, 226, 245, 270
transmission of resemblances
in, 217
" Galtee More," 122
purchase of, by Russia, and
account of transport, 284-
291
Galton, Mr., law of heredity, 13-14
" Gauache," 270, 271
"Gang Forward," 192, 247
" Gascoyne's Horse," Daughter of,
classic winners of family, 78
" George Frederick," 181
Germany, Bruce Lowe's Figure
System adopted in, 25-27
"Gladiator's' position in, 233
" Herod's " position in, 227
Horsebreeding in, 254-260
Statistics of stock, 154-161
" Gidran " family, 265
"Gipsy," 117
Giron, M., transmission of resem-
blances, 216-218
" Gladiateur," 113, 114
pedigree of, 18
" Gladiator," 183, 193, 226, 230,
232
position in France, Germany,
Austria, and Hungary, 233
"Glaucus," 231, 232
3^
"Glencoe," 108, 131, 135, 194,
226, 228, 230, 231
" Golden Agnes," 242
"Golden Bridge," 129
" Goldsbrough," 240
Golochvastoff, Prince Gaganne
Skariatin, 280
"Gomera," 8
" Goodfellow," 261, 268, 273
(ioodwood Cup, standard test for
horses, 34-39
Goos, Hermann, arrangement of
tables, 107-117
Bruce Lowe's Figure System
adopted by, 25-26
statisticsof German stock, 154,
166
tables of female descent to
original mares, 24-25
" Gouverneur," 2,57
"Governess," 116, 194
" Gower Stallion," Daughter of,
classic winners of family, 70
" Gozo," 234, 247
Grabowski, L. (Russia), 281
Graditz, thoroughbred Stud, 255
" Grafter, The," 252-253
Graham, Mr. Young, system of
breeding, 181
" Grand Flaneur," 42, 43, 44
" Grand Prior," 181
Grand Prix de Paris, classification
of winners in families, 50-54
"Grapeshot," 268
" Grasshopper" Mare (dam of
" Hartley's Blind Horse"),
86
" Greensnake," 275
"Grey Leg," 115, 233, 234
"Grey Momus," 110
" Grey Royal," 150
"Greyhound" Mare, 116
" Guerrier," 270
" Guunersbury," 268
" Habenichts," 256
"Hampton," 112,181, 190, 191,
194, 19.5
" Hannah," 112
" Hanover," 228, 231
Haras du Pin, Normandy,'294
" Haricot," 132
" Harkaway," 110, 192
50
-ocr page 378-
INDEX
Horsebreeding, descent in tail
male, 224-236
in Germany, 254-260
in Hungary, 263-278
inbreeding to a horse is to
the individual, to a mare to
the blood, 193-194
introduction of new blood
from Australia proposed,
239-240, 240-253
no exact science in, 185
in Russia, 278-296
saturation theory, 170-184
stock must be kept healthy,
222-223
superior parent produces op-
posite sex, 213-223
transmission of resemblances,
216-218
Horsebreediny Recollection*, by
Count Lehndorft', 259
Horses of doubtful parentage,
races won by, 99-100
Hough, Dr., transmission of
resemblances, 216
" Humphrey Clinker," 115
Hungarian Jockey Club, 204
Hungary, "Gaga" a stud horse in,
109
"Gladiator's" position in, 233
Government Studs, 264-276
Horsebreeding in, 263-278
Royal Stud, 271
Sire depots (Governmental),
272
statistics of stock, 161-166
" Hurricane," 112
Hutton, Mr. A. W., statistics of
Australian Stock, 141-142
"Hutton's Spot Mare," 115, 116
" Hybla," 113
" Idle Boy," 283
" Illuminata," 121
" Imperieuse," 192
Import Society (German), 256-258
" Insulaire," 261
" Irish Idyll," 109
" Isinglass," 112
" Isonomy," 22, 32, 109
pedigree of, 17
" Hartley's Blind Horse," 150
dam, " A Grasshopper Mare,"
80
"Harvester," 131
" Haut Brion," 252
" Hautboy," Daughter of, classic
winners of family, 84
"Havoc," 240
"Hawker," Due de Chartres',
Daughter of, classic winners
of family, 83
" Hawthornden," 108
" Haydn Edwards," 235
Hayes, Captain, believer in tele-
gony, 176
"Headlong," 110
" Helmsley Turk Mare," classic
winner of family, 80
"Hengist," 283
Heredity, Galton's law of, 13-14
opinion on, by Professor
Ewart, 13-14
" Hermit," 114, 134, 181, 195,
210
no blood in the Colonies, 247-
248
" Herod," 29, 113, 114, 140,193
descent in tail male from, 10-
11, 225-236
pedigree of, 16
male linedeficient in England,
246-247
"Hester," 116
"Highflyer," 112,113, 187
branch nearly extinct in Eng-
land, 231-232
Hirsch, Baron de, 136
"His Majesty," 283
" History," 46
" Holocauste," 147
" Homily," 192
" Honeycomb Punch," Sister to,
classic winners of family, 84
Hoppegarten, the Union Club at,
257
"Horatia," 114,115
"Hornsea," 131, 132,151
Horsebreeding, in Austria, 260,
263
capacity of families for getting
good brood mares, 197-212
colts and Allies, 187-193
definition of law of sex, 213-223
3
Jacobus," 40
51
-ocr page 379-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
" Ladas," 30, 121
" Lady Anglesey," 271
" Lady Blanche'," 110-111
" Lady Brooke," 270
" Lady Grace," 273
" Lady Grey," 117
" Lady Langden," 112
Lady Meux, 177
" Lady Morgan," 230
" Lady Paramount," 270
" Lady Rosebery," 114
" Lady Thigh," 147
" Lady Trenton," 141
" Lady Yardley," 110
Ladyjensky, Count Z. Z., 280
"Laiiercost," 112, 132, 236
" Lara," 283
" Lass," 112
ta of Sex, 213-223
" Layton Barb Mare," classic
winners of family, 63-65
"Leamington," 135, 147, 252
" Leda," 110
Lehndorff, Count, 255, 257, 258
Bruce Lowe's Figure System
advocated by, 25-26
" Carnage " bought by, 245
Horsebreeding Recollections,
extracts from, 259
rule for purchasing mares, 3
views on the British thorough-
bred and racing test, 258
" Le Justicier," 256
" Levity," 117
" Lexington," 117, 130, 131,
135
pedigree of, 148-152
" Lilian," 111
foals of, 4-5
" Lillibulero," failure of, 4-5
" Lily Agnes," 182, 230
Limarewaky Stud, 292
" Limasol," 46
Lipizza Stud, 265
" Little Duck," 234
" Lizzie Agnes," 274
"Lochiel," 235, 248
" Lohengrin," 184
" Lord Hastings," 273
"Lord Lyon," 109, 182
; Lounine (Russia), 281
" Love Charm," 110
' Lowe, C. Bruce, 12
" Janissary," 124
" Jannette," 109,124
Janowski Stud, 292
"Janus," 1.35
" Jeddah," 109, 129
pedigree of, 124
Derby victory anticipated, 122,
12,3-124
Jerome, Mr. Leonard, 1-53
Jersey, Mr., " Merman " bought
' by, 4,3
" Jocose," 43
" Joe Miller," 232
"Joliette," 111
"Jongleur," 111
" Juvenal," 146, 252
" Kaiser," 283
" Kathleen," 274
" Katv Ann," 117
" Keenan," 46
Keene, Mr. James R., 153
" Kelpie," 6
Kempton Park, "Forfarshire's"
victory over " Democrat,"
134-135
" Kettledrum," 112, 113
" Kilcock," 194
*■" Kilwarlin," 194
" Kincsem," 161, 268, 270
" King Alfonso," 152
" King Fergus," 110, 115
" King John," 232
" King Tom," 42, 189, 192, 212
former objections to inbreed-
ing to, 2
" Kingfisher," 131
" Kingston," 116, 131, 132, 184,
232
Kinsky, Count, private Stud, 262
" Kirkconuel," 114, 256
" Kisber," 161, 228, 234, 252, 257
„ Stud sale conditions, 271
Hungarian Government Stud,
264, 267
" Kisberocscse," 234
" Kisboske," 270
Koiistaiitinowitch, Grand Duke
Dimitri, 284, 288, 291
" Kosma," 268
Kovacs, Mr. von, 273
" Kozma," 270
" Krakatoa," 110
352
-ocr page 380-
INDEX
Lowe, C. Bruce, Figure Guide
System of, allotment of
figures, 21-22
Australian statistics, 140-143
Austrian statistics, 161-166
Belgian statistics, 166-169
capacity of families for get-
ting good brood mares, 197-
212
corroboration of, by French
figures, 50-54
examined, 185-196
explanation of, 13-27
German statistics, 154-161
Hungarian statistics, 161-106
object lessons, 120-139
practical results, 41-48
revision and corrections of
statements, 57-87
Scandinavian statistics, 165
subdivision of families, 107-
119
tested and proved, 28-40
mistakes about " Lexing-
ton's" pedigree, 149-152
opinion on saturation, 170-
184
Luczenbacher, Mr., 274
"Macaria," 6
" Macaroni," 6,126,183,196, 230,
232
"Macheath," 232
" Macmahon," 232
"Madame de Senlis," 113
" Madame Bglentine," 113
" Mademoiselle de Caiseix," 168
" Mademoiselle Giraud," 261
"Madge Wildfire," 132
" Magnetism," 131
" Magnolia," 113
" Magus," 291
"Makeless Mare," 150
"Makeshift/' 111
" Malua," 235, 248
" Maluma," 153
"Mameluke," 147
"Mandane," 194
"Manganese," 155
"Marchioness," 111
" Marco," 113
" Marechal, Le," 6
Mares, age for brood mares, 4-8
Mares, Count Lehndorff's rule for
purchasing, 33
Hungarian fees for, 269
Hungarian
         Government's
breeding operations, 208-
278
influence of remote ances-
tress, 28-30
no consideration paid to, in
" Antwerp and Lamp-
lighter's" bibles, 10,11
prepotency of, 14, 15, 24, 25
running family essential for
breeding, 7-10, 11, 12, 23-
26
sires of brood, 195-212
" Margrave," 110
" Maribyrnong," 246, 247
Marienhof Stud, Capt. T. Fran-
ker s, 262
" Marigold," 114
" Marioni," 232
" Marquis, The," 248, 252
" Marshal Saxe," 291
" Marshall Scott," 283
" Marske," 16
"Marsyas," 116, 181
"Martha Lynn," 110, 183
"Marvel," 116
Maryland, quarter racing in, 144
" Mascotte," 261
"Massy Mare," 113
Massy's " Black Barb," Daughter
of, classic winners of family,
65-66
" Master Kildare," 182, 262
" Matchbox," 261, 262
"Matchem," 17, 29, 110, 113
tail male descent from, 10-11,
225-236
" Matchgirl," 261
"Mayonnaise," 113
"Mazurka," 110
" Meddler," 108, 191
" Melbourne," 108, 124, 189, 194,
195, 212, 217, 230, 283
"Melissa," 192
" Melody," 145
" Melton," 182, 252
" Melzas," 131
" Memnon," 281
" Memoir," 111
Memorandum on sires of brood
3                        2a
-ocr page 381-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Nagykiiros (Hungary), 272
" Nameless," 109
Napagedl Stud, Mr. Aristide Bal-
tazzi's, 262
" Natural Barb Mare," 24-25, 87,
151
" Nectar," 281
Nervous system, negative and
positive results produced by
electricity, 214-216
Neustadt Stud, 255
"Newhaven," 141, 238, 239, 247
Newmarket, Cesarewitch won by
" Merman," 45-48
" Newminster," 6, 192, 248
" Niagara," 240
" Ninus," 129
" Noble," 281
" Nonius " family, 265
" Nonius Senior," 265
" Nordenfeldt," 111
"Nord, Le," 283
" Nordstern," 268
" Northallerton," 46
North Carolina, quarter racing in,
144
" North Star," 265
Norway, statistics of stock, 165
Notes sur la methode de classification
creee par Bruce Lowe, by
L. Bedout, quoted, 12, 51
" Nougat," 113
Nowo-Alexandrowskij Stud, 292
" Nutwith," 235
" Oakball," 268
Oaks, Winners, 58-84
French, classification of win-
ners in families, 50-54
standard test for horses, SO-
BS, 39
" Ocean Wave," 233
Oertzen, Mr. Ulrich von, 257
Bruce Lowe's Figure System,
advocated by, 26
"Officer, The," 247
" Ogle's Oscar," 117
"Old Bald Peg," 114, 145
classic winners of family, 86-
67
"Oldfield Mare, The," classic
winners of family, 74-75
" Old Margery Daw," 115
mares by J. A. Doyle, 197-
212
" Mentmore," 112
" Mermaid," loo
"Merman," 107, 153, 235, 240,
247
purchased by application of
the Figure Guide System,
41-43
success of, 44-48
" Merry Sunshine," 283
Mezohegyes, Hungarian Govern-
ment Stud, 264
" Miami," 113
Miasonoff, 281
" Middleton," 108, 281
"Midge," 111
"Mimi," 117
"Mince Pie," 111
" Mincemeat," 113
" Minerva Anderson," 145
" Minting, 108, 124
"Miss Belsea," 111,112
" Miss Elis," 131
" Miss Euston," 87
" Miss Gladiator," 230
"Miss Lettv," 116
"Miss Makeless," 109, 110
"MissTheo," 111
"Miss West," 113, 114
" Mrs. Langtry," 271
" Monarque," 116, 126, 228
"Montagu Mare," 116
"Montanvert," 283
" Montargis," 116
" Moonah Barb Mare of Queen
Anne," classic winners of
family, 79
" Morglav," 232
" Morisco," 261
" Mortemer," 108
Morton, Lord, 175
Moscow racecourse, 281
Mossoloff, F. S., 281
" Mount Gilford," 273
Mouravieff, Count, 280
" Mulatto," 176
"Muley," 182
" Musj'id," 115
" Musket," 111, 235, 240, 245,252
" Myakka," 149
pedigree of, 130-133
" Myrtle," 147
-ocr page 382-
INDEX
ter of, classic winners of
family, 78
" Pawn," 109, 124
Peard, Mr., opinion of Bay
Gelding by " Trenton " —
"Golden Agnes," 242-243
Pedigrees, " Aurum," of, 241
" Barb, The," of, 18
Bay Colt by "Trenton" —
" Polly Eccles," of, 244
Bay Gelding by "Trenton"
—" Golden Agnes," of, 243
" Caiman," of, 129
" Chester," of, 17
" Eclipse," of, 16
" Flying Fox," of, 127
" Frontier," of, 126
" Gladiateur," of, 18
"Herod," of, 16
" Isonomy," of, 17
" Jeddah,"" of, 124
" Lexington," of, 148-152
" Merman," of, 42-43
" Myakka," of, 130-132, 133
" Patron," of, 118-119
"Quiver," of, 242
" St. Gris," of, 128
" Peep o' Day," 146
Pembroke, Lord, 278
"Penelope," 108, 182
" Penuistone," 283
Penycuik Experiments, by Professor
Ewart, quoted, 13, 14, 171,
177
" Pepper and Salt," 233
" Perplexe," 232
" Persimmon," 189, 212
" Persistence," 273
" Persistive," 273
" Perth," 109
" Peter," 270
Peter the Great, horse-breeding
improved by, 278
"Petrarch," 190, 191
" Petrel," 270
" Petronel," successes of, 7
" Peut-etre," 283
"Pewet," 115
" Phenomenon," 17
Pietrofskv, 281
" Pilgrimage," 109, 124
Pio Torterolo, 47
" Pioneer," 42
"Old Merlin," Daughter of,
classic winners of family, 81
sister to, classic winners of
family, 85
"Old Vintner Mare," classic
winners of family, 69-70
"Old Woodcock," Daughter of,
classic winners of family, 77
(PaviU's) Daughter of, classic
winners of family, 78
"Omnium II.," 231
One Thousand Guineas, Winners,
59-87
standard test for horses, 32-33,
39
"Orange Girl," 132
Orde, Mr., instructions respecting
" Beeswing," 4
"Oriflamb," 121
" Orlando," 192, 235, 242
" Orme," 134, 187, 217, 218, 220
success anticipated by figure
analysis, 136-139
"Ormonde," 22, 137, 182, 220
"Orphelin," 233
"Or Vert," 261
"Orville," 115, 187, 236
" Orville Mare," 116
" Orwell," 274
" C)streger," 268
"Otisiua," 112, 113
"Owen," 283
"Oxford," 116, 117
"Oxide," 141
Oxonian, see J. A. Doyle
" Paganini," 283
" Palm," 7
" Pantaloon," 193, 248
" Paradigm," 109
" Paradox," 182
" Paris," 141
"Paris III.," 131
" Parmesan," 183, 189, 190, 232
"Partisan," 42, 179, 189, 190,
231, 232
" Partner," 111
" Pasquinade," 43
" Pasztor," 268
" Patron," 114, 153, 235, 240, 249
pedigree of, 118-119
" Paulowitz," 115
PaviU's "Old Woodcock," Daugh-
-ocr page 383-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
" Radieux," 283
"Rake, The," 108, 233
" Rataplan," 189, 194, 212
former objections to inbreed-
ing to, 2
Rayeffsky, Prince Golitsen, 280
" Rayon'd'Or," 135
" Rebecca," 155, 194
Redern, Count, 256
" Red Flag," 109
"Red Hot," 270
purchased by Prince Louis
Esterhazv, 10!)
" Refraction," il4
" Regulus," 16, 112
Reichenbach, 215
" Reine," 113
Remounts, haphazard purchase of,
254, 296
Renard, Count Tchirschky, 257
Resemblances, transmission of,
216-218
"Revolver," 268
Reynolds, Mr. Frank, Figure
Guide System worked by, 1!)
" Rhedvcina," 116, 194
" Richmond," 246
"Rifleman," 110
" Rigolboche," 110
"Ringbone," 109-110, 111
"Ringlet," 266
"Robert the Devil," 108, 189
"Robin Grey," 131, 151
" Robinson Crusoe," 240
"Rodringham," 131
" Roehampton," 283
"Roitelet," 283
"Roman Candle," 192
" Romance," 270
Romanes, believer in telegony, 174,
175
Rose, Mr. C. D., 270
Rosebery, Lord, Figure Guide
System ignored by, 120-121
"Rosebud," 112
" Rosicrucian," 125, 196
Rosslyn, late Lord, age for brood
mares, 5-0
Rosstopchin, Count, 280
"Rouge Rose," 182, 230
Rowe, Mr. W. H., American sta-
tistics compiled by, 144-140
Royal Commission of Nine, 274
" Piping Peg," classic winners of
family, 80
" Piquet," 108
" Pirate of Penzance," 23.5
Place's ". White Turk," Daughter
of, classic winners of family,
82
" Placida," 110
" Plaisanterie," 22
Platoff, Count, 280
Piatt, Mr. James E., 246
" Pleasaunce," 275
" Plutus," 228, 235
"Pocahontas," 3, 23, 112, 118,
131,   135, 183, 187, 192,
194, 212, 217, 224, 230
" Podagra," 270
" Poinsettia," 273
" Polly Eccles," 243
" Pope Joan," 108
Porter, Mr. John, 130, 136, 137-
138
"Pot-8-os," 113, 193, 194
" Poulet," 233
Prepotency, causes and contribu-
tives, 14-15
female descent from certain
original mares, 24-25
"Presta," 116
" Priestess," 117
"Primas II.," 271
" Primrose League," 232
" Prince Charlie," 110, 235, 252
" Prince Louis," 261
" Prince Rudolph," 235
" Princess Beatrice," 272
"Princess of Wales," 194
stud records, 179-181
Prix de Diane, see Oaks, French
Prix du Jockey Club, see Derby,
French
" Prudence," 108
" Prunella," 43, 108, 194
"Pumpernickel," 256
" Pyrrhus," 112
"Pyrrhusl.," 190, 252
Quarter racing in America, 144
"Queen Bertha," 108, 179, 183
"Queen Mary," 3, 22, 23,
132,   142, 154, 183, 184,
194
" Quiver," pedigree of, 242
-ocr page 384-
INDEX
"Royal Flush," 232
" Royal Hampton, 134, 135
"Royalist," 131
'' Royal Mare " (dam of " Brimmer
Mare," family 40), 86
(family 12) classic winners of
family, 72-73
(dam of "Grey Royal"),
classic winners of family,
73-74
(dam of "Grey Why Not"),
classic winners of family,
75
"Rubens," 110, 111
Rucker, Mr., 47
" Ruperra," 268
" Rush, The," 46
Russia, Government Studs, 292
horse-breeding in, 278-293
Racing in, 293
stallion depots in, 293
" Ruy Bias," 235
"Sabine," 111
" Sailor Prince, The," 252
"Sainfoin," 110
"St. Albans" (by " Stockwell"),
110, 182
" St. Albans " (by " Blair Athol "),
235
"St. Bris," 46
"St. Cloud II.," 47
" St. Elizabeth," 115, 134
" St. Evox," 130
" St. Frusquin," 32, 128, 134
" St. Gatien," 191
St. Genois, Count, 275
"St. Gris," 134
pedigree of, 128
" St. Leger," 112, 247
St. Leger, Winners, 58-85
standard test for horses, 30-
33, 39
" St. Marguerite," 181
" St. Salvatore," 262
" St. Serf," 5
" St. Simon," 132, 134, 189, 190,
193, 212, 245, 246, 261
letter of J. A. Doyle on stock
of, 221-222
transmission of resemblances
in case of, 217
"Salvator," 117, 131, 235, 283
" Sancy, Le," 52, 228, 231
" Sandiway," 244
" Saraband," 256
"Sarpedon," 130, 149, 150, 151
" Sarrazin, Le," 283
Saturation, theoi'y of, 170-184
" Savile," 5
Scandinavia, statistics of stock,
165
" Scene Shifter," 232
Scheremetieff, Count, 280
" Scintillant," 130
" Scot Free," 108
"Scottish Chief," 116, 190, 196
" Seaweed," 42
" Seclusion," 114
" Sedbury Royal Mare," classic
winners of family, 71-72
" See-Saw," 115, 233
"Selim," 110, 187, 194, 231
" Sensation," 117, 131, 135
Sepsi St. Gyorgy (Hungary), 272
" Seringa," 6
Sex, law of, 213-223
" Shaddock," 291
" Shark," 151, 152
Sharpies, J., 47
" Sheen," 110
" Sheet Anchor," 116-117
Shichareff (Russia), 281
" Shields Galloway Mare," 87
" Shotover," foals of, 2
" Signorina," 189
" Silverhair," 179, 183, 184
" Silvio," 108, 132, 183, 184, 252
" Simonian," 114
" Simouv," 192
"Sir Archy," 130, 150, 151
"SirBevys," 112
"Sir Hercules," 110, 111, 183,
194, 226
" Sir Modred," 248
" Sir Paul," branch existing
through "Wild Davrell,"
233-234
" Sir Peter Teazle," 111
" Sir Visto," 121
Sires, brood mares of, 195-212
classic winners of, 59 et seg.
Hungarian Government's,
267-278
" Skim Mare," 63
" Skopos," 130
-ocr page 385-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Strieletozky Stud, 292
" Stripling'" by " Hutton's Spot,"
Sister to, classic winners of
family, 75-76
" Stronziau," 261, 262
Stud Book de la Race Pare, Le,
225
" Sturminster," 272
" Sultan," 116
" Sundown," 146
" Sunflower," 109
" Sunshine," 230
"Surefoot, 22
"Surplice," 110, W2
"
Suspender," 117
Sutherland, believer in telegony,
176
Sweden, statistics of stock, 165
" Sweet Nina," 272
" Sweetbread," 268
"Sweetmeat," 183, 190, 194, 226,
232
Sykes, Sir Tatton, 268
"'Sylvia," 246
" Symmetry," 281
" Syrinx," 6
Szapary, Count Ivan, 161, 274, 342
Szekesfehervar (Hungary), 272
Tail male descent, 224-236
" Talpra Magyar," 234
" Tartar," 281
Tcherkoff, Prince Lopouchin
Bourtourlin Ismailoff Pro-
zaroffsky, 280
Tchesmensky, Count OrlofF, 279
" Teddingtoh," 110, 192, 268
Tegetmeier, believer in telegony,
176
Telegony, factor in horse-breeding,
174-184
"Tempete," 168
"Teufel," 134
"Thebais," 181
"Theodora," 192
" Thessalian," 110
" Thorgunna," 263
" Thormanby," 6, 230, 231
" Throstle,"' 194
"Thwart's Dun Mare," classic
winners of family, 86
"Timoleon," 130, 148'
"Tim Whiffler," 111, 248
" Skylark," 131
" Smolensko," 235
"Snap," 112
" Snowden," 141
Sloan, Tod, 47, 128, 130
" Solon," 234
" Soothsayer," 281
" Spanker " Mare (27), classic win-
ners of family, 82
(42), classic winner of family,
8G
" Spectator Mare," 87
" Speculum," 108, 125, 126, 212
Spencer, Herbert, believer in
telegony, 175
mercantile test for horse-
breeding, 1
" Spendthrift," 145
" Spiletta," 16
"Spinaway," 191
Sportsman, The, appreciation of
"Jeddah" and "Flying
Fox" in, 123-124, 125-126,
129-130
departure of " Galtee More,"
280
" Forfarshire" to heat ''De-
mocrat, 134-135
" He (' Merman') wins the
Cesarewitch," 45-47
letters to, by J. A. Doyle,
23, 220-222
"Merman's" pedigree pub-
lished in, 43
sale of " Galtee More," by
Vigilant, 284, 287
Springer, Baron, 262
"Springfield," 117
" Squirt," 16
Stallions, winners from 1850-1899,
88-98
Starkweather, G. B., 187, 189,190,
210
law of sex, 213-223
" Sterling," 32, 117, 181, 182, 270
" Sterling Love," 113
" Stockwell," 3, 6, 42, 118, 131,
126, 182, 187, 189, 192,
194, 195, 235, 245, 248
former objections to inbreed-
ing to, 2
" Strathconan," 273
" Strathmore," 142
358
-*J^-
-ocr page 386-
INDEX
"Tokio," 114, 262
"Tomato," 113
"Tomyris," 116
"Torment," 194
Totalisator, German, 257
"Touchstone," 43, 183, 187, 192,
226
" Toucques, La," 110
" Toxophilite," 111
" Traducer," 248
Trakelmen Stud, 255
" Tramp," 111
Transmission of resemblances,
216-218
" Tregonwell's Natural Barb
Mare," classic winners of
. family," 58-59
" Trenchant," 141
"Trenton," 45, 142, 153, 235,
240, 249
compared with " Carbine"
and " Carnage," 245-246
how to mate, 240-245
" Trident," 129
Trotting horses (Russian), 278
" True Art," 46
"True Blues," Dam of Two, classic
winners of family, 61 -63
" Trumpator," 109
"Tupgill," 268
" Turul," 263
" Twine the Plaiden," 132
Two Thousand Guineas, Winners,
58-83
standard test for horses, 32-
33, 39
" Typhoeus," 283
Uechtritz, Baron, 270
" Uncas," 108, 134, 273
" Upas," 231
Vaddsz and Verseny Lap (Hun-
garian Jockey Club organ),
270
"Valauris," 256
" Valois," 268
" Vampire," 134, 220
"Vane," 134
"VanTromp," 281
"Vauban," successes of, 7
Vay, Count Olivier, 273
" Vederemo," 234
8,
" Vedette," 22, 32, 126, 217, 245
"Veilchen," 155
"Velasquez," 122, 189
" Velocipede," 113, 132
" Veneration," 52
" Venison," 232
"Ventre St. Gris," 113, 233
"Vermont," 232
" Vermouth," 112, 228
" Verneuil," 228, 268
Vernon, Mr., 63
" Vertugadin," 112, 233
" Vertumna, 261
" Vespasia," 142
" Victorious," 121
" Victor Wild," 235
" Viennois," 283
" Violet," 230
" Violet Melrose," 182
Virginia, quarter racing in, 144
Volinsky (Grand Equerry), Russia,
279
" Voltaire," 117
" Wagner," 235
Wahrman, Mr., 271
" Waisenknabe," 234, 261, 274
Wales, Prince of, 137
" Waltz," 108
"War Dance," 109
" Warcraft," 283
"Warwick Mare," 113
" Waterford," 233
Waugh, Mr. James, 46
" Waverlev," 111
" Waxy," 182,193
" Weatherbit," 116, 236
Weatherbv, Mr. C. T., 68
Weatherbv, Messrs., 63,148, 248,
280
unfairness to Australasian
horses regarding entry into
Stud Book, 238-239
" Web," 108
Webb, Mr. F., 47
Webster, late Mr. Hume, mares of
running family essential for
breeding, 11-12
" Wedlock," 117
Weismann, 174, 176, 250
Welten, Mr. AViener von, 262
Westminster, late Duke of, 130,
137, 244, 291
59
..
-ocr page 387-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
"Whalebone," 42, 182, 187, 189,
194, 226, 240, 252
" Wheel of Fortune," 191
" Whisker," 42, 235, 240, 266
" AYhiskey," 17, 111, 182
" Whisper," 117
White, Mr. Henry, Figure Guide
System used by, 19
"White Turk" (Place's) Daughter
of, classic winners of family,
82
"Whitelock,"110
" Whitenose Mare," 87
"Whizgig," 108
"Wildair," 130
"WildDayrell," 233-234
" Wildfowler," 129
"Wild Oats," 233, 234
" Wild Rose," 192
Williamstown Cup, won by
" Merman," 41
"Willis," 168
" Wilsford," 268
Wilson, late Mr. W. R., descrip-
tion of " Merman," 45
"Windhound, 111
Winning stallions from 1850-1899,
88-98
"Wire," 108
"Wisdom," 189, 190, 229
Withers, Mr. D. D., 153
Wojeikoff (Russia), 281
Wood, Chas., 47
" Woodbine," 6
"Woodpecker," 17, 231
Woronzotf-Dashkoif, Count, Rus-
sian Imperial Horsebreed-
ing Board, 283
"Yattendon,"42, 141
" Young Cade Mare," 87
"Young Country Wench," 63
"Young Giantess," 114, 182, 194
"Young Hag," 114
"Young Maid of Oaks, 117
" Young Melbourne," 230
" Young O'Bayan," 267
Yuille, Mr. Archibald, 238
letter on Australian Stud
Hook,
142-143
" Zalinski," 240
" Zanzibar," 270
"Zsupan," 262
"Zutzen," 283
360
-ocr page 388-
WINNERS OF THE DERBY
2b
I
-ocr page 389-
-ocr page 390-
DERBY WINNERS 1780 & 1781
f Partner 9 "
I (Ch. 1718)
I Meliora
I (1729)
Blaze 4-
Selima
.(1733)
j'Godolphin
Arabian 4"
Blossom
(Grey)
Y. Cartouch 4
(1731)
Ebony
(B. 1728)
|' Alcock's
I Arabian 4"
| Sister to Soreheels
I Partner 9 —
I (Ch. 1718)
| Bonny Lass
I (B. 1723)
j'Godolphin
I Arabian 4"
| Daughter of
I (Ch. 1727)
[Flying Childers 6
I (B. 1715)
I Miss Belvoir
/Jigg 4"
\ Sister to Mixbury
/Fox 6
I Milkmaid
/ Bethell's Arabian 4*
I Dau. of Graham's Champion
00
p ^ -
to
1 -
Sffl
T—<
w —
M
Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
Cypron
(B. 1750)
Cygnet 6
(Gr. 1753)
"5
("Crab 9 —
"(Sis. to Y. Miss Belvoir
fCartouch 4
'. M. by Hampton Court Ch.
[ Arabian
/ Flying Childers 6
\ Old Ebony
Dau. of
g
a
w
o
I—I
a
,--(
^ — 1
1763
tator
1749
O . 1
Bi
S £0 I
■w
QQ V
•O
Crab 9 —
(Gr. 1722)'
Dau. of
(B. 1735)
/ Basto 6
\ Partner's Dam
f Jigg 4*
(Sister to Mixbury
j Bay Bolton 37
( Dau. of Darley Arabian
Blank 15
(B. 1740)
| Bartlet's Childers 6
(Flying Whigg
| Darley Arabian >f
\ Betty Leedes
(Grey Grantham 4*
( Mare by Paget Turk
Dau. of
(Grey)
/Darley Arabian 4"
( Betty Leedes
/Snake 4"
( Grey Wilkes
(Mulso Bay Turk 4«
(Dau. of Coneyskins
/Bay Bolton 37
(Dau. of Cub 17 (by Fox 6)
f Bartlet's Childers
Squirt 11 I           ------
(Ch. 1732)1 Daughter of
™ t> , i Blacklegs' 4-
TMare ^          ^
Mare        j Daughter of
j'Godolphiii
Regulus 111 Arabian «f
(B. 1739) I Grey Robinson
I (Gr. 1723)
in- j.i            /Smith's Son of
^ther            Snake*
Western ' Daughte7of
/"Alcock's
Crab 9
              Arabian •{*
(Gr. 1722)"! Sister to Soreheels
/Partner 9
,»s
SfO
o
a.
(Bald Galloway 15
(Dau. of Snake
/Snake 4"
(Dau. of Akaster Turk
/Montagu 4"
\Dau. of Hautboy
1—1 "
Hi
O
pa
e
-#
i—
CO
O
1—1
>-
^L
/Basto 6
(Partner's dam
/Jigg 4.
(Sister to Mixbury
/Bay Bolton 37
(Dau. of Darley Arabian
u ^
o ■*
$-<
o ■
SS5
Dau. of
(B. 1735)
| (Ch. 1718)
| Bonny Lass
[ (B. 1723)
(Godolphin
Arabian 4*
Daughter of
(Ch. 1727)
/"Flying Childers 6
I (1715)
"j Miss Belvoir
Blank 15
(B. 1740)
/Bartlet's Childers6
(Flying Whigg
/Darley Arabian 4"
(Betty Leedes
f Grey Grantham 4"
(Mare by Paget Turk
■2 °°
<m
Dau. of
(Grey)
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DERBY WINNERS 1782 & 1783
j'Bartlet's Childers
I (Bay)
               6
I Daughter of
} Patriot 24
I (Br. 1729)
j Daughter of
I (1728)
(Hobgoblin 4"
j Little Hartley
I Mare (Ch. 1727)
(Cade 6
I (B. 1734)
I Little Hartley
I Mare (Ch. 1727)
/'Flying Childers 6
I (B. 1715)
I Sister to Soreheels
(Fox 6
I (B. 1714)
| Gipsey
I (Bl. 1725)
(Godolpliin
I Arabian 4"
I Grey Kobinson
{ (Gr. 1723)
( Bartlet's Childers
I (Bay)               6
| Sister to Two True
{ Blues (Grey)
I Darley Arabian 4"
( Betty Leedes
| Snake 4*
\ Grey Wilkes
J Bay Bolton 37
(Dau. of Jigg
(Crab 9
( Sister to Sloven
( Aleppo 4"
( Dau. of Old Careless
( Bartlet's Childers 6
I Flying Wlugg
( Godolpliin Arabian 4"
( Roxana
I Bartlet's Childers 6
I flying Whigg
| Darley Arabian 4"
(Miss Leedes
( Basto 6
(^ Partner's Dam
(Clumsey 11
(Bay Peg
I Bay Bolton 37
I Dau. of Newcastle Turk
Squirt 11
(Ch. 1732)
. cr-
o
O l-
J3 "-<
020
Dau. of
fShake-
speare 15
(Ch. 1745)
Miss
Meredith
. (1751)
Snip 9
(Br. 1736)
Sister to
Slipby
(1740)
Regulus 11
(B. 1739)
^Q
fN§
15.
CO
| Bald Galloway 15
(Dau. of Snake
( Darley Arabian 4"
(Betty Leedes
J Honywood's Arabian 4*
V Byerly Turk Mare
as
Dan. of
(Bartlet
(Squirt 11 I (Bay)
(Ch. 1732)"| Daughter
rri t> i, /'Blacklegs
Marl y J <1725)
i Daughter
Childers f Darley Arabian 4"
6 ( Betty Leedes
| Snake 4"
^Grey Wilkes
/Mulso Bay Turk 4>
(Dau. of Coneyskins
(Bay Bolton 37
\ Dau. of Cub 17 (by Fox 6)
,<8 o"
'J
cq
(Godolpliin
o
-
Eclips
iletta
1749
a
^ffl
*
*—
a
^Regulus 111 Arabian 4"
(B. 1739) "l Grey Robinson
I (Gr. 1723)
| Bald Galloway 15
( Dau. of Snake
| Snake 4"
(Dau. of Akaster Turk
(Montagu 4*
(Dau. of Hautboy
Mother
Western
/"Smith's Son of
I Snake 4"
"j Daughter of
&-
■-'..-
%
-<d
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o
H
r""< >o
a
,—*
o£H
-4
■^
CD
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Pi tl
w
[Gr. 17
Ks.
{Flying Childers 6 (Darley Arabian 4-
(B. 1715)
             (.Betty Leedes
Sister to Soreheels / Basto 6
------ ^Partner's Dam
Snip 9
f Clumsey 11
( Bay Peg
/Bay Bolton 37
( Dau. of Newcastle Turk
/'Fox 6
J (B. 1714)
j Gipsey
I (Bl. 1725)
Sister to
Slipby
(1740)
(Godolphin
"Regulus 111 Arabian 4"
(B. 1739) 1 Grey Robinson
{ (Gr. 1723)
(Crab 9
Dau. of J (Gr. 1722)
(Gr. 1750)1 Miss Slamerkin
I (1729)
/ Bald Galloway 15
( Dau. of Snake
f Alcock's Arabian
I Sister to Soreheels
(Y. True Blue 3
"i Dau.of Oxford Dun Arabian
-ocr page 392-
DERBY WINNERS 1784 & 1785
(Bartlet's Cliilders
Squirt 11 | (Bay)
               I
I Darley Arabian 4"
\ Betty Leedes
J Snake «J<
\ Grey Wilkes
| Mulso Bay Turk •£•
^ Dau. of Coneyskins
/Bay Bolton 37
/Dau. of Cub 17 (by Fox 6)
'
r«o
\a
0 t^
-,
*iU
f« ,•
& £
.:
3^
_,
U
-—■
(Ch. 1732) |
1
aughter of
The Ruby | B1^fS *
~\ Daughter of
/'Godolphin
Regulus 111 Arabian «J*
M
/Bald Galloway 15
tDau. of Snake
I Snake "f
( Dau. of Akaster Turk
( Montagu 4"
I Dau. of Hautboy
f Jigg 4*
(^Sister to Mixbury
f Fox 6
\ Milkmaid
f Bethell's Arabian 4*
( Dau. of Graham's Champion
(B. 1739)
Mother
Western
) Grey Robinson
[ (Gr. 1723)
("Smith's Son of
I Snake •{«
| Daughter of
(Partner 9
' (Ch. 1718)
Meliora
(1729)
UzT«
■'Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
Cypron
( (B. 1750)
I" Blank 15
(B. 1740)
Helen
I (B. 1763)
| Blaze >|«
- Selima
t (1733)
( Godolphin
I Arabian 4"
1 Daughter of
I (Ch. 1727)
(Spectator /
I (B. 1749)
1 Daphne
I (B. 1753)
K
n
( Bartlet's Cliilders 6
\ Flying Whigg
/Crab 9
(Dau. of Partner
| Godolphin 4*
\ Dau. of Fox
i.p
/'Aleock's
I Arabian 4"
| Sister to Soreheels (Basto 6
(" Crab 9
(Gr. 1722)
S; /■".
(Partner's Dam
! Jigg *
\ Sister to Mixbury
f Bay Bolton 37
( Dau. of Darley Arabian
/Partner 9
| (Ch. 1718)
"| Bonny Lass
I (B. 1723)
/"Godolphin
J Arabian 4"
1 Daughter of
I (Ch. 1727)
fRegulus 11
I (B. 1739) .
i Daughter of
( Partner 9
(Ch. 1718)
x.
Dau. of
I (B. 1735)
Blank 15
(B. 1740)
| Bartlet's Cliilders 6
(Flying Whigg
( Godolphin Arabian 4"
\ Grey Robinson
(Soreheels 9
/ Dau. of Makeless
I Jigg "i-
| Sister to Mixbury
f Fox 6
i Milkmaid
5 eo
,n to
o *--
V =3 H
Dau. of
(1751)
, j"Tartar 48
< g . (Ch. 1743)1 Meliora
IS;.!
                    I (1729)
(Blaze 4"
- Selima
\ (1733)
("Snip 9
(Br. 1736)
tS S ^'yp1'011
| Bethell's Arabian 4"
| Dau. of Graham's Champion
(Flying Childers 6
| Sister to Soreheels
(B. 1750)
Snap /
(Br. 1750) "I Sister to Slipby
I (1740)
(Gower Stallion 15
Dau. of I (1740)
1 Daughter of *
(Fox 6
I Gipsey
( Godolphin Arabian 4*
(Sister to Tortoise
(Childers 4-
m v-
\
Fair Helen.—B. S. B., vol. i. p. 188.
Probably the Grey Cliilders Mare-
a
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DERBY WINNERS 1786 & 1787
Partner 9
(Ch. 1718)
Meliora
, (1729)
| Blaze <i>
Selima
I (1733)
/Godolphin
I Arabian «J*
I Daughter of
I (Ch. 1727)
/'Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
| Daughter of
/Partner 9
I (Ch. 1718)
| Daughter of
I (Bay)
/ Bloody
Buttocks 4"
| Sister to Guy
I (1722)
/'Godolphin
I Arabian ►£"
I Daughter of
{ (Ch. 1727)
/ Crab 9
I (Gr. 1722)
| Miss Jigg
I (1717)
f Jigg <i>
{ Sister to Mixbury
I Fox 6
(Milkmaid
( Bethell's Arabian ►£•
\ Dau. of Graham's Champion
Tartar 48
(Oh. 1743)
Cypron
(B. 1750)
Blank 15
(B. 1740)
*tf
i-
0
i-
T3 t~ -
O i-l
a
wS
2-
m
-
►»
=
*•—< *--*. 1
| Bartlet's Childers 6
| Flying Whigg
( Godolphin Arabian ►{"
| Grey Robinson
(Soreheels 9
| Dau. of Makeless
/Jigg 4-
\ Sister to Mixbury
( Almanzor "J"
| Sister to Bay Bolton
Dau. of
(1751)
Traveller
37 (B. 1735)
Grey
Bloody
Buttocks
I (Gr. 1733)
fBlank 15
(B. 1740)
a-
a:
O
/Greyhound •}"
t Brown Farewell
| Bartlet's Childers 6
| Flying Whigg
I Alcock's Arabian ►£•
^ Sister to Soreheels
/Jigg «t
| Sister to Mixbury
I Jigg 4"
( Sister to Mixbury
| Fox 6
\ Milkmaid
( Bethell's Arabian >J"
| Dau. of Graham's Champion
«,
Mab
(Gr. 1740)
Partner 9
Tartar 48 | (Ch. 1718)
(Ch. 1743) | Meliora
I (1729)
Cypron
I (B. 1750)
j Blaze •{"
-J Selima
I (1733)
/'Godolphin
Arabian •}"
CU
•—' -—-.
q=
2 M
to
it;"
£
(gC-
^
Blank 15
(B. 1740)
Dau. of
(1751)
I Daughter of'
I (Ch. 1727)
| Regulus 11
I (B.1739)
I Daughter of
( Bartlet's Childers 6
\ Flying Whigg
/ Godolphin Arabian •\-
\ Grey Robinson
(Soreheels 9
\ Dau. of Makeless
( Darley Arabian >£■
\ Betty Leedes
/ Basto 6
^ Partner's Dam
| Clumsey 11
I Bay Peg
| Bay Bolton 37
I Dau. of Newcastle Turk
( Flying Childers 6
Snip 9
         I (B. 1715)
(Br. 1736)"| Sister to Soreheels
W
H
K
W
P.
-.8
fsfc
i I'ox 6
Sister to
Slipby ' ,(B-1714)
ri74o> 0i?^y„
U'WJ | (B]_ J725)
/'Godolphin
Regulus 111 Arabian ►}"
(B. 173 ' Grey Robinson
I (Gr. 1723)
Midge       J Son of
(Bay) | Daughter of
3
M
a
(Bald Galloway 15
I Dau. of Snake
(Bay Bolton 37
\
(Bartlet's Childers 6
\ Sister to Two True Blues
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DERBY WINNERS 1788 & 1789
("Bartlet's Childers
(Bay)
               6
Daughter of
fBlacklegs >J"
I (1725)
| Daughter of
r Godolphin
Arabian 4"
Grey Robinson
, (Gr. 1723)
'Allworthy 6
(Gr. 1744)
Daughter of
f Godolphin
Arabian 4"
Roxana
I (Ch. 1718)
Heneage's
Whitenose 4"
(B. 1722)
Daughter of
("Crab 9
I (Gr. 1722)
\ Miss Slamerkin
I (1729)
('Crab 9
I (Gr. 1722)
I Daughter of
f Darley Arabian -J"
^ Betty Leedes
f Snake »J"
^Grey Wilkes
( Mulso Bay Turk 4<
(Dau. of Coneyskins
(Bay Bolton 37
(Dau. of Cub 17 (by Fox 6)
Squirt 11
(Oh. 1732)
00 °
The Ruby
Mare
^m
o
Regulus 11
(B. 1739)
rC-1
ct'co
o *.r,
TO
<1 —
/"Bald Galloway 15
(Dau. of Snake
/Crab 9
^Sister to Y. Miss Bel voir
I Old Starling 24
\ Dairy Maid
Dau. of
I (1750)
Cade 6
(B. 1734)"
O
M
H
H
(Bald Galloway 15
(Sister to Chaunter
(Hall's Arabian •J-
( Dau. of Jigg
(Rattle -fr
( Dau. of Darley Arabian
fAlcock's Arabian ►£■
(Sister to Soreheels
(Y. True Blue 3
( Dau. of Oxford Dun Arabian
( Alcock's Arabian 4"
( Sister to Soreheels
(Partner 9
I Thwaite's Dun Mare
Silvertail
(B. 1737)
Oroonoko 7
(BI. 1745)
Dau. of
f Partner 9
J (Ch. 1718)
~| Meliora
I (1729)
( Blaze 4*
- Selima
I (1733)
I'Godolphin
' Arabian 4-
| Daughter of
I (Ch. 1727)
("Regulus 11
(B. 1739)
Daughter of
f Jigg 4-
(Sister to Mixbury
(Fox 6
(Milkmaid
(Bethell's Arabian 4"
( Dau. of Graham's Champion
Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743;
Cypron
(B.1750)
O T-l
pa
1-H •
S-l
<e
>-.
-—
i-H ,—.,
to
S co
^
CO r-H
("Blank 15
(B.1740)
| Bartlet's Childers 6
(Flying Whigg
f Godolphin Arabian 4*
(Grey Robinson
| Soreheels 9
( Dau. of Makeless
(Bartlet's Childers 6
( Dau. of Snake
| Blacklegs «J«
I Dau. of Bay Bolton
(Godolphin Arabian 4"
( Grey Robinson
( Smith's Son of Snake 4*
( Dau. of Montagu
/ Flying Childers 6
( Dau. of Basto
fFox 6
(Gipsey
(Godolphin 4"
( Grey Robinson
(Bartlet's Childers 6
(Sister to Two True Blues
Dau. of
. (1751)
Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
«
«
o
■li
M
CO
('Squirt 11
I (Ch. 1732)
j The Ruby Mare
(Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
I Mother Western
(Snip 9
I (Br. 1736)
*| Sister to Slipbv
I (1740)
fRegulus 11
J (B. 1739)
I Daughter of
I (Grey)
7
S O Spiletta
(B. 1749)
..lj-
3
-t->
00
3|
_. ^
m
e« CO
«
rtt-
H
Jfl«
■—*
("Snap /
(Br. 1750)
Miss Belsea
I (B. 1753)
-ocr page 395-
DERBY WINNERS 1790 & 1791
("Partner 9
I (Ch. 1718)
| Meliora
I (1729)
(Blaze «I"
- Selima
{ (1733)
(Snip 9
I (Br. 1736)
| Sister to Slipby
I (1740)
(Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
| Daughter of
I (Grey)
j Squirt 11
I (Ch. 1732)
I Daughter of
("Shakespeare 15
I (Ch. 1745)
| Miss Meredith
I (1751)
("Traveller 37
(B. 1735)
Grey Bloody
Buttocks
. (Gr. 1733)
(Blank 15
j (B.1740)
/Jigg "J"
\ Sister to Mixbury
(Fox 6
\ Milkmaid
(Bethell's Arabian 4*
\Dau. of Graham's Champion
/Flying Childers 6
|^ Sister to Soreheels
(Fox 6
\Gipsey
| Godolphin Arabian >J>
\Grey Robinson
(Bartlet's Childers 6
( Sister to Two True Blues
| Bartlet's. Childers 6
| Dau. of Snake
(Patriot 24
| Dau. of Crab
(Hobgoblin ►}«
( Little Hartley Mare
fCade 6
\ Little Hartley Mare
(Partner 9
| Almanzor Mare
I Bloody Buttocks 4-1
j Sister to Guy
| Godolphin Arabian ►£•
| Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
(Regulus 11
Dau. of Lonsdale Bay
I Arabian
Tartar 48
(Ch.1743)
| Oypron
[ (B.1750)
Snap /
(Br. 1750)
r id
't3 t~
£'■
M
■J: I -
.2 "-<
pq
DM
Dau. of
(B. 1749)
J—1 _^
«l
eg X1
s
'«£
of
-q^h-1
w
sup.
-1
fc
ir-
00
M
1-i
< •
Syphon 9
(Ch. 1750)
Dau. of
(1763)
Q
Squirrel 4
(B. 1754)
OS
CO
O)

o
Gold-
finder's
Dam
I (Bay)
I Daughtei
of
(Partner 9
Tartar 48 | (Ch. 1718)
(Ch. 1743)1 Meliora
I (1729)
fJigg Hh
\ Sister to Mixbury
(Fox 6
t Milkmaid
(Bethell's Arabian ►£«
(Dau. of Graham's Champion
Cypron
| (B. 1750)'
(Blaze •}«
J Selima
[ (1733)
(Godolphin
I Arabian >J>
I Blossom
MS
cq
«sl
*s r
r
° ^~-1
I"
N
<B «D 1
•«
-M t^. 1
lor
J3 i-H !
SO .
Esj
3 li-
es C5
^a~
\
Cygnet 6
(Gr. 1753)
("Crab 9
\ Sister to Y. Miss Belvoir
( Cartouch 4
'. M. by Hampton Court Ch.
I Arabian
| Flying Childers 6
(Old Ebony
I (Grey)
Y. Cartouch 4
(1731)
Dau. of
Ebony
(1728)
(Godolphin
Cade 6
        | Arabian «J«
(B. 1734) "I Roxana
I (Ch. 1718)
Sis. to Miss iFa£?e\£1Rv
Partner .' ('°"- 1'18^
n£i?f I Brown Farewell
(1/35) I (Br. 1710)
(Squirt 11
Syphon 9 | (Ch. 1732)
(Ch. 1750)1 Dau. of
(Shakespeare 15
Pi
sq
/
C5
r>^
•<
1777)
as
J8J5-
_fi
"Km
5(C
a~(
(Bald Galloway 15
\ Sister to Chaunter
(Jigg -i-
\ Sister to Mixbury
(Makeless >J«
I Dau. of Brimmer
(Bartlet's Childers 6
\Dau. of Snake
(Patriot 24
(Dau. of Crab
(Hobgoblin «£■
\ Little Hartley Mare
(Cade 6
(Little Hartley Mare
O
IH
°^
r4
■is *^*
*:f
xt'-'.
0
SPh
Q
gw
^i—t
Dau. of
. (1763)
I (Ch. 1745)
"j Miss Meredith
I (1751)
8
-ocr page 396-
DERBY WINNERS 1792 & 1793
{Jigg -i-
(Sister to Mixbury
| Fox 6
(Milkmaid
(Bethell's Arabian 4*
| Dau. of Graham's Champion
I Flying Childers 6
I Sister to Soreheels
| Fox 6
( Gipsey
(Godolphin Arabian ►£•
( Roxana
| Partner 9
V Brown Farewell
f Bartlet's Childers 6
(Dau. of Snake
| Blacklegs ►£•
(Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Godolphin Arabian•}■
| Grey Robinson
I Smith's Sou of Snake -f-
( Dau. of Montagu
/Partner 9
I (Ch. 1718)
| Meliora
{ (1729)
| Blaze 4"
- Selima
t (1733)
i Snip 9
| (Br. 1736)
i Sister to Slipby
I (1740)
/Cade 6.
I (B. 1734)
I Miss Partner
I (1730)
i Squirt 11
I (Ch. 1732)
j The Ruby Mare
Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
Cypron
I (B.1750)
'Snap /
(Br. 1750)
Ira
to to
SO .
Milksop
(Ch. 1753)
o
3-
a
g
w
o
Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
~ so
/'Regulus 11
Spiletta I (B. 1739)
^3^!
££
(B. 1749) ~
I1
other Western
o
|'Croft's Forester 23 |
Hartley's Blind Horse 13
§ ■-■ (William's
(Ch. 1736)
(Bay Brocklesby
| Looby 30
I Margery
| Godolphin Arabian •{<
\
Dau. of Danger
(Bustard 9 (by Crab)
\ Charming Molly
I Forester 2~.
IS
u
' (Oh. 1760) [ (Ch*
hter of
1744)
Coalition Colt 9
-/,
Dau. of
1739)
f
Daughter of
.CD
i Squirt 11
I (Ch. 1732)
*| The Ruby Mare
/"Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
| Mother Western
/"Cade 6
! (B. 1734)
| Silvertail
I (B. 1737)
/"Oroonoko 7
I (Bl. 1745)
I Daughter of
/'Partner 9
I (Ch. 1718)
| Meliora
I (1729)
iBlaze »J"
• Selima
{ (1733)
i Snip 9
I (Br. 1736)
) Sister toSlipbv
I (1740)
/"Godolphin
I Arabian «f"
| Daughter of
9
( Bartlet's Childers 6
( Dau. of Snake
| Blacklegs >J>
(Dau. of Bay Bolton
| Godolphin Arabian ►£■
I Grey Robinson
f Smith's Son of Snake -%•
( Dau. of Montagu
I Godolphin Arabian >f<
| Roxana
I Heneage's Whitenose ►£•
\ Dau. of Rattle
| Crab 9
( Miss Slamerkin
| Crab 9
( Dau. of Partner
I Jigg 4-
( Sister to Mixbury
| Fox 6
( Milkmaid
| Bethell's Arabian 4«
( Dau. of Graham's Champion
I Flying Childers 6
\ Sister to Soreheels
/Fox 6
(Gipsey
Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
2^
Spiletta
(B. 1749)
Sportsman
32 (B. 1753)
Golden
Locks
^ (Ch. 1758)
(Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
Cypron (B.
1750)
Snap /
(Br. 1750)
H
T3«2
«
2
IS
■-^m
Miss Wind -
. sor(1754)
I Yg. Belgrade 25
( Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
-ocr page 397-
DERBY WINNERS 1794 & 1795
i Partner 9
I (Ch. 1718)
| Meliora
I (1729)
| Blaze «j*
Selima
I (1733)
/'Snip 9
I (Br. 1736)
J Sister to Slipby
I (1740)
I Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
I Daughter of
I (Grey)
i Squirt 11
I (Ch. 1732)
j Daughter of
i Shakespeare 15
I (Ch. 1745)
I Miss Meredith
t (1751)
Traveller 37
(B. 1735)
Grey Bloody
Buttocks
(Gr. 1733)
("Blank 15
I (B. 1740)
I Daughter of
I'Jigg 4*
1 Sister to Mixbury
( Fox 6
\ Milkmaid
( Bethell's Arabian 4<
\ Dau. of Graham's Champion
/ Flying Childers 6
(Sister to Soreheels
/Fox 6
\Gipsey
( Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Grey Robinson
(Bartlet's Childers 6
(Sister to Two True Blues
| Bartlet's Childers 6
\ Daughter of Snake
| Patriot 24
I Daughter of Crab
(Hobgoblin ►}■
I Little Hartley Mare
(Cade 6
( Little Hartley Mare
( Partner 9
(Almanzor Mare
I Bloody Buttocks 4"
I Sister to Guy
| Godolphin Arabian •{"
I Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
| Regulus 11
Daughter of Lonsdale Bay
Arabian
Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
^ 00 I
g'-'i
ffiffl Cypron
^-! (B. 1750)
j-Snap /
(Br. 1750)
^P
V
Dau. of
. (B. 1749)
/■Syphon 9
(Ch. 1750)
-.
-
-
Dau. of
(1763)
go
Squirrel 4
(B. 1754)
Gold-
finder's
Dam
(Bay)
SS
V
('Squirt 11
/Bartlet's Childers 6
rN5-
'Marske 8 | (Ch. 1732)
I Daughter of Snake
^
■rtS
(Br. 1750)~| The Ruby Mare
(Blacklegs >J«
o
05 i-H
I ------
{ Daughter of Bay Bolton
r-t
■^Sji
(Regulus 11
(Godolphin Arabian ►£«
^
wS
Spiletta 1 (B. 1739)
I Grey Robinson
'_
I (B. 1749) 1 Mother Western
( Smith's Son of Snake <$>
»■
I ------
I Daughter of Montagu
^_^
'' %
(Partner 9
( Jigg 4.
CM
OS
4-i
op
fTartar 48 | (Ch. 1718)
{Sister to Mixbury
1-
J—t
S3!°
(Ch. 1743)1 Meliora
I (1729)
(Fox 6
>>
'o
(Milkmaid
«
>
to . "
3-J=
/ Mogul 15
( Godolphin Arabian »f>
LE(
Dau. of ------
\ Large Hartley Mare
,.------ 1 Daughter of
f Sweepstakes 44
o-
1 ____
( Sister to Sloven
<
( Tartar 48
"Herod 26 I (Ch. 1743)
(Partner 9
CO
\ Meliora
<
s-^
(B. 1758) "l Cypron
| Blaze »f<
ao
53 i-H -
{ (B. 1750)
(Selima
ti
r-4
High
(B.
(Blank 15
( Godolphin Arabian >{*
Rachel | (B. 1740)
\ Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
, (1763) "Daughter of
I Regulus 11
I (1751)
( Dau. of Soreheels
V-
(Sampson 4"
( Blaze »f"
O
'Engineer | (B. 1745)
( Hip Mare
■■»->
,4
»-*
36 (1756)1 Daughter of
( Y. Greyhound 4
0
set- -
| -----
\ Dau. of Curwen Bay Barb
Q
C3 »-h
eS '—'
(Regulus 11
( Godolphin Arabian 4"
j5
Dau. of J (B. 1739)
(Grey Robinson
^ ------ j Daughter of
I (1744)
/ Traveller 37
\ Miss Makeless
10
-ocr page 398-
DERBY WINNERS 1796 & 1797
Cade 6
/ Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Roxana
I Partner 9
I Brown Farewell
I Snip 9
(Sister to Slipby
/ Cullen Arabian 4"
(Lady Thigh
I Partner 9
I Daughter of Almanzor
I Bloody Buttocks 4*
I Daughter of Greyhound
/'Godolphin Arabian <$>
I Daughter of Soreheels
| Ancaster Starling 2
\ Look at me Lads
) Partner 9
I Meliora
/Blaze 4-
| Selima
I Godolphin Arabian 4*
( Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
I Regulus 11
\ Daughter of Soreheels
I Blaze 4«
I Hip Mare
| Y. Greyhound 4
\ Dau. of Curwen Bay Barb
| Godolphin Arabian 4*
\ Grey Robinson
| Traveller 37
\ Miss Makeless
I Partner 9
\ Meliora
| Blaze 4>
) Selima
| Godolphin Arabian 4"
( Blossom
( Y. Cartouch 4
\ Ebony
/Godolphin Arabian 4*
\ Roxana
| Partner 9
\ Brown Farewell
J Squirt 11
\ Daughter of Patriot
(Shakespeare 15
\ Miss Meredith
f Partner 9
(Meliora
( Blaze 4*
I Selima
I Godolphin Arabian 4"
I Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
/Regulus 11
I Daughter of Soreheels
(Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Roxana
/ Partner 9
\ Brown Farewell
) Godolphin Arabian 4"
\ Large Hartley Mare
/ Foxhunter 5
I Daughter of Partner
Matchem 4
(B. 1748)
(B. 1734)
Sister to Miss
CO
o so
o
Partner
. (1735)
(Snap /
J (Br. 1750)
| Daughter of
I Traveller 37
4 (B. 1735)
\ (Gr. 1733)
Dan. of
(1762)
Squirrel
~33W
Dove
(B. 1764;
I Matchless 13
I (B. 1754)
| Daughter of
I (Bl. 1755)
| Tartar 48
w
f Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Rachel
(1763)
I (Ch. 1743)
I Cypron
I (B. 1750)
/Blank 15
I (B. 1740)
| Daughter of
"Sri.
rt
I (1751)
| Sampson 4"
I (B. 1745)
Daughter of
ill
Engineer
36
(B.1756) [
f Regulus 11
Dau. of | (B. 1739)
"| Daughter of
I (1744)
(Tartar 48
I (Ch. 1743)
| Cypron
{ (B. 1750)
(Cygnet 6
j (Gr. 1753)
~\ Daughter of
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Dau. of
(Gr. 1761)
r">'.
H
Cade 6
(B. 1734)
Sis. to Miss Partner
(1735)
Syphon 9
(Ch. 1750)
Daughter of
(1763)
Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
Cypron
(B. 1750)
Blank 15
(B. 1740)
Daughter of
(1751)
Cade 6
(B. 1734)
Sis. to Miss Partner
(1735)
Babraham 15
(B. 1740)
Daughter of
11
Matcheni 4
(B. 1748)"
60 •
3-S
I Dau. of
I (Br. 1770)
'Herod 26
(B. 1758)"
Rachel
I (1763)
{Matchem 4
(B. 1748) "j
Molly Long
Legs
(B. 1753)
a
L
-
s

o
c
-ocr page 399-
DERBY WINNERS 1798 & 1799
/'Tartar 48
I (Ch. 1743)
I Cypron
I (B. 1750)
i Blank 15
I (B. 1740)
| Daughter of
I (1751)
(Snip 9
I (1736)
J Sister to Slipby
I (1740)
I Regains 11
I (B. 1739)
| Midge
I (Bay)
|" Cade 6
I (B. 1734)
| Sis.to Miss Partner
I (1735)
j Snap /
J (Br. 1750)
I Daughter of
| Squirt 11
I (Ch. 1732)
1 The Ruby Marc
/Regulus 11
J (B. 1739)
I Wildair's Dam
/Tartar 48
| (Ch. 1743)
| Cypron
I (B. 1750)
I Blank 15
I (B. 1740)
J Daughter of
I (1751)
| Snip 9
I (Br. 1736)
| Sister to Slipby
I (1740)
i Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
I Midge
I (Bay)
| Squirt 11
I (Ch. 1732)
I The Ruby Mare
I Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
I Mother Western
("Godolphin
I Arabian ►£*
I Daughter of
I (Ch. 1727)
/Rib 21
I (Gr. 17361
| Daughter of
| Partner 9
(Meliora
(Blaze ►}<
\ Selima
(Godolphin Arabian »f<
(Dan. of Bartlet's Childers
(Regulus 11
\ Dau. of Soreheels
| Flying Childers 6
I Sister to Soreheels
(Fox 6
(Gipsey
(Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Grey Robinson
(Son of Bay Bolton 37
\ Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
(Godolphin Arabian 4*
\ Roxana
| Partner 9
| Brown Farewell
(Snip 9
I Sister to Slipby
(Cullen Arabian 4"
[ Lady Thigh
( Bartlet's Childers 6
(Dau. of Snake
(Blacklegs 4*
\ Dau. of Bay Bolton
| Godolphin Arabian «f<
I Grey Robinson
(Steady 6 (by Childers)
(Dau. of Partner
("Herod 26
j (B. 1758)
Rachel
I (1763)
f JO
F-4 "*
W^
/■ $_,
OJ
1
+j
Ph
O cT
0 <©
OJ
U^-
eS t*
vP-icS
Snap /
(Br. 1750)
Miss Cleve-
land
(1758)
Matchem 4
(B. 1748}
/«;
<
-
r.
^
Dau. of
(1762)
Marskc 8
(Br. 1750)
^ /"
0
° 1
Fh
t-. £T 1
-.
fi «^
"S *> 1
3
ac""1 1
§M
^P^l
Dau. of
, (1756)
( Partner 9
\ Meliora
| Blaze 4"
\ Selima
| Godolphin Arabian 4"
\ Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
( Regulus 11
(Dau. of Soreheels
(Flying Childers 6
(Sister to Soreheels
(Fox 6
t Gipsey
( Godolphin Arabian 4*
| Grey Robinson
I Son of Bay Boltou'37
I Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
(Bartlet's Childers 6
[Dau. of Snake
(Blacklegs 4*
\ Dau. of Bay Bolton
( Godolphin Arabian 4"
I Grey Robinson
(Smith's Son of Snake 4"
\ Dau. of Montagu
("Herod 26
(B. 1758
Rachel
I (1763)
SOPC
PQ
,«^
h
CD
+3
p^
II
■—j r-i _
o2
■a ■
,5 m
Snap /
(Br. 1750;
Miss Cleve-
land
(1758)
Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
M
hJ
<N *"-*
HID
oo"
so 1!
1764
^
Cm .
<
d
Eeli
(Ch
Spiletta
, (B. 1749)
/"Blank 15
j (B. 1740)
Dau. of
( Bartlet's Childers 6
| Flying Whigg
( Crab 9
I Doll
I Wynn Arabian 4"
I Dau. of Governor
Qi CD
12
-ocr page 400-
DERBY WINNERS 1800 & 1801
("Squirt 11
fMarske 8 J (Ch. 1732)
(Br. 1750)"| The Ruby Mare
/'Regulus 11
I Spiletta I (B. 1739)
(B. 1749)1 Mother Western
I Bartlet's Childers 6
(Dau. of Snake
(Blacklegs >f<
(_ Dau. of Bay Bolton
( Godolphin Arabian >f>
i Grey Robinson
/ Smith's Son of Snake ►£>
( Dau. of Montagu
( Godolphin Arabian 4"
t Roxana
( Heneage's Whitenose 4"
\ Dau. of Rattle
("Crab 9
I Miss Slamerkin
(Crab 9
| Dau. of Partner
( Partner 9
(Meliora
/Blaze «{<
(Selima
( Godolphin Arabian 4*
^Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
(Regulus 11
( Dau. of Soreheels
(Partner 9
(Dau. of Almanzor
I Bloody Buttocks 4"
J Dau. of Greyhound
( Godolphin Arabian 4"
^Grey Robinson
(Bartlet's Childers 6
I Sister to Two True Blues
hB
/■co
-
cc
0
0> ^^
Pot-8
isti
765
a-1!
oris
Ch.
^32
1
o 4- „, i Cade 6
Sportsman) (B. m4)
iv T7f;'>\ I Silvertail
(B. 1753) [ {B m7)
r< TAn         lOroonoko 7
GLodcks            (fil-1745)
(Ch.l758)|Daug_h^1'of
«
o
I—I
■a)
a
/'Tartar 48
fHerod 26 | (Ch. 1743)
(B. 1758) 1 Cypron
H
.a .
eppq
(B. 1750)
/"Blank 15
I (B. 1740)
I Daughter of
I (1751)
Traveller 37
(B. 1735)
Grey Bloody
Buttocks
(Gr. 1733)
j'Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
*| Daughter of
Rachel
(1763)
cq
f Squirrel 4
(B. 1754)
> t?~
a
o
'CO
of
1749)
Dau.
(B.
( Squirt 11
I,The Ruby Mare
| Regulus 11
1 Mother "Western
(Snip 9
fMarske 8
Eclipse 12 J (Br. 1750)
(Ch. 1764)1 Spiletta
I (B. 1749)
,^r
' a §
00
3«2
18
to CO
pq
— 1
("Snap /
Virago
(Gr. 1764)
(Br. 1750)
I Daughter of
V Sister to Slipby
(Regulus 11
I Dau. of Crab
(Partner 9
\ Meliora
(Blaze 4"
(Selima
(Cade 6
(^ Dau. of Partner
/"Regulus 11
I Miss Starling
("Tartar 48
\ Cypron
( Cygnet 6
\Dau. ofY. Cartouch
(Crab 9
\ Dau. of Partner
(Blank 15
\ Dau. of Flying Childers
| Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Roxana
("Partner 9
^ Brown Farewell
(Godolphin Arabian 4"
\ Large Hartley Mare
f Foxhunter S
\ Dau. of Partner
I (Grey)
/"Tartar 48
Herod 26 | (Ch. 1743)
(B. 1758) "I Cypron
I (B. 1750)
fMatchem 4
Teresa
         | (B. 1748)
(B. 1767) 1 Brown Regulus
I (Br. 1759)
fHerod 26
Florizel 5 | (B. 1758)
(B. 1768) 1 Daughter of
I (Gr. 1761)
{Spectator /
(B. 1749)
Horatia
(B. 1758)
fCade 6
"Matehem 4 \ (B. 1734)
(B. 1748) 1 Sis.toMissPartner
I (1735)
,, ,, T fBabraham 15
Molly Long | (R (mo)
(Beg1753){Daughterof
<v
>■,
r &
M
A <a 1
m i> l
|>
cS l^ 1
P1
/3rtl
SO
«■
O
9
w
/•"St
a
o
ON
13
-ocr page 401-
DERBY WINNERS 1802 & 1803
("Squirt 11
I (Ch. 1732)
| The Ruby Mare
[Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
I Mother Western
[Cade 6
I (B. 1734)
I Silvertail
I (B. 1737)
[Oroonoko 7
I (Bl. 1745)
j Daughter of
[Tartar 48
I (Ch. 1743)
I Cypron
I (B. 1750)
[Cade 6
I (B. 1734)
| Daughter of
(Bay)
( Bartlet's Childers 6
I Dau. of Snake
(Blacklegs 4*
I Dau. of Bay Bolton
(Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Grey Robinson
(Smith's Son of Snake 4-
I Dau. of Montagu
| Godolphin Arabian 4"
( Roxana
/ Heneage's Whitenose 4"
I Dau. of Rattle
| Crab 9
( Miss Slamerkin
| Crab 9
I Dau. of Partner
f Partner 9
\ Meliora
/ Blaze 4"
I Selima
| Godolphin Arabian 4"
\ Roxana
( Lonsdale Bay Arabian 4"
\ Dau. of Bay Bolton
(Flying Childers 6
\ Dau. of Basto
(Fox 6
\Gipsey
I Godolphin Arabian 4-
| Grey Robinson
(Son of Bay Bolton 37
I Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
rMarske 8
(Br. 1750)
I-
"3f9
Spiletta
(B. 1749)
w'
1 CO
m ,
03
o
OT
CD -~-
U WS
OO
£»
Ot-
flH
!>.
Ph
^
59.
rt
Ph
-
Leo
f Sportsman
32(B. 1753)
Golden
Locks
(Ch. 1758)
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Miss Rams-
den
' (Bay)
Snap /
(Br. 1750)
Miss
Cleveland
(1758)
'IS
-1
H
^5
-
| Snip 9
(Br. 1736)
Daughter of
I. (1740)
[Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
j Midge (Bay)
pq
lei
[Tartar 48
I (Ch. 1743)
"j Cypron
I (B. 1750)
[Blank 15
I (B. 1740)
1 Daughter of
I (1751)
[Snip 9
I (Br. 1736)
"l Sister to Slipby
I (1740)
[Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
'j Midge
{Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
Spiletta
(B. 1749)
[Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
I Doris
I Partner 9
(Meliora
(Blaze 4*
I Selima
/Godolphin Arabian 4*
(Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
(Regulus 11
(Dau. ofSoreheels
/ Flying Childers 6
I Sister to Soreheels
(Fox 6
I Gipsey
(Godolphin Arabian 4-1
I Grey Robinson
(Son of Bay Bolton 4*
[Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
/Squirt 11
I The Ruby Mare
(Regulus 11
(Mother Western
(Tartar 48
I Cypron
fBlank 15
(Helen
( Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Grey Robinson
[Partner 9
(Dau. of Greyhound
f Snip 9
\Dau. of Fox
[Regulus 11
\Dau. of Crab
Herod 26
(B.1758)
■"t-H ,_^
Rachel
(1763)
sacpa
[Snap /
(Br. 1750)
Ph
PQ
MissCleve-
lland (1758)
<Z3
fc
o
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53
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o
[Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
as
Aspasia
(1775)
s \s
[Regulus 11
[Prophet 12 | (B. 1739)
(Ch. 1760)1 Jenny Spinner
I (Ch. 1740)
[Snap /
Virago I (Br. 1750)
(Gr. 1764)1 Daughter of
I (Grey)
14
fe«»
O
-ocr page 402-
DERBY WINNERS 1804 & 1805
Sweepstakes 44
(Ch. 1722)
Daughter of
/ Oxford Bloody Shoulders »£«
( Dau. of Basto
( Bay Bolton 37
(Dau. of Basto
| Regulus 11
\Dau. ofSoreheels
(Y. Cartouch 4
| Ebony
"» ^ (Sweep-
3 Jg stakes 44 -
J- I (Ch.1743)
S |                       "• ------
Sp                         (South 13
H — I Miss South | (B. 1750)
" (B. 1759) \ Daughter of
22
erll
801)
Driv
ette
764)
SH
>^
l|S
7t
D2
►J.
I
fThe
Compton
Barb *b>
/ Godolphin
I Arabian ►J*
| Grev Robinson
{ (Gr. 1723)
j Marske 8
| (Br. 1750)
| Spiletta
{ (B. 1749)
/Tartar 48
I (Ch. 1743)
| Daughter of
(Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
I Miss Ramsden
I (Bay)
( Eclipse 12
J (Ch. 1764)
| Hyfena
I. (Br. 1762)
(Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
Dau. of
(B. 1743)
( Bald Galloway 15
\ Dau. of Snake
| Squirt 11
\ Dau. of Blacklegs
(Regulus 11
\ Mother Western
| Partner 9
\ Meliora
(Mogul 15
| Dau. of Sweepstakes
/Tartar 48
\ Cypron
(Cade 6
\ Dau. of Lonsdale Arabian
/Marske 8
(Spiletta
(Snap /
\ Miss Belsea
| Squirt 11
\ Dau. of Blacklegs
| Regulus 11
| Mother Western
( Partner 9
\ Meliora
| Mogul 15
\ Dau. of Sweepstakes
(Partner 9
( Meliora
| Blaze ►£•
\ Selima
J Cade 6
\Dau. of Partner
j Squirt 11
\Dau. of Mogul
j Partner 9
( Meliora
(Blaze ►}■
(Selima
[Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Roxana
(Lonsdale Arabian »J«
) Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Oxford Bloody Shoulders •£•
( Dau. of Basto
/South 13
\Dau. of Y. Cartouch 4
«
I—I
<
Eclipse 12
(Ch.l764j
P
sP
Dau. of
(Ch.1757)
Wood-
pecker /
(Ch. 1773)
Ever-
lasting
(B. 1775)
&
Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)"! Spiletta
I (B. 1749)
(Tartar 48
& g Dau. of J (Ch. 1743)
(Ch. 1757)1 Daughter of
a
(•Tartar 48
I (Ch. 1743)
I Cypron
I. (B. 1750)
('Matchem 4
| (B. 1748)
| Pratt's Old Mare
I (1750)
('Tartar 48
| (Ch. 1743)
I Cypron
I (B. 1750)
(Cade 6
| (B. 1734)
I Daughter of
I (Bay)
(Sweepstakes 44
J (Ch. 1743)
| Miss South
[ (B. 1759)
{The Compton
Barb>J<
Sister to Regulus
(B. 1743)
15
( Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Maiden
(Ch. 1770)
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Miss Rams-
den
(Bay)
Trentham5
(B. 1766)
r
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IP
c
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low
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/Godolphin Arabian >f>
(Grey Robinson
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DERBY WINNERS 1806 & 1807
(Partner 9
(Meliora
( Blaze >J<
(Selima
I Godolphin Arabian ►£«
( Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
(Regulus 11
(Dau. of Soreheels
I Flying Childers 6
I Sister to Soreheels
( Fox 6
\Gipsey
I Godolphin Arabian »£■
(Grey Robinson
(Son of Bay Bolton 37
( Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
(Bartlet's Childers 6
(Dau. of Snake
(Blacklegs ►£>
(Dau. of Bay Bolton
j Godolphin Arabian »{"
( Grey Robinson
(Smith's Son of Snake >£■
(Dau. of Montagu
I
Tartar 48
(Ch.1743)
» f Herod 26
(B. 1758
Cypron
I (B. 1750)
("Blank 15
I (B. 1740)
I Daughter of
l (1751)
I Snip 9
I (Br. 1736)
I Sister to Slipbv
I (1740)
("Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
| Midge
I (Bay)
("Squirt 11
I (Ch. 1732)
The Ruby Mare
(Regulus 11
J (B. 1739)
J Mother Western
("Godolphin
I Arabian ►£>
j Daughter of
[ (Ch. 1727)
(Rib 21
| (Gr. 1736)
j Daughter of
.sen
Rachel
I (1763)
Snap /
(Br. 1750)
Miss Cleve-
land
(1758)
/-Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
Spiletta
(B. 1749)
ji
eg I*
VPhCQ
pq
,N,
a
©■
Blank 15
(B. 1740)
Dau. of
(Bartlet's Childers 6
(Flying Whigg
(Crab 9
(Doll
( Wynn Arabian >J>
( Dau. of Governor
(Squirt 11
"(Dau. of Blacklegs
(Regulus 11
( Mother Western
(Partner 9
(Meliora
(Mogul 15
(Dau. of Sweepstakes
/Partner 9
(Meliora
(Blaze •}«
( Selima
I Cade 6
(Dau. of Partner
(Squirt 11
(Dau. of Mogul
("Partner 9
\ Meliora
(Blaze •i'
(Selima
(Godolphin Arabian ►}■
( Roxana
(Lonsdale Arabian ►£•
(Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Partner 9
(Meliora
/Blaze -i-
(Selima
(Starling 24
(Miss Mayes
I Crab 9
\ Ebony
m to
«^
3 .
O h
( Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
r<3>c?
CO
^N
J-. £~~
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a> — I
T-H
SB
pq
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1
"Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)"j Spiletta
(B. 1749)
(Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
Daughter of
Dau. of
(Ch. 1757)1
(Tartar 48
("Herod 26 J (Ch. 1743)
(B. 1758)1 Cypron
I (B. 1750)
(Matchem 4
Maiden I (B. 1748)
(Ch. 1770)1 Pratt's Old Mare
I (1750)
"B *~
60 .
^3
-
o
H
w
^fl
,_^
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OS
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Us
("Tartar 48
Herod 26 I (Ch. 1743)
(B. 1758) | Cypron
I (B. 1750)
Miss Rams-1 ^r,e 1704-,
dell
of
Dau.
(Bay)
I (Bay)
{Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
Cypron
(B. 1750)
{Skim 19
(Gr. 1746)
Hag
(Gr. 1744)
16
-ocr page 404-
DERBY WINNERS 1808 & 1809
Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
| Partner 9
( Meliora
| Blaze ■£■
^Selima
f Godolphin Arabian ►£«
^Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
(Regulus 11
(Dau. of Soreheels
/ Squirt 11
( Dau. of Blacklegs
I Regulus 11
\ Mother Western
(Godolphin Arabian ►£«
^Dau. of Lath
(Starling 24
( Dau. of Godolphin Arabian
(Squirt 11
\The Ruby Mare
( Regulus 11
(Mother Western
(Tartar 48
( Cypron
(Blank 15
(Helen
(Godolphin Arabian >f
(Grey Robinson
(Partner 9
I Dau. of Greyhound
| Snip 9
( Dau. of Fox
I Regulus 11
\ Dau. of Crab
Herod 26
(B. 1758) 1 Cypron
r-
(B. 1750)
/Blank 15
I (B. 1740)
~| Daughter of
I (1751)
3 ~;
Rachel
(1763)
«
r*1
bo
SH
a
pm »o
ai *>-
-pi>
■w
ri3 rH -
a;
&J3 .
I.
('Marske 8
("Eclipse 12 | (Br. 1750)
(Ch. 1764)1 Spiletta
I (B. 1749)
Miss
            ("Omar 9
Spindle- I (B. 1752)
shanks 1 Daughter of
(B. 1770) I (1753)
("Marske 8
(-Eclipse 12 I (Br. 1750)
(Ch. 1764)1 Spiletta
I (B. 1749)
(Herod 26
3 -^
3^
Aspasia
. (1775)
I (B. 1758)
| Doris
o
efl
w
3
o —
-3
ftK
33
St-
-1
so . 1
36
k)~
(Regulus 11
("Prophet 12 | (B. 1739)
(Ch. 1760) | Jenny Spinner
I (Ch. 1740)
("Snap /
Virago        ! (Br. 1750)
, (Gr. 1764)"| Daughter of
I (Grev)
("Squirt 11
(Dau. of Blacklegs
("Regulus 11
(Mother Western
(Cade 6
| Silvertail
(Oroonoko 7
(Dau. of Crab
(Partner 9
(Meliora
(Blaze ^«
( Selima
(Snip 9
(Dau. of Fox
( Godolphin Arabian «£<
(Dau. of Y. Belgrade
(Partner 9
( Meliora
("Blaze >J«
(Selima
(Godolphin Arabian
(Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
(Regulus 11
\Dau. of Soreheels
(Flying Childers 6
\Dau. of Basto
(Fox 6
\Gipsey
(Godolphin Arabian ►£■
\Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
(Partner 9
(Bonny Lass
2 c
("Marske 8
("Eclipse 12 | (Br. 1750)
(Ch. 1764)1 Spiletta
I (B. 1749)
'Warren's Sports-
Sports-
mistress
(Ch. 1765)
man 32
(B. 1753)
Golden Locks
(Ch. 1758)
("Tartar 48
I (Ch. 1743)
1 Cypron
I (B. 1750)
Snap /
(Br. 1750)
=5
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
I                           
. ILisette
I (B. 1772) |
Miss Windsor
(1754)
{Tartar 48
/"Herod 26
(Ch. 1743)
'~2
Cypron
^ J
(B. 1750)
("Blank 15
Rachel | (B. 1740)
(Br. 1763)1 Daughter of
I (1751)
("Snip 9
("Snap / | (Br. 1736)
(Br. 1750)1 Daughter of
I (1740)
{Blank 15
(B. 1740)
Daughter of
(B. 1735)
17
25
a
Ch
s>hm
-ocr page 405-
DERBY WINNERS 1810 & 1811
(Marske 8
I (Br. 1750)
j Spiletta
I (B. 1749)
f Warren's Sports-
man 32
(B. 1753)
Golden Locks
(Ch. 1758)
(Tartar 48
J (Ch. 1743)
"j Cypron
I (B. 1750)
[Snap /
I (Br. 1750)
\ Miss Windsor .
I (1754)
(Matchem 4
I (B. 1748)
j Daughter of
I (1762)
('Squirrel 4
I (B. 1754)
| Dove
I (B. 1764)
(Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
j Rachel
I (1763)
/ Snap /
I (Br. 1750)
I Julia
I. (B. 1756)
[Squirt 11
\ Dau. of Blacklegs
(Regulus 11
(Mother Western
/Cade 6
| Silvertail
(Oroonoko 7
(Dau. of Crab
I Partner 9
\Meliora
| Blaze 4"
(Selima
(Snip 9
\Dau. of Fox
(Godolphin Arabian •£•
( Dau. of Y. Belgrade
| Cade 6
(Dau. of Partner
/Snap /
\ Dau. of Cullen Arabian
(Traveller 37
\ Grey Bloody Buttocks
/Matchless 13
( Dau. of Ancaster Starling
I Tartar 48
(Cypron
(Blank 15
I Dau. of Regulus
| Snip 9
I Dau. of Fox
(Blank 15
(Dau. of Partner
(Tartar 48
) Cypron
J Blank 15
(Dau. of Regulus
(Snip 9
\ Dau. of Fox
(Regulus 11
\ Midge
/Marske 8
(Spiletta
fHerod 26
\ Doris
(Regulus 11
(Jenny Spinner
/Snap /
^Dau. of Regulus
/Marske 8
^ Spiletta
/Snap /
(Dau. of Regulus
(Tartar 48
I Cypron
| Matchem 4
\ Brown Regulus
(Herod 26
\ Dau. of Cygnet
(Spectator /
I Horatia
(Cade 6
(Dau. of Partner
/Babraham 15
(Dau. of Foxhunter
fm ^
CO co
nN
O «>■
0
' 1—1 _
3s
CO
1 -
+»,d
-'
&S,
'Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Sports -
mistress
. (Ch. 1765)
/•CO j
t-H
>,
H
t
ce
ps
.s£
£ *■- !
c8 t-. ■-,
L
1
Herod 26
(B.1758)
Lisette
(B.1772)
Conductor
12
(Ch. 1767)
Brunette
(Br. 1771)
Highflyer
13
(B.1774)
Promise
(Br. 1768)
H S
**-< H
<x>
0
»
a
<S CT
■"3! co
Ph
»
^f£«
w
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Rachel
(1763)
Snap /
(Br. 1750)
Miss Cleveland
(1758)
Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Aspasia
(1775)
Prophet 12
(Ch. 1760)
Virago
I. (Gr. 1764)
{Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Virago
(Gr. 1764)
fHerod 26
J (B. 1758)
"j Teresa
l (B. 1767)
{Florizel 5
(B. 1768)
Daughter of
(B. 1763)
/Matchem 4
(B. 1748)
| Molly Long Legs
I (B. 1753)
18
m^~
-*
,-—*
On .
:.
u
OS
.& m
r-H
W-*
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Highflyer
13
(B. 1774)
Papillon.
(Br. 1769)
Dungan-
non 33
(B. 1780)
Dau. of
(Gr. 1777)
Xr- '
/
a
1
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s8
5 *- 1
>
rH H-!
c>
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<D . 1
^-^J
l<3o
w 1
Saltram 7
(Br. 1780)
.<N
■MS
(B I—I
Calash
(B. 1775)
Diomed 6
(Ch. 1777)
Giantess
V (B. 1769)
I —
-ocr page 406-
DERBY WINNERS 1812 & 1813
(Eclipse 12
I (Ch. 1764)
I Herod 26
(B. 1758)
( Marske 8
\ Spiletta
(Black and All Black 7
i Fanny
(Tartar 48
\ Cypron
( Matchem 4
\ Duchess
| Tartar 48
\ Cypron
(Blank 15
( Dau. of Regulus
(Cripple >f"
', Dau. of Hampton Court
I Childers
( Sampson 4"
| Dau. of Regulus
(Tartar 48
\ Cypron
(Snap /
\Miss Cade
(Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Dau. of Hobgoblin
(Whittington 9
(Dau. of Crab
(Tartar 48
(Cypron
| Skim 19
(Dau. of Janus
( Godolphin Arabian 4*
I Grey Robinson
(: All worthy 6
(Dau. of Bolton Starling
King Fer
gus "
p o>
SO
.Sffl
Dau. of
(B. 1780)
Highflyer
13
J Pyrrha
M-
(B.1771)
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Rachel
N—*
00
'
a
Orvi
lina
1791
CD
am
'
si /n, n__.. | Rachel
|S «*•"''*)(. (1763)
I Tantrum 21
Termagant J (B. 1760)
(1772) I Cantatrice
'—^^
r/)
•-J
—<
>
*>. CO
00
EH
S
35 r-l
O
t-
S3 . '
O
rH
^
f Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
| Miss Barforth
I (B. 1760)
I Infant 21 *
J (B. 1746)
j Miss Slamerkin
I (Gr. 1754)
(Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
I Daughter of
I (1758)*
f Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
| Daughter of
I (1750)
Fitz-
herod 4
(B. 1773)
Dau. of
(B. 1760)
Telema-
chus 4
(Br. 1770)
A-la-
Grecque
(Ch. 1763)
ri
d)
a
.2
.si"
a
2n.
n
ce .—i
s
k«^
m
>—-
r, , . / Matchem •#
.Conductor j (fi mg)
| (Ch.l767)\D^6h2*er0f
(Squirrel 4
Brunette I (B. 1754)
(Br. 1771) I Dove
I (B. 1764)
/Cade 6
(Dau. of Partner
(Snap /
\ Dau. of Cullen Arabian
(Traveller 37
( Grey Bloody Buttocks
(Matchless 13
\ Dau. of Ancaster Starling
| Herod 26
[ Dau. of Cygnet
(Spectator /
[ Horatia
/Cade 6
(Dau. of Partner
/Babraham 15
I Dau. of Foxhunter
(Tartar 48
(Cypron
/Snap /
( Dau. of Regulus
(Hobgoblin 4*
/Little Hartley Mare
/Cade 6
\ Little Hartley Mare
(Partner 9
(Meliora
(Blaze 4*
| Selima
/Snip 9
(Dau. of Fox
(Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Dau. of Y. Belgrade
H
a
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Diomed 6 I (B. 1768)
(Br. 1777)"| Daughter of
I (B. 1763)
f Matchem 4
Giantess | (B. 1748)
(B. 1769) I Molly Long Legs
o
M
a
o
I (B. 1753)
(Herod 26
/■Justice 3 I (B. 1758)
(Br. 1774)1 Curiosity
I (Br. 1760)
(Shakespeare 15
Dau. of I (Ch. 1745)
(1763) "I Miss Meredith
00 I
•>-4
^
j
9S
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1
Maria
B. 1777
~l
I (1751)
('Tartar 48
Herod 26 I (Ch. 1743)
(B. 1758) "| Cypron
(B. 1750)
(Snap /
Lisette | (Br. 1750)
(B. 1772) 1 Miss Windsor
I (1754)
See remarks in Stud Book, vol. i.
19
-ocr page 407-
r
DERBY WINNERS 1814 & 1815
Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
Spiletta
(B. 1749)
Warren's Sports-
man 32 (B. 1753)
Golden Locks
(Ch. 1758)
Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
| Squirt 11
\Dau. of Blacklegs
(Regulus 11
\ Mother Western
/Cade 6
/ Silvertail
| Oroonoko 7
1 Dau. of Crab
| Partner 9
/Meliora
( Blaze 4"
( Selima
I Snip 9
(Dau. of Fox
( Godolphin Arabian «f*
( Dau. of Y. Belgrade
f Tartar 48
/ Cy pron
J Cade 6
( Dau. of Lonsdale Arabian
I Matchem 4
\ Duchess
|Snap /
V Dau. of Regulus
| Sweepstakes 44
( Dau. of Bay Bolton
/South 13
(Dau. of Y. Cartouch
( Tartar 48
/Cypron
| Blank 15
I Peggy
(Eclipse 12 I
(Ch. 1764)1
J Sports- I
mistress -!
I (Ch. 1765)
TO CO
ON
K
fHerod 26
(B. 1758)
jCypron^
(B. 1750)
(■Snap /
Lisette | (Br. 1750)
(B. 1772~i "I Miss Windsor
I (1754)
w j
          /'Herod 26
ffl
_
pq
ftO {Z
eck'rf™ ^ ►t
73)\J
(B. 1768)
iss Ramsden
(Dux 7
Misfortune | (B. 1761)
(Br. 1775)"! Curiosity
I (Br. 1760)
(Sweepstakes 44
Trentham J (Ch. 1743)
5(B. 1766) | Miss South
I (B. 1759)
I Herod 26
Cytherea | (B. 1758)
I (B. 1775)1 Lily
I (B. 1765)
MB
a*
« Si
I Squirt 11
/Dau. of Blacklegs
| Regulus 11
/Mother Western
| Cade 6
man 32 (B~. 1753)\Silvertail
/Oroonoko 7
j" M^ ("Eclipse 12 |
5      (Ch. 1764)1 Sp£J                    Ij I „ (W
6    Sports- J
^ £"1 Go
»
00
►»
k
a
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UN
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«
V
(Ch.1765) |_ (Ch_ 175g)
(Tartar 48
Herod 26 I (Ch. 1743)
(B. 1758) I Cypron
, (B. 1750)
(Snap /
(Br. 1750)
Miss Windsor
/ Dau. of Crab
(Partner 9
/ Meliora
| Blaze »|-
/ Selima
(Snip 9
(Dau. of Fox
/Godolphin Arabian ►£«
(1754)
„ ,           fMatchem 4
Conductor J (B mg)
(Ch-ire?)^^01
(Squirrel 4
Brunette J (B. 1754)
(Br. 1771)1 Dove
I (B. 1764)
{Herod 26
(B. 1758)
\Dau. of Y. Belgrade
fCade 6
(Dau. of Partner
{Snap /
\Dau. of Cullen Arabian
( Traveller 37
\ Grey Bloody Buttocks
/Matchless 13
\Dau. of Ancaster Starling
(Tartar 48
/Cypron
1*
T< —.
fog
g H
P< .
gs
3 -—•
H
EH V
too
eg GO
c3 co
5
Spa
Rachel
(1763)
{Snap /
(Blank 15
/Dau. of Regulus
/Snip 9
(Br.Julia
(B. 1
1750)          \Dau. of Fox
(Blank 15
\Dau. of Partner
20
-ocr page 408-
DERBY WINNERS 1816 & 1817
Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Daughter of
("Marske 8
\Spiletta
| Tartar 48
| Dau. of Mogul
/Tartar 48
ICypron
( Matchem 4
\ Pratt's Old Mare (by Squirt)
| Tartar 48
^Cypron
| Cade 6
\ Dau. of Lonsdale Arabian
| Sweepstakes 44
( Miss South
| The Compton Barb »f>
(Sister to Regulus
| Matchem 4
| Dau. of Snap
| Squirrel 4:         
\ Dove
| Florizel S
\ Dau. of Spectator
( Matchem 4
\ Molly Long Legs
| Herod 26
\ Rachel
|Snap /
\ Miss Cleveland
(Syphon 9
\Dau. of Regulus
J Herod 26
\ Fair Forester
/"Mercury 9
(Ch. 1778)
| Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
1 Maiden
I (Ch. 1770)
/'Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
^ Miss Ramsden
Trent ham 5
(B. 1766)
Coquette
. (B. 1765)
Conductor 12
(Ch. 1767)
Brunette
I (Br. 1771)
'Diomed 6
(Ch. 1777)
Giantess
. (B. 1769)
'Highflyer 13
(B. 1774)
Papillon
[ (Br. 1769)
Tandem 17
I (B. 1773)
Perdita
[ (Ch. 1769)
Dau. of
(B. 1779)
( Wood-
pecker /
(Ch. 1773)
Camilla
(B. 1778)
Trumpator
14
(B1.1782)
Y. Giant-
ess
(B. 1790)
fSir Peter 3
(Br. 1784)
Deceit
I (Ch. 1784)
O
M
a
3
0-
o
H
►J
H
-
N
(Herod 26
j (B. 1758)
j Miss Ramsden
(Dux 7
I (B. 1761)
I Curiosity
I (Br. 1760)
(Eclipse 12
I (Ch. 1764)
I Grecian Princess
I (Ch. 1770)
(Highflyer 13
| (B. 1774)
| Daughter of
(Marske 8
I (Br. 1750)
) Spiletta
I (B. 1749)
| Tartar 48
(Cypron
(Cade 6
\ Dau. of Lonsdale Arabian
( Matchem 4
\ Duchess
(Snap /
{ Dau. of Regulus
J Marske 8
\Spiletta
| William's Forester 2
\ Dau. of Coalition Colt
| Herod 26
\ Rachel
(Alfred 12
\ Dau. of Engineer
| Squirt 11
\ Dau. of Blacklegs
| Regulus 11
\ Mother Western
Wood-
pecker /
(Ch. 1773)
nB
Misfortune
V (Br. 1775)
r Alexander
13
11 (Ch. 1782)
Dau. of
VP
o-
M
O
'S
t Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
J Grecian
Princess
V   (Ch.1770)
/-John Bull
13
| (Ch. 1789)
Dau. of
V   (B.1792)
as
■i-H t*~<
„E3
/'William's Forester ( Croft's Forester 23
( Dau. of Looby
| Coalition Colt 9
\ Dau. of Bustard
| Herod 26
I Dau. of Snap
( Eclipse 12
\ Grecian Princess
(Herod 26
»Lily
| Y. Marske 12
\ Dau. of Cade
2 (Ch. 1750)
I Daughter of
(Fortitude 4
| (B. 1777)
j Xantippe
i (Ch. 1779)
( Drone 4
I (B. 1777)
| Lardella
I (1780)
v3£
Died In 1S17 after Castration.
21
-ocr page 409-
DERBY WINNERS 1818 & 1819
| Marske 8
^ Spiletta
| Black and All Black 7
) Fanny
(Tartar 48
I Cypron
(Matchem 4
\ Duchess
(Tartar 48
I Cypron
(Blank 15
\ Dau. of Regulus
(Marske 8
| Spiletta
| Herod 26
\ Nettle
|Partner 9
( Meliora
( Blaze ►£*
I Selima
(Marske 8
\ Spiletta
/ Engineer 36
\ Dau. of Blank
( Matchem 4
\
Dau. of Snap
( Squirrel 4
\
Dove
I Herod 26
\ Dau. of Cygnet
(Spectator /
I Horatia
/Matchem 4
[Dau. of Snap
(Squirrel 4
\ Dove
( Florizel 5
\ Dau. of Spectator
(Matchem 4
\ Molly Long Legs
| Herod 26
| Rachel
(Blank 15
1 Dau. of Rib
| Marske 8
) Dau. of Snap
(Syphon 9
I Charlotte
/Marske 8
I Spiletta
( Warren's Sportsman 32
| Golden Looks
| Tartar 48
| Cypron
| Snap /
\ Miss Windsor
/Tartar 48
\ Cypron
(Blank 15
\ Dau. of Regulus
(Snip 9
\ Dau. of Fox
/ Blank 15
\ Dau. of Partner
A
SO,-,
3 iH
O 01
"I-
bo
.5 :d
a"
Sf ,,«0 Polly
(Ch.l775)( (ci 1756)
j'Herod 26
Dau. of J (B. 1758)
(B. 1780) 1 Pyrrha
I (B. 1771)
M
Highflyer
13
(B. 1774)
Augusta
(Ch. 1784)
| Herod 26
J (B. 1758)
I Rachel
I (1763)
/'Eclipse 12
I (Ch. 1764)
I Daughter of
.K
CO
("Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
"| Cypron
I (B. 1750)
/'Eclipse 12
I (Ch. 1764)
j Daughter of
IfcJ
q I Frenzy
-"l (Ch. 1774)
rr.                /'Conductor 12
Irumpator J (ch> m7)
(Bl. 1782)|Bn)
/'Florizel 5
Fancy
         I (B. 1768)
(B. 1780) | Daughter of
I (B. 1763)
!sl
r                ("Conductor 12
Irumpator ) (Ch m7)
(B,.1782)[B^n)
i Diomed 6
Y. Giantess I (Ch. 1777)
(B. 1790) 1 Giantess
{ (B. 1769)
/Highflyer 13
f Delpini 30 I (B. 1774)
(Gr. 1781)] Countess
I (Gr. 1760)
/"Shark «}«
! =
!£3<
£ «>
i-J/~
| Violet
(Ch. 1787
(Br. 1771)
| Daughter of
I (Ch. 1772)
/'Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
•fS
c
o
e-
<;
rPot-8-os38
(Ch. 1773) I Sportsmistress
{ (Ch. 1765)
/" Herod 26
Maria          I (B. 1758)
(B. 1777)1 Lisettc
I (B. 1772)
OS
few
.„
-1
il
te
eS GO
0> l>
c-
3 .
'
££
l
,m i a         i Herod 26
('Highflyer J (B mg)
/T1 .,„„., 1 Rachel
(B.H74)[ (Br.1763)
/'Snap /
Promise I (Br. 1750)
(Br. 1768)"| Julia
I (B. 1756)
22
-ocr page 410-
DERBY WINNERS
1820 & 1821
,,.               (Eclipse 12
Ki,uS . (Ch. 1764)
Fergus 6 -\ poU
(Ch.1775)^ 1756)
( Herod 26
(Marske 8
(Spiletta
(Black and All Black 7
\ Fanny
I Tartar 48
(Cypron
I Matchem 4
\ Duchess
(Tartar 48
\ Cypron
( Blank 15
I Dau. of Regulus
(Marske 8
\ Spiletta
(Herod 26
\ Nettle
(Marske 8
| Spiletta
(Black and All Black 7
\ Fanny
(Herod 26
I Rachel
(Matchem 4
(Dau. of Alcides
(Matchem 4
\ Dau. of Snapi'
(Squirrel 4
\ Dove
(Herod 26
\ Dan. of Cygnet
(Spectator /
\ Horatia
r*s
m
&
*.
=3
p
"^Z
K
S a
IK
..2>-
l-H
ar-
.d
ea
v»^
I
Dau. of I (B. 1758)
(B. 1780) iPyrrha
I (B. 1771)
( Herod 26
] (B. 1758)
Rachel
5- «W) t1 (1768)
(Eclipse 12
Augusta I (Ch. 1764)
(Ch. 1784 V| Dau. of
O
King
/'Eclipse 12
_, - . J (Ch. 1764)
Fergus 6 \ p^,,
(Ch.l775)[10(^_l756)
[ Highflyer 13
Dau. of ! (B. 1774)
(Gr. 1782) I Monimia
I (Gr. 1771)
                (Conductor 12
Trumpator | (Ch_ mJ)
tm 1 7H9\1 Brunette
!|
Spa
(Bl.1,82)
(Br.
(Florizel 5
I (B. 1768)
"I Dau. of
( (B. 1763)
(Eclipse 12
I (Ch. 1764)
"I Daughter of
I (Ch. 1759)
(Herod 26
vJd
Fancy
(B. 1780)
( Marske 8
\ Spiletta
(Tartar 48
| Dau. of Mogul
(Tartar 48
\ Cypron
(Matchem 4
\ Pratt's Old Mare
(Tartar 48
(Cypron
(Old Cade 6
) Dau. of Lonsdale Arabian
(Tartar 48
1 Cypron
(Skim 19
I Hag
(Herod 26
( Rachel
I Snap /
\ Miss Cleveland
(Marske 8
\ Spiletta
(Blank 15
(Dau. of Rib
(Tartar 48
I Cypron
(Cygnet 6
( Dau. of Y. Cartouch
(Regulus 11
\ Jenny Spinner
(Snap /
\ Dau. of Regulus
--
- °
0
s «
£3 ^- 1
IH
H l-H "i
=3 i
g
13 pa
Q
o"-" !%
Mercury 9
(Ch. 1778;
Dau. of
(B. 1779)'
Wood-
pecker /
(Ch. 1773)
Dau. of
(Gr. 1780)
(B. 1758) i
I Maiden
I (Ch. 1770)
(Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
j Miss Ramsden
(Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
I Y. Hag
o
an
fa
H
o
c
I (Gr. 1761)
(Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
I Papillon
I (Br. 1769)
(Eclipse 12
Sir Peter 3
(Br. 1784)
a -~
*pa
Horatia
(1778)
(Bourdeaux
|5(Gr.l774)
Dau. of
(Gr. 1777)
I (Ch. 1764)
I Countess
I (Gr. 1760)
(Herod 26
(B. 1758)
I Daughter of
I. (Gr. 1761)
(Prophet 12
I (Ch. 1760)
I Virago
Ik
I (Gr. 1764)
28
-ocr page 411-
DERBY WINNERS 1822 & 1823
[Herod 26
/ Tartar 48
l_ Cypron
(Blank 15
(Dau. of Regulus
(Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
/Rib 21
\ Dau. of Wynn Arabian •£•
(Marske 8
/Spiletta
| Spectator /
\ Dau. of Blank
/Herod 26
(Rachel
(Squirrel 4
\
Angelica
(Marske 8
\ Spiletta
(Tartar 48
\Dau. of Mogul
/Tartar 48
^ Cy pron
(Matchem 4
\
Pratt's Old Mare
(Tartar 48
^ Cypron
| Old Cade 6
(Dau. of Lonsdale Arabian
(Tartar 48
\ Cypron
I Skim 19
I Hag
0
0^
DO
SCO r-t
*4
.w OO
d *—
pa
•H r»r „
CO
2?5
Qb
0
(Highflyer | (B. 1758)
13
             1 Rachel
(B. 1774) l (B. 1763)
(Blank 15
Countess I (B. 1740)
(Gr. 1760)1 Daughter of
>..
("Eclipse 12
/'Javelin 13 I (Ch. 1764)
(B. 1772) 1 Miss Rose
I (1766)
1-5 i-H
f High flyer 13
(-1 *
Y. Flora I (B. 1774)
(B. 1785) "I Flora
I (B. 1768)
('Eclipse 12
Mercury 9 I (Ch. 1764)
(Ch. 1778)) Daughter of
I (Ch. 1759)
«^C
-^
*
t).
w
SOK
. 1807)
anna 24
1790)
m
■§«
,«>
O \
(Herod 26
J (B. 1758)
| Maiden
I (Ch. 1770)
('Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
I Miss Ramsden
Dau. of
(B. 1779)
rWood-
pecker /
(Ch. 1773)
CGI-
(Herod 26
Dau. of I (B. 1758)
(Gr. 1780)"j Y. Hag
I (Gr. 1761)
f£~
i
60" 1
o °>
£ t~ 1
-Q >h i
60 . I
O) V.
(■Eclipse 12
J (Ch. 1764)
| Marske 8
(^ Spiletta
f Black and All Black 7
I Fanny
I Tartar 48
I Cypron
(Matchem 4
\ Duchess
(Tartar 48
[ Cypron
| Blank 15
( Dau. of Regulus
| Cripple 4*
I Dau. of Hampton Court
( Childers
| Sampson 4*
I Dau. of Regulus
(Herod 26
/Rachel
|Snap /
( Miss Cleveland
(Marske 8
\ Spiletta
(Blank 15
( Dau. of Rib
/Eclipse 12
(Virago
I Herod 26
\ Teresa
f'Otho 4
| Dau. of Babraham
/Blank 15
(Dizzy, by Driver
' is accepted.
,s (King
Fergus i
(Ch81775) [Poliy
. 1756)
Herod 26
Dau. of | (B. 1758)
(B. 1780) '| Pyrrha
I (B. 1771)
tj. , H          j'Herod 26
Highflyer I (R mg)
/T> ._,.., I Rachel
(B. 1774) ( (m3)
/Tantrum 21
(B. 1760)
-..
PQ
a)
r °
^
^_^
r—!
&-
c3 Ci
6
C3 -b-
•-^ j—(
■u . "i
t> t-i
Ijaas
Termagant
«
(Jantatrice
rr.
u
t—1
MIL
r0 — !"
w
o
OO
Sco
r-4
I
02 1
I"
Highflyer 13
Sir Peter 3 I (B. 1774)
(Br. 1784) I Papillon
[ (Br. 1769)
(Eclipse 12
Horatia | (Ch. 1764)
(Ch. 1778)1 Countess
I (Gr. 1760)
(Saltram 7
Whiskey2 I (Br. 1780)
(B. 1789) I Calash
I (B. 1775)
r% t\ ■ (Dorimant 40
O
15
G
mant
(Gr. 1781)
L(Ch- "72)
| Dizzy
V
[ (Gr. 1757)
' Seymour
24
The pedigree of
-ocr page 412-
DERBY WINNERS 1824 & 1825
(Herod 26
\ Kachel
(Snap /
| Miss Cleveland
| Eclipse. 12
( Aspasia
I Prophet 12
I Virago
(Eclipse 12
I Virago
| Herod 26
I Teresa
(FlorizeU
\ Dau. of Spectator
( Matchem 4
\ Molly Long Legs
/Herod 26
\ Rachel
(Snap /
\ Miss Cleveland
/Eclipse 12
I Aspasia
(Prophet 12
I Virago
/Matchem 4
| Dau. of Snap
/Squirrel 4
\ Dove
(Herod 26
| Rachel
(Squirrel 4
(Helen
/'Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
I Papillon
I (Br. 1769)
(Dungannon 33
I (B. 1780)
I Daughter of
l (Gr. 1777)
/'Saltram 7
I (Br. 1780)
I Calash
I (B. 1775)
/'Diomed 6
I (Ch. 1777)
I Giantess
I (B. 1769)
I Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
I Papillon
{ (Br. 1769)
i Dungannon 33
I (B. 1780)
I Daughter of
I (Gr. 1777)
I Conductor 12
I (Ch. 1767)
I Brunette
I. (Br. 1771)
| Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
I Brim
I (B.1771)
/'Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
I Papillon
ft— ^ i
Oi
a a,
Sj
0 t*.
0
*> 1-1 !
3
£«1
M
Sir Peter 3
(Br. 1784)
Aretliusa
t (Ch. 1792)
rS
0
+j
t
a
s?
=3
«
.a
««
to
1^ 5^ 1
^ 1
^ ri
>• m
Whiskey 2
(B. 1789)
Y. Giantess
(B. 1790)
c
—1
tf
!
Q
Ed
(M
'sf
C
T—1
CO
c3 |
9 (Br.
few
^ d 1
Sir Peter 3
(Br. 1784)
Aretliusa
- (Ch. 1792)
fTrumpator
14
J (Bl. 1782)
-^> oo
Ml .
«fi
Demirep
' (Ch. 1782)
( Herod 26
\ Rachel
(Snap /
i Miss Cleveland
/ Eclipse 12
\ Aspasia
( Prophet 12
| Virago
/Eclipse 12
\ Virago
( Herod 26
\ Teresa
| Florizel 5
\ Dau. of Spectator
(Matchem 4
\ Molly Long Legs
( Marske 8
I Spiletta
I Warren's Sportsman 32
I Golden Locks
| Tartar 48
I Cypron
(Snap /
| Miss Windsor
(Matchem 4
| Dau. of Snap
(Squirrel 4
I Dove
( Herod 26
| Rache
| Snap
\ Julia
r_l
«<*
,—s
«03
oo
ot.
o
S "-1"
GO
efl .
iH
^m
-
Sir Peter 3
(Br. 1784)
(Br. 1769)
Dungannon 33
Arethusa | (B. 1780)
(Ch. 1792)1 Daughter of
I (Gr. 1777)
/'Saltram 7
WThiskey2 I (Br. 1780)
(B. 1789) 1 Calash
I. (B. 1775)
/Diomed 6
Y. Giantess I (Ch. 1777)
(B. 1790) 1 Giantess
I (B. 1769)
(Eclipse 12
Pot-8-os 38 I (Ch. 1764)
(Ch. 1773)"l Sportsmistress
I (Ch. 1765)
j'Herod 26
Maria
          ! (B. 1758)
"ca
y.
c
p
W
t t
~!
-8
-
_
Waxy
(B. 17
~-
CO
o
CO
I—1
V
isette
(B. 1772)
(B. 1777)
g*
'
■i*-
a) »—4 -
1 .
Men
V
k.
Conductor 12
(Ch. 1767)
Brunette
(Br. 1771)
Trumpator
14
(Bl. 1782) I
■3
(Highflyer 13
Prunella | (B. 1774)
(B. 1788) "j Promise
I (Br. 1768)
25
-ocr page 413-
DERBY WINNERS 1826 & 1827
f Marske 8
(Spiletta
| Warren's Sportsman 32
( Golden Locks
I Tartar 48
| Cypron
(Snap /
( Miss Windsor
(Matchem 4
\ Dau. of Snap
(Squirrel 4
\ Dove
(Herod 26
I Rachel
(Snap /
\ Julia
(Eclipse 12
[Dau. of Tartar
(Herod 26
\ Maiden
( Herod 26
\ Miss Ramsden
(Trentham 5
\ Coquette
(Herod 26
( Miss Ramsden
(Eclipse 12
\ Rosebud
(Eclipse 12
( Dau. of Tartar
(Woodpecker /
| Everlasting
Eclipse 12
Pot-8-os88 I
(Ch. 1773)
Maria
(B. 1777) "J
Trumpator |
(Bl. 1782) I
Prunella
(B.175
(Ch. 1764)
Sportsmistress
(Ch. 1765)
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Lisette
(B. 1772)
Conductor 12
(Ch. 1767)
Brunette
(Br. 1771)
Highflyer 13
(B. 1774)
Promise
>:<-
:PQ
£m
ca
{ (Br. 1768)
i Mercury 9
0
0
Q
TS-
h
03
co O
"J
r—1
pf GO
►J
QO
ft^-1
O .
P CO
S.
«3 CZ-
0
Gohanna 24
(B. 1790) "I
Colibri
(B. 1793)
Y. Wood-
pecker 3 ,
(Ch. 1794) ^
Fractious
(B.1792)
(Ch. 1778)
Daughter of
(B. 1779)
Woodpecker /
(Ch. 1773)
Camilla
(B. 1778)
Woodpecker /
(Ch. 1773)
Daughter of
(B. 1778)
Mercury 9
(Ch. 1778)
Daughter of
0
'■« f
U
0 ^ 1
w
^f 1
£ O
bo
£co
r
- -
^
«o
«— {
I (B. 1785)
(■Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
I Papillon
I (Br. 1769)
/'Dungannon 33
I (B. 1780)
| Daughter of
I (Gr. 1777)
/'Eclipse 12
J (Ch. 1764)
I Sportsmistress
I (Ch. 1765)
/'Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
J Promise
I (Br. 1768)
/'Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
I Papillon
I (Br. 1769)
/'Eclipse 12
J (Ch. 1764)
| Countess
I (Gr. 1760)
/'Woodpecker /
I (Ch. 1773)
j Misfortune
I (Br. 1775)-
| Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
I Cypher
I (Br. 1772)
26
/Herod 26
( Rachel
(Snap /
\ Miss Cleveland
(Eclipse 12
( Aspasia
/Prophet 12
\ Virago
(Marske 8
| Spiletta
(Warren's Sportsman 32
\Golden Locks
(Herod 26
( Rachel
(Snap /
(Julia
(Herod 26
| Rachel
(Snap /
\ Miss Cleveland
(Marske 8
\ Spiletta
(Blank 15
| Dau. of Rib
(Herod 26
\ Miss Ramsden
(Dux 7
\ Curiosity
(Herod 26
| Rachel
(Squirrel 4
\ Dau. of Regulus
w~ (
.-^
on
45 rH -
r-H
s6 .
fePQ
M
r" ^Z-
Sir Peter 3
(Br. 1784)
Arethusa
(Ch. 1792)
(Pot-8-os 38
(Ch. 1773)
Prunella
I (B. 1788) '
Sir Peter 3
(Br. 1784)
Horatia
(Ch. 1778)
("Buzzard 3
(Ch. 1787)
Hunca-
munca
*> (Br. 1787)
II
■---
M
-Sffl
50 •—'
rf ao
^*sq
-ocr page 414-
DERBY WINNERS 1828 & 1829
/'King Fergus 6
J (Ch. 1775)
j Daughter of
I (B. 1780)
I Highflyer 13
J (B. 1774)
I Termagant
I (1772)
i Trumpator 14
I (Bl. 1782)
j Y. Giantess
I (B. 1790)
(Buzzard 3
I (Ch. 1787)
j Puzzle
{ (B. 1778)
(Eclipse 12
i Polly
| Herod 26
( Pyrrha
) Herod 26
(Rachel
(Tantrum 21
I Cantatrice
/Conductor 12
I Brunette
| Dionied 6
I Giantess
| Woodpecker /
(Misfortune
| Matchem 4
\ Princess
( Matchem 4
\ Dau. of Snap
| Squirrel 4
\Dove
(Florizel 5
\ Dau. of Spectator
| Matchem 4
\ Molly Long Legs
| Herod 26
\ Rachel
( Eclipse 12
1 Hyaena
/ Herod 26
| Miss Ramsden
(Squirrel 4
\ Principessa
00 <»
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fa*
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Bening-
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(B. 1791)
Evelina
(Br.1791)
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(Bl. 1796)
Hornby
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179
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14
(Bl. 1782)
Y. Giantess
j Conductor 12
I (Ch. 1767)
| Brunette
I (Br. 1771)
(Dionied 6
11 (Ch. 1777)
"jGia
I (B. 1769)
(Highflyer 13
J (B. 1774)
| Everlasting
I (B. 1775)
/'Woodpecker /
I (Ch. 1773)
I Heinel
{ (B. 1771)
CBeningbrough '
I (B. 1791)
I Evelina
I (Br. 1791)
(Mufti 7
J (B. 1783)
| Maria
I (B. 1783)
(Herod 26
J (B. 1758)
I Miss Ramsden
(Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
1 Y. Hag
I (Gr. 1761)
(Sir Peter 3
I (Br. 1784)
| Arethusa
I (Ch. 1792)
(■Whiskey 2
I (B. 1789)
| Y. Giantess
I (B. 1790)
(Mercury 9
I (Ch. 1778)
I Daughter of
I. (B. 1779)
("Woodpecker /
I (Ch. 1773)
I Daughter of
I (Gr. 1780)
27
8
>:
-■.
D.T
g8 C<t
O
;a> O
V
J5 00
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Skyscraper
3
(B.1786)
Dau. of
(B. 1788)
( King Fergus 6
I Dau. of Herod
/Highflyer 13
( Termagant
| Fitzherod 4
\ Dau. of Infant
/ Telemachus 4
\ A-La-Grecque
( Tartar 48
(Cypron
/Cade 6
I Dau. of Lonsdale Arabian
/Tartar 48
(Cypron
(Skim 19
I Hag
/ Highflyer 13
( Papillon
f Dungannon 33
[ Dau. of Prophet
(Saltram 7
\ Calash
( Diomed 6
( Giantess
) Eclipse 12
( Dau. of Tartar
(Herod 26
I Maiden
/Herod 26
I Miss Ramsden
) Herod 26
IV. Hag
Orvillc 8
(B.1799)
55 f,
Marianna
(Ch. 1798)
Wood-
pecker /
(Ch. 1773)
Dau. of
- (Gr. 1780)
o33
«5
.Seo
00 ft
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(Walton 7
(B.1799)
Julia
(Br. 1799)
Gohanna 24
(B. 1790)
Skim
(Ch. 1794)"
:ra
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So
J5
be
s
B
-ocr page 415-
DERBY WINNERS 1830 & 1831
(King Fergus 6
j (Ch. 1775)
I Daughter of
I (B. 1780)
I Highflyer 13
! (B. 1774)
| Termagant
{ (1772)
I Sir Peter 3
j (Br. 1784)
I Horatia
I (Ch. 1778)
/'Whiskey 2
I (B. 1789)
| Dorimant
(Gr. 1781)
(Eclipse 12
| Polly
( Herod 26
| Pyrrha
(Herod 26
i Rachel
( Tantrum 21
\ Cantatrice
I Highflyer 13
| Papillon
(Eclipse 12
\ Countess
(Saltram 7
^ Calash
(Dorimant 40
\ Dizzy
(Marske 8
\ Spiletta
(Snap /
\ Dau. of Regulus
( Tartar 48
I Cypron
( Matehem 4
\Brown Regulus
f Herod 26
. \ Dau. of Cygnet
( Spectator /
(Horatia
/Cade 6
\ Dau. of Partner
( Babraham 15
\ Dau. of Foxhunter
Bening-
brough 7
(B. 1791)
Evelina
(Br. 1791)
/-Stamford
& 30
^g I (Br. 1794;
w
Dau. of
(Ch. 1799)
s
'
<l
^_
1—1
>,o
03
s?co
—1
^
OT »~< ^
180
w
V
*—'J
7/
Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Saltram
(Br. 1780)
I Virago
(. (Gr. 1764)
j Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
I Teresa
{ (B. 1767)
iFlorizel 5
J (B. 1768)
| Daughter of
{ (B. 1763)
/Matchem 4
I (B. 1748)
| Molly Long Legs
{ (B. 1753)__
/ Eclipse 12
I (Ch. 1764)
| Sportsmistress
I (Ch. 1765)
| Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
j Lisette
I (B. 1772)
/Conductor 12
I (Ch. 1767)
! Brunette
I. (Br. 1771)
| Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
I Promise
{ (Br. 1768)
( Mercury 9
I (Ch. 1778)
I Daughter ol'
{ (B. 1779)
(Woodpecker /
I (Ch. 1773)
1 Camilla
I (B. 1778)
('Woodpecker 1
| (Ch. 1773)
I Daughter of
I (B. 1778)
(Mercury 9
I (Ch. 1778)
"i Daughter of
{ (P.. 1785)
28
Calash
(B. 1775)
CD 1
GG
01 O
res
:)
O ■
.w
^H—
'Diomed 6
(Ch. 1777)
Giantess
(B. 176!
(Marske 8
| Spiletta
| Warren's Sportsman 32
\ Golden Locks
( Tartar 48
\ Cypron
(Snap /
\ Miss Windsor
| Matchem 4
\Dau. of Snap
(Squirrel 4
\ Dove
(Herod 26
\ Rachel
(Snap /
\ Julia
(Eclipse 12
\ Dau. of Tartar
(Herod 26
\ Maiden
(Herod 26
\ Miss Ramsden
| Trentham 5
\ Coquette
| Herod 26
\ Miss Ramsden
(Eclipse 12
\ Rosebud
| Eclipse 12
\ Dau. of Tartar
(Woodpecker /
\ Everlasting
GO •—s 1
c
f^-i O
0
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X 1-1 "
£
^ffl
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11—'
*«« .
Pot-8-os 38
(Ch. 1773)
Maria
(B. 1777)
Trumpator
14
(B1.1782)
Prunella
(B. 1788)
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Y. Wood-
pecker 3
(Ch. 1794)
Fractious
(B. 1792)
M
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Is
-ocr page 416-
DERBY WINNERS 1832 & 1833
( Marske 8
(Spiletta
/Omnium 4
\ Cloudy
(Herod 26
1 Rachel
| Cardinal Puff 4
\ Dau. of Tatler
I Eclipse 12
( Dau. of Tartar
(Herod 26
\ Maiden
(Sweepstakes 44
(Miss South
| Woodpecker /
( Everlasting
I Herod 26
[ Dau. of Snap
(Eclipse 12
(Grecian Princess
("Eclipse 12
(Dau. of Tartar
| Evergreen 3
(Dau. of Herod
( Imperator 28
( Brunette
/ Volunteer 9
| Dau. of Highflyer
/ Phenomenon 2
\ Dau. of Goldfinder
(Javelin 13
(Dau. of Highflyer
r                 /Eclipse 12
(B. 1778) ^ (17n)
/Highflyer 13
Dau. of J (B. 1774)
(B. 1790)"| Daughter of
I (1777)
/Mercury 9
(Gohanna24 | (Ch. 1778)
(B. 1790) "l Daughter of
I (B. 1779)
l Trentham 5
Fraxinella | (B. 1766)
(B. 1793) '| Daughter of
I (B. 1785)
9 **■
h* OS
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M
60 .
3P5
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t i. i> ii (Fortitude 4
John Bull | (B_ m7)
(Ch.l789)\Xa^79)
/ Volunteer 9
Miss Whip I (Ch. 1780)
(B. 1793) 1 Wimbleton
I (1785)
/Pipator 14
! I
0
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T—1
hte
■X'
I-H
d
M
it
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M Harriet
(B. 1803) [ (Ch 1794)
/Stride 12
Floyerkin J (Ch. 1787)
(B.1808) 1 Daughter of
I (B. 1797)
/Marske 8
( Spiletta
| Omnium 4
\
Cloudy
(Herod 26
( Rachel
fCardinal Puff 4
\
Dau. of Tatler
("Eclipse 12
\ Dau. of Tartar
f Herod 26
(Maiden
(Sweepstakes 44
\Miss South
f Woodpecker /
\Everlasting
/Herod 26
(Miss Ramsden
JDux 7
( Curiosity
(Eclipse 12
(Grecian Princess
(Highflyer 13
\I)au. of Alfred
("Highflyer 13
\ Flora
("Herod 26
( Proserpine
(Eclipse 12
\Dau. of Tartar
/Alfred 12
\ Magnolia
Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Joe
Andrews 4
mi i?^ 'lAmaranda
(B. 1778) [ (17?1)
(Highflyer 13
Dau. of | (B. 1774)
(B. 1790) "I Daughter of
I (1777)
/"Mercury 9
fGohanna24 | (Ch. 1778)
(B. 1790) "I Daughter of
I (B. 1779)
/Trentham 5
Fraxinella | (B. 1766)
(B. 1793) "I Daughter of
I (B. 1785)
/Woodpecker /
"Buzzard 3 J (Ch. 1773)
(Ch. 1787) I Misfortune
[ (Br. 1775)
/Alexander 13
fNS
Dau. of
| (Ch. 1782)
S9
| Daughter of
/Spadille 3
Highland ^B_l784)
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(B.1798)( °$ a1?75)
(Volunteer 9
(Ch. 1780)
Daughter of
(B. 1785)
29
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-ocr page 417-
DERBY WINNERS 1834 & 1835
(King Fergus 6
I (Ch. 1775)
"I Daughter of
I (B. 1780)
/'Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
I Termagant
{ (1772)
(Sir Peter 3
I (Br. 1784)
| Horatia
I (Ch. 1778)
I Whiskey 2
I (B. 1789)
I Grey Dorimant
{ (Gr. 1781)
i Delpini 30
I (Gr. 1781)
j Caroline
I (Ch. 1793)
(Precipitate 24
I (Ch. 1787)
| Firetail
I (B. 1789)
| Buzzard 3
I (Ch. 1787)
I Daughter of
(Eclipse 12
\ Polly
I Herod 26
[ Pyrrha
| Herod 26
\ Rachel
(Tantrum 21
\ Cantatrice
( Highflyer 13
I Papillon
I Eclipse 12
\ Countess
(Saltram 7
| Calash
(Dorimant 40
| Dizzy
( Highflyer 13
\ Countess
( Phoenomenon 2
\ Faith
(Mercury 9
\ Dau. of Herod
( Highflyer 13
\ Mariauuina
( Woodpecker /
| Misfortune
(Alexander 13
I Dau. of Highflyer
(Highflyer 13
( Papillon
(Trumpator 14
I Fancy
|-Benitig-
brough 7
I (B. 1791)
Evelina
V (Br. 1791)
<d 01
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/
3
. 0
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(Br. 1794)
Dau. of
(Ch. 1799)
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Evander 2
(Gr. 1801)
Dau. of
(1803)
fSelim 2
(Ch. 1802)
ft
(Sir Peter 3
Pipylina I (Br. 1784)
(Br. 1803)1 Rally
I (Ch. 1790)
1 Mercury 9
60 •
So
(Eclipse 12
i Dau. of Tartar
(Herod 26
\ Maiden
j Herod 26
(Miss Ramsden
( Trentham S
\
Coquette
(Highflyer 13
I Countess
(Matchem 4
\
Dau. of Turk
(Herod 26
[Dau. of Cygnet
("Eclipse 12
[ Dau. of Engineer
/Eclipse 12
\ Sportsmistress
/Herod 26
t Lisette
(Conductor 12
I Brunette
fHighflyer 13
\ Promise
j Eclipse 12
[Dau. of Tartar
("Woodpecker /
\ Petworth
/Imperator 28
( Brunette
(Sir Peter 3
I Pyrrha
fGohauna24
(B. 1790)
Catherine
I (B. 1795)
I (Ch. 1778)
I Daughter of
I (B. 1779)
('Woodpecker /
I (Ch. 1773)
I Camilla
a .
o ^^
{ (B. 1788)
i Delpini 30
J (Gr. 1781)
I Cora
I (B. 1777)
( Florizel 5
I (B. 1768)
| Frenzy
{ (Ch. 1774)
|Pot-8-os38
J (Ch. 1773)
| Maria
I (B. 1777)
/Trumpator 14
I (Bl. 1782)
j Prunella
I (B. 1788)
/ Mercury 9
I (Ch. 1778)
| Rosina
[ (Ch. 1783)
{Pipator 14
(B. 1786)
Beatrice
(B. 1791)
30
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Timothy 23
(B.1794)
Lucy
(. (B. 1798)
{Waxy 18
(B. 1790)
Penelope
(B. 1798)
jqflQ
Hermes 4
(Ch.1790)
Vicissitude
(B. 1800)
-ocr page 418-
PHOSPHORUS (Bay 1834)
BAY MIDDLETON (Bay 1833)
Daughter of 27 (Oh. 1819)
-ocr page 419-
DERBY WINNERS 1838 & 1839
/Hanibletonian /
J (B. 1792)
I Rosalind
I (Ch. 1788)
("Coriander 4
I (B. 1786)
j Wild Goose
I (Br. 1792)
I Whiskey 2
j (B. 1789)
| Jenny Spinner
(. (Ch. 1797)
('Sorcerer 6
j (Bl. 1796)
| Virgin
( (Br. 1801)
?Pot-8-os 38
I (Ch. 1773)
I Maria
I (B. 1777)
/Trumpator 14
I (Bl. 1782)
| Prunella
I (B. 1788)
/Delpini 30
(Gr. 1781)
Bay Javelin
(B. 1793)
Sorcerer 6
(Bl. 1796)
Daughter of
(Br. 1802)
| King Fergus 6
(Grey Highflyer
f Phcenomenon 2
( Atalanta
(Pot-8-os38
(Lavender
/Highflyer 13
(Co-heiress
("Saltram 7
( Calash
( Dragon 6
(Dau. of Eclipse
(Trumpator 14
\ Y. Giantess
( Sir Peter 3
"(Dau. of Pot-8-os
(Eclipse 12
(Sportsmistress
/Herod 26
( Lisette
(Conductor 12
{ Brunette
( Highflyer 13
( Promise
(Highflyer 13
(Countess
("Javelin 13
(Y. Flora
("Trumpator 14
(Y. Giantess
/Sir Peter 3
\ Deceit
fN~
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^s -*
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(B. 1803)
Dau. of
I (1799)
CO.
f-3
v. 1
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0
.£•
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Juniper 9
(Ch. 1805)
Dau. of
I (Br. 1810)
c
m ■
o
("Waxy 18
(B. 1790)
Ssm"
Penelope
.. (B. 1798)
Seymour 3
(B. 1807)
Gramarie
I (Bl. 1807)
O r-J
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a .
" CI
(Mercury 9
( Dau. of Herod
(Woodpecker /
( Camilla
/Delpini 30
(Cora
/Florizel 5
( Frenzy
("King Fergus 6
(Dau. of Herod
( Highflyer 13
( Termagant
/Highflyer 13
( Papillon
f Diomed 6
| Desdemona
(Herod 26
( Dau. of Snap
( Eclipse 12
(Grecian Princess
/Eclipse 12
(Dau. of Tartar
/Evergreen 3
(Dau. of Herod
/Imperator 28
( Brunette
("Volunteer 9
(Dau. of Highflyer
f Phcenomenon 2
(Dau. of Goldfmder
/Javelin 13
(Dau. of Highflyer
{
(B. 1802) y-
ohanna 24
(B 179Q)
atherine
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Go
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fBeningbrough 7
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(B. 1799) "I Evelina
( (B. 1791)
f Sir Peter 3
Fanny         | (Br. 1784)
(B. 1796) 1 Dau. of
I (Ch. 1788)
t i Ti ii (Fortitude 4
John Bull J (B im)
(Ch. 1789) [*$???„,
(Volunteer 9
(Ch. 1780)
Wimbleton
(1785)
„ ,.         (Tipator 14
Cramhng- | £_ im)
(B. 1803) [ (Ch_ 1794)
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(Ch. 1787)
Dau. of
(B. 1797)
32
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DERBY WINNERS 1840 & 1841
( Eclipse 12
I Polly
(Herod 26
( Pyrrha
(Herod 26
[ Rachel
(Tantrum 21
( Cantatrice
f Eclipse 12
\ Virago
I Herod 26
^ Teresa
( Florizel 5
[ Dau. of Spectator
f Matchem 4
\ Molly Long Legs
/ Herod 26
^ Rachel
f Eclipse 12
I Miss Spindle Shanks
J Herod 26
(Miss Ramsden
(Eclipse 12
\ Dau. of Blank
j Eclipse 12
| Dau. of Tartar
f Herod 26
{ Maiden
(Sweepstakes 44
( Miss South
( Compton Barb «f>
\ Dau. of Godolphin Arabian •£<
Bening-
brough 7
(B. 1791)
Evelina
(Br. 1791
I' King Fergus 6
I (Ch. 1775)
| Daughter of
I (B. 1780)
('Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
j Termagant
I—I t^
I (1772)
j'Saltram 7
Whiskey .2! (Br. 1780)
(B. 1789) \ Calash
I (B. 1775)
fDiomed 6
Y. Giantess) (Ch. 1777)
(B. 1790) 1 Giantess
I (B. 1769)
("Highflyer 13
f St, George 9 | (B. 1774)
VWW
(B. 1789) "
{
Daughter of
(B. 1775)
('Woodpecker ,
Abigail
(B. 17
I (Ch. 1773)
| Firetail
No
I (B. 1772)
('Mercury 9
Gohanna24 | (Ch. 1778)
(B. 1790) \ Daughter of
I (B. 1779)
Trentliam 5
■g2-
Was
Camilla
. (B.177
(B. 1766)
Coquette
(B. 1765)
f Eclipse 12
t Sportsmistress
(Herod 26
[Lisette
(Conductor 12
I Brunette
f Highflyer 13
^ Promise
f Mercury 9
{ Dau. of Herod
(Woodpecker /
( Camilla
/Eclipse 12
\ Grecian Princess
("Sir Peter 3
\_ Hornet
/Herod 26
\Miss liamsden
/Dux 7
\ Curiosity
f Eclipse 12
/Grecian Princess
f Highflyer 13
^Dau. of Alfred
/Highflyer 13
\ Papillon
f Dungannon 33
/ Dau. of Prophet
("Young Marske 12
^Vauxhall Snap Mare
f Highflyer 13
\ Dau. of Goldfinder
2d
|'Pot-8-os 38
I (Ch. 1773)
| Maria
I (B. 1777)
fTrumpator 14
I (Bl. 1782)
I Prunella
I (B. 1788)
("Gohanna 24
I (B. 1790)
| Catherine
I (B. 1795)
I Alexander 13
| (Ch. 1782)
I Rival
I (Br. 1800)
("Woodpecker /
I (Ch. 1773)
I Misfortune
I (Br. 1775)
I Alexander 13
fCh. 1782)
Waxy 18
(B. 1790)
11
^m
Penelope
(B. 1798)
Wanderer
11
(B. 1811)
Thalestris
~ (Bl. 1809)
f-i SO
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23
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j Daught
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I (Br. 1784)
j Arethusa
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("Shuttle 21
J (B. 1793)
"| Daughter of
I (Br. 1788)
33
f William-
son's
Ditto 7
(B. 1800)
Agnes
I (B.1805)
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DERBY WINNERS 1842 & 1843
/Highflyer 13
V Papillon
(Eclipse 12
\ Clio
| Pot-8-os 38
\ Maria
| Woodpecker /
\ Heine!
(Highflyer 13
\ Papillon
| Diomed 6
\ Ambrosia
(Herod 26
\ Dau. of Feather
(Eclipse 12
( Harmony
J Woodpecker /
\ Misfortune
| Alexander 13
\ Dau. of Highflyer
J Sir Peter 3
V Arethusa
(Diomed"6
\ Giantess
('Hambletonian /
\ Rosalind
(Coriander 4
\ Wild Goose
(Sir Peter 3
\ Bab
/ Tartar 48
I Dau. of Drone
Sir Peter 3
(Br. 1784)
Miss Hervey
(Ch. 1775)
Waxy 18
(B. 1790)
Daughter of
(B. 1788)
Sir Peter 3
(Br. 1784)
Fanny
(Ch. 1790)
Anvil 9
(B. 1777)
Scota
(B. 1783)
Buzzard 3
(Ch. 1787)
Daughter of
Walton 7
M
Haphazard
35
(Br. 1797) I
Mrs.Barnet
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I (Ch. 1808)"
Blacklock.2 |
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Dau. of
(B. 1799)
. Giantess
(B. 1790)
Whitelock 2
(B. 1803)
aughter of
(1799)
Knowsley 7
(Gr. 1804)
Daughter of
(Pot-8-os 38
| Maria
| Trumpator 14
\ Prunella
/ Buzzard 3
(Dau. of Alexander
(Sir Peter 3
I Dau. of Phcenomenon
| Beningbrough 7
\ Evelina
(Stamford 30
\ Sophia
J Eclipse 12
^Grecian Princess
(Amaranthus 4
\ Mayfly
(Eclipse 12
\ Sportsmistress
(Herod 26
^ Lisette
/Conductor 12
\ Brunette
(Highflyer 13
\ Promise
(Eclipse 12
\Dau. of Tartar
(Woodpecker /
\ Pet worth
(Imperator 28
\ Brunette
/Sir Peter 3
\ Pyrrha
Waxy 18
^Whalebone
| / (B. 1807)
Dau. of
(B. 1812)
(B. 1790)
1 Penelope
[ (B. 1798)
('Selim 2
J (Ch. 1802)
"l Maiden
«
c
(. (B. 1801)
(Orville 8
I (B. 1799^
"| Miss Sophia
1. (B. 1805)
/'Alexander 13
I (Ch. 1782)
I Brunette
fPot-8-os 38
J (Ch. 1773)
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I (1777)
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J (Ch. 1778)
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J (B. 1786)
j Beatrice
a'
I. (B. 1791)
34
-ocr page 422-
'''
DERBY WINNERS 1844 & 1845
I Waxy 18
j (B. 1790)
J Penelope
I (B. 1798)
(Selim 2
| (Ch. 1802)
| Maiden
{ (B. 1801)
j'Orville 8
j (B. 1799)
I Miss Sophia
{ (B. 1805)
[Alexander 13
(Ch. 1782)
/ Pot-8-os 38
\ Maria
fTrumpator 14
I Prunella
| Buzzard 3
I Dau. of Alexander
/Sir Peter 3
| Dau. of Phtenomenon
I Beningbrough 7
( Evelina
/Stamford 30
(Sophia
/Eclipse 12
(Grecian Princess
/ Amaranthus 4
\ Mayfly
) Woodpecker /
I Misfortune
j Alexander 13
\ Dau. of Highflyer
/ Sir Peter 3
( Arethusa
/ Diomed 6
i Giantess
(Buzzard 3
I Dau. of Alexander
/Shuttle 21
\ Dau. of Sir Peter
/Sir Peter 3
I Fanny
| Anvil 9
i Scota
fWhalebone
/ (B. 1807)
I Dan. of
v (B. 1812)
, Master
Henry 3
| (B. 1815)
I Boadicea
I (B. 1807)
fSelim 2
(Ch. 1802)
I Dau. of.
(Ch. 1808)"
I Brunetl
e
"Buzzard 3
(Ch. 1787)
Daughter of
'Walton 7
(B. 1799)
Y. Giantess
(B. 1790)
sf
Castrel 2
(Ch. 1801)
Bustard 3
(B. 1813)
I Miss Hap
I (B. 1806)
(Sir Oliver 13
| (B. 1800)
j Seotilla
'. (B. 1795)
0> fM
Olympia
(B. 1815)
TGolumpus 11
/ Gohanna 24
\ Catherine
/Timothy 23
\ Lucy
/Sorcerer 6
\ Wowski
/ Beningbrough 7
| Dau. of Highflyer
f King Fergus 6
i Dau. of Herod
f Highflyer 13
i Termagant
( Highflyer 13
\ Papillon
/King Fergus 6
\Lardella
j Beningbrough 7
\ Evelina
/Mufti 7
( Maria
/Herod 26
| Miss Ramsden
| Herod 26
\ Y. Hag
/Sir Peter 3
I Arethusa
{ Whiskey 2
\
Y. Giantess
| Mercury 9
\Dau. of Herod
f Woodpecker I ,
\Dau. of Herod
"3
fCatton 2 j (B. 1802)
M 22 (B. 1809) 1 Lucy Gray
<5»
                      I (Ch. 1804)
•^ .                      /'Smolensko 18
>>M Dau. of I (Bl. 1810)
«*"" (B. 1818) "j Lady Mary
I (B. 1800)
/'Beningbrough 7
■g fOrville 8 J (B. 1791)
x S (B. 1799) 1 Evelina
13 J                l_ (Br. 1791)
M
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I EpsomLass | (Br. 1784)
(Br. 1803)1 Alexina
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Octavius23J (B. 1799)
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I (Ch. 1798)
fWoodpecker /
Grey Skim | (Ch. 1773)
(Gr. 1793)1 Daughter of
M
M
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I. (Gr. 1780)
("Walton 7
Phantom 6 J (B. 1799)
(B. 1808) 1 Julia
[ (Br. 1799)
{Gohanna 24
(B. 1790)
Chesnut Skim
(Ch. 1794)
35
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so .
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-ocr page 423-
DERBY WINNERS 1846 & 1847
| Woodpecker /
( Misfortune
/Alexander 13
(Dau. of Highflyer
I Sir Peter 3
( Arethusa
/Diomed 6
I Giantess
/Highflyer 13
( Papillon
(Diomed 6
( Ambrosia
/ Herod 26
(Dau. of Feather
/ Eclipse 12
(Harmony
/ Pot-8-os 38
( Maria
| Trumpator 14
(Prunella
| Buzzard 3
(Dau. of Alexander
(Highland Fling 12
( Harriet
j Delpini 30
1 Buzzard 3
I (Ch. 1787)
I Daughter of
i Walton 7
] (B. 1799)
I Y. Giantess
I (B. 1790)
/"Sir Peter 3
| (Br. 1784)
j Fanny
{ (Ch. 1790)
(Anvil 9
(B. 1777)
Seota
Selim .2
(Ch. 1802)
M
Dan. of
(Ch. 1808)
Sir Oliver
13 (B. 1800)
, CO
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(B. 1783)
Whalebone
(B. 1807)
Defiance
{ (Ch. 1816
(Waxy 18
| (B. 1790) •
| Penelope
I (B. 1798)
("Rubens 2
j (Ch. 1805)
"I Little Folly
( (B. 1806)
"Whalebone or
Seymour 3 *
(B. 1807)
Daughter of
\ (B. 1807)
(Camerton 5
| (Ch. 1808)
| Snowdrop
( (B. 1806)
n
| Bay.
avelin
Moses 5
(B. 1819)
8 S3
<D CO
| Gohanna 24
(Grey Skim
| Hamble toman /
( Dau. of Precipitate
/Highland Fling 12
( Daisy
Calendula?
(B. 1815)
/"Hambletonian /
( Rosalind
| Coriander 4
(Wild Goose
(Eclipse 12
( Sportsmistress
| Woodpecker 1
( Camilla
| Trumpator 14
(Y. Giantess
| Sir Peter 3
( Alexina
(Sir Peter 3
( Horatia
| Coriander 4
\
Faith
| Bcningbrougli 7
( Evelina
| Stamford 30
(Dau. of Whiskey
| Saltram 7
( Calash
(Diomed 6
(Giantess
/Buzzard 3
t Dau. of Alexander
| Williamson's Ditto 7
(Dau. of Mercury
/Sorcerer 6
(Golden Locks
(Waxy 18
( Penelope
' is accepted.
(Whitelock 2
J (B. 1803)
I Daughter of
I (1799)
(Pot-8-os 38
| (Ch. 1773)
| Y. Camilla
\ (B. 1787)
(Sorcerer 6
| (Bl. 1796)
| Houghton Lass
I. (B. 1801)
(Stamford 30
| (Br. 1794)
| Marcia
( (Gr. 1797)
(Orville 8
Blacklock
2
(B. 1814)
Mandane
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Sultan 8
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1 Emily
1 (Ch. 1810)
(Whiskey 2
| (B. 1789)
"j Y. Giantess
t (B. 1790)
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J (Ch. 1802)
1 Bacchante
PhPP
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( (Br. 1809)
(Soothsayer 15
M
Filagree
(Ch. 1815)
* The
J (Ch. 1808)
IWeb
\ (B. 1808)
pedigree of " Seymour
36
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DERBY WINNERS
1848 & 184
.Whalebone fW(gyi790)
(B.1807)\P^98)
(Pot-8-os38
| Maria
—'
( Trumpator 14
00
\ Prunella
i—
eh
| Selini .2
| Buzzard 3
£
66
Dau. of I (Ch. 1802)
1 Dau. of Alexander
. (B. 1812) | Maiden
1 Sir Peter 3
L (B. 1801)
(Dau. of Phoenomenoii
r a>
Master | Orville 8
/Beningbrough 7
3
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'HenryS -' (B' 17">
it> loin 1 JIiss Sophia
(B. 1815) | (R 18^5)
1 Evelina
^
/Stamford 30
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f Highflyer 13
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1 Grecian Princess
c3
21
, (B. 1807) "| Brunette
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\ Mayfly
&3 '
fOrville 8
| Beningbrough 7
PLL
'Erailius 28 | (B. 1799)
| Evelina
r<=iC
(B. 1820) "I Emily
(Stamford 30
« GO
\ (Ch. 1810)
1 Dau. of Whiskey
t--
TO
C$ rH '
'r-
| Whiskey 2
) Saltram 7
00
PnCq
Cressida I (B. 1789)
\ Calash
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, (B. 1807) | Y. Giantess
I (B. 1790)
1 Diomed 6
^3-
\ Giantess
<V
(Stripling 2
( Phcenomenon 2
X
'0ctavian8 1 (Ch. 1795)
\ Laura
a
-8
(Ch. 1807)"! Daughter of
I (1796-7)
1 Oberon 9
S
\ Dau. of Ranthos
w
St
(Shuttle 21
(Y. Marsko 12
js
Dau. of I (B. 1793)
\ Vauxhall Snap Mare
, (B. 1807; "| Zara
{ (B. 1801)
(Delpini 30
\ Flora
(Buzzard 3
'Selim 2 I (Ch. 1787)
1 Woodpecker /
1 Misfortune
M
.00 to
(Ch. 1802)"| Daughter of
(Alexander 13
30
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\ Dau. of Highflyer
-^ ^
( Williamson's
(Sir Peter 3
ii
Is
Bacchante | Ditto 7 (B. 1800) I Aretliusa
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I (B. 1791)
( Mercury 9
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p
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(B. 1808) "| Julia
{ (Br. 1799)
(Whiskey 2
3
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1 Soothsayer 15
(Sorcerer 6
<
£Q
Filagree | (Ch. 1808)
I Golden Locks
, (Ch. 1815)1 Web
I (B. 1808)
(Waxy 18
1 Penelope
H
(Golumpus 11
Xatton 2 1 (B. 1802)
( Gohanna 24

P
oo„
1 Catherine
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I (Ch. 1804)
(Timothy 23
r^
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( King Fergus 6
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fe
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I (B. 1804) "l Evelina
I (Br. 1791)
(Highflyer 13
gg
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\ Termagant
1—1
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(Don Quixote 13
"Amadis 5 J (Ch. 1784)
1 Eclipse 12
H
1 Grecian Princess
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(Br. 1807)"! Fanny
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(Sir Peter 3
3
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( Buzzard 3
as
Selima I (Ch. 1802)
\ Dau. of Alexander
I (B. 1810) "l Daughter of
( Pot-8-os 38
I (B. 1794)
37
\ Editha
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VOLTIGEUR (Br. 1847)
TEDDINGTCXN" (Ch. 1848)
Martha Lynn 2 (Br. 1837)
Orlando 13 (B. 1841)
Voltaire 12 (Br. 1826)
Miss Twickenham 2 (Ch. 1838)
w
Leda
(B. 1824)
Mulatto 5
(B. 1823)
Vulture
(Ch. 1833)
Touchstone 14
(Br. 1831)
Daughter of
(B. 1816)
Blacklock 2
(B. 1814)
Rockingham /
(B. 1830)
Electress
(Ch. 1819)
9?
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DANIEL O'ROURKE (Ch. 1849)
WEST AUSTRALIAN (Bay 1850)
Birdcatcher 11 (Ch. 1833)
Melbourne / (Br. 1834)
Forget-me-Not 9 (B. 1843)
Mowerina 7 (B. 1843)
Sir Hercules 2
(Bl. 1826)
Touchstone 14 Daughter of Humphrey Clinker 8 Oblivion
(Br. 1831)
              (B. 1825)              (B. 1822)             (B. 1831)
Hetmau I'latoff 2 Guiccioli
(B. 1836)
           (Ch. 1823)
Emma
(Ch. 1824)
2
2:
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to
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-ocr page 427-
DERBY WINNERS 1854 & 1855
Buzzard 3
I Woodpecker /
{Misfortune
| Alexander 13
| Dau. of Highflyer
| Sir Peter 3
\ Arethusa
I'Mercury 9
(Dau. of Herod
| Sir Peter 3
I Arethusa
/Whiskey 2
\ Y. Giantess
| Sorcerer 6
| Golden Locks
| Waxy 18
[ Penelope
I Pot-8-os 38
I Maria
I Trumpator 14
\ Prunella
| Buzzard 3
i Dau. of Alexander
/Highland Fling 12
1 Harriet
/Waxy 18
I Penelope
/Delpini 30
/Tipple Cyder
/ Don Quixote 13
\ Fanny
I Sir Peter 3
^ Pewet
lr-^
rCD jo*
GO
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pq
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V
fSelim 2 \ (Ch. 1787)
(Ch. 1802)"| Daughter of
/"Williamson's
Bacchante I Ditto 7 (B. 1800)
(Br. 1809)"! Daughter of
. I (B. 1791)
(Walton 7
PhantomS I (B. 1799)
(B. 1808) "| Julia
\ (Br. 1799)
| Soothsayer 15
Filagree I (Ch. 1808)
(Ch. 1816)1 Web
I (B. 1808)
, Whalebone J (By1790)
"opa
«
PS-
IS!
t>
O
P
/
(B.
1807) Y°$Tm
Eubens 2
Defiance | (Ch. 1805)
(Ch. 1816)"| Little Folly
I. (B. 1806)
"S
>>
--
o ^->
a
CO 1
,«J CO I
b(
%. l-H
-
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a
1£2 -4
Q
Sol
(CI
>,
T,                /'Whisker /
(Ch.l826)|^*»f
I'Amadis 5
Galatea | (Br. 1807)
(Br. 1816)1 Paulina
I (B. 1804)
„ , ., ("Sir Paul 8
Paulowitz ) (B 18()2)
/Sir Peter 3
I Pewet
/Highflyer 13
I Termagant
| Trumpator 14
\ Dau. of Mark Anthony
/Delpini 30
I Dau. of Y. Marske
/ Beningbrough 7
I Evelina
(Waxy 18
\ Sorcery-
/ Buzzard 3
(Dau. of Alexander
| Sir Harry 4
\ Dau. of Volunteer
(Buzzard 3
/ Dau. of Alexander
f Williamson's Ditto 7
{ Dau. of Mercury
/Walton 7
(Julia
/Soothsayer 15
\ Web
('Whitelock.2
1 Dau. of Coriander
| Juniper 9
| Dau. of Sorcerer
( Gouty 2
[ Dau. of Dungannon
(Sir Harry Dimsdale 19
( Dau. of Pipator
(Br. 1813)1 *
MCN
IN
a00 j
velina
(Br. 1791)
Paynator 18
Dau. of
(1812)
I (Br. 1791)
j Daughter of
I (Gr. 1805)
„, j /'Orville 8
Edmund J (B.1799)
rv ,ooi\ I Emmeline
(B. 1824) [ (g_ 1817)
CSelim 2
5.'
>
a
13,
Medora
(Ch. 1811
I (Ch. 1802)
I Daughter of
I (1803)
I'Selim 2
| (Ch. 1802)
) Bacchante
L (Br. 1809)
/'Phantom 6
(B. 1808)
K
3
CO
p
184
f"8S
fi
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Sultan 8
(B. 181
Cobweb
(B. 1821)
1 Filagree
I (Ch. 1815)
/'Blacklock 2
J (B. 1814)
| Daughter of
I (1817)
|'Y. Gouty 46
I (B. 1805)
| Grandiflora
I (B. 1810)
40
fMalek 3
(Ch. 1824)
.a I z^
Ed ba*fi
Bessy
(1815)
-ocr page 428-
DERBY WINNERS 1856 & 1857
) Buzzard 3
I Dau. of Alexander
/"Williamson's Ditto 7
\ Dau. of Mercury
/Walton 7
I Julia                 
/ Soothsayer 15
\ Web
/ Golumpus 11
I Lucy Gray
/ Beningbrough 7
I Evelina
/Don Quixote 13
I Fanny
I Selim .2
\ Dau. of Pot-8-os
( Dick Andrews 9
( Dau. of Gohanna
| Whisker /
\ Mandane
| Buzzard 3
I Gipsy
/ Election 5
\ Dau. of Highflyer
I Smolensko 18
( Louisa
| Ardrossan 2
\ Lady Eliza
J Waxy 18
(Penelope
/ Octavian 8
\ Dau. of Sancbo
("Selim 2
J (Ch. 1802)
I Bacchante
{ (Br. 1809)
j'Phantom 6
I (B. 1808)
I Filagree
I (Ch. 1815)
| Catton 2
I (B. 1809)
j Orvillina
l (B. 1804)
| Amadis 5
I (Br. 1807)
I Selima
I (B. 1810) .
[ Tramp 3
I (B. 1810)
I Daughter of
I (B. 1822)
('Bustard 10
I (B. 1801)
I Daughter of
I (1813)
| Jerry 15
I (Bl. 1821)
I Daughter of
I (Ch. 1817)
[Whisker /
I (B. 1812)
I Lady of the Tees
I (B.1822)
(Sultan 8
(B. 1816)
Cobweb
(B. 1821)
<D CO
<—> CO
T3 GO
2:
Sandbeck8
(B.1818)
Darioletta
I (Br. 1822)
Liverpool
11
(B.1828)
Otis
(B. 1820)
C cqpa
I Tomboy 8
j (B.1829)
it:
Tesane
I (B.1830)
I Trumpator 14
\ Y. Giantess
J Sir Peter 3
I Alexina
I Sir Peter 3
\ Hyale
| Tandem 17
\ Termagant
I Eclipse 12
I Grecian Princess
f Highflyer 13
\ Termagant
/Gohanna 24
\ Catherine
/ Paynator 18
I Dau. of St. George
(Sir Peter 3
\ Arethusa
/Pot-8-os 38
I Prunella
| Whalebone or Seymour 3
I Dau. of Gohanna
/Selim 2
| Canary Bird
/"Orville 8
t Emily
/Pericles 17
{ Dau. of Selim
/Waxy 18
I Penelope
f Young Gohanna 5
I Dau. of Sir Peter
'Sorcerer 6
(Bl. 1796)
Houghton Lass
{ (B. 1801)
Clinker 6
(Br. 1805)
Pewet
„ (B. 1786)
(Don Quixote 13
I (Ch. 1784)
| Evelina
I (Br. 1791)
(Golumpus 11
J (B. 1802)
| Daughter of
I (B. 1810)
(Walton 7
I (B. 1799)
| Parasol
I (B. 1800)
j Moses 5
I (B. 1819)
| Quadrille
{ (B. 1815)
(Emilius 28
I (B. 1820)
I Harriet
I (Bl. 1819)
(Whalebone /
I Br. (1807)
I Gift
\ (Or. 1818)
41
Comus 25
(Ch. 1809)
Clinkerina
(Br. 1812)
^ 'M
^00
pq
5
•Cervantes
S
i 8
I elk
titer
1825
| (B. 1806)
*q
to .
1
ra »—'
Dau. of
va
I (Br. 1818)
fsa^
'Partisan /
so
CM co
(B. 1811)
o °°
x
+= f-1
1—1
|
Pauline
I (B. 1826)
>.
|
(«m
'Plenipo-
n
._, c»
tentiary 6
z
-2 CO
(Ch. 1831)
-
g
so .
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1 C-
Myrrha
i-H
L (B.1830)'
-ocr page 429-
DERBY WINNERS 1858 & 1859
| Tramp 3
I (B. 1810)
| Mandane
I (Ch. 1800)
fMuley 6
I (B. 1810)
| Miss Stephenson
I (Ch. 1814)
j'Emilius 28
I (B. 1820)
l Cressida
C Dick Andrews 9
[ Dau. of Gohanna
| Pot-8-os 38
\ Y. Camilla
(Orville 8
^ Eleanor
(Scud or Sorcerer (i
| Dau. of Precipitate
( Orville 8
( Emily
/Whiskey 2
\Y. Giantess
(Beningbrough 7
( Evelina
(Buzzard 3
I Hornpipe
(Waxy 18
\ Penelope
(Selim 2
\ Maiden
| Orville 8
| Miss Sophia
( Alexander 13
(Brunette
(Joe Andrews 4
( Dau. of Highflyer
(Gohanna 24
[ Fraxinella
j Oastrel 2
( Miss Hap
(Sir Oliver 13
\ Scotilla
05
('Lottery 11
(Br. 1820)
Morgiana
I (Bl. 1820)
7
Priam 6
(B. 1827)
^ rr
J 2
I (B. 1807)
fOrville 8
Dau. of | (B. 1799)
(Br. 1815)1 Daughter of
I (B. 1800)
/'Whalebone /
Camel 24 I (B. 1807)
(B. 1822) | Daughter of
[ (B. 1812)
("Master Henry 3
Banter | (B. 1815)
, (Br. 1828)1 Boadicea
{ (B. 1807)
c
s
-A
<
'S„r
§£>
DC
uchs
(Br.
r-i
CO
o \
>
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ti
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a
O r-i -;
o
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>5
eg
Dick Andrews 9
(B. 1794)
Tramp 3
(B.1810)
| Daughter of
[ (B. 1803)
I Bustard 35
I (B. 1813)
| Olympia
I (B. 1815)
i Whalebone /
! (B. 1807)
| Daughter of
I (B. 1812)
(Master Henry 3
I (B.1815)
I Boadicea
I (B. 1807)
/'Paynator 18
J (Br. 1791)
| Daughter of
f Ardrossan 2
I (B. 1809)
I Lady Eliza
I (B. 1813)
fOrville 8
I (B. 1799)
I Eleanor
I (B. 1798)
I Dick Andrews 9
I (B. 1794)
| Spitfire
I (B. 1800)
f Smolensk o 18
Kite
(B. 1821)
/ Waxy 18
\ Penelope
(Selim 2
\ Maiden
fOrville 8
\ Miss Sophia
(Alexander 13
| Brunette
(Trumpator 14
I Dau. of Mark Anthony
(Beningbrough 7
(Jenny Mole
(John Bull 13
I Miss Whip
(Whitworth 2
\ Dau. of Spadille
(Beningbrough 7
| Evelina
(Whiskey .2
(Y. Giantess
(Joe Andrews 4
\ Dau. of Highflyer
( Beningbrough 7
\Dau. of Y. Sir Peter
(Sorcerer 6
\ Wowski
(Orville 8
\ Thomasina
| Golumpus 11
I Lucy Gray
(Sir Solomon 24
\ Dau. of AVoodpecker
3~(
,-,
2S
'X;
—■
00
r—.
hstoi
r. 18
U CQ
PQ
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Camel 24
(B. 1822)
Banter
I (Br. 1826)
h
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a
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-
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New
Bees;
(B. 1
Dr. Syntax
37
(Br. 1811)
Dau. of
(Ch. 1817)
ec
Muley 6
(B. 1810)
|1
Nancy
(B. 1813)
Jerry 15
(Bl. 1821)
Fair Char-
lotte
(B. 1819)
| (Bl. 1810)
1 Louisa
I (Br. 1813)
("Catton 2
I (B. 1809)
\ Henrietta
r- CO
I (B. 1807)
42
W,.
-ocr page 430-
DERBY WINNERS i860 & 1861
['Buzzard 3
j (Ch. 1787)
I Daughter of
(Peruvian 27
| (B. 1806)
| Musidora
I (B. 1804)
(Camel 24
I (B. 1822)
I Banter
I (Br. 1826)
(Filho-da-Puta 12
I (Br. 1812)
1 Finesse
I (B. 1815)
fOrville 8
I (B. 1799)
! Eleanor
I (B. 1798)
fDick Andrews 9
I (B. 1794)
| Spitfire
I (B. 1800)
('Tramp 3
J (B. 1810)
I Mandane
I (Ch. 1800)
(Cervantes 8
I (B. 1806)
\ Anticipation
I (Ch. 1802)
| Woodpecker /
(Misfortune
/Alexander 13
| Dau. of Highflyer
/Sir Peter 3
^ Dau. of Boudrow
/Meteor 7
\Maid of all Work
/Whalebone /
^Dau. of Selim
/ Master Henry 3
^ Boadicea
/ Haphazard 35
\Mrs. Barnet
/"Peruvian 27
(Violante
(Beningbrough 7
\ Evelina
/Whiskey 2
\Y. Giantess
f Joe Andrews 4
\ Dau. of Highflyer
f Beningbrough 7
I Dau. of Y. Sir Peter
| Dick Andrews 9
(Dau. of Gohanna
( Pot-8-os 38
\Y. Camilla
(Don Quixote 13
| Evelina
| Beningbrough 7
\ Expectation
1-
-r
•*
M
</;
- 1
^
*s
a
SB
V
CO
s
a
Castrel 2
(Ch. 1801)
Idalia
I (Ch. 1815)
Touch-
stone 14
(Br. 1831)
Decoy
(B. 1830)
In
•2 ^.fi
t
r-J
CO
cj ^^
SO
O 0
00
0 m
M CO
i—!
3 rH J
>
J5M
M
V S
r*5
Muley 6
(B. 1810)
Nancy
. (B. 1813)
! Lottery 11
(Br. 1820)
Dan. of
. (B. 1818)
j Sir Hercules 2
I (Bl. 1826)
I Guiccioli
I (Ch. 1823)
^Economist 36
I (B. 1825)
| Miss Pratt
I (B. 1825)
/'Sultan 8
J (B. 1816)
J Trampoline
I (Ch. 1825)
C Muley 6
I (B. 1810)
| Clare
I (B. 1824)
j'Waverley 2
I (Br. 1817)
| Castrellina
I (Br. 1823)
f Lottery 11
j (Br. 1820)
I Daughter of
I (B. 1818)
(Tramp 3
I (B. 1810)
I Daughter of
I (B. 1822)
(■Bustard 10
I (B. 1801)
| Daughter of
(1813)
| Whalebone /
\ Peri
/Bob Booty 23
\ Flight
(Whisker /
\ Floranthe
/Blacklock 2
\ Gadabout
( Selim 2
\ Bacchante
/Tramp 3
\Web
I Orville 8
| Eleanor
(Marmion 28
I Harpalice
) Whalebone /
| Margaretta
(Castrel 2
\ Dau. of Waxy
/ Tramp 3
\ Mandane
(Cervantes 8
\ Anticipation
(Dick Andrews 9
\ Dau. of Gohanna
/Whisker /
^ Mandane
(Buzzard 3
\ Gipsey
(Election 5
| Dau. of Highflyer
Bird-
catcher 11
(Ch. 1833)
Echidna
(B. 1838)
P3 j
r»1
Glencoe /
(Ch. 183i;
IS
Marpessa
, (B. 1830)
^ Ph
s
Q
>
f«!
f 4*»
« CO
8 CO
> rH..
O
M
QO
rT* r^
M
• S
^3.
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H
.
The
Saddler 3
(Br. 1828)
Rebecca
(B. 1831)
CO
Liverpool
11
(B. 1828)
Otis
■ (B. 1820)
» The
=
pedigree of " Windhottnd " is accepted.
43
-ocr page 431-
MACARONI (Bay 1860)
CARACTACUS (Bay 1859)
Jocose '
14 (B. 1843)
Pantaloon 17
(Ch. 1824)
Os= Ok
go oo r-
C 1—
Sweetmeat 21 (B. 1842)
r
Banter
(Br. 1826)
Lollypop
(Bl. 1836)
Gladiator 22
(Ch. 1833)
'Master
Henry 3
(B. 1815)
Boadicea
(B.1807)
[ (Br. 1825)
Starch or
Voltaire
12*
(Br. 1826)
Belinda
'Partisan 1
(B. 1811)
Pauline
, (B. 1826)
Defenceless 6 (B. 1844)
Kingston 12 (B. 1849)
w
Daughter of
(B. 1840)
Defence 5
(B. 1824)
Queen Anne
(B. 1843)
O                52
Venison 11
(Br. 1833)
o
^o
w 5*
OS,
f*1
M ©
~5.
K^j-r
as
— -
ss
CO
W c ^ S £5 td£,MgQc-S» WS £ e Q gr CSS tcM tdd-So td 3 CS£-
~i>
211
w
CO
IC
5 »S o " *-S
— -=~'Sn
8,-sor
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OBQ
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3
<i S3
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CD JT *4 H A Li I"!'
'SSs
oc
S='Ss,i5?,E
s 5! i
slip
grt&i-s:?
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ON
-ocr page 432-
DERBY WINNERS 1864 & 1865
I Whalebone /
I Peri
( Bob Booty 23
(.Flight
( Whisker /
t Floranthe
( Blacklock 2
( Gadabout
(Selim.2
( Bacchante
| Tramp 3
(Web
COrville. 8
^ Eleanor
( Marmion 28
(Harpalice
| Sorcerer 6
( Houghton Lass
(Clinker 6
( Pewet
I Don Quixote 13
(Evelina
(Golumpus 11
( Dau. of Paynator
(Walton 7
| Parasol
(Moses 5
\
Quadrille
6 ("Emilius 28
^Harriet
(Whalebone /
\ Gift
(Bird-
catcher
11
(Ch. 1833)
Echidna
(B. 1838)
(Sir Hercules 2
I (Bl. 1826)
"1 Guiccioli
l, (Ch. 1823)
/Economist 36
| (B. 1825)
| Miss Pratt
\ (B. 1825)
("Sultan 8
I (B. 1816)
| Trampoline
I (Ch. 1825)
(Muley 6
I (B. 1810)
*| Clare
v (B. 1824)
(Comus 25
I (Ch. 1809)
| Clinkerina
{ (Br. 1812)
I" Cervantes 8
I (B. 1806)
| Daughter of
[ (B. 1818)
('Partisan /
| (B. 1811)
"| Pauline
I (B. 1826)
('Plenipotentiary
I (Ch. 1831)
"I Myrrha
I (B. 1830)
^
r
».
Glencoe /
(Ch. 1831
II
V oK
Marpessa
, (B. 1830)
Humphrey
Clinker 8
(B. 1822)
Dau. of
(B. 1825)
Gladiator
22
(Ch. 1833)
Dau. of
(B. 1840)
-5
H
= cc
i-----1 TJ1
(^ GO
x
("Whalebone /
| (B. 1807)
| Defiance
(. (Ch. 1816)
{Reveller 19
I (B. 1815)
| Design
I (Ch. 1827)
?Catton 2
I (B. 1809)
| Daughter of
i (B. 1818)
("Whisker /
| (B. 1812)
I Anna Bella
I. (B. 1807)
(Walton 7
I (B. 1799)
I Parasol
I (B. 1800)
I Moses 5
| (B. 1819)
I Quadrille
I. (B. 1815)
("Lottery 11
I (Br. 1820)
I Morgiana
t (Bl. 1820) .
("Merman 9
J (Br. 1826)
1 Daughter of
[ (Br. 1822)
(Waxy 18
(Penelope
(Rubens 2
\Little Folly
(Comus 25
(Rosette
( Tramp 3
(Defiance
( Golumpus 11
(Lucy Gray
| Smolensko 18
\Lady Mary
| Waxy 18
(Penelope
(Shuttle 21
^Dau. of Drone
( Sir Peter 3
(Arethusa
(Pot-8-os38
( Prunella
(Whalebone or Seymour
(^Dau. of Gohanna
(Se!im.2
^Canary Bird
(Tramp 3
( Mandane
( Muley 6
(Miss Stephenson
(Whalebone /
( Mermaid
(Ardrossan 2
(Shepherdess
Defence 3
(B. 1824)
a 2.-
G T
Dau. of
I (Ch. 1834)
Royal Oak
5
(Br. 1823)
Ada
(B. 1824)
Ph P3
(Partisan /
(B. 1811)
Pauline
. (B. 1826)
Sheet
Anchor
(Br. 1832)
The War-
wick Mare
(Br. 1834
. CO
£ CO
l«fl
o
g CO
' The Emperor's " pedigree is accepted.
45
-ocr page 433-
DERBY WINNERS 1866 & 1867
(Sir Hercules 2
I (Bl. 1826)
j Guiccioli
l (Ch. 1823)
['Economist 36
I (B. 1825)
| Miss Pratt
I (B. 1825)
/'Sultan 8
I (B. 1816)
1 Trampoline
I (Ch. 1825)
/'Mnlev 6
I (B. 1810)
| Clare
I (B. 1824)
( Camel 24
J (B. 1822)
I Banter
I (Br. 1826)
/'Tomboy 8
I (B. 1829)
I Rocbana
I (Ch. 1831)
fSandbeck 8
I (B. 1818)
|Johanna
I (Ch. 1813)
("Plenipotentiary
I (Ch. 1831)
I Pawn Junior
I (Br. 1817)
I Whalebone /
I Peri
| Bob Booty 23
\ Flight
/Whisker /
\Floranthe
(Blacklock 2
\ Gadabout
(Selim 2
\ Bacchante
f Tramp 3
(Web
(Orville 8
V Eleanor
( Marmion 28
) Harpalice
(Whalebone /
\ Dau. of Selim
(Master Henry 3
\ Boadicea
I Jerry 15
| Dau. of Ardrossan
( Velocipede 3
\Miss Garforth
| Catton 2
(Orvillina
(Selim 2
\ Dau. of Skyscraper
(Emilius 28
(Harriet
( Waxy 18
I Pawn
/Bird-
catcher il
(Ch. 1833)
a f
~ -v
-~
X
J8S
Echidna
(B. 1838)
_
CO
b6 •—■.
^
if t^
0
P CO
O
O OO
CQ
e3 .
*W '
LPh^
Glencoe 1
(Ch. 1831)
Marpessa
(B. 1830)
^ t
<D CC 1
s •* 1
<M
O 00
10
Sbr-I -
=3 ,
£W
u
1—1 1
O
-
M
o
Touch-
stone 14
(Br. 1831)
Hoyden
(Bl. 1837)
.'Red-
shank 15
1 (B.1833)
Delhi
(Bl. 1838)
3^
o ^
;3«
I Whalebone /
I (B. 1807)
I Daughter of
I (B. 1812)
(Master Henry 3
J (B. 1815)
J Boadicea
I (B. 1807)
(Paynator 18
(Br. 1791)
| Waxy 18
( Penelope
/Selim 2
\ Maiden
f Orville 8
(Miss Sophia
("Alexander 13
(Brunette
/Trumpator 14
\ Dau. of Mark Anthony
/ Beningbrough 7
(Jenny Mole
/John Bull 13
(Miss Whip
| Whitworth 2
\Dau. of Spadille
( Paulowitz 8
(Dau. of Payiiator
/Edmund 12
I Medora
( Selim 2
\ Bacchante
| Camel 24
(Monimia
f Sultan 8
1 Cobweb
(Priam 6
| Octaviana
(Blacklock 2
\ Manuella
(Starch 4
(Cuirass
(Camel 24
(B.1822)
- rr
c '-
+3 rH
Banter
(. (Br. 1826)
rT>r. Syntax
37
(Br. 1811)
| Dau. of
(Ch. 1817)
| Daught
er of
Ardrossan 2
(B. 1809)
Lady Eliza
(B. 1813)
Cain 8
(B. 1822)
Margaret
(Br. 1831)
Sultan 8
(B. 1816)
Hester
. (Br. 1832)
/'Bay Middleton /
I (B. 1833)
j Crucifix
[ (B. 1837)
/'Belshazzar 11
I (Ch. 1830)
I Ellen
\ (B. 1831)
46
flon 4
\
(Br. 1835)
I Palmyra
(Br. 1838)
N
«S
Cowl 2
(B. 1842)
38
.2 35
Belle Dame
(Ch. 1839)
-ocr page 434-
DERBY WINNERS 1868 & 1869
(Lottery 11
I (Br. 1820)
"| Morgiana
{ (Bl. 1820
f Priam 6
I (B. 1827)
| Daughter of
{ (Br. 1815)
(Camel 24
j (B. 1822)
j Banter
{ (Br. 1826)
i Tramp 3
I (B. 1810)
| Kite
I (B. 1821)
i Birdcatclier 11
I (Ch. 1833)
I Echidna
I (B. 1838)
| Glencoe /
I (Ch. 1831)
| Marpessa
I (B. 1830)
i Camel 24
I (B. 1822)
I Banter
I (Br. 1826)
iLangar 6
I (Ch. 1817)
I Wire
{ (Br. 1811)
f Tramp 3
\ Mandane
/Muley 6
(Miss Stephenson
/Emilius 28
(Cressida
/ Orville 8
| Dau. of Buzzard
| Whalebone /
(Dau. ofSelim
/Master Henry 3
\ Boadicea
/ Dick Andrews 9
\ Dau. of Gohanna
/ Bustard 35
| Olympia
j Sir Hercules 2
\ Guiccioli
j Economist 36
i Miss Pratt
/ Sultan 8
\ Trampoline
/ Muley 6
\ Clare
/Whalebone /
\ Dau. of Selim
/ Master Henry 3
\ Boadicea
| Selim 2
| Dau. of Walton
| Waxy 18
\ Penelope
ra
Sheet
Anchor 12
(Br. 1832)
Miss Letty
(B. 1834)
Touch-
stone 14
(Br. 1831)
Lady Moore
Carew
{ (B. 1830)
The
Baron 24
(Ch. 1842)
Pocahontas
(B. 1837)
,n oo
^1-1
v
■a tj
"8«
fl CO
a -v
O CO
-
Ss.
o
c
~- OS
■?CO
,M .
o "
-^ o
-
j-Touoh-
■ I stone 14
I (Br. 1831)
Vat
(Br. 1826)
r
rj r-H
/'Camel 24
I (B. 1822)
I Banter
I (Br. 1826)
[Dr. Syntax 37
| (Br. 1811)
I Daughter of
i (Ch. 1817)
fOrville 8
(B. 1799)
i Emily
t (Ch. 1810)
/'Partisan /
I (B. 1811)
| Daughter of
I (Br. 1815)
fWalton 7
(B. 1799)
| Parasol
{ (B. 1800)
/Smolensko 18
I (Bl. 1810)
"j Jerboa
[ (B. 1803)
[Phantom 6
I (B. 1808)
I Web
[ (B. 1808)
fBlucher 4
1 (B. 1811)
Scheherazade
[ (Ch. 1810)
47
/ Whalebone /
( Dau. of Selim
/ Master Henry 3
| Boadicea
/'Paynator 18
| Dau. of Beningbrough
(Ardrossan 2
\ Lady Eliza
f Beningbrough 7
| Evelina
/ Stamford 30
( Dau. of Whiskey
/Walton 7
{ Parasol
/ Orville 8
\ Dau. of Buzzard
/'Sir Peter 3
(Arethusa
/ Pot-8-os 38
| Prunella
(Sorcerer 16
[ Wowski
/ Gohanna 24
( Camilla
| Walton 7
I Julia
/Waxy 18
| Penelope
/Waxy 18
) Pantina
| Selim 2
I Gipsy
Touch-
stone 14
(Br. 1831
Beeswing
(B. 1833)
0> CO
2 co
Emilius 28
(B. 1820)
Francesca
(Br. 1829)
Partisan /
(B. 1811)
Fawn
(Br. 1823)
Middleton
I
(Ch. 1822)
Favourite
(B. 1821)
p
T*
_
-*
SO
r,-~.
d
00
a
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tS <»
£S
-ocr page 435-
DERBY WINNERS 1870 & 1871
/'Whisker /
I (B. 1812)
1 Floranthe
I (B. 1818)
(Nabocklish 4
| (Ch. 1810)
| Miss Tooley
I (B. 1808)
('Sultan 8
I (B. 1816)
| Trampoline
[ (Ch. 1825)
("Muley 6
I (B. 1810)
Clare
I (B. 1824)
(Blacklock 2
I (B. 1814)
I Daughter of
I (B. 1816)
^Mulatto 5
| (B. 1823)
I Leda
\ (B. 1824)
(Partisan /
j (B. 1811)
| Fawn
I (Br. 1823)
(' Camel 24
I (B. 1822)
\ Margellina
1. (B. 1826)
I Waxy 18
( Penelope
( Octavian 8
(Caprice
( Kugantino ►}<
( Butterfly
(Teddy the Grinder 5
\ Lady Jane
("Selim 2
\ Bacchante
I Tramp 3
(Web
i Orville 8
\ Eleanor
I Marmion 28
( Harpalice
/ Whitelock 2
(Dau. of Coriander
j Phantom 6
(Dau. of Overton
( Catton 2
\ Desdemona
I Filho da Puta 12
\ Treasure
/Walton 7
( Parasol
( Smolensk o 18
(Jerboa
(Whalebone /
\ Dau. of Selim
| Whisker /
I Manuella
r
N-.
. ■**
r*>CO
c8 OO
iO
&^J
00
=3 .
—1
r*!^
SO
W
V
'Economist
36
(B.1825)
Fanny
Dawson
to.
ri
v
1
H
a
-—•>
*s -~--1
i~
a
-w t-
1
a ^ 1
0 00
-
3
B. 1
5?
IP* t
\
(Ch. 1823)
^Glencoe /
(Ch. 1831)
Marpessa
(B. 1830)
Voltaire 12
(Br. 1826)
Martha
Lynn
(Br. 1837)
|a
jW"
<- r
°-^
0
-^ CO 1
0
^3HA
60 .
p*
3»
Venison 11
(Br. 1833)
"Wedding
Day
I (B. 1842)
(Partisan /
I (B. 1811)
I Pauline
I. (B. 1826)
(Starch or
Voltaire 12 *
(Br. 1826)
j Belinda
i (Br. 1825)
(Lottery 11
(Walton 7
\ Parasol
f Moses 5
\
Quadrille
/Blacklock 2
I Dau. of Phantom
(Blacklock 2
\ Wagtail
(Tramp 3
( Mandane
(Waxy 18
(Penelope
("Camel 24
"(Banter
(Whisker /
(Gibside Fairy
/Whisker /
\ Floranthe
/ Nabocklish 4
\ Miss Tooley
| Sultan 8
\ Trampoline
| Muley 6
\ Clare
(Comus 25
\ Clinkerina
f Cervantes 8
\ Dau. of Golumpus
(Whalebone /
(Defiance
/Emilius 28
(Dau. of Whisker
Gladiator
22
(Ch. 1833)
Lollypop
(Bl. 1836)
Verulam /
(B.1833)
Jennala
(B. 1844)
Harkaway
2
(Ch. 1834)
Pocahontas
(B.1837)
Melbourne
(Br. 1834)
Emerald
(Ch. 1841)
I (Br. 1820)
"l Wire
I (Br. 1811)
C Touchstone 14
I (Br. 1831)
~\ Emma
I. (Ch. 1824)
('Economist 36
I (B. 1825)
"j Fanny Dawson
(. (Ch. 1823)
Glencoe /
(Ch. 1831)
I Marpessa
[ (B. 1830)
(Humphry Clinker
I 8 (B. 1822)
| Daughter of
I (B. 1825)
( Defence 5
| (B. 1824)
1 Emiliana
P '-
a
„e
apq
CO
~
{ (Ch. 1829)
The pedigree of " Voltaire " is accepted.
48
-ocr page 436-
DERBY WINNERS 1872 & 1873
Partisan /
( Walton 7
( Parasol
(Moses 5
{
Quadrille
(Blacklock 2
I Dau. of Phantom
( Blacklock 2
\ Wagtail
(Tramp 3
\ Mandane
(Waxy 18
( Penelope
(Camel 24
( Banter
/Whisker /
(Gibside Fairy
(Sir Hercules 2
I Guiccioli
( Economist 36
\ Miss Pratt
(Sultan 8
(Trampoline
(Muley 6
(Clare
fInterpreter 17
(Miss Newton
(Tramp 3
( Mandane
I Selim 2
(Dau. of Walton
( Clinker 6
I Bronze
Gladiator I
(Ch
1833;
I Pauline
I (B. 1826)
(Starch 4 * or
T ,i                 Voltaire 12
Lollypop J ,g .
(B1-1836)|BeHnda86)
[ (Br. 1825)
(Lottery 11
9 "
'Verulam /
(B. 1833)
I (Br. 1820)
I Wire
(. (Br. 1811)
/"Touchstone 14
I (Br. 1831)
j Emma
I (Ch. 1824)
/'Birdcatcher 11
(Ch. 1833)
Jennala
I (B. 1844
fThe
M
Echidna
I (Ch. 1842) [l (B 1M8)
|                    /"Glencoe /
Pocahontas I (Ch. 1831)
I (B. 1837) 1 Marpessa
{ (B. 1830)
„ i,          (Falcon 8
o
M
/Card ham
(Gr. 1822)
11
4) [ (Ba 1819)
/"Langar
! (Ch. 1817)
| Dau. of
(Br. 1837^1 Daughter of
I (Br. 1816)
( Whalebone /
\Peri
| Bob Booty 23
\ Flight
/ Whisker /
( Floranthe
/Blacklock 2
(Gadabout
(Selim 2
I Bacchante
(Tramp 3
\Web
(Orville 8
( Eleanor
(Marmion 28
I Havpalice
/Camel 24j
( Banter
(Langar 6
\ Kite
f Humphry Clinker 8
( Medora
(Election 5
( Dau. of Stamford
) Blacklock 2
(Miss Newton
f Picton 6
(Dau. of Selim
/ Humphry Clinker 8
( Dau. of Cervantes
(Phantom 6
( Elizabeth
2e
Bird-
/"Sir Hercules .2
. (Bl. 1826)
fCh 1833)1 Guicci0H
(Ui. 1833) ( (ck 1823)
/"Economist 36
Echidna | (B. 1825)
(B. 1838) | Miss Pratt
I (B. 1825)
(Sultan 8
Glencoe / | (B. 1816)
(Ch. 1831)1 Trampoline
i (Ch. 1825)
("Muley 6
Marpessa I (B. 1810)
(B. 1830)1 Clare
I (B. 1824)
/l—(
.
©
n i
=3^1
M
l^1^
o
5 °>
o
O oo J
-^*
ni
J^ »__- I
N
a oo
O -*tfi
|
tCr-H
QO
^3««
T30
j&
oj •■—
o
H
■•—-
/"Touchstone 14
("Orlando 13 | (Br. 1831)
(B. 1841) 1 Vulture
I (Ch. 1833)
Miss
            /"Rockingham /
Twicken- J (B. 1830)
ham
         | Electress
(Ch. 1838) { (Ch. 1819)
~
;_
w
0
ifl
_
oo .
,4
fH
if
Dau
CQ
/"Buzzard 8
Ratan 9 | (B. 1821)
(Ch. 1841)1 Daughter of
I (B. 1831)
/Melbourne /
Dau. of I (Br. 1834)
(Br. 1844)"| Lisbeth
{ (B. 1828)
49
-ocr page 437-
DERBY WINNERS 1874 & 1875
„ ,          (Camel 24
TT .a (B. 1822)
(RH*^ Banter
(Bi. 1831) ^ (Br_ lg26)
j'Langar 6
Vulture I (Ch. 1817)
(Ch. 1833)1 Kite
I (B. 1821)
f Waxy 18
Whisker / I (B. 1790)
(B. 1812)1 Penelope
I (B. 1798)
fOctavian 8
Garcia
         I (Ch. 1807)
(Br. 1813)1 Daughter of
I (B. 1806)
("Birdcatcher 11
fThe Baron | (Ch. 1833)
f Whalebone /
(Dau. of Selim
( Master Henry 3
(Boadicea
/Selim 2
\
Dau. of Walton
/Bustard 35
(Olympia
/ Pot-8-os 38
\ Maria
| Trumpator 14
| Prunella
/Stripling 2
\
Dau. of Oberon
f Shuttle 21
\ Katherine
f Sir Hercules 2
\
Guiccioli
f Economist 36
r
CO
^p
0 ■*
r-
ns co
*Q
a ,-H
a-
rt .
i-H
tips
^
0 —
U
2
joo
c
1—1
Pi
H-
Q
Si
W
c-
o
-3
<o (0,
00 '
00
(Ch. 1842) I(GPocahontas |(B. 1837)1 Ml
\ Miss Pratt
/Sultan 8
( Trampoline
/Muley 6
\ Clare
Humphry Clinker/Comus 25
\Clinkerina
f Cervantes 8
V^;
'
V
So
c tfi
0 oo
M"".
ceq
^H
k,
Melbourne
J
(Br. 1834) |j
(B. 1825)
Dau. ofGolumpus
/Blacklock 2
/Dau. of Juniper
/"Velocipede 3
Lady Sarah I
(Ch. 1825)
fa 1
(Ch. 1841)1 Lady Moore Carew f Tramp 3
I (B. 1830)
           1 Kite
I'Whitelock 2
/Dau. of Coriander
/Phantom 6
(Dau. of Overton
fCatton 2
\ Desdemona
/Filho da Puta 12
/Treasure
f Whalebone /
/Peri
/Bob Booty 23
(Flight
f Lottery 11
/ Handmaiden
/Blacklock 2
/Madame Vestri.s
| Selim 2
\ Bacchante
/ Phantom 6
( Filagree
/Catton 2
(Orvillina
/Amadis S
\ Selima
/Whitelock 2
\ Dau. of Coriander
/ Phantom 6
| Dau. of Overton
f Whiskey 2
/Jenny Spinner
/Sorcerer 6
/Virgin
/'Blacklock 2
Voltaire 12 | (B. 1814)
* (Br. 1826)1 Daughter of
I (B. 1816)
) M_artha [Mu]
^1837)1^ 1824)
ffi
m<
frH
>*
<D
efl
+J
del
■y co
CD
>
g^.
■ Q
£*
«~
■R' A            rSir Hercules 2
catcher 11 ] <?L"*>
(Ch.l833)(«—23)
Nan            f1
(Bl. 1831)
Darrell
(Gr. 1844) (^
ell
(Gr. 1831)
R                /"Sultan 8
Middleton- (,B.1816)
/(B.1833)^g21)
("Sandbeck 8
Barbelle | (B. 1818)
(B. 1836"! 1 Darioletta
I (Br. 1822)
(Blacklock 2
yoltairel2| (B. 1814)
(Br. 1826)1 Daughter of
(B. 1816)
i—i
Ph
c
►J
<
-
-m
I
O oo
("Juniper 9
| (Ch. 1805)
1 Daughter of
\ (Br. 1810)
50
Dau. of
(1817)
-ocr page 438-
DERBY WINNERS 1876 & 1877
f Cain 8
I (B. 1822)
( Paulowitz 8
( Dau. of Paynator
( Edmund 12
/ Medora
' /Sultan 8
( Cobweb
f Malek 3
\ Bessy
( Dick Andrews 9
(Dau. of Gohanna
f Paynator 18
| Dau. of Beningbrough
I Orville 8
| Emmeline
( Soothsayer 15
| Berenice
/ Sir Hercules 2
( Guiccioli
/ Economist 36
t Miss Pratt
/Sultan 8
(Trampoline
(Muley 6
/Glare
(Whalebone /
/Peri
(Bob Booty 23
/Flight
j Jerry 15
[Dau. of Ardrossan
/Prime Minister 12
( Maniac
Ion 4
(Br. 1835)1 Margaret
(Br. 1831)
(■Bay Middleton
I (B.1833)
Ellen
Middleton-, ,, ,
(B,1846)|M^1831)
f ft
<v
•—
OJ
O ■—* i
a
. »-h
&
0
Is J
0
en
&0 •
3 —^
-
Little Red
Rover 37
(Ch. 1827
Eclat
j Tramp 3
I (B. 1810)
i Miss Syntax
I (Br. 1814)
f Edmund 12
(B. 1824)
(Br. 1830)1 Squib
{ (Ch. 1820)
m, t>         /'Birdcatcher 11
The Baron ) (Ch lg33)
(Ch. 1842)}™- g)
fGlencoe /
Pocahontas! (Ch. 1831)
(B. 1837) 1 Marpessa
(B. 1830)
,«;
$u
fSir Hercules 2
I (Bl. 1826)
I Guiccioli
I (Ch. 1823)
[Tomboy 8
(B. 1829)
Bird-
catcher 11
(Ch. 1833)
Moonbeam
r. ??
- x
60
3 A
(Ch. 1838)1 Lunatic
I (B. 1818)
„, „         i'Birdcatchei' 11
J Sir Hercules ^
/ Guiccioli
/Economist 36
[Miss Pratt
(Sultan 8
( Trampoline
(Miiley 6
( Clare
er (Comus 25
I Clinkerina
/ Cervantes 8
(Dau. of Golumpus
f Partisan /
( Pauline
/ Plenipotentiary 6
(Myrrha
(Walton 7
\ Parasol
I Smolensko 18
(Jerboa
/Royal Oak 5
(Dau. of Orville
(Octavian 8
/Dau. of Shuttle
/Whalebone /
/Peri
TBob Booty 23
/Flight
(Camel 24 ■
(Banter
/ Reveller 19
( Morisca
r«-
^-s
_, Os
rH
,—t i*i
« oo
OD
|£ T—1
*~*
M . 1
°-=
-So
z
oa-(,
rThe Baron | (Qh_ lg33)
(Ch.l842)(™-8)
fGlencoe /
Pocahontas | (Ch. 1831)
(B. 1837) 1 Marpessa
SJ
"2
>>
+3
<1
3sr
0 ^
,x
'3
•*■""
3
V.
v.
I (B. 1830)
r Melbourne fHumPhry Clink
rmeiDourne | 8
(j lg22)
(B,1834)f^|5f
Queen
Mary
(B. 1843)
Gladiator 22
(Ch. 1833)
Daughter of
(B. 1840)
a.
o
(Partisan /
I (B. 1811)
Fawn
{ (Br. 1823)
fSlane 25
I (B. 1833)
rs;
Venison 11(Br. 1833)1
Queen
Anne
I Garcia
(B;"1843) IV 1823)
Rird            f Sir Hercules 2
catcher 11-fl(B1-. I826)
(Ch.1833)^—g23)
(B-1844UZiSl835)
51
00
To
1 =
-ocr page 439-
DERBY WINNERS 1878 & 1879
( Voltaire 12
I (B. 1826)
| Martha Lynn
{ (Br. 1837)
I Birdcatcher 11
I (Ch. 1833)
j Nan Darrell
I. (Gr. 1844)
(Touchstone 14
I (Br. 1831)
| Vulture
I (Ch. 1833)
I'Emilius 28
I (B. 1820)
I Mustard
(. (Ch. 1824)
(Humphry Clinker
| 8 (B. 1822)
I Daughter of
I. (B. 1825)
I Touchstone 14
I (Br. 1831)
I Emma
I (Ch. 1824)
(Castrel 2
| (Ch. 1801)
l Idalia
I (Ch. 1815)
(Glencoe /
I (Ch. 1831)
I Frolicsome
I (B. 1824)
I Blaekloek 2
t Dau. of Phantom
(Mulatto 5
\ Leda
f Sir Hercules 2
y Guiccioli
| Inheritor 4
\Nell
(Camel 24
\ Banter
(Langar 6
\ Kite
|0rville8
\ Emily
(Merlin 8
\ Morel
(Comus 25
( Clinkerina
I Cervantes 8
I, Dau. of Golumpus
/Camel 24
(Banter
(Whisker/
(Gibside Fairy
(Buzzard 3
\ Dau. of Alexander
| Peruvian 27
I Musidora
(Sultan 8
\ Trampoline
(Frolic 19
I Dau. of Stamford
Voltigeur2
(Br. 1847)
Mrs. Ridg-
way
^ (B.1849)
-22
fi
r
03 (M
0
.2 «
0
a 00
p<
Cd .-1 "^
02
lis
^
Alarm 19,
or Orlando*
13(B.1841)
Preserve
L (Cli. 1832)'
Melbourne
(Br. 1834)
Mowerina
(B. 1843)'
Pantaloon
17
(Ch. 1824)
Dau. of
(B.1837)
. =
11
^OB
( Partisan /
\ Pauline
J Starch or Voltaire 12
( Belinda
| Lottery 11
/Wire
(Touchstone 14
( Emma
(Economist 36
\ Fanny Dawson
/ Glencoe /
\ Marpessa
(Humphry Clinker 8
| Dau. of Cervantes
(Defence 5
\ Emiliana
( Birdcatcher 11
^ Echidna
(Glencoe /
\ Marpessa
/The Saddler 3
( Rebecca
(Liverpool 11
\Otis
(Tramp 3
/Dau. of Whisker
(Bustard 10
\Dau. of Election
(Partisan /
\ Pauline
/Plenipotentiary 6
( Myrrna
t " Lanercost" accepted.
(Gladiator 22
I (Ch. 1833)
/-Sweetmeat
:[ 21
i (Br. 1842)
r*~
Lollypop
I (Bl. 1836)
(Verulam /
W
Gruyere
(B. 1851)
f King Tom
3
J (B. 1833)
I Jennala
I (B. 1844)
(Harkaway 2
I (Ch. 1834)
o
CO
I a
. \ Pocahontas
(B. 1851) [ (B_ lg37)
,r ,            (Melbourne /
Mentmore | (Rr_ lg34)
41
^pa
Lass
(B.
., 1 Emerald
185°) { (Ch. 1841)
(The Baron 24
Rataplan 3 I (Ch. 1842)
(Ch. 1850)'| Pocahontas
>
-
I (B. 1837)
r;
(The Provost 4
Hybla         | (Br. 1836)
(B. 1846) 1 Otisina
l (Br. 1837)
^A
"
■n
--r
a
<a
J
o ^p
>.
OCOJ
a
►-S
^a
Mango / or (Liverpool 11
Lanercost | (B. 1828)
3 -i-       1 Otis
(Br. 1835) I (B. 1820)
r,                (Gladiator 22
<>een         | (Ch. 1833)
IB IMS) 1 Daughter of
(B. 1843) { (B_ lg40)
* The pedigree of " Orlando " is accepted.
52
-ocr page 440-
DERBY WINNERS 1880 & 1881
fBirdcatcher 11
I (Ch. 1833)
I Echidna
I (Br. 1838)
(Glencoe /
I (Ch. 1831)
j Marpessa
I (B. 1830)
/'Orlando 13
I (B. 1841)
| Miss Twickenham
{ (Ch. 1838)
i Ratan 9
I (Ch. 1841)
| Daughter of
I (Br. 1844)
(Pantaloon 17
I (Ch. 1824)
I Phryne
I (Br. 1840)
I Muley Moloch 9
I (B. 1830)
| Rebecca
I (B. 1831)
I Sandbeck 8
J (B. 1818)
I Johanna
{ (Ch. 1813)
i Plenipotentiary 6
j (Ch. 1831)
j Pawn Junior
I (Br. 1817)
/'Whalebone /
I (Br. 1807)
| Peri
I (B. 1822)
(Bob Booty 23
I (Ch. 1804)
| Flight
I (Ch. 1809)
f Castrel 2
| (Ch. 1801)
I Idalia
I (Ch. 1815)
("Laurel 21
I (Br. 1824)
| Maid of Honor
I (Br. 1829)
(Melbourne /
I (Br. 1834)
J Mowerina
{ (B. 1843)
|'Y. Emilius 6
I (B. 1833)
1 Persian
I (B. 1829)
j'Tinioleon 4"
| (Ch. 1814)
) Daughter of
I (Ch. 1814)
j'Glencoe / (imp.
(Ch. 1831)
(Sir Hercules 2
{ Guiccioli
f Economist 36
\Miss Pratt
f Sultan 8
\ Trampoline
( Muley 6
\ Clare
/Touchstone 14
\ Vulture
(Rockingham /
(Electress
/ Buzzard 8
\ Dau. of Picton
/ Melbourne /
| Lisbeth
/ Castrel 2
\ Idalia
| Touchstone 14
(Decoy
/Muley 6
I Xancv
/Lottery 11
I Dau. of Cervantes
/ Catton 2
\ Orvillina
(Selim 2
\ Dau. of Skyscraper
| Emilius 28
I Harriet
| Waxv 18
I Pawn
/Waxy 18
I Penelope
/ Wanderer 11
\ Thalestris
/ Chanticleer 3
\Ierne
/Escape »f«
\ Young Heroine
| Buzzard 3
\ Dau. of Alexander
/ Peruvian 27
[ Musidora
| Blacklock 2
\ Wagtail
(Champion 13
( Etiquette
(Humphry Clinker 8
(Dau. of Cervantes
(Touchstone 14
/ Emma
(Emilius 28
\ Shovel er
( Whisker /
| Variety
/Sir Archy 13
I Dau. of imp. Saltram
/Ball's Florizel ^
The Baron
24
(Ch. 1842)
Pocahontas
■ (B. 1837)
I _
o
«5
r
(
c3
■d 0
I:
one
igol
186
00
r-4
W
Jd
c
Tedding-
ton 2
(Ch. 1848)
Sister to
Singapore
(B. 1852)
M
c
^„
Q
X
to
3 00
H
00
X.
go
ri
u
EH
'Melbourne
/ or Wind ■
hound 3*
(Br. 1847)
Alice
Hawthorn
(B. 1838)
CO
0
Sqrf
0 ■*
tf,
as!
c
su1
.SH
K I
Redshank
15
(B. 1833)
Delhi
(Bl. 1838)
Sir
Hercules .2
(Bl. 1826)
Guiccioli
(Ch. 1823)
II
S>-H
B
r«
^_
<
TH
r
d
M
'°~l
0
Fh '— 1
T3
+J
g -*
0
iO
+^ CO I
JH
■° --1
pq
*S
SO .
S
a..~
S?
c3
v4~
1-
:
1—1 \_
Pantaloon
17
(B. 1824)
Daphne
(Br. 1837)'
West
Australian
7
(B. 1850)
Emilia
(B. 1840)
l~-
S
_^ <*>
r-n m
,—,
■H =0
PC
667
§ -
a
0-—
O
C
§4
c-
'> 1
<S ,
§ e=
Boston 40
(Ch. 1833)
II
\ Dau. of imp
/Sultan 8
(Trampoline
/Mameluke 3
Alderman
Magnolia
(Ch. 1841)
j Myrtle (m
p.)
\ Bobadilla
The pedigree of " Windhonnd " is accepted.
53
-ocr page 441-
DERBY WINNERS 1882 & 1883
/Whalebone /
(Dau. of Selim
("Master Henry 3
(Boadicea
(Paynator 18
(Dan. of Beningbrough
( Ardrossan 2
\
Lady Eliza
| Cain 8
\ Margaret
/Sultan 8
| Hester
/ Bay Middleton /
(Crucifix
(Belshazzar 11
\ Ellen
/Touchstone 14
( Verbena
f Catton 2
\
Dau. of Orville
| Castrel 2
\
Idalia
/Filho da Puta 12
( Finesse
( Birdcatcher 11
I Echidna
( Glencoe /
I Marpessa
(Camel 24
\ Banter
ew (Tramp 3
/Kite
'
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(Cain 8
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/ Sultan 8
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| Bay Middleton /
{ Crucifix
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/Camel 24
( Banter
/ Langar 6
\ Kite
(Waxy 18
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( Octavian 8
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St. Editha 16 (B. 1873)
Sterling 12 (B. 1868)
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Oxford 12
(Ch. 1857)
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DERBY WINNERS 1885 & 1886
[The Baron 24
J (Ch. 1842)
(Birdcatcher 11
\ Echidna
(Glencoe /
\ Marpessa
/ Touchstone 14
\ Beeswing
(Pyrrhus the First 3
\ Wiasma
(Gladiator 22
1^ Lollypop
f Birdcatcher 11
i Brandy Bet
Priam 6
Dau. of Bustard
/■Stockwell
| (Ch. 1849) I
Pocahont;
a oc
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(B. 1837)
("Newminster 8
Edith
          | (B. 1848)
(Br. 1857) "I Deidamia
M
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s
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s
^ £
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                ("Sweetmeat 21
Pudding 3 ,
(Br. 1857) I
(Br. 1842)
oimmalla
(Ch. 1843)
fCrozier 2, or Dey
of Algiers 4
(B. 1836)
Cacique
(1848)
Judy Go
(Ch. 1854)
("Palinurus 22
\Dau. of Y. Blacklock
/Camel 24
[ Banter
(Pantaloon 17
\ Rebecca
(Muley 6
\ Laeerta
f Bay Middleton /
(Camilla
I Pantaloon 17
j Phryne
/Muley Moloch 9
\Rebecca
(The Baron 24
\ Pocahontas
(Touchstone 14
\ Beeswing
Lord of the
Touchstone 14
c
sles 4 -! (Br' 1831)
iv. ifiKoi I Fair Helen
(B. 1852) [ (ch_ 1843)
I                    /"The Little Known
Miss Ann | 11 (B. 1836)
v (B. 1846)1 Bay Missy
[ (B. 1842)
SO.l
f
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1864
-
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J>
Melbourne or
Thornian-
         Windhound 3
by 4 \ (Br. 1847)
(Ch. 1857) Alice Hawthorn
^ (B. 1838)
('Stockwell 3
Woodbine ! (Ch. 1849)
(B. 1860)"| Honeysuckle
I (Br. 1851)
f Birdcatcher 11 «■
\ Echidna
/Glencoe /
\ Marpessa
/"Orlando 13
\Miss Twickenham
(Ratan 9
\ Dau. of Melbourne /
I Pantaloon 17
1 Phryne
f Muley Moloch 9
(Rebecca
(Sandbeck 8
(Johanna
/Plenipotentiary 6
| Pawn Junior
(Partisan /
\ Pauline
(Starch or Voltaire 12
^Belinda
/CastrelJ
(Idalia
f Master Henry 3
\ Boadicea
| Brutandorf 11
\ Primette
(Mulatto 5
\ Linda
(Sir Hercules 2
\ Guiccioli
/Clarion 6
(Annette
The Baron 24
(Ch. 1842)
Stockwell I
>1 .
3            \
irh 1suoi I Pocahontas
(Ch. 1849) ^ (B_ 1837)
("Teddington 2
Marigold | (Ch. 1848)
(Ch. 1860)1 Sis. to Singapore
(B. 1852)
Melbourne or
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(Br. 1860)1 Agnes
1. (Br. 1844)
56
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DERBY WINNERS 1887 & 1888
^Touchstone 14
I (Br. 1831)
] Beeswing
(. (B. 1833)
j" Melbourne /
I (Br. 1834)
I Volley
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f Rataplan 3
I (Ch. 1850)
I Hvbla
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I Mango or
Lanereost 3
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I Queen Mary
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/ The Baron 24
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| Pocahontas
I (B. 1837)
fGladiator 22
J (Ch. 1833)
| Daughter of
(. (B. 1840)
flthuriel 2
| (Br. 1841)
| Miss Bowe
I (B. 1834)
("Sir Hercules 2
J (Bl. 1826)
"I Echo
I (B. 1828)
/Camel 24
( Banter
/Dr. Syntax 37
( Dau. of Ardrossan
/"Humphry Clinker 8
\Dau. of Cervantes
f Voltaire 12
( Martha Lynn
/The Baron 24
( Pocahontas
/The Provost 4
\
Otisina
J Liverpool 11
I Otis
/Gladiator 22
(Dau. of Plenipotentiary
f Birdcatcher 11
(Echidna
fGlencoe /
I Marpessa
/Partisan /
( Pauline
(Plenipotentiary 6
( Myrrha
/Touchstone 14
(Verbena
/ Catton 2
(Dau. of Orville
/Whalebone /
\ Peri
/ Emilius 28
(Dau. of Scud or Pioneer
"fCamel 24
( Banter
/Dr. Syntax 37
(Dau. of Ardrossan
/Humphry Clinker 8
\ Dau. of Cervantes
/ Voltaire 12
(Martha Lynn
(The Baron 24
\ Pocahontas
/The Provost 4
(Otisina
J Liverpool 11
I Otis
/Gladiator 22
(Dau. of Plenipotentiary
/Voltaire 12
(Martha Lynn
I Birdcatcher 11
(Nan Darrell
New-
minster 8
(B. 1848)
The Slave
(B.1852)
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(Ch. 1858)
Haricot
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Br. 1854)"| Mrs- Ridgway
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J Pantaloon 17
I Phryne
/Muley Moloch 9
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1 Pocahontas
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(Ch. 1857) Alice Hawthorn
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fStockwell 3
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(B. 1860) 1 Honeysuckle
I (Br. 1851)
57
11
-ocr page 445-
~7
DERBY WINNERS 1889 & 1890
f Blackloek 2
\ Dau. of Phantom
(Mulatto 5
(Leda
(Sir Hercules 2
\ Guiccioli
I Inheritor 4
\ Nell
(Sultan 8
\, Cobweb
(Sandbeck 8
(Darioletta
(Blackloek^
( Dau. of Phantom
/Juniper 9
( Dau. of Sorcerer
/ Camel 24
( Banter
/Pantaloon 17
( Rebecca
/ Muley 6
( Lacerta
) Bay Middleton /
I Camilla
/ Birdcatcher 11
| Echidna
j Glencoe /
I Marpessa
( Humphry Clinker 8
I Dau. of Cervantes
| Touchstone 14
(Emma,
(Birdcatcher 11
/Echidna
( Glencoe /
( Marpessa
/Pantaloon 17
\ Pasquinade
(St. Luke 2
y Eleetress
(Touchstone 14
/ Vulture
/Whisker /
( Garcia
/Epirns 13
\ Fortress
/Sultan 8
\ Hester
(Touchstone 14
/Beeswing
f Melbourne /
/Volley
/ The Baron 24
/ Pocahontas
/Birdcatcher 11
\ Moonbeam
/Birdcatcher 11
( Echidna
/Glencoe /
( Marpessa
( Tramp or Waverley 2
/ Dau. of Comus
f Priam 6
\ Arachne
[ Voltaire 12
I (B. 1826)
j Martha Lynn
l (Br. 1837)
(Birdcatcher 11
I (Ch. 1833)
I Nan Darrell
I (B. 1840)
/'Bay Middleton /
I (B. 1833)
I Barbelle
V. (B. 1836)
(Voltaire 12
I (B.1826)
j Velocipede's Dam
I (B. 1817)
I Touchstone 14
I (Br. 1831)
I Fair Helen
{ (Ch. 1843)
I The Little Known
| 11 (B. 1836)
i Bay Missy
l (B. 1842)
(The Baron 24
I (Ch. 1842)
I Pocahontas
I (B. 1837)
(Melbourne /
I (Br. 1834)
I Mowerina
I (B. 1843)
(The Baron 24
I (Ch. 1842)
j Pocahontas
I (B. 1837)
(The Libel 14
I (Br. 1842)
1 Splitvote
I (Ch. 1841)
COrlando 13
j (B. 1841)
| Malibran
I (Ch. 1830)
(Pyrrlius the First
I 3 (Ch. 1843)
I Palmyra
I (Br. 1838)
(Newminster 8
| (B. 1848)
"j The Slave
I (B. 1852)
("Rataplan 3
J (Ch. 1850)
I Manganese
I (Ch. 1853)
f The Baron 24
I (Ch. 1842)
| Pocahontas
I (B. 1837)
f Don John 2
I (B. 1835)
I Industry
I (Br. 1835)
58
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.Lord of the
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Miss Ann
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SIR HUGO (Ch. 1889)
COMMON (Brown 1888)
Manoeuvre 19 (Ch. 1874)
Isonomy 19 (B. 1875)
Wisdom 7 (B. 1873)
Thistle 4 (B. 1875)
Quick March
(B. 1863)
Lord Clifden 2
(B. 1860)
Aline
(Oh. 1862)
Blinkhoolie 10
(B. 1864)
Sterling 12
(B. 1868)
The Flower Safety Scottish Chief 12 Isola Bella
(B. 1860)
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DERBY WINNERS 1893 & 1894
(Sir Hercules 2
[Guiccioli
(Plenipotentiary 6
\My Dear
(Touchstone 14
\ Decoy
/Melbourne /
^Secret
(Birdcatcher 11
\ Echidna
( Glencoe /
tMarpessa
(Faugh-a-Ballagh 11
\Espoir
/ The Prime Warden 17
/Miss Whinney
(Touchstone 14
I Beeswing
(Melbourne /
I Volley
/The Baron 24
\ Pocahontas
(Birdcatcher 11
^ Moonbeam
(Touchstone 14
( Vulture
(Priam 6
[ Arachne
| Bay Middleton /
I Barbelle
I Rubini 3
^ Sweetbriar
(Camel 24
I Banter
(Dr. Syntax 37
\ Dau. of Ardrossan
(Humphry Clinker 8
I Dau. of Cervantes
(Voltaire 12
t Martha Lynn
(The Baron 24
( Pocahontas
/The Provost 4
\
Otisina
J Liverpool 11
| Otis
(Gladiator 22
\ Dau. of Plenipotentiary
/Sheet Anchor 12
\ Miss Letty
(Touchstone 14
/Lady Moore Carew
( Bay Middleton /
1 Crucifix
(Defence 5
\ Folly
(The Baron 24
/ Pocahontas
(Melbourne /
\ Queen Mary
(Touchstone 14
| Hoyden
(Redshank 15
/Delhi
( Birdcatcher 11
I (Ch. 1833)
j Honey Dear
L (B. 1844)
(Flatcatcher 3
j (B. 1845)
| Silence
I (B. 1848)
(The Baron 24
I (Ch. 1842)
| Pocahontas
I (B. 1837)
(Ethelbert 12
I (Ch. 1850)
I Bassishaw
{ (B. 1847)
(Newminster 8
I (B. 1848)
I The Slave
I (B. 1852)
( Rataplan 3
I (Ch. 1850)
I Manganese
(. (Ch. 1853)
i'Orlando 13
j (B. 1841)
j Industry
(Br. 1835)
The Flying
Dutchman 3
(B. 1846)
Red Rose
(B. 1836)
('Touchstone 14
I (Br. 1831)
I Beeswing
I (B. 1833)
( Melbourne /
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I Volley
I (B. 1845)
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Chevalier
d' Indus-
trie 2
(Ch. 1854)
Dutch-
man's
Daughter
(B. 1854)
New-
r <s>
ifd
3? i
_■
i
„-
-
-.
"—-'
c
1
h-l
minster 8
(B. 1848)
The Slave
(B. 1852)
CM      -3 T-4
(Kettle-
drum 3
(Ch. 1858)
1850)
(Ch
Hybla
(B. 1846)
Mango, or Laner
cost 3
(Br. 1835)
Queen Mary
(B. 1843)
( Weatherbit 12
I (Br. 1842)
I Mendicant
I (Br. 1843)
(Cowl 2
I (B. 1842)
I Diversion
I. (Ch. 1838)
(Stoekwell 3
I (Ch. 1849)
| Blink Bonny
I (B. 1854)
(Paragone 2
I (B. 1843)
I Ellen Home
! (Ch. 1844)
60
~ X
9 I—
i-a .
pa
Haricot
v (Br. 1847)
Beadsman
13
(Br. 1855)
Madame
Eglentine
I (B. 1857)
Blair Athol
10
(Ch. 1861)
Paradigm
*- (Br. 1852)
4-
M
6 ^
H
SO
^aa
-ocr page 448-
DERBY WINNERS 1895 & 1896
I Melbourne /
I (Br. 1834)
I Mowerina
I (B. 1843)
('Birdcatclier 11
I (Ch. 1833)
| Daughter of
I (B. 1845)
I Stockwell 3
I (Ch. 1849)
I Catherine Hayes
I (B. 1850)
z" Adventurer 12
I (B. 1859)
| Daughter of
I (B. 1850)
(Gladiator 22
I (Ch. 1833)
I Lollypop
[ (Bl. 1836)
(Pantaloon 17
j (Ch. 1824)
| Banter
I (Br. 1826)
("Harkaway 2
| (Ch. 1834)
I Pocahontas
I (B. 1837)
("Newminster 8
I (B. 1848)
I Lady Hawthorn
I (B. 1854)
( Humphry Clinker 8
\ Dau. of Cervantes
( Touchstone 14
\ Emma
(Sir Hercules 2
[ Guiccioli
(Hetman Platoff 2
\ Whim
( The Baron 24
( Pocahontas
(Lanercost 3
\ Constance
( Newminster 8
^ Palma
( Birdcatclier 11
^ Dau. of Hetman Platoff
| Partisan /
I Pauline
(Starch or Voltaire 12
( Belinda
/ Castrel 2
\ Idalia
( Master Henry 3
( Boadicea
( Economist 36
I Fanny Dawson
(Glencoe /
^ Marpessa
( Touchstone 14
( Beeswing
( Windhound 3
( Alice Hawthorn
West
Australian
7 (B. 1850)
Dau. of
(B. 1850)"
-
1
rcald
yroe
1872
«
£h
1=3 5
Belladrum
22
(B. 1866)
Bon Accord
. (B. 1867)
ri
«
C
r-
V.
I—I
>
I—I
•v.
^Sweetmeat
21
(Br. 1842)
Jocose
(B. 1843)
5-
VP.<
-_' '
>
f
Sfl
of
+3
0 1^- 1
g
p-i <n
£
3 «.
P>
T)H|
^ . 1
~~" I
King Tom
3
(B. 1851)
May Bloom
(B. 1861)
( Voltigeur 2
(Voltaire 12
\ Martha Lynn
( Birdcatclier 11
(Nan Darrell
( Bay Middleton /
^ Barbelle
(Voltaire 12
\ Velocipede's Dam;
/ Economist 36
t Fanny Dawson
f Glencoe /
\ Marpessa
(Cain 8
(Margaret
(Hornsea 15
^ Lacerta
( Touchstone 14
^ Beeswing
/Melbourne /
(Volley
(Rataplan 3
\Hybla
(Lanercost 3
^ Queen Mary
/"Humphry Clinker 8
\ Dau. of Cervantes
f Pantaloon 17
^ Dau. of Glencoe
(Stockwell 3
(Bribery
(Voltigeur 2
\ Ellen Middleton
Vedette 19
(Br. 1854)'
Flying
Duchess ■
(B. 1853)
King Tom
3
(B. 1851)
I Adeline
I (B. 1851)
Lord
Clifden 2
(B. 1860)
Lady
Langden
, (Br. 1868)
(Y. Mel-
bourne 25
(Br. 1855)
La Belle
Helene
(Br. 1866)
I (B. 1847)
\ Mrs. Ridgway
I (B. 1849)
("Flying Dutchman
! 3 (B. 1846)
I Merope
I (B. 1841)
('Harkaway 2
I (Ch. 1834)
| Pocahontas
I (B. 1837)
(Ton 4
I (B. 1835)
I Little Fairy
I (B. 1841)
("Newminster 8
I (B. 1848)
I The Slave
I (B. 1852)
("Kettledrum 3
I (Ch. 1858)
I Haricot
I (Br. 1847)
/"Melbourne /
I (Br. 1834)
I Clarissa
I (B. 1846)
("St. Albans 2
(Ch. 1857)
I Teterrima
W;
(
0
s
'•r.
e3 ^
;r. -
- X
M
o
Is
5"
Vis
I. (Bl. 1859)
61
-ocr page 449-
DERBY WLNNERS 1897 & 1898
Stockwell 3
(Ch. 1849)
Marigold
(Ch. 1860)
(Thormanby 4
J (Ch. 1857)
1 Ellen Home
{ (Ch. 1844)
/'Sweetmeat 21
J (Br. 1842)
1 Jocose
I (B. 1843)
("Birdcatcher 11
I (Ch. 1833)
| Agnes
I (Br. 1844)
C Stockwell 3
I (Ch. 1849)
I Bribery
L (Ch. 1851)
I'Marsyas 12
) (Ch. 1851)
| Maid of Palmyra
I (Br. 1855)
Melbourne or
Windhound 3
(Br. 1847)
Alice Hawthorn
(B. 1838)
("Cowl 2
| (B. 1842)
I Miami
{ (Ro. 1844)
/The Baron 24
^ Pocahontas
ITeddington.2
\ Sister to Singapore
I Windhound 3
/Alice Hawthorn
(Redshank 15
/Delhi
I Gladiator 22
^ Lollypop
/Pantaloon 17
/ Banter
(Sir Hercules 2
|_ Guiccioli
(Clarion 6
^ Annette
J The Baron 24
i Pocahontas
I The Libel 14
^ Splitvote
I Orlando 13
i Malibran
/ Pyrrhus the First 3
l^ Palmyra
Pantaloon 17
Doncaster
5
(Ch. 1870)
Rouge Rose
<• (Ch. 1865)
Macaroni
14
(B.1860)
Miss Agnes
(Br. 1850)
St. Albans
2
(Ch. 1857)
Viridis
(B. 1864)
c
n
■a
-A
W
o
CO.
CD OO
So .
-
fThor-
manby 4
(Ch. 1857;
Morgan-
la-Faye
I (B. 1852)
| Phryi]
("Muley Moloch 9
I Rebecca
/Bay Middleton /
^Crucifix
) Venison 11
^ Diversion
("Oxford 12
Sterling 12 | (Ch. 1857)
(B. 1868) 1 Whisper
I (B. 1857)
fStockwell 3
Isola Bella | (Ch. 1849)
(B. 1868) 11soline
[ (B. 1860)
/Birdcatcher 11
^ Honey Dear
/Flatcatcher 3
| Silence
/The Baron 24
(Pocahontas
/Ethelbert 12
( Bassishaw
(Touchstone 14
^Beeswing
/Melbourne /
/Volley
("The Baron 24
/ Pocahontas
(Paragone 2
/Ellen Home
/Sheet Anchor 12
(Miss Letty
/Touchstone 14
/ Lady Moore Carew
/Bay Middleton /
I. Crucifix
(Defence 5
/Folly
/Gladiator 22
( Lollypop
(Pantaloon 17
( Banter
(Humphry Clinker 8
| Dau. of Cervantes
/Jerry 15
(^ Nameless
frt«
>st^
-
ss -
GO
o
-f
fl '
T—
oPG
U2 ^-^
pq
w I
Lord Clif-
den 2
(B. 1860)
Chevi-
("Newminster 8
I (B. 1848)
I The Slave
I (B. 1852)
("Stockwell 3 •
a rM
a .
I (Ch. 1849)
Paradigm
(Br.l868)^^1852)
("Weatherbit 12
(Br. 1842)
'_'
W
■«»
a
SI?
c
io
m "2 °°
w
OO
l—l
<u CO
-d
2^^-
l._ J
^
B
13
I Mendicant
(Br. 1856) j1^ m3)
Cowl 2
(B. 1842)
Diversion
(Ch. 1838)
("Sweetmeat 21
I (Br. 1842)
\ Jocose
l (B. 1843)
("Melbourne /
J (Br. 1834)
Madame
Eglentine
(B. 1857)
Macaroni
14
(B. 1860)
IS
Secret
V (Br. 1853)"| Mystery
I (B. 1842)
Tlie pedigree of " The Palmer " is accepted.
62
-ocr page 450-
DERBY WINNER 1899
/Stockwell 3
\ Marigold
/Thormanby 4
| Ellen Home
/Sweetmeat 21
^Jocose
[The Cure 6
\ Miss Agnes
fVoltigeur 2
(Mrs. Ridgway
/Flying Dutchman 3
V Merope
/ Harkaway 2
\ Pocahontas
/Ion 4
\ Little Fairy
/Voltaire 12
^ Martha Lynn
/ Birdca tcher 11
I, Nan Darrell
/ Bay Middleton /
\ Barbelle
/Voltaire 12
(Velocipede's Dam
/Vedette 19
^ Doralice
/Newminster 8
I Zuleika
I Stockwell 3
^ Blink Bonny
fFlatcatcher 3
|_ Extempore
("Doncaster 5
I (Ch. 1870)
| Rouge Rose
I (Ch. 1865)
I Macaroni 14
I (B. 1860)
| Polly Agnes
I (Br. 1865)
f Vedette 19
j (Br. 1854)
| Flving Duchess
I (B. 1853)
/King Tom 3
I (B. 1851)
I Adeline
I (B. 1851)
fVoltigeur 2
I (Br. 1847)
\ Mrs. Ridgway
I (B. 1849)
TFlying Dutchman
J 3 (B. 1846)
\ Merope
I (B. 1841)
('Speculum /
J (B. 1865)
| Ladylike
I (Br. 1858)
fBreadalbane 10
I (Ch. 1862)
I Jeu d'Esprit
I (B. 1852)
Bend Or/
(Ch. 1877)
1=
Lily Agnes
(B. 1871)
-
Galopin 3
(B. 1872)
<"fs
St. Angela
B. 1865)
0
--
_
YIN
CO
00
-
T-t
pq
^J
Vedette 19
(Br. 1854)
Flying
Duchess
(B. 1853)
Rosebery
22
(B. 1872)
Sarcasm
(B. 1871)
1
'!
J
68
-ocr page 451-
"
-ocr page 452-
WINNERS OF THE OAKS
65                         2 F
-ocr page 453-
-ocr page 454-
OAKS WINNERS 1779 & 1780
f
'gg 4"                 / Byerly Turk 4*
------           ^ Dau. of Spanker
Partner 9
(Ch. 1718)1 Sister to Mixbury /Curwen Bay Barb 4<
I           ------           /Old Spot Mare
/"Fox 6                    /Clumsey 11
Meliora | (B. 1714)           (_ Bay Peg
(1729) 1 Milkmaid             /Snail 4.
I (1720)                I Dau. of Shield's Galloway
f Flying Childers 6 /Darley_Arabian 4"
$6
(B. 1715)
(Blaze 4"
\ Betty Leedes
g © J (B. 1733) ) Confederate Filly /Grey Grantham 4<_
\Dau. of Rutland's Black Barb
r
ethell's
OS
Salome
(1733)
Arabian 4*
1 Daughter ol
/Graham's Champion 4"
\ Dau. of Darley Arabian
/"Flying Chil
ders 6 /Darley Arabian 4"
-r
r-.g
«■*■■- 1
y-S
g-I-H J
OS
fl .*
0
1—1
O
Snip 9
(Br. 1736)
Sister to
Slipbv
(1740")
J (B. 1715)
1 Daughter of
/"Fox 6
J (B. 1714)
1 Gipsey
\ Betty Leedes
/ Basto 6
/Sister to Mixbury
/Clumsey 11
\ Bay Peg
I Bay Bolton 37
\ Dau. of Newcastle Turk
/Godolphin Arabian 4"
\ Roxana
/Partner 9
\ Brown Farewell
/Godolphin Arabian 4"
\Grey Robinson
/Son 4* °' Bay Bolton
\Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
I (Bl. 1725)
("Cade 6
Matchem 4 | (B. 1734)
(B. 1748) ) Daughter of
I (1735
f Regulus 11
Miss            I (B. 1739)
Middleton") Camilla
I (B. 1746)
as
Q 4^
("Godolphin
Arabian 4*
{Bald Galloway 15/St. Victor's Barb 4*
------
           /Grey Whynot
Daughter of
         /Ancaster Turk 4-
\ Cream Cheeks
/'Jigg 4*
                 /Byerly Turk 4"
'Partner 9 |            ------           \Dau. of Spanker
(Ch. 1718)1 Sister to Mixbury f Curwen Bay Barb 4.
l
           ------           \ Old Spot Mare
v.                ("Makeless
Brown
OM
6o£n
a
Farewell
>1 Daughter of
{Brimmer 4"
Dau. of Place's White Turk 4.
/Jigg 4"
\ Sister to Mixbury
/Almanzor 4*
\Dau. of Grey Hautboy
(Br. 1710) I
S-*
/
CO
CO
t-
r^ —
•*&
rZ *o
«
CO
OT^
<D
[i\
Partner 9
I (Ch. 1718)
"| Daughter of
I (Bay)
Traveller
37(B.1735;
Grey
Bloody
Buttocks
(Gr. 1733)
Blaze 4*
(B. 1733)
I Bloody
Buttocks 4*
1 Daughter of
         /Greyhound 4*
(1722)               \ Brown Farewell
{Flying Childers 6 / Darley Arabian 4*
(B. 1715)
           \Betty Leedes
Confederate Filly /Grey Grantham 4"
\ Dan. of Rutland's Black Barb
/"Bethell's
Arabian 4"
1 Daughter of
67
ft.
Salome
(1733)
/Graham's Champion 4*
\ Dau. of Darley Arabian 4"
-ocr page 455-
OAKS WINNERS 1781 & 1782
(Jigg *t
/Byerly Turk 4.
(Dau. of Spanker
Partner 9
. 1718)"| Sister to Mixbury/Curwen Bay Barb «fi
(. ------               (.Old Spot Mare
pox 6                   /Clumsey 11
(Ch
B. 171v4)
Milkmaid
I Bay Peg
/Snail 4"
Meliora
(1729)
I
cc
(1720)                (Dau. of Shield's Galloway
(Flying Childers 6 (Darley Arabian 4*
I (B. 1715)
            (Betty Leedes
1 Confederate Filly /Grey Grantham 4"
(, ------               I, Dau. of Rutland's Black Barb
("Bethell's Arabian
J 4* -----
~| Daughter of         /Graham's Champion 4"
V ------■               ( Dau. of Darley Arabian
[Flying Childers 6 (Darley Arabian 4*
(B. 1715)
            (Betty Leedes
(Basto 6
(Dau. of Curwen Bay Barb
/Clumsey 11
\Bay Peg
Blaze 4*
(B. 1733)
■s
rt o
Salome
(1733)
'Snip 9
(Br. 1736
«
r-
a. °
Sister to
1 Gipsey
I (Bl. 1725)
f Godolphin
Regulus 11 I Arabian 4"
(B. 1739)~| Grey Robinson
(Gr. 1723)
/Bay Bolton 37
(Dau. of Newcastle Turk
>1
**H
O
urio
2 2M
O
M>£
1 eS
Q
/Bald Galloway 15
( Dau. of Snake
/■Bartlet's Childers /Darley Arabian 4*
6
                        ( Betty Leedes
Dau. of
I Daughter of
/Hollywood Arabian 4*
\ Byerly Turk Mare
Bartlet's Childers
(■Squirt 11 | 6
(Ch. 1732) I Daughter of
/ Darley Arabian 4"
I Betty Leedes
f Snake 4*
( Grey Wilkes
/Bay Bolton 37
(Dau. of Jigg
/Crab 9
I Sister to Sloven
(Patriot 24
J (Br. 1729)
1 Daughter of
j'Godolphin
Dau. of
'Cade 6
(B. 1734)
I Arabian 4"
\Roxana
/Bald Galloway 15
(Dau. of Ancaster Turk
(Ch. 1718)
/■Bloody
Madam
            Buttocks 4*
(Gr. 1735)1 Miss Partner
I (1730)
m 11 ^Partner 9
Traveller I (ch- m8)
(B. 1735) j^g^ of
Grey           I Bloody
Bloody J Buttocks 4"
Buttocks 1 Daughter of
(Gr. 1733) l (1722)
{Godolphin
Arabian 4*
Little Hartley
Mare (Ch. 1727)
43 a
'/.
/Partner 9
( Brown Farewell
/Jigg <$"
(Sister to Mixbury
/Almanzor 4*
(Dau. of Grey Hautboy
M
Id
Q
cr»
/Greyhound 4*
(Brown Farewell
/Bartlet's Childers 6
(Flying Whigg
/Godolphin Arabian 4*
(Grey Robinson
f Lonsdale Arabian 4*
(Bonny Lass
/"Regulus 11
(B. 1739)
\Daughter of
(1736)
68
Dau. of
V 7?
Q
-ocr page 456-
STELLA (Bay 1781)
MAID OF THE OAKS (Ch. 1780)
Miss Euston 13 (B. 1774)
Plunder 4 (B. 1771)
Snap /
(Br. 1750)
Nancy
(Or. 1754)
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Charmer
(Br. 1765)
w
o
^<<
as
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^ £<
Cl
o W1
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•^J^* CD
O CT1 .
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o
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Plfrisl"
5t Co
w
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CC td O W 5
P CD 93 g= £
ratv r?><
5 ** a,
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a c
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f & s,^- k A p «
S « S h ©
O £. Q-CTQ Bo*
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OAKS WINNERS 1785 & 1786
/Jigg -b
(Dau. of Curwen Bav Barb
fFox6
(Milkmaid
I Flying Childers 6
( Confederate Filly
/Bethell's Arabian ►£•
\ Dau. of Graham's Champion
| Flying Childers 6
\ Dau. of Basto
/ Fox 6
( Gipsey
fGodolphin Arabian -]-•
(Grey Robinson
/Bartlet's Childers 6
(Sister to Two True Blues
/Jigg •$?
( Dau. of Curwen Bay Barb
/Almanzor ►£*
(Dau. of Grey Hautboy
("Partner 9
I (Ch. 1718)
| Meliora
I (1729)
("Blaze «f<
I (B. 1733)
I Salome
I (1733)
("Snip 9
J (Br. 1736)
"| Sister to Slipby
I (1740)
("Regulus 11
J (B. 1739)
I Daughter of
f Partner 9
| (Ch. 1718)
I Daughter of
/"Bloody
I Buttocks •}<
| Daughter of
I. (1722)
("Godolphin
Arabian ►£•
("Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
Cypron
I (B. 1750)
ws
'Snap /
Br. 1750)
Dau. of
I (1749)
Traveller
37
(B. 1735)
Grey
Bloody
Buttocks
t (Gr. 1733)
Regulus 11
(B. 1739)
bffl
d
is
c
m-
w
3
i—i "■*
/Greyhound >£<
(Brown Farewell
/Bald Galloway 15
(Dau. of Snake
Bartlet's Childers/Darley Arabian 4"
6                        (Betty Leedes
Daughter of         / Honywood Arabian >J<
( Byerly Turk Mare
>,
C
IcS
Dau. of
\5
f Bartlet s Child
'Squirt 11 I 6
(Ch. 1732)1 Daughter of
ers/ Darley Arabian »f
(Betty Leedes
/Snake 4"
(Grey "Wilkes
/Bay Bolton 37
(Dau. of Jigg >J"
/Crab 9
( Dau. of Bay Bolton
"Hi •
w o
("Patriot 24
J (Br. 1729)
I Daughter of
("Godolphin
Arabian ►£«
| Grey Robinson
I (Gr. 1723)
f Snip 9
I (Br. 1736)
| Daughter of
I (B. 1745)
j" Partner 9
I (Ch. 1718)
i Meliora
I (1729)
| Blaze «J«
I (B. 1733)
I Salome
{ (1733)
("Crab 9
I (Gr. 1722)
I Daughter of
(Forester 23
! (Ch. 1736)
I Ringbone
I (1732)
70
Dau. of
f Regulus 11
(B. 1739)
I Dau. of
(1758)
f Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
/Bald Galloway 15
\ Dau. of Snake
/Flying Childers 6
( Dau. of Basto
/Cottingham «f>
( Warlock Galloway
(Jigg Hh
(Sister to Mixbury
/Fox 6
( Milkmaid
/Flying Childers 6
/Confederate Filly
/ Bethell's Arabian «J*
(Dau. of Graham's Champion
f Alcock's Arabian 4*
(Dau. of Basto
/Flying Childers 6
( Mermaid
(Hartley's Blind Horse 13
(Bay Brocklesby
f Partner 9
( Lusty Thornton
!
O
'8 g
■gS;
Cypron
(B. 1750)
n
t-
fSloe 33
(Bl. 1740)
t- CO
Dau. of
Ch. 1746)
-ocr page 458-
OAKS WINNERS 1787 & 1788
fSquirt 11 I 6
(Ch. 1732)"! Daughter of
("Blacklegs «J«
lders f Darley Arabian >J«
( Betty Leedes
/Snake >J>
( Grey Wilkes
/Mulso Bay Turk »J<
,C0o
I Pi?
The Ruby
Mare
J (1725)
I Daughter of
\Dau. of Coneyskins
/ Bay Bolton 37
(Dan. of Cub
ga
("Godolphin
Regulus 11 I Arabian >J«
(B. 1739) "I Grev Robinson
I (Gr. 1723)
.« 2
/Bald Galloway 15
(Dau. of Snake
("Snake ►£•
( Dau. of Akaster Turk
( Old Montagu •£■
( Dau. of Hautboy
( Darley Arabian ►£■
( Betty Leedes
f Basto 6
(Dau. of Curwen Bay Barb
(Clumsey 11
( Bay Peg
/Bay Bolton 37
(Dau. of Newcastle Turk
H
^6
Mother
Western
(Smith's Son of
Snake »}■
j Daughter of
("Flying Childers
Snap 9
        I (B. 1715)
(Br. 1736)1 Daugliter of
Sister to I °,XR 17l..
SliPby iGiSv
(1740) [Glf^1725)
("Godolphin
Regulus 11 I Arabian ►£«
(B. 1739) 1 Grey Robinson
I (Gr. 1723)
fCrab 9
«
H
H
H
V.
-s
'ffl
vO
/Bald Galloway 15
\Dau. of Snake
f Alcock's Arabian ►}«
(Dau. of Basto
| Y. True Blue 3
Dau. of
(1750)
| (Gr. 1722)
I Miss Slamerkin
{ (1729)
I
Dau. of Lord Oxford's Dun
Arabian
("Squirt 11
rMarske 8 J (Ch. 1732
(Br. 1750)1 The Ruby Mare
("Regulus 11
ISpiletta I (B. 1739)
(Ch. 1749)1 Mother Western
Warren's ("Cade 6
Sports- J (B. 1734)
man 32 1 Silvertail
(B. 1763) I (B. 1737)
n , j           /"Oroonoko 7
GTold?n             (Bl. 1745)
Locks in 1.4. i
, (Ch. 1758) [Dau^r of
("Partner 9
Tartar 48 | (Ch. 1718)
(Ch. 1743)1 Meliora
I (1729)
("Blaze •$•
Cypron | (B. 1733)
(B. 1750) "| Salome
I (1733)
("Godolphin
/ Bartlet's Childers 6
( Dau. of Snake
( Blacklegs »J<
(Dau. of Bay Bolton
j Godolphin Arabian 4"
( Grey Robinson
(Smith's Son of Snake ►£«
"(Old Montagu Mare
/Godolphin Arabian >f-
\ Roxana
/Whitenose »J<
(Dau. of Rattle
/Crab 9
(Miss Slamerkin
/Crab 9
(Dau. of Partner
/Jigg «f.
(Sister to Mixbury
/Fox 6
( Milkmaid
f Flying Childers 6
(Confederate Filly
/ Bethell's Arabian 4*
(Dau. of Graham's Champion
o
a!?
Eg .
o O
&^-
Hi
w
02
»
O
I—I
«
«
Blank 15
(B. 1740)
Peggy
(B. 1753)
Arabian »J"
1 Little Hartley
( Mare (Ch. 1727
("Cade 6
I (B. 1734)
1 Daughter of
/"Bartlet's Childers 6
) (Flying Whigg
/ Godolphin Arabian ►£«
( Roxana
/Partner 9
\Bay Bloody Buttocks
£
a
I (1744)
71
-ocr page 459-
OAKS WINNERS 1789 & 1790
1 Oxford Bloody
fSw
stakes 44
I Shoulders *
/Basto 6
\01d Spot Mare
/Grey Hautboy »J>
\Makeless Mare
/Basto 6
\01d Snot Mare
/Godolphin Arabian •{-
/Grey Robinson
/Sorehocls 9
/Dau. of Makeless
( Cartouch 4
- Dau. of Hampton Court
I Chestnut Arabian «J«
/Flying Childers 6
\01d Ebony
/Bartlet's Childers 6
^Dau. of Snake
f Blacklegs «J«
\Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Godolphin Arabian 4"
\Grey Robinson
/Smith's Son of Snake <§f
\01d Montagu Mare
/Jigg ^
\ Sister to Mixbury
/Fox 6
^ Milkmaid
/Godolphin Arabian •£<
/Large Hartley Mare
/Sweepstakes 44
/Dau. of Bay Bolton
■aughter of
■IS
«* .
So
02
(Ch.l722)lu
("Bay Bolton 37
I (Br. 1705)
| Daughter of
Dau. of
B
("Regulus 11
South 13 | (B. 1739)
(B. 1750) "j Daughter of
t-,        c f Y- Cartouch 4
Dau- of I (1731)
Ebony
1 (B. 1728)
f Squirt 11
Marske 8 J (Oh. 1732)
(Br. 1750) | The Ruby Mare
{Regulus 11
(B. 1739)
Mother Western
( Partner 9
Tartar 48 | (Oh. 1718)
(Ch. 1743)1 Meliora
I (1729)
/■Mogul 15
Dau. of | -----
------ 1 Daughter of
MS
{Bartlet's Childers 6
Dau. of Snake
/Blacklegs 4"
\Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Godolphin Arabian 4"
/Grey Robinson
/Smith's Son of Snake 4"
/Old Montagu Mare
/Jigg 4*
\ Sister to Mixbury
/Fox 6
/Milkmaid
/'Godolphin Arabian 4"
\ Large Hartley Mare
{Sweepstakes 44
Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Jigg 4-
\ Sister to Mixbury
|Fox6
/Milkmaid
/Flying Childers 6
\ Confederate Filly
/Bethell's Arabian 4*
\Dau. of Graham's Champion
("Squirt 11
J (Ch. 1732)
Marske 8
N
^-,
f**
'-2
<X) *"»
03
rH .
P.
IS2
A
O
(Br.l750)"| The Ruby Mare
(Regulus 11
(B. 1739)
Mother Western
("Partner 9
Tartar 48 I (Ch. 1718)
(Ch.1743) 1 Meliora
I (1729)
("Mogul 15
oJ
Oi
1*,
t*
178'
ercu
a
s
I Dau. of
Daughter of
j
g-
5
o
K
I-------!
w
("Partner 9
fTartar 48 I (Ch. 1718)
(Ch.1743)I Meliora
I (1729)
("Blaze 4"
Cypron I (B. 1733)
(B. 1750)1 Salome
TJ»2
(1733)
'Godolphin
Arabian «J«
{Hobgoblin «J«
-----
Daughter of
(1731)
72
c
W
/Aleppo 4"
^Dau. of Wharton's Careless 4*
/Whitefoot /
\Dau. of Leedes
60 .
TO-------
O
-ocr page 460-
OAKS WINNERS 1791 & 1792
("Squirt 11
I (Ch. 1732)
j The Ruby Mare
(Regulus 11
) (B. 1739)
| Mother Western
(Bartlet's Childers 6
\Dau. of Snake
(Blacklegs 4*
(Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Grey Robinson
(Smith's Son of Snake 4"
(Old Montagu Mare
(Jigg 4-
( Sister to Mixbury
/Fox 6
(Milkmaid
(Godolphin Arabian 4*
1 Large Hartley Mare
(Sweepstake 44
\Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Jigg 4«
I Sister to Mixbury
(Fox 6
(Milkmaid
(Flying Childers 6
(Confederate Filly
/Bethell's Arabian 4"
\Dau. of Graham's Champion
Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
.«:
Spiletta
(Ch. 1749)
.30
Partner 9
(Ch. 1718)
Meliora
(1729)
Mogul 15
Daughter of
(^
' OJ
1
+3
o
d
fcj
p
i—i
o
1
J
t>
Daug
I
(Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
Dan. of
I
(Partner 9
I (Ch. 1718)
"j Meliora
I (1729)
{Blaze 4<
(B. 1733)
Salome
(1733)
(Godolphin
Arabian 4"
Blossom
Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
CM»
Cvpron
( (B. 1750)
s;
W
M
■si
f
O ^-n
+j
- 1—t
f
1
Daugh
(Gr. 1
>
i.
fCvgnet 6
(Gr. 1753)
/Crab 9
\Dau. of Flying Childers
!Cartouch 4
Dan. of Ham pton Court
Chestnut Arabian
Flying Childers 6
Old Ebonv
fY. Cartouch 4
(1731)
Ebony
fB. 1728)
(Jigg 4"
(Sister to Mixbury
/Fox 6
(Milkmaid
/Flying Childers 6
(Confederate Filly
(Bethell's Arabian 4"
(Dau. of Graham's Champion
Partner 9
(Ch. 1718)
Meliora
(1729)
{Blaze 4*
(B. 1733)
Salome
(1733)
(Godolphin
I Arabian 4"
I Little Hartley
I Mare (Ch. 1727)
j'Regulus 11
J (B. 1739)
1 Daughter of
(Squirt 11
I (Ch. 1732)
j The Ruby Mare
j'Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
I Mother Western
(Crab 9
I (Gr. 1722)
"I Miss Slamerkin
I (1729)
(Tartar 48
J (Ch. 1743)
Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
xt
Cypron
I (B. 1750)
PQ
'Blank 15
(B. 1740)
(Bartlet's Childers 6
(Flying Whigg
/Godolphin Arabian 4*
(Grey Robinson
/Soreheels 9
(Dau. of Makeless
/Bartlet's Childers 6
\ Dau. of Snake
f Blacklegs 4.
(Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Godolphin Arabian 4*
(Grey Robinson
/Smith's Son of Snake 4"
(Old Montagu Mare
(Alcock's Arabian 4*
\ Dau. of Basto
(Y. True Blue 3
(Dau. of Oxford Dun Arabian
(Partner 9
I Meliora
(Old Starling 24
(Dau. of Flying Childei'3
=3^
Dau. of
I. (1751)
(Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
P,
O
>
Spiletta
(Ch. 1749)
Black and
All Black 7
(Bl. 1743)
Fanny
*■ (1751)
p
vc
5
j Daughter
of
73
-ocr page 461-
OAKS WINNERS
&
J793
*794
/•Squirt 11
/ Bartlet's Childers 6
(Dau. of Snake
I Blacklegs 4"
( Dau. of Bay Bolton
f Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Grey Robinson
| Smith's Son of Snake 4*
(Old Montagu Mare
/Jigg *
( Sister to Mixbury
/Fox 6
( Milkmaid
/Godolphin Arabian 4*
( Large Hartley Mare
/Sweepstakes 44
( Dau. of Bay Bolton
( Partner 9
(Meliora
/Blaze 4"
( Salome
/ Godolphin Arabian 4"
( Little Hartley Mare
I Regulus 11
(Dau. of Soreheels
/ Godolphin Arabian 4-1
(Roxana
/Partner 9
(Brown Farewell
(Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Large Hartley Mare
/Cole's Fox-Hunter S
( Daughter of Partner
[Marske 8 | (Ch. 1732)
N
(Br. 1760)"] The Ruby Mare
r*3
%i\
/Regulus 11
Spiletta I (B. 1739)
(Ch. 1749)"
I
Mother Western
011
(-1
U-i
a>
O
d
s li
""o
l>
6<J
3
^O
/• Partner 9
Tartar 48 | (Ch. 1718)
(Ch. 1743)1 Meliora
I (1729)
(Mogul 15
Dau. of J ------
------ 1 Daughter of
ffi
-1
1—1
CO
1 1
/-I-H -—>
^
2!
o
t-H
b.;
bJ0«
S
£
/"Tartar 48
J (Ch. 1743)
) I Cypron
I (B. 1750)
{Blank 15
Herod 26
(B. 175S
Rachel
(1763)
(B. 1740)
Daughter of
(1751)
/"Cade 6
Matchem 4 I (B. 1734)
(B. 1748) 1 Daughter of
I (1735)
it ii t fBabrahaml5
Molly Long | (R mQ)
(B. 1753) 1I;,aughter of
vo;
("Tartar 48
I (Ch. 1743)
1 Cypron
( (B. 1750)
/•Blank 15
J (B. 1740)
1 Daughter of
I (1751)
/ Partner 9
( Meliora
/Blaze 4*
(Salome
/Godolphin Arabian 4"
( Little Hartley Mare
/ Regulus 11
\Dau. of Soreheels
/Flying Childers 6
\ Dau. of Bastb
/Fox 6
(Gipsey
/Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Grey Robinson
/Son 4" of Bay Bolton
(Sister to True Blue
/ Partner 9
( Meliora
/Blaze 4"
( Salome
(Godolphin Arabian 4"
\ Blossom
/ Y. Cartouch 4
(Ebony
/Godolphin Arabian 4*
( Roxana
( Partner 9
\ Brown Farewell
(Cade 6
( Little Hartley Mare
f Oroonoko 7
( Dau. of Traveller
CO (
r~?
a> *-.
;*
£•«■{
-fi .
■~
6023
«
fHerod 26
(B. 1758)
Rachel
(1763)
/•Snip 9
M
fSnap /
(Br. 1750) |
(Br. 1736)
Daughter of
O 50
(1740)
Miss Cleve
land
(1758)
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Dau. of
/"Regulus 11
J (B. 1739)
1 Midge
( Tartar 48
I (Ch. 1743)
I Cypron
I (B. 1750)
I Cvgnet 6
I (Gr. 1753)
I
c
P-«
r"5 5?
ra *o
gN
778)
.3 H-<
■Spq
r-t
f^C-
M
~"
(Gr. 1761)1 Daughter of
f _
(B. 1748)
r
c
~
e ^n 1
t»i~
-
3»«3 J
-
crti
US
k
M
I (1735)
/"Slouch 15
Calliope | (Ch. 1747)
(Ch. 1763)1 Y. Lass of the Mill
I (1756)
74
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-ocr page 462-
OAKS WINNERS 1795 & 1796
/Squirt 11
I (Ch. 1732)
j The Ruby Mare
/'Regulus 11
) (B. 1739)
| Mother Western
/ Partner 9
I (Ch. 1718)
j Meliora
I (1729)
/Mogul 15
I Daughter of
/ Partner 9
! (Ch. 1718)
j Meliora
I (1729)
/ Blaze 4"
j (B. 1733)
| Salome
I (1733)
/Starling 24
I (Gr. 1727)
I Miss Mayes
I (1737)
/"Crab 9
I (Gr. 1722)
| Ebony
I (B. 1728)
/Bartlet's Childers 6
( Dau. of Snake
(Blacklegs ►£*
(Dau. of Bay Bolton
(Godolphin Arabian <■}>
(Grey Robinson
/Smith's Son of Snake >J>
(Old Montagu Mare
/Jigg 4*
(Sister to Mixbury
| Fox 6
(Milkmaid
/Godolphin Arabian »J<
| Large Hartley Mare
| Sweepstakes 44
( Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Jigg 4*
( Dau. of Snake
/Fox 6
(Milkmaid
/ Flying Childers 6
(Confederate Filly
/ Bethell's Arabian ►£■
( Dau. of Graham's Champion
/Bay Bolton 37
( Camilla's Dam
/ Bartlet's Childers 6
(Dau. of Counsellor
f Alcock's Arabian >f<
( Dau. of Basto
(Flying Childers 6
"(Old Ebony
Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
Spiletta
I (Ch.1749)
P
o
[Tartar 48
(Ch.1743)
^3
I Dau. of
-=5
1—I
H
<
c-
("Tartar 48
(Ch.1743)
Cypron
(. (B. 1750)
C
fSkim 19
(Gr.1746)
2>S
MS
•5 V
Hag
(Gr.1744)
><o
(Tartar 48
(Herod 26 I (Ch. 1743)
(B. 1758)1 Cypron
I (B. 1750)
/Blank 15
Rachel
        I (B. 1740)
(1763) | Daughter of
I (1751)
/Partner 9
I Meliora
/Blaze 4"
( Salome
f Godolphin Arabian «£•
( Little Hartley Mare
/Regulus 11
(Dau. of Soreheels
{ Flying Childers 6
I Dau. of Basto
/Fox 6
(Gipsey
j Godolphin Arabian «J«
(Grey Robinson
("Son ►}" of Bay Bolton
(Sister to True Blue
/Bartlet's Childers 6
(Dau. of Snake
/Patriot 24
(Dau. of Crab
(Godolphin Arabian 4*
(Grey Robinson
(Snip 9
(Dau. of Cottingham
( Partner 9
( Meliora
(Blaze "J*
(Salome
/Crab 9
I Dau. of Flying Childers
/Forester 23
(Ringbone
w-
f u
©
O
rt Ci
Ph
5 «o
.—i i>.
H2
I. ?j '«
PhPP
/Snip 9
Snap /
(Br. 1750)
(Br. 1736)
Daughter of
(1740)
I
M
land
(1758)
ve-/*^"
1 Midge
-
H
C
r.
3
/Squirt 11
Syphon 9 | (Ch. 1732)
(Ch.l750)"| Daughter of
i>.
CO
784)
andem
B. 177
H —
loj
I
Regulus 11
Dau. of
(B. 1739)
| Daughter of
I (1758)
/Tartar 48
I (Ch. 1743)
I Cypron
I (B. 1750)
/Sloe 33
I (Bl. 1740)
| Daughter of
I (Ch. 1746)
15
<N
,-Herod 26
(B. 1758;
Faii-
Forester
(1753)
T3 ft
l4"
-ocr page 463-
OAKS WINNERS 1797 & 1798
("Squirt 11
{Marske 8 | (Ch. 1782)
(Br. 1750)1 The Ruby Mare
(-Regulus 11
Spiletta I (B. 1739)
(Ch. 1749)"! Mother Western
{Forester 23
(Ch. 1736)
Daughter of
(Ch. 1744)
("Coalition Colt 9
/Bartlet's Childers 6
\Dau. of Snake
f Blacklegs »|"
\Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Godolphin Arabian »£•
(.Grey Robinson
("Smith's Son of Snake •£■
\01d Montagu Mare
("Hartley's Blind Horse 13
\Bay Brocklesby
(" Looby 30
\ Margery
/ Godolphin Arabian 4*
\ Dau. of Danger
/Bustard 7
\ Charming Molly
/Partner 9
\ Meliora
{Blaze 4*
Salome
/Godolphin Arabian -J*
\ Blossom
/Y. Cartoueh 4
\
Ebony
Dau. of
I (B. 1739)
"j Daughter of
("Tartar 48
Herod 26 I (Ch. 1743)
(B. 1758)1 Cypron
I (B. 1750)
("Cygnet 6
Dau. of | (Or. 1753)
(Gr. 1761)1 Daughter of
(Godolphin
Blank 15 | Arabian >f
(B. 1740)1 Little Hartley
t Mare (Ch. 1727
U»^'
r °°
■ag
*#
•P i-H J
178
V
/ Bartlet's Childers 6
|\ Flying Whigg
(Godolphin Arabian 4*
\Grey Robinson
/Whitenose 4*
(Dau. of Rattle
("Regulus 11
\3g.
Joan           J (B. 1739)
(Ro. 1757)1 Silvertail
I (B. 1737)
Partner 9
(Ch. 1718)
Meliora
(1739)
{Blaze 4*
(B. 1733)
Salome
(1733)
(Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
Spiletta
(Ch. 1749)
{Engineer 36
(Br. 1756)
Daughter of
(Ch. 3763)
("Tartar 48
(Ch. 1748)
Cypron
I (B. 1750)
("Cade 6
J (B. 1734)
1 Daughter of
("Snip 9
| (Br. 1736)
/Jigg 4*
\ Sister to Mixbury
/Fox 6
\ Milkmaid
/Flying Childers 6
\ Confederate Filly
/Bethell's Arabian ►£■
\Dau. of Graham's Champion
(Squirt 11
\The Ruby Mare
/Regulus 11
\ Mother Western
/Sampson 4"
\Dau. of Y. Greyhound 4
/Blank 15
\Lass of the Mill
/Partner 9
\ Meliora
/Blaze 4*
( Salome
/Godolphin Arabian 4"
\Roxana
/Lonsdale Arabian 4*
\ Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Flying Childers 6
\ Dau. of Basto
/Fox 6
\Gipsey
/Godolphin Arabian 4"
\Grey Robinson
/Son 4" of Bay Bolton
\ Sister to True Blue
Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
Cypron
(B. 1750)
XI
wt
I Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
a Dau. of
PQ
Herod 26
(Ch. 1758)
Miss
Ramsden
■is
h
B
go
fSnap /
(Br. 1750)"| Daughter of
jt. I
I (17
740;
("Regulus 11
| (B. 1739)
1 Midge
76
Miss Cleve
land
(1758)
-ocr page 464-
OAKS WINNERS 1799 & 1800
fTartar 48
Herod 26 J (Ch. 1743)
(B. 1758) I Cypron
I (B. 1750)
fBlank 15
Rachel | (B. 1740)
1, (1763) "I Daughter of
I (1751)
{Cade 6
(B. 1734)
Daughter of
(1735)
Pratt's Old \r\, -i 7<j2'>
(1750) 1 Daugilter of
(■Squirt 11
fMarske 8 | (Ch. 1732)
(Br. 1750)1 The Ruby Mare
{Regulus 11
(B. 1739)
Mother Western
(Crab 9
/■Spectator / | (Gr. 1722)
(B. 1749)1 Daughter of
I (B. 1735)
(Blank 15
Dau. of J (B. 1740)
(B. 1757)1 Diana
I (Br. 1740)
/Partner 9
( Meliora
| Blaze 4"
(Salome
/Godolphin Arabian <%>
(, Little Hartley Mare
(Regulus 11
(Dau. of Soreheels
f Godolphin Arabian ►£>
( Roxana
/Partner 9
( Brown Farewell
/Bartlet's Childers 6
(Dau. of Snake 4*
f Mogul 15
(Camilla
/Bartlet's Childers 6
(Dau. of Snake
/ Blacklegs ►{<
(Dan. of Bay Bolton
/Godolphin Arabian »J«
(Grey Robinson
(Smith's Son of Snake ►£■
"(Old Montagu Mare
/Alcock's Arabian 4"
( Dau. of Basto
/Partner 9
\ Bonny Lass
( Godolphin Arabian «J>
( Little Hartley Mare
/"Second 9
\Dau. of Stan van's Arabian
Is
a-
U i—!
It
/Jigg 4-
( Sister to Mixbury
(Fox 6
(Milkmaid
/Flying Childers 6
(Confederate Filly
f Bethell's Arabian 4"1
(Dau. of Graham's Champion
/"Partner 9
J (Ch. 1718)
1 Meliora
I (1729)
("Blaze 4"
I (B. 1733)
j Salome
I (1733)
("Godolphin
I Arabian 4"
j Roxana
I (Ch. 1718)
/"Lonsdale
Bay Arabian »J"
"I Daughter of
/■Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
r--> °2
Cypron
I (B. 1750)
O
fCade 6
| (B. 1734)
Dau. of
/Bald Galloway 15
(Dau. of Akaster Turk
/Bay Bolton 37
(Dau. of Darley Arabian
/Bartlet's Childers 6
(Dau. of Snake
/Blacklegs 4"
(Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Godolphin Arabian >J>
(Grey Robinson
/Smith's Son of Snake «J"
(Old Montagu Mare
{ Partner 9
( Meliora
/Blaze >f
(Salome
/Snip 9
(Dau. of Fox
( Regulus 11
(Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
f
\ The Ruby M
f
. ("Marske 8
ig (Br. 1750)
are
«
q Spiletta
~j Mother Western
/"Tartar 48
I (Ch. 1743)
Cypron
I (B. 1750)
{Snap /
(Br. 1750)
Daughter of
(1749)
77
- i (Ch. 1749)
to
-■
■f
&
^oa
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Curiosity
(Br. 1760)
-ocr page 465-
OAKS WINNERS 1801, 1802 & 1803
ELEANOR (Bay 1798) by Whiskey 2 out of Y. Giantess 6 by Diomed 6.
Won the Derby Stakes, see page 13.
/'Tartar 48
) (Ch. 1743)
I Cypron
I (B. 1750)
fBlank 15
(B. 1740)
Daughter of
(1751)
Godolphiii
Arabian 4"
| Little Hartley
I Mare (Ch. 1727)
Rib 21
(Or. 1736)
Daughter of
/Partner 9
/Meliora
/ Blaze 4*
\ Salome
/Godolphin Arabian 4*
/Little Hartley Marc
(Regulus 11
/ Dau. of Soreheels
'Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Rachel
(1763)
CA^.
bcX,
X"
o
(Blank 15
(B. 1740)
>; -■
f Bartlet's Childers 6
/Flying Whigg
/Crab 9
/Doll
f Wynn Arabian 4*
/ Dau. of Governor
/Squirt 11
/The Ruby Mare
/Regulus 11
/ Mother Western
/Crab 9
i Miss Slamerkin
/Tartar 48
/Dau. of Old Starling
/ Partner 9
(Meliora
/Blaze 4*
/ Salome
/Squirt 11
/Dau. of Blacklegs
/Regulus 11
/Mother Western
/
Vj <5 Dau. of
o
(Marske 8
j (Br. 1750)
j Spiletta
I (Ch. 1749)
(Black & All Black
J 7 (Bl. 1743)
I Fanny
I (1751)
(Tartar 48
I (Ch. 1743)
I Cypron
I (B. 1750)
(Marske 8
I (Br. 1750)
' Spiletta
I (Ch. 1749)
Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Creeping
Polly
(Ch. 1756)
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
.Sfc
Proserpine
(B. 1766)
(Tartar 48
/Partner 9
/ Meliora
/Blaze 4"
/ Salome
/Godolphin Arabian -J*
/ Little Hartley Mare
/Regulus 11
/Dau. of Soreheels
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Rachel
(1763)
(Blank 15
(B. 1740)
Dau. of
J (Ch. 1743)
I Cypron
I B. 1750)
(-Blank 15
J (B. 1740)
~j Daughter of
I (1751)
/'Godolphin
Arabian 4"
"j Little Hartley
I Mare (Ch. 1727)
("Rib 21
to *-*•
f Bartlet's Childers 6
V Flying Whigg
/Crab 9
/Doll
/Wynn Arabian 4"
/Dau. of Governor
/Bartlet's Childers 6
/Dau. of Snake
(Blacklegs 4*
/Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Snip 9
^Dau. of Fox
/Marlborough 15
/Natural Barb Mare
/Bartlet's Childers 6
/ Dau. of Snake
/Patriot 24
/ Dau. of Crab
(Godolphin Arabian 4"
t Little Hartley Mare
/Crab 9
/Dau. of Dyer's Dimple
x o
^65
J (Gr. 1736)
(, ■
               j Daughter of
('Squirt 11
fMarske 8 | (Ch. 1732)
(Br. 1750)1 The Ruby Mare
<
•A
<
o
/'Snap /
05 n I
(Br. 1750)
j Daughter of
(Squirt 11
Syphon 9 | (Ch. 1732)
(Ch. 1750) | Daughter of
(Blank 15
Charlotte | (B. 1740)
(Ch. 1756)1 Daughter of
^T8
_
O
r—
0 '-* f
45*2 I
~* J
"So •"
3 -a
BO
lQ~
-ocr page 466-
OAKS WINNERS
1804 & 1805
. fMarake 8
Eclipse 12 | (Br. 1750)
/Squirt 11
\The Ruby Mare
rls-
(Ch. 1764)1 Spiletta
{ (Ch. 1749)
/Regulus 11
\ Mother Western
^-^
OS
CO
B\.
/Snap /
/Snip 9
\Dau. of Fox
1—1
o3 ra
02 t_-
Virago 1 (Br. 1750)
pd
*• (Gr. 1764)1 Daughter of
/Regulus 11
{ (1750)
^Dau. of Crab
r^
/"Tartar 48
/Partner 9
\ Meliora
'Herod 26 J (Ch. 1743)
(B. 1758)1 Cypron
/Blaze 4*
\ Salome
T~
£
1--
t (B. 1750)
00
£
=8 .
? Matchem 4
(Cade 6
a
Teresa J (B. 1748)
\ Dau. of Partner
ft
k (B. 1767)1 Brown Regulus
/Regulus 11
\Miss Starling Jun.
§
pa-
l_ (Br. 1759)
(Tartar 48
'Herod 26 | (Ch. 1743)
/ Partner 9
\ Meliora
pa
2Ai
CD
(h ■* i
(B. 1758)1 Cypron
I (B. 1750)
/Blaze ►£>
\ Salome
2
^
r
&
CO
00
S~1
(Blank 15
Rachel I (B. 1740)
/Godolphin Arabian >J>
1 Little Hartley Mare
Q-i
1-1
.Sfffl
pq
Mw
, (1763) 1 Daughter of
I (1751)
/Regulus 11
\Dau. of Soreheels
(Snip 9
/Flying Childers 6
\ Dau. of Basto
i—1
-Snap / 1 (Br. 1736)
3
« 00 1
(Br. 1750)1 Daughter of
/Fox 6
a
1-4
IS)
^8 ol
I (1740)
fi
( Blank 15
Julia | (B. 1740)
/ Godolphin Arabian 4*
\ Little Hartley Mare
(Cm
~|
(B. 1756)1 Daughter of
/Partner 9
\ Bonny Lass
i. (B. 1735)
/Bartlet's Childers 6
^Dau. of Snake
/Blacklegs 4*
\Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Godolphin Arabian 4*
\Grey Robinson
/Smith's Son of Snake >£•
\01d Montagu Mare
/Flying Childers 6
\Dau. of Basto
/Godolphin Arabian »£■
(Little Hartley Mare
/Godolphin Arabian •£•
\ Lady Cow
/ Brother to Mixbury 9
\ Dau. of Bald Galloway
/Partner 9
\ Meliora
/Blaze 4*
\ Salome
/Godolphin Arabian 4*
1 Little Hartley Mare
/Regulus 11
\Dau. of Soreheels
/Bartlet's Childers 6
\Dau. of Snake
/Patriot 24
\Dau. of Crab
/Godolphin Arabian 4"
\Grey Robinson
/Snip 9
\Dau. of Cottingham
(Squirt 11
fMarske 8 | (Ch. 1732)
(Br. 1750)1 The Ruby Mare
("Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
ll Mother "Western
§0
Spiletta
I (Ch. 174
O
(Second 9
(Br. 1732)
Daughter of
(B. 1739)
2s"
Mother
Pratt
(1748)
(Marksman 21
I (1741)
I Daughter of
SO
a
5
M
o
w
H
»
S£ '-''—
°0 . ^H
(B. 17
>—1
w"
^
('Tartar 48
Herod 26 | (Ch. 1743)
(B. 1758)1 Cypron
(B. 1750)
(Blank 15
Rachel
(1763)
I (B. 1740)
1 Daughter of
I (1751)
( Squirt 11
Syphon 9 | (Ch. 1732)
(Ch. 1750)"! Daughter of
(Regulus 11
I Dau. of J (B. 1739)
------ 1 Daughter of
I (1758)
79
P
-ocr page 467-
BRONZE (Br. 1803)
BRISEIS (Bay 1804)
f
Daughter of 2
Buzzard
I),u
lghter of
Alexander 13
Mis
"ortune
-----
(Ch. 1'
____, i
'82)
(Br
1775)
> .....
d
tu
o
p
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reci
Pri
Ch.
fcd 8
w*
p
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(71
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~J CO
Oi >*■
Ci^!
Ob
l-p*.
o w
^M
o
h-1
Lady Jane 2 (B. 1796)
Beningbrough 7 (B. 1791)
o
>
CO
Woodpecker /
(Ch. 1773)
Paulina
(B. 1778)
King Fergus 6
(Ch. 1775)
Sir Peter 3
(Br. 1784)
Daughter of
(1780)
2
w
CO
M
GO
o
ON
t) ►> Sd M rj
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Bay
SO
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fU n, n r^.-. [^ r^1 T\ ^- kiJ ^ r^     «« H 1 , '
sggpss
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w" ^ pi
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-ocr page 468-
OAKS WINNERS 1808 & 1809
„ ,           1Matchem 4
tor 12 I <B-m8)
(CHul7«7)|D*J^,rof
/"Squirrel 4
Brunette | (B. 1754)
/Cade 6
[Dan. of Partner
fSnap /
[ Dau. of Cullen Arabian
/Traveller 37
\ Grey Bloody Buttocks
/Matchless 13
[Dau. of Ancaster Starling
/Herod 26
[Dau. of Cygnet
( Spectator /
\ Horatia
( Cade 6
\Dau. of Partner
/Babraham 15
[ Dau. of Cole's Foxhunter
/Tartar 48
[Cypron
/Cade 6
I Dau. of Lonsdale Bay Arabian
/Matchem 4
[ Duchess
/Snap /
\ Dau. of Regulus
/Godolphin Arabian >J<
\ Roxana
('Partner 9
[Brown Farewell
| Tartar 48
[Cypron
/Blank 15
[ Dau. of Partner
is
1771)1 Dot
(Br
«
B. 1764)
/Tlorizel 5
Diomed 6 I (B. 1768)
(Ch. 1777)1 Daughter of
I (B. 1763)
/Matchem •/
Giantess | (B. 1748)
(B. 1769)1 Molly Long Legs
I (B. 1753)
,,. ,
          /"Herod 26
r
aj
U
« ^-^
Ol'L'l
iante
1790
BO
w„-
I .«
><^
pecker
J (B. 1758)
Miss Ramsden
(Ch. 1773) \*hs*^
/"Dux 7
Misfortune | (B. 1761)
(Br. 1775)1 Curiosity
{ (Br. 1766)
fCade 6
Matchem 4 | (B. 1734)
(B. 1748)") Daughter of
IJ1735)
fit
^S
M
r
A
^
_■.-.
03 JC.
a
N !>.
s-
N f—1 -
o
a
.^03
' Herod '.
(B. 1758)
Princess
(B. 176
T
ulia
(B. 1756)
/-n ,           /'Matchem 4
r tor 12 J (B-1748)
(Ch. 1767){D^2fof
/'Squirrel 4
Brunette J (B. 1754)
(Br. 1771)1 Dove
l (B. 1764)
/"Florizel S
/-Diomed 6 | (B. 1768)
(Ch. 1777)1 Daughter of
I
                    I (B. 1763)
I                    /-Matchem 4
Giantess | (B. 1748)
{ (B. 1769)] Molly LonS LeSs
I (B. 1753)
(Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
Spiletta
(Ch. 1749)
(Warren's Sports
Sports-
            man 32
mistress \ (B. 1753)
(Ch. 1765) Golden Locks
{ (Ch. 1758)
/Cade 6
[Dau. of Partner
/'Snap /
[ Dau. of Cullen Arabian
/Traveller 37
I Grey Bloody Buttocks
("Matchless 13
( Dau. of Ancaster Starling
/Herod 26
\ Dau. of Cygnet
/"Spectator /
\ Horatia
/Cade 6
[ Dau. of Partner
(Babraham 15
[Dau. of Cole's Foxhunter
("Squirt 11
[The Ruby Mare
/Regulus 11
/Mother Western
/Cade 6
[Silvertail
f'Oroonoko 7
I Dau. of Crab
/Tartar 48
\ Cypron
/Blank 15
[ Dau. of Regulus
(Traveller 37
[Grey Bloody Buttocks
/Regulus 11
[ Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
2g
a
■n
<
■■A J
3
a
o
u
o
a
i—i
vco
z
«
u
In
rH |*w
&e
3 »
a
S^1-
Q
Ig
m~
(*¥»» WlTW)
flyer 13 A R;„hpl '
("Squirrel 4
Cypher | (B. 1754)
(Br. 1772)1 Curiosity's Dam
[ (1749)
81
-ocr page 469-
OAKS WINNERS 1810 & 1811
Marske 8
(Squirt 11
\The Ruby Mare
J Regulus 11
| Mother Western
/Crab 9
^Miss Slamerkin
I Tartar 48
\Dau. of Old Starling
f Partner 9
\Meliora
/Blaze «J<
^ Salome
/Cade 6
^Dau. of Partner
(Whitenose «J"
IMiss Slamerkin
/Tartar 48
\ Cypron
J Blank 15
\ Dau. of Regulus
fSnip 9
\Dau. of Fox
(Regulus 11
\ Midge
(Squirt 11
/The Ruby Mare
/Blank 15
(.Bay Starling
(Cade 6
\Dau. of Partner
/Tarquin 13
/Sister to Antelope
CO
(-Eclipse 12 1
791)
ergu
1776
(Ch. 1764)1
^ ■"
a>5
Creeping
eg.
Polly
L (Ch. 1756) 1
1-
S
1
c
u
'a
'Herod 26 1
ningb
(B. 1758) 1
(D
so .
I
-■
spa
Pyrrha |
, (B. 1771) 1
'Highflyer
'W?T
13
.—,
IS.
(B. 1774)
T—
1 —
Oh -•
|
!—1
AM
Papillon I
a
GQ —'
"■ (Br. 1769)1
(Br. 1750)
Spiletta
(Ch. 1749)
Black and All
Black7(Br.l743)
Fanny
(1751)
Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
Cypron
(B. 1750)
Matchem 4
(B. 1748)
Duchess
(B. 1748)
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Rachel
(1763)
Snap /
(Br. 1750)
Miss Cleveland
>
fi.
<
V,
-A
o
(1758)
Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
Daughter of
(Ch. 1759)
Matchem 4
(B. 1748)
"Daughter of
00
T—
d
o
a
<
>!
^
-
ao 1
OS
. £
fY. Marske
12
(B. 1771) [
n I Dan. of
/Matchem 4          J Cade 6
_ (B. 1748)           \Dau. of Partner
Conductor
trt 1?<m1 Daughter of
(Ch. 1,67) [ (iys62)
{Squirrel 4
(B. 1754)
Dove
(B. 1764)
(Florizel 5
/Snap /
\Dau. of Cullen Arabian
/Traveller 37
/Grey Bloody Buttocks
/Matchless 13
\Dau. of Ancaster Starling
/Herod 26
/Dau. of Cygnet
(Spectator /
/Horatia
/Cade 6
\ Dau. of Partner
/Babraham 15
/Dau. of Cole's Foxhunter
/Tartar 48
/Cypron
a..
.as
iomed 6 | (B. 1768)
(Ch. 1777)1 Daughter of
»<3
o ■
I (B. 1763)
1
                    i Matchem 4
Giantess J (B. 1748)
I (B. 1769) 1 Molly Long Legs
I (B. 1753)
«
Pi
-
-
O
''Highflyer
(Herod 26
(B. 1758)
to
13
(Blank 15
\Dau. of Regulus
/'Eclipse 12
            j Marske 8
I (Ch. 1764)         /Spiletta
| Hyseua                 /Snap /
I (Br. 1762)          (Miss Belsea
/"Herod 26              /Tartar 48
i (B.1758)           \ Cypron
f Cade 6
\ Dau. of Lonsdale Bay Arabiar
("Traveller 37
/Grey Bloody Buttocks
/Blank 15
\Dau. of Cullen Arabian
1 1774) \
Everlast-
ing
(B. 1775
/•Wood-
f ~",        ,
Ih CO
a> oo
rS I—<
-0 .
(Ch 1773)1
"j                   
C
, Heinel       
V (B. 1771) 1
* Some accounts say this mare was by a brother to Tarquin.
82
-ocr page 470-
OAKS WINNERS 1812 & 1813
Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
1 Spiletta
I (Ch. 1749)
/Omnium 4
I (B. 1758)
| Cloudy
I (B. 1761)
/'Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
| Rachel
I (1763)
/Cardinal Puff-/
I (Gr. 1760)
| Daughter of
I (Ch. 1768)
/ Marske 8
I (Br. 1750)
1 Spiletta
I. (Ch. 1749)
f Warren's Sports-
man 32
] (B. 1753)
Golden Locks
[ (Ch. 1758)
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
| Miss Ramsden
I Trentham 5
(B. 1766)
/Squirt 11
( Dau. of Blacklegs
I Regulus 11
\ Mother Western
/Snap /
\ Miss Cade
/Blank 15
/ Dau. of Crab
/Tartar 48
\ Cypron
/Blank 15
l^Dau. of Regulus
/ Babraham 15
^Dau. of Snip
jTatler /
\ Bay Snip
/Squirt 11
\Dau. of Blacklegs
/Regulus 11
( Alother Western
/ Cade 6
I. Silvertail
/Oroonoko 7
^Dau. of Crab
/Tartar 48
t Cypron
| ^de 6
- Dau. of Lonsdale Bay
\ Arabian
/ Sweepstake 44
\ Miss South
/The Compton Barb ►£•
^Sister to Regulus
fEclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
c .
z
—.
Amaranda
I (1771)
Highflyer
13
(B. 1774)
Dau. of
I (1777)
3=Q
/"Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
I Sports-
mistress
{ (Ch. 1765)
?S
Wood-
pecker) /
(Ch. 1773)
§5
Camilla
, (B. 177S
| Coquette
M<
I (B. 17'
/Marske 8
(Eclipse 12 | (Br. 1750)
(Ch. 1764)") Spiletta
I (Ch. 1749)
fWarren's Sports-
Sports-
             man 32
mistress \ (B. 1753)
(Ch. 1765) Golden Locks
[ (Ch. 1758)
(Tartar 48
/-Herod 26 J (Ch. 1743)
(B. 1758) 1 Cypron
I (B. 1750)
{Snap /
(Br. 1750)
Miss Windsor
I Squirt 11
I^Dau. of Blacklegs
/Regulus 11
\ Mother Western
/Cade 6
I Silvertail
/Oroonoko 7
\ Dau. of Crab
/ Partner 9
\ Meliora
/Blaze ►£■
/ Salome
/Snip 9
\Dau. of Fox
/Godolphin Arabian «J-
\Dau. of Yg. Belgrade
/Partner 9
\ Meliora
/Blaze >J<
/Salome
/Godolphin Arabian •£•
l^ Roxana
/Lonsdale Bay Arabian •{•
\ Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Godolphin Arabian 4"
^ Roxana
/Partner 9
\ Brown Farewell
/Tartar 48
\ Cypron
/Blank 15
tDau. of Partner
/CO CO
?S
oo .
4S-C]
*k
*N|
r
^N
cs
sr-)
I—1
So
vS
? ■
I
(1754)
/Tartar 48
| (Ch. 1743)
I Cypron
I (B. 1750)
/Cade 6
I (B. 1734)
J Daughter of
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Miss Rams-
den
/Cade 6
'Matchem 4} (B. 1734)
(B. 1748) "| Daughter of
I (1735)
/Herod 26
Princess | (B. 1758)
(B. 1769) 1 Julia
I (B. 1756)
83
-ocr page 471-
OAKS WINNERS 1814 & 1815
/Tartar 48
[Cypron
/Cade 6
\ Dau. of Lonsdale Bay Arabian
/Matchem 4
\ Duchess
/Snap /
[Dau. of Regulus
[Marske 8
\Spiletta
/Forester 2
\Dau. of Coalition Colt
/Herod 26
\ Rachel
/Alfred 12
[Dau. of Engineer
[Herod 26
/Rachel
/Snap /
/Miss Cleveland
/Matchem 4
X Dau. of Snap
/Marske 8
\Dau. of Regulus
[Marske 8
[Spiletta
[Tartar 48
I, Dau. of Mogul
[Tartar 48
\ Cypron
[Blank 15
[Spinster
[He
rod 26
---» /■
CO
1-
00
T)
f-
u
-
N
0
:)
__
Wood
, I (B. 175
pecker
1 * 1 V
Miss Ramsden
(Ch. 1773) lJ
fDux 7
Misfortune) (B. 1761)
. (Br. 1775)1 Curiosity
N
*- c
Ui
°
5 1
^ I
r~t
c/S
bo
-—'
00
P
rf
JZ
o I
D
I. (Br. 1760)
fEelipse 12
.Alexander | (f£ m4)
/r\i i>roo\1 Grecian Princess
(Ch. 1782) { (ch_ mo)
[Highflyer 13
Dau. of J (B. 1774)
------ "j Daughter of
[Highflyer 13
{Sir Peter 3 I (B. 1774)
(Br. 1784)1 Papillon
I (Br. 1769)
[Alfred 12
Matron I (B. 1776)
(B. 1785) 1 Daughter of
I (B. 1771)
Volunteer (^1^4)
(Ch. 1780)iDau^r of
[Herod 26
Dau. of I (B. 1758)
(B. 1779) 1 Golden Grove
I (Ch. 1760)
.ftW
03"
sO
Q"
[Marske 8
Eclipse 12 J (Br. 1750)
(Ch. 1764) I Spiletta
I (Ch. 1749)
[Warren's Sports-
[Squirt 11
[Dau. of Blacklegs
[Regulus 11
[Mother Western
00 ^-v
CO CO
rSfc
o
oa
OO
t-.
I-H
po
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cc
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OO
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rf
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, cS t^ 1
c6 rH -
Cade 6
Silvertail
Sports-
mistress
(Ch. 176-
man 32
\ (B. 1753)
Golden Locks
[Oroonoko 7
1 Dau. of Crab
/Partner 9
[ M eliora
[Blaze ►£<
\ Salome
[Snip 9
\Dau. of Fox
/Godolphin Arabian »J«
( Dau. of Yg. Belgrade
/Partner 9
[Meliora
/Blaze ►}■
| Salome
[Godolphin Arabian «Jj«
\ Roxana
/Lonsdale Bay Arabian ►J*
| Dau. of Bay Bolton
[Godolphin Arabian >J>
\ Roxana
[Partner 9
\ Brown Farewell
/Tartar 48
I Cypron
[Blank 15
\Dau. of Partner
1 (Ch. 1758)
[Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
J Cypron
(B. 1750)
(Snap /
(Br. 1750)
Miss Windsor
(1754)
[Tartar 48
»s
*-* '-N
^, CD CO
as
0 r-H J
Ph .
■^-d
GQ
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Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Miss Rams
den
(Ch. 1743)
\ Cypron
(B. 1750)
[Cade 6
I (B. 1734)
"i Daughter of
[Cade 6
Matchem 4 I (B. 1734)
(B. 1748) 1 Daughter of
I (1735)
[Herod 26
Princess | (B. 1758)
(B. 1769) 1 Julia
{ (B. 1756)
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OAKS WINNERS 1816 & 1817
rrartar48
1 Cypron
/Cade 6
( Dau. of Lonsdale Bay Arabian
| Matchem 4
\
Duchess
/Snap /
[Dau. of Kegulus
/Marske 8
\Spiletta
/Forester 2
\
Dau. of Coalition Colt
/Herod 26
[ Rachel
/Alfred 12
\Dau. of Engineer
/Squirt 11
\Dau. of Blacklegs
/Regulus 11
\ Mother Western
fBabraham 15
\ Dau. of Hampton Court
[ Childers
/Forester 2
\
Dau. of Coalition Colt
/ Partner 9
\ Meliora
/Blaze »f<
\ Salome
/Snap /
\Dau. of Blank
/Sedley's Arabian *J>
1 Vanessa
Wood-
Herod 26
w,
pecker /-'
(Ch. 1773) (^
Miss Ramsden
I Dux 7
(B. 1761)
Misfortune
(Br. 1775)
11 Curiosity
I (Br. 1760)
fEclipse 12
o
en
li-i
a
O
J
m
O l
■5)
-^
<y>
-H
To
o
Alex
(Ch. 1764)
ander1
8211 Grecian Princess
(Ch.1782;, (Chmo)
j Highflyer 13
Dau. of J (B. 1774)
------
        J Daughter of
a!
B
H
<
O
35
3
y.
Marsko 8
Eclipse 12
(Ch. i~
(Br. 1750)
'^"lSSt.tl749)
Bosphorus 21
I (1754)
Daughter of
Dau. of
m
-
(Tartar 48
Herod 26 J (Ch. 1743)
(B. 1758)1 Cypron
I (B. 1750)
fGoldfinder /
Dau. of | (B. 1764)
        I Sister to Greyling
lfl|
i Marske 8
Eclipse 12 J (Br. 1750)
(Ch. 1764)1 Spiletta
I (Ch. 1749)
/Squirt 11
\ Dau. of Blacklegs
/Regulus 11
\ Mother Western
/Forester 23
\ Dau. of Looby
/Coalition Colt 9
\ Dau. of Bustard
/Tartar 48
\ Cypron
/Blank 15
\jlau. of Regulus
I Cripple 4«
-j Dau. of Hampton Court
{ Childers
/Sampson >J«
\ Dau. of Regulus
( Tartar 48
t Cypron
/Blank 15
1 Dau. of Regulus
/Snip 9
[Dau. of Fox
/Regulus 11
1 Midge
/ Herod 26
\ Dau, of Cygnet
/Spectator /
\ Horatia
/Squirt 11
\Dau. of Blacklegs
/Skim 19
I Hag
Grecian F^f^m
Princess i^011;,1'50
*■ (Ch. 1770)1 DaugM*r °»
00 i           m<A           f Herod 26
flier 13 J <B- 1758>
(b. 1774)y (1763)
(Tantrum 21
^W £ Termagant (B. 1760)
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W*l?..-i Eaohel
8)
(1 1774)[J (1763)
("Snap /
Papillon I (Br. 1750)
(Br. 1769)1 Miss Cleveland
I (1758)
fFlorizel 5
Dionied 6 I (B. 1768)
(Ch. 1777)1 Sister to Juno
I (B. 1763)
('Marske 8
Desdemona \ (Br. 1750)
I (Gr. 1770)1 Y. Hag
I (Gr. 1761)
85
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OAKS WINNERS 1818 & 1819
/Squirt 11
\Dau. of Blacklegs
[Regulus 11
\ Mother Western
'TCade 6
\Silvertail
I Oroonoko 7
\Dau. of Crab
/Partner 9
\Meliora
( Blaze »J"
{ Salome
/Snip 9
[Dau. of Fox
[ Godolphin Arabian 4*
\Dau. of Y. Belgrado
/Marske 8
\ Spiletta
(Black and All Black 7
\ Fanny
(Tartar 48
\ Cypron
(Matcheni 4
\ Duchess
f Herod 26
\ Rachel
/Snap /
[Miss Clevelanil
(Herod 26
\Dau. of Cygnet
/Matchem 4
[ Calliope
[Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
CO ^~s
CO CO
0
00 .
at
OO
P-l-^
-
Eclipse 12
(Chi 1764)1 Spiletta
I. (Ch. 1749)
Warren's Sports
Sports-
            man 32
mistress \ (B. 1753)
(Ch. 1765) Golden Locks
(Ch. 1758)
/"'Tartar 48
Herod 26 | (Ch. 1743)
(B. 1758)"| Cypron
I (B. 1750)
[Snap /
Lisette I (Br. 1750)
(B. 1772)1 Miss Windsor i
I (1754)
c3 i>«
v a
«P5
'King
Fergus 6
(Ch. 177"
[ Eclipse 12
I (Ch. 1764)
,"| Creeping Polly
,) [ (Ch. 1756)
[Herod 26
Dan. of I (B. 1758)
(B. 1780)1 Pyrrha
I (B. 1771)
[Highflyer 13
Sir Peter 3 J (B. 1774)
(Br. 1784)1 Papillon
I. (Br. 1769)
[Florizel 5
Paulina J (B. 1768)
(B. 1778)1 Captive
I (B. 1771)
c
en
a
™ OS
•3 m
/Marske 8
[Spiletta
/Black and All Black 7
1 Fanny
/Tartar 48
\ Cypron
[Matcheni 4
\ Duchess
/Tartar 48
\ Cypron
[Blank 15
\Dau. of Regulus
/Marske 8
[Spiletta
[Herod 26
1 Nettle
[Marske 8
[Spiletta
[Black and All Black 7
1 Fanny
(Herod 26
[Rachel
f Matchem 4
\Dau. of Alcides
(Matchem 4
[Dau. of Snap
/Squirrel 4
\ Dove
/Herod 26
[Dau. of Cygnet
/Spectator /
\ Horatia
**•
King
Fergus 6
(Ch. 1775)
LBh.
^
to .
©
00
as
Dan. of
ai
PP
(B. 1780)
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a:
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, (Gr. 1782)
►6
Trump-
o*
ator 14
-
6
LbS
(B. 1782)
a .1
Fancy
(B. 1780)
(Eclipse 12
I (Ch. 1764)
| Creeping Polly
I (Ch. 1756)
[Herod 26
| (B. 1758)
)1 Pyrrha
I (B. 1771)
f Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
."l Rachel
>{ ares)
[Eclipse 12
J (Ch. 1764)
"| Daughter of
[Eclipse 12
I (Ch. 1764)
~\ Creeping Pollv
1 { (Ch. 1756)
[Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
1 Monimia
{ (Gr. 1771)
[Conductor 12
I (Ch. 1767)
| Brunette
{ (Br. 1771)
(Florizel 5
I (B. 1768)
I Diomed's Dam
{ (B. 1763)
86
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CAROLINE (Bay 1817)
AUGUSTA (Bay 1818)
Marianne 23 (Ch. 1798)
Whalebone / (Br. 1807)
Woful / (B. 1809)
Daughter of 26 (Ch. 1813)
O
>
CO
Mufti 7
(B. 1783)
Penelope
(B. 1798)
Waxy 18
(B. 1790)
Guildford Nan
(B. 1805)
Rubens 2
(Ch. 1805)
Waxy 18
(B. 1790)
Maria
(B. 1783)
Penelope
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OAKS WINNERS 1822 & 1823
l Herod 26
fWood- | (B m8)
(gh ie773)\Miss R^sden
j'Dux 7
I Misfortune | (B. 1761)
(Br. 1775)1 Curiosity
/Tartar 48
\ Cypron
/Cade 6
(Dau. of Lonsdale Bay Arabian
/Matchem 4
(Duchess
/Snap /
\Dau. of Regulus
/Marske 8
\ Spiletta
/Forester 2
\Dau. of Coalition Colt
/Herod 26
\ Rachel
/Alfred 12
\Dau. of Engineer
/Squirt 11
(Dau. of Blacklegs
/Regulus 11
\ Mother Western
•f Cade 6
)\Silvertail
/Oroonoko 7
(Dau. of Crab
/Tartar 48
(.Cypron
/Blank 15
\Dau. of Regulus
(Snip 9
\Dau. of Fox
f Blank 15
\ Dau. of Partner
p
(Br. 1760)
.,        , ("Eclipse 12
Alexander | ((£ mi)
(Ch. 1782)1°™ f™eeS*
("Highflyer 13
Dan. of I (B. 1774)
1 Daughter of
{Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
Spiletta
(Ch. 1749)
                 /"Warren's Sports
Sl'°^- I man 32 (B. 1753
^i*?S?r\1 Golden Locks
(Ch. 176:0 [ (ch 1758)
tt- i,a         ("Herod 26
Highflyer ) (Bl, l758)
ivt tiIas 1 Rachel
(B. 1//4) [ (1763)
f ?!5
V-
js oo
£3 QO
("Snap /
I (Br. 1750)
I "I Julia
I (B. 1756)
Promise
1 (Br. 176
{Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Sportsmistress
(Ch. 1765)
[ Herod 26
Maria
          | (B. 1758)
(B. 1777) iLisette
I (B: 1772)
rp „ . ("Conductor 12
Trumpator | (Ch_ m1)
(b. i/82) y (Br_ 1771)
(Highflyer 13
Prunella J (B. 1774)
fB. 1788) 1 Promise
I (Br. 1768)
rmghflyer (*£**,,
(B. 1774) \»«g
(Snap /
Papillon I (Br. 1750)
1 (Br. 1769)1 Miss Cleveland
(1758)
/Marske 8
\ Spiletta
/Warren's Sportsman 02
\ Golden Locks
/Tartar 48
1 Cypron
/Snap /
\Miss Windsor
( Matchem 4
(Dau. of Snap
(Squirrel 4
\ Dau. of Snap                ^
(Herod 26
(Rachel
fSnap /
\ Julia
I Tartar 48
"(Cypron
/Blank 15
\Dau. of Regulus
/Snip 9
(Dau. of Fox
f Regulus 11
(Midge
(Marske 8
V Spiletta
(Black and All Black 7
(Fanny
f Marske 8
(Dau. of Blank
/Cade 6
(Dau. of Brother to Fearnought
»o
w ^ -
S,oo
LSI
a
t-
to
3M
2W
Fer (EcliPse 12
I (Ch. 1764)
(King
gus 6
(Ch. 1775)
I Creeping Pollv
I (Ch. 1756)
(Y. Marske 12
) (B. 1771)
j Daughter of
88
34
Lardella
(1780)
-ocr page 476-
OAKS WINNERS 1824 & 1825
/"Highflyer 13
fSir Peter 3 I (B. 1774)
(Br. 1784)1 Papillon
I
                    [ (Br. 1769)
I                   /'Dungannon 33
Arethusa I (B. 1780)
I (Ch. 1792)1 Daughter of
I (Gr. 1777)
/'Saltrani 7
Whiskey^) (Br. 1780)
(B. 1789) 1 Calash
I (B. 1775)
/ Diomed 6
Y. Giantess I (Ch. 1777)
(B. 1790) | Giantess
I (B. 1769)
/Herod 26
\ Kachel
(Snap /
\Miss Cleveland
/Eclipse 12
^Aspasia
/Prophet 12
\ Virago
/Eclipse 12
\ Virago
f Herod 26
\ Teresa
/Florizel 5
/Dau. of Spectator
/Matehem 4
(Molly Long Legs
/Conductor 12
\ Brunette
(Diomed 6
/Giantess
| Highflyer 13
1 Countess
/Shark ȣ.
\Dau. of Syphon
/Eclipse 12
/Sportsmis tress
( Herod 26
\ Lisette
/Conductor 12
\ Brunette
I Highflyer 13
1 Promise
-a
-
■o ■
fa
35
-
-
-
p
o
(Trumpator 14
(B. 1782)
Y. Gia
(B. ]
^Sorcerer 6
(Bl. 1796)1 Y
o o
fDelpini 30
I Golden
Locks
(Ch. 1793)
f Waxy 18
(B. 1790)
Penelope
I (B. 1798
(Gr. 1781)
1 Violet
I (Ch. 1787)
i'Pot-8-os 38
I (Ch. 1773)
| Maria
I (B. 1777)
/'Trumpator 14
J (B. 1782)
I Prunella
I (B. 1788)
oO
LP.
fe
2?
/Highflyer 13
(Papillon
J Dungannon 33
| Dan. of Prophet
[Eclipse 12
\Sportsmistress
/Highflyer 13
I Hebe
/Eclipse 12
( Creeping Polly
/Herod 26
/ Pyrrha
/Herod 26
( Rachel
(Goldftnder /
\ Dau. of Marske
/Matehem 4
(Dau. of Snap
/Squirrel 4
\Dove
/Herod 26
\Miss Ramsden
/Trentham 5
\ Coquette
/Eclipse 12
\ Virago
/Herod 26
X Teresa
/Otho 4
\Dau. of Babraham
/Blank 15
^ Dizzy, by Driver 14
f Sir Peter 3
Walton 7 I (Br. 1784)
(B. 1799) "| Arethusa
I (Ch. 1792)
i'Pot-8-os 38
Dabchick | (Ch. 1773)
(Br. 1798) | Drab
(B. 1791)
Boning
brou
p
King Fergus 6
(Ch. 1775)
;h 7 - ,
fnTftl! 1 Daughter of
(B. i/9i) y (B 17g0)
/'Highflyer 13
Gilliflower J (B. 1774)
(B. 1787) 1 Preference
m
•H I
""1
^ «o
» .s oo f
S3
6-1
'
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ja
ja ZZ- |
SB
I (B. 1778)
-p           . ^Conductor 12
rrumpatorl (Ch_ l76?)
(-R 17S9^ 1 Brunette
(B. 1/82) { (Br_ 1771)
/'Woodpecker /
Dau. of J (Ch. 1773)
(B. 1794) 1 Daughter of
00 <
"VI 1
I (Br. 1781)
(Saltram 7
(Whisker 2 | (Br. 1780)
(B. 1789) 1 Calash
[ (B. 1775)
\ n -n ■ I Dorimant 40
(G, 1781){D^ m7)
89
3 «
3 '
-ocr page 477-
OAKS WINNERS 1826 & 1827
/Conductor 12
|_ Brunette
/Diomed 6
( Giantess
/Highflyer 13
\ Countess
/Shark -fr
1 Dau. of Syphon
/Herod 26
\ Miss Rarasden
f Dux 7
\ Curiosity
/Eclipse 12
\ Sportsmistress
/Highflyer 13
(Dau. of Syphon
t Trumpator 14
J (B. 1782)
96)1 Y. Giantess
I (B. 1790)
{Delpini 30
(Gr. 1781)
(Ch. 1787)
("Woodpecker /
3 I (Ch. 1773)
87)1 Misfortune
I (Br. 1775)
fPot-8-os38
I (Ch. 1773)
96)1 Maid of All Work
I (B. 1786)
10
'(—1,—,
CD O
o ^
00
Sorcerer
(Bl. 17
Golden
Locks
(Ch. i;
[ Buzzard
(Ch. 17
i-~.
t
■33 M
I Dau. of
(B. 17
Si-
te
<
I—-
ij
1-9
if
/"C
I
„. ,          fHerod 26
r ft n J <B-1758>
fleI,It.A Rachel
(B. 1774)[ (1768)
(Matchem 4
(B. 1748)
Miss Starling
(1750)
/Tartar 48
( Cy pron
/Blank 15
\Dau. of Regulus
/Cade 6
\Dau. of Partner
/Starling 24
\ Ringbone
3
.2 °°
/ Matchem 4
\Dau. of Snap
f Squirrel 4
\Dove
/Florizel 5
\Dau. of Spectator
f Matchem 4
\ Molly Long Legs
/Herod 26
1 Curiosity
/Shakespeare 15
(Miss Meredith
/Tartar 48
\Cypron
/Snap /
\Miss Windsor
/Herod 26
(Miss Ramsden
/Dux 7
( Curiosity
/Eclipse 12
( Grecian Princess
f Highflyer 13
\Dau. of Alfred
/Highflyer 13
\ Papillon
/Alfred 12
(Dau. of Marske
/Eclipse 12
( Dau. of Tartar
/Herod 26
1 Golden Grove
„,                1 Conductor 12
fTrumpatorl (0h> m7)
/■o i^oonI Brunette
<B- imH (Br. 1771)
("Diomed 6
Y. Giantess | (Ch. 1777)
(B. 1790)1 Giantess
I (B. 1769)
{Justice 3
(Br. 1774)
Daughter of
(1763)
! Herod 26
Maria
          | (B. 1758)
(B. 1777)1 Lisette
I (B. 1772)
u as
11 " -
ta
""1
?P3
(Woodpecker /
J (Ch. 1773)
"I Misfortune
I (Br. 1775)
("Alexander 13
J (Ch. 1782)
"I Daughter of
M
to
a
5
c
("Buzzard 3
; (Ch. 1787
<V
Dau. of
(Sir Peter 3
Sir Harry-/I (Br. 1784)
(Br. 1795)1 Matron
I (B. 1785)
("Volunteer 9
Dau. of I (Ch. 1780)
(Ch. 1793)1 Daughter of
>
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1779)
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-ocr page 478-
OAKS WINNERS 1828 & 1829
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Miss Ramsden
/Tartar 48
iCypron
/Cade 6
- Dau. of Lonsdale Bay
| Arabian
f Matchem 4
(Duchess
fSnap /
( Dau. of Regulus
(Marske 8
(Spiletta
/ Forester 2
( Dau. of Coalition Colt
(Herod 26
( Rachel
/Alfred 12
( Dau. of Engineer
/.Marske 8
\ Spiletta
/Warren's Sportsman 32
(Golden Locks
(Tartar 48
( Cypron
(Snap /
( Miss Windsor
f Tartar 48
ICypron
/Blank 15
( Dau. of Regulus
f Snip 9
\Dau. of Fox
/Blank 15
1 Dau. of Partner
,Wood-
pecker /
(Ch. 1773)
/-»P
■gff
CO
MS.
/Dux 7
I (B. 1761)
I Curiosity
{ (Br. 1760)
/"Eclipse 12
I (Ch. 1764)
I Grecian Princess
I (Ch. 1770)
/Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
j Daughter of
/Eclipse 12
I (Ch. 1764)
I Sportsmistress
I (Ch. 1765)
/Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
| Lisette
I (B. 1772)
/ Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
) Rachel
I (1763)
(Snap /
I (Br. 1750)
I Julia
I (B. 1756)
o
00
Misfortune
(Br. 1775)
Alex-
ander 13
(Ch. 1782)
I Dau. of
.Si
2
Ml
V. 3
B-
w
00
I—I
o
tJ
M
&
fPot-8-os 38
(Ch. 1773)
Maria
(B. 1777)
co 0
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IB
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High-
flyer 13
(B. 1774)
Promise
(Br. 1768)
/Woodpecker /
I (Ch. 1773)
| Misfortune
[ (Br. 1775)
/Alexander 13
I (Ch. 1782)
j Daughter of
/Sir Peter 3
I (Br. 1784)
I Arethusa
I (Ch. 1792)
/Mercury 9
| (Ch. 1778)
I Daughter of
I (B. 1776)
{Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Grecian Princess
(Ch. 1770)
/Highflyer 13
| (B. 1774)
i Termagant
/Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
\ Georgiana
I (B. 1771)
/Tnunpator 14
| (B. 1782)
] Fancy
I (B. 1780)
91
/Herod 26
(Miss Ramsden
/Dux 7
(Curiosity
/Eclipse 12
( Grecian Princess
/Highflyer 13
\ Dau. of Alfred
/Highflyer 13
( Papillon
f Dungannon 33
(Dau. of Prophet
(Eclipse 12
(Dau. of Tartar
/Herod 26
(Folly
("Marske 8
( Spiletta
f Forester 2
(Dau. of Coalition Colt
/Herod 26
( Rachel
/Tantrum 21
( Cantatrice
/Herod 26
\ Rachel
/Matchem 4
(Dau. of Snap
/Conductor 12
( Brunette
| Florizel 5
I Dau. of Spectator
^Buzzard 3
(Ch. 1787)
Dau. of
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Ditto 7
(B. 1800)
Dau. of
(B. 1791)
H"
fe
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i^
125
s-r
i—i
S3
.
n
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^
,Don
Quixote 13
(Ch. 1784)
Evelina
(Br. 1791)
Moor-
cock 12
(B. 1791)
Rally
(Ch. 1790)
00
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OAKS WINNERS 1830 & 1831
(Woodpecker /
(Ch. 1773)
Misfortune
(Br. 1775)
(Alexander 13
Dau. of I (Ch. 1782)
------
        | Daughter of
(Y. Marske 12
Shuttle 21 I (B. 1771)
(B. 1793)] Daughter of
I (Ch. 1781)
(Sir Peter 3
/Herod 26
\ Miss Kamsden
/Dux 7
\ Curiosity
| Eclipse 12
\ Grecian Princess
/Highflyer 13
\Dau. of Alfred
/Marske 8
\Dau. of Blank
/Vauxhall Snap 20
\Hip
/Highflyer 13
\ Papillon
/Eclipse 12
\Clio
/Marske 8
\Spiletta
I Black and All Black 7
\Fanny
f Tartar 48
\Cypron
/Matchem 4
\ Duchess
/Conductor 12
\ Dau. of Herod
/Squirrel 4
\Dove
/Herod 26
t^ Rachel
/Cardinal Puff 4
\Dau. ofTatler
3$
~
Dau. of
(Br. 17
I (Br. 1784)
"1 Miss Hervey
«
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I (Ch. 1775)
n
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CD
pq
(Eclipse 12
I (Ch. 1764)
King
Fergus 6 -,
(Ch 1775) I CreePins Polly
^n. UlOjy (Ch. 1756)
(Herod 26
Dau. of I (B. 1758)
(B. 1780) 1 Pyrrha
I (B. 1771)
I Imperator 28
Pipator 14 | (Br. 1776)
(B. 1786) 1 Brunette
I (Br. 1771)
I"
o
EI! GO
cS A
^O
(Highflyer 13
Dau. of I (B. 1774)
(B. 1790)1 Daughter of
I (1777)
/Eclipse 12
1 Creeping Polly
/'Herod 26
^ Pyrrha
/Herod 26
1 Rachel
/Tantrum 21
\Canta trice
/Highflyer 13
\ Papillon
/Eclipse 12
\ Countess
/Saltram 7
1 Calash
/Dorimant 40
1 Dizzy
/Herod 26
\Miss Ramsden
/Dux 7
1 Curiosity
/Eclipse 12
\ Grecian Princess
/Highflyer 13
t Dau. of Alfred
/Matchem 4
\Dau. of Snap
{Squirrel 4
Dove
/Herod 26
\ Rachel
/Snap /
\ Julia
(King Fergus 6
I (Ch. 1775)
, 1 Daughter of
(Bening-
I brough 7
ol*0"
rVT        I---- t~
I (B. 1791'
(B. 1780)
(Highflyer 13
Evelina J (B. 1774)
(Br. 1791)1 Termagant
PQ
Stamford
30
Sir Peter 3
, (Br 1784)
(Br. 1794)^ (0hl778)
(Whiskey 2
Dau. of J (B. 1789)
(Ch. 1799) I Grey Dorimant
I (Gr. 1781)
\SS
mo
(Woodpecker /
f Buzzard 3
(Ch. 1787
Dau. of
J (Ch. 1773)
)*) Misfortune
I. (Br. 1775)
/"Alexander 13
I (Ch. 1782)
da
1 Daughter of
rp                 /Conductor 12
TrumpatorJ (ch. 1767)
(B. 1782) |B—71)
(Highflyer 13
Prunella | (B. 1774)
' (B. 1788) 1 Promise
I (Br. 1768)
92
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OAKS WINNERS
1832 & 1833
(Woodpecker /
I (Ch. 1773)
i"| Misfortune
I (Br. 1775)
/'Alexander 13
J (Ch. 1782)
j Daughter of
/Herod 26
\Miss Ramsden
/Dux 7
|_ Curiosity
/Eclipse 12
^Grecian Princess
/Highflyer 13
\Dau. of Alfred
/Highflyer 13
\ Papillon
/Dungannon 33
\ Dau. of Prophet
/Eclipse 12
^ Dau. of Tartar
/Herod 26
\ Folly
/Eclipse 12
\ Virago
/Herod 26
\ Teresa
/Herod 26
\ Kachel
(Snap /
\ Julia
/Herod 26
\Miss Ramsden
/Dux 7
\ Curiosity
/Eclipse 12
|_ Sportsmistress
/Highflyer 13
^ Cypher
Ng
a °°
'Bh.
■--
r^«
CO
^Q
B5
Buzzard 3
(Ch. 1787;
o Dau. of
William-
son's
Ditto 7
(B. 1800)
(■Sir Peter 3
I (Br. 1784)
1 Arethusa
(. (Ch. 1792)
II
( Mercury 9
Dau. of I (Ch. 1778)
(B. 1791) "I Daughter of
I (B. 1776)
(Saltrani 7
(Br. 1780)
Calash
(B. 1775)
(Highflyer 13
Prunella | (B. 1774)
(B. 1788) "l Promise
I (Br. 1768)
(Woodpecker /
Buzzard 3 J (Ch. 1773)
(Ch. 1787) I Misfortune
I (Br. 1775)
(Pot-8-os 38
Dau. of J (Ch. 1773)
(1793) ~| Huncamunca
I (Br. 1787)
- ■-
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pq
12-
-1
/
H
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,OCO
3
(Br. 18
2 ^
M
3^g
/Eclipse 12
^Creeping Polly
/Herod 26
( Pyrrha
/Herod 26
(^ Rachel
/Tantrum 21
I Cantatrice
/Eclipse 12
^ Virago
/Herod 26
\Teresa
fFlorizel 5
\Dau. of Spectator
(Matchem 4
\ Molly Long Legs
/Marske 8 •
\Spiletta
/Warren's Sportsman 32
1^ Golden Locks
/Tartar 48
\Cypron
/Snap /
\Miss Windsor
/Matchem 4
I^Dau. of Snap
(Squirrel 4
\Dove
/Tartar 48
\Cypron
/Snap /
\Dau. of Gower Stallion
^Bening-
brough 7
(B. 1791)
Evelina
(King Fergus 6
(Ch. 1775)
Daughter of
(B. 1780)
/"Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
<0 ST
(Br. 1791)1 Termagant
(Saltram 7
Whiskey 2) (Br. 1780)
(B. 1789) I Calash
I (B. 1775)
~ CO
o a,
V IS r-l
CD
3 m
Yg.
Giantess
(B. 1790) I
Diomed 6
(Gr. 1777)
Giantess
(B. 1769)
("Eclipse 12
1-. 0
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Pot-8-os 38 I (Ch. 1764)
(Ch. 1773)1 Sportsmistress
I (Ch. 1765)
{Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Lisette
(B. 1772)
Si
rr                /"Conductor 12
rTrumpatorl (ch- 1767)
(B. 1782) JB71)
(Herod 26
Peggy J (B. 1758)
(B. 1778) j Daughter of
93
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OAKS WINNERS 1834 & 1835
/'Eclipse 12
\ Creeping Polly
[ Herod 26
\ Pyrrha
I Herod 26
1 Rachel
/Tantrum 21
\ Cantatrice
/Woodpecker /
\ Misfortune
/Boudrow 9
\Dau. of Squirrel
[King Fergus 6
^ Dau. of Herod
/Sir Peter 3
\ Paulina
/Herod 26
^Miss Ramsden
/Eclipse 12
t Rosebud
[ Herod 26
\ Narotte
/Gamahoe 4"
\ Patty
/Eclipse 12
\ Sportsmistress
[ Herod 26
\Lisette
(Conductor 12
| Brunette
/Highflyer 13
|^ Promise
living Fergus 6
00
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.Bening-
(Ch. 1775)
(B. 1791) ^ (B_ 1780)
( Highflyer 13
Evelina | (B. 1774)
(Br. 1791)1 Termagant
„ . .         [ Buzzard 3
Popinjay         (ch. 1787)
60
eg .
b^~
5
27
(Ch.
i/yxH (B. 1788)
[Beningbrough 7
J (B. 1791)
1 Lady Jane
I (B. 1796)
(Woodpecker /
(Ch. 1773)
Daughter of
(B. 1778)
Briseis
(B. 1804)
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(Ch. 17
Ierne
(1790)
[Bagot 41
I (B. 1780)
1 Daughter of
[ Pot- 8 -os 38
I (Ch. 1773)
1 Maria
I (B. 1777)
[Trumpator 14
I (B. 1782)
\ Prunella
I (B. 1788)
Waxy 18
(B. 1790)
Penelope
(B. 1798)
a
/King Fergus 6
\Grey Highflyer
/Phoenomenon 2
\
Atalanta
[Pot-8-os 38
^ Lavender
/Highflyer 13
\ Co-heiress
/Saltram 7
\ Calash
[Dragon 6
I Dau. of Eclipse
/Trumpator 14
\Y. Giantess
/Sir Peter 3
\Dau. of Pot-8-os
/Herod 26
t Miss Ramsden
/Dux 7
/Curiosity
/Eclipse 12
(Grecian Princess
[Highflyer 13
I Dau. of Alfred
[Herod 26
^ Rachel
/Matchem 4
\
Barbara
/Highflyer 13
^Papillon
[Florizel 5
\
Frenzy
rWhitelock
2
(B. 1803)
| Dau. of
(1799)
[Hambletonian /
I (B. 1792)
1 Rosalind
I (Ch. 1788)
(Coriander 4
(B. 1786)
Wildgoose
(Br. 1792)
/"Whiskey 2
I
Juniper 9 | (B. 1789)
(Ch. 1805)1 Jenny Spinner
I (Ch. 1797)
[Sorcerer 6
Dau. of I (Bl. 1796)
(Br. 1810)1 Virgin
(Br. 1801)
[Woodpecker
Buzzard 3 | (Ch. 1773)
(Ch. 1787) I Misfortune
I (Br. 1775)
[Alexander 13
Dau. of J (Ch. 1782)
------ "| Daughter of
[Highflyer 13
Diamond 4 I (B. 1774)
(Br. 1792) I Daughter of
I (B. 1774)
[Sir Peter 3
Dau. of | (Br. 1784)
(Br. 1801) | Lucy
I (B. 1789)
94
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OAKS WINNERS 1836 & 1837
/Herod 26
\ Rachel
/Snap /
\ Miss Cleveland
/Eclipse 12
\Aspasia
/Prophet 12
\ Virago
/ Marske 8
( Spiletta
( Warren's Sportsman 32
(Golden Locks
/Herod 26
( Rachel
/Snap /
\ Julia
/Highflyer 13
\ Papillon
/Eclipse 12
\ Clio
fPot-8-os 38
\ Maria
/Woodpecker /
\ Heine!
/King Fergus 6
(Dau. of Herod
/Highflyer 13
\ Termagant
f Highflyer 13
\Dau. of Snap
/Y. Marske 12
I Emma
Highflyer 13
(B. 1774)
Papillon
(Br. 1769)
Dungannon 33
(B. 1780)
Daughter of
(Gr. 1777)
Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Sportsmistress
(Ch. 1765)
Highflyer 13
(B. 1774)
Promise
(Br. 1768)
Sir Peter 3
(Br. 1784)
Miss Hervey
(Ch. 1775)
Waxy 18
(B. 1790)
Daughter of
(B. 1788)
Beningbrough 7
(B. 1791)
Evelina
(Br. 1791)
Star 24
(B. 1785)
Daughter of
(Ch. 1794)
Sir Peter 3
(Br. 1784)"
Arethusa
(Ch. 1792)
fPot-8-os 38 I
(Ch. 1773)1
Prunella
{ (B. 1788) 1
Hap-
[ hazard 35 <
| (Br. 1797) [
Mrs.
Barnet
(B. 1806) I
rOrville 8 I
(B. 1799) "|
fio
fen
pq
c ©
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Oh
Dau. of
(Ch. 1803)"
i Beningbrough 7
Orville 8 I (B. 1791)
(B. 1799) ') Evelina
I (Br. 1791)
/'Stamford 30
Emily         | (Br. 1794)
I (Ch. 1810)"| Daughter of
I (Ch. 1799)
Saltram 7
("King Fergus 6
\ Dau. of Herod
/Highflyer 13
\ Termagant
/Sir Peter 3
\ Horatia
/Whiskey 2
\ Grey Dorimant
/Eclipse 12
/Virago
/Herod 26
X Teresa
/Florizel.?
\Dau. of Spectator
fMatehem 4
\ Molly Long Legs
/Eclipse 12
t Creeping Polly
/Herod 26
( Pyrrha
/Herod 26
( Rachel
/Tantrum 21
I Cantatrice
/Herod 26
( Miss Ramsden
/Dux 7
( Curiosity
f Conductor 12
{Brunette
/Herod 26
(Proserpine
( Whiskey .2 |
(B. 1789) 1
(Br. 1780)
Calash
(B. 1775)
11 Diomed 6
Y. Giantess | (Gr. 1777)
m 17001 "| Giantess
I (B. 1769)
Y
oc
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['King Fergus 6
I (Ch. 1775)
"j Daughter of
I (B. 1780)
("Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
"I Termagant
Bening-
brough 7
(B. 1791)
Evelina
(Br. 1791)
"-1
/'Woodpecker /
C Buzzard 3 I (Ch. 1773)
(Ch. 1787)"| Misfortune
I
                    I (Br. 1775)
|                    ("Trumpator 14
Hornpipe I (B. 1782)
(. (B. 1793) "I Luna
[ (Ch. 1779)
95
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DECEPTION" (Bay 1836)
INDUSTRY (Brown 1835)
Lady Stumps 5 (B. 1827)
Defence 5 (B. 1824)
Arachne 2 (Br. 1822)
Priam 6 (B. 1827)
o
>
CO
Tramp 3
(B. 1810)
Defiance
(Ch. 1816)
Whalebone /
(Br. 1807)
Filho da Puta 12
(Br. 1812)
Ursula
(Ch. 1818)
Treasure
(Ch. 1810)
Cressida
(B. 1807)
Emilius 28
(B. 1820)
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OAKS WINNERS 1840 & 1841
j'Beningbrougli 7
("King Fergus 6
( Dau. of Herod
/Highflyer 13
( Termagant
/Sir Peter 3
( Horatia
(WThiskey 2
(Grey Dorimant
/Eclipse 12
( Virago
/Herod 26
( Teresa
/Florizel 5
(Dau. of Spectator
(Matchem 4
\ Molly Long Legs
/Herod 26
\ Frenzy
/Eclipse 12
(Dau. of Locust
/Highflyer 13
( Queen Mab
( Ranthos 24
(Dau. of Sweepstakes
/Marske 8
( Dau. of Blank
/ Vauxhall Snap 20
I Hip
/Highflyer 13
/Countess
flung Fergus 6
\ Atalanta
Orville 8 | (B. 1791)
(B. 1799)1 Evelina
I (Br. 1791)
Stamford 30
J CO J
is
(Br. 1794)
(Ch. 1810)1 Daughter of
I (Ch. 1799)
/ Saltram 7
Whiskey 2 | (Br. 1780)
(B. 1789)1 Calash
{ (B. 1775)
■v „■
        fDiomed 6
L?ian' I «*•]777>
T Phcenomenon .2
Stripling 2 I (Ch. 1780)
(Ch. 1795)1 Laura
I (B. 1778)
j'Oberon 9
Dau. of J (B. 1790)
------         | Daughter of
I (Ch. 1779)
[Yg. Marske 12
Shuttle 21 | (B. 1771)
(B. 1793)1 Daughter of
I (Ch. 1784)
(Delpini 30
(Gr. 1781)
Flora
(Ch. 1789)
I
MS
a! r-—
TS o
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>-.
A
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X'
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t—<
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oo — f
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T—1
00
vian
180
«
SB
S5!
{Woodpecker /
(Ch. 1773)
Misfortune
(Br. 1775)
f Alexander 13
| Dau. of J (Ch. 1782)
------ 1 Daughter of
/Herod 26
I Miss Ramsden
/Dux 7
( Curiosity
/Eclipse 12
(Grecian Princess
f Highflyer 13
I Dau. of Alfred
/Highflyer 13
( Papillon
f Boudrow 9
\Dau. of Squirrel
/Eclipse 12
(Dau. of Merlin
T7 m
- —
o
(Sir Peter 3
| (Br. 1784)
| Daughter of
I (B. 1788)
/Meteor 7
(Ch. 1783)
Peru-
vian 27
(B
Musidora
"3 a
I—I J3
o
(B. 1804)1 Maid of All Work/ Highflyer 13
(Dau. of Syphon
/Sir Peter 3
( Pewet
/Highflyer 13
(Termagant
(Trumpator 14
(Dau. of Mark Anthony
(Delpini 30
(Dau. of Y. Marske
(Highflyer 13
\ Papillon
(Diomed 6
(Ambrosia
| Coriander 4
( Rosalind
f Weasel 39
(Dau. of Turk
2h
v (B. 1786)
p ,
            (Sir Paul 8
wtz"8 L^-1802)
cr,. iann Evelina
(Br. 1813) ^ (Br 1791)
(Paynator 18
Dau. of I (Br. 1791)
I (1810) 1 Daughter of
v (Gr. 1805)
(Sir Peter 3
{Poulton 13 I (Br. 1784)
(B. 1835)1 Fanny
I (Ch. 1790)
(Hyacinthus 2
Variety J (Ch. 1797)
(B. 1808)1 Daughter of
I (B. 1790)
97
oo 8
s
pa
-ocr page 485-
OAKS WINNERS 1842 & 1843
00
I Sorcerer 6
I (Bl. 1796)
"| Houghton Lass
I (B. 1801)
(Clinker 6
| (Br. 1805)
i Pewet
I (B. 1786)
I'Camillus 2
I (Gr. 1803)
I Daughter of
I. (Ch. 1797)
fWaxy 18
I (B. 1790)
| Penelope
I (B. 1798)
/"Joe Andrews 4
| (B. 1778)
f Trunipator 14
\Y. Giantess
/Sir Peter 3
[Alexina
(Sir Peter 3
[Hyale
/Tandem 17
\ Termagant
/Hambletonian /
[Faith
/Ruler 31
[Treecreeper
/Pot-8-os 38
[ Maria
f Trnmpator 14
\ Prunella
/Eclipse 12
[ Amaranda
/Highflyer 13
[Dau. of Cardinal Puff
/Mercury 9
[Dau. of Herod
/Trentham 5
[Dau. of Woodpecker
f Hambletonian /
[ Rosalind
/Coriander 4
[Wildgoose
/Yg. Marske 12
[ Dau. of Vauxhall Snap
/Beuingbrougli 7
[Expectation
Comus 25
(Ch. 1809)
I*
Clinkerina
(Br. 1812)
fOiseau 42
(Ch. 1809)'
Wire
I (Br. 1811)
>S
o
C
(Dick
Andrews
(B. 1796
to o
5 ri
I
Daughter of
(B. 1790)
fGohanna 24
I (B. 1790)
| Fraxinella
{ (B. 1793)
rWhitelock 2
| (B. 1803)
| Daughter of
I (1799)
("Shuttle 21
I (B. 1793)
I Anticipation
{ (Ch. 1802)
Dau. of
(B. 1803)
Black-
lock 2
(B. 1814)
Maniac
(Ch. 1806)
vc
■*
>>
^
. ~F
s
^iC<l
p=l
%x
5 .'
.3 6
I Beuingbrougli 7
I (B. 1791)
~\ Evelina
I. (Br. 1791)
(Stamford 30
I (Br. 1794)_
\ Daughter of
(Ch. 1799)
(King Fergus 6
[ Dau. of Herod
f Highflyer 13
t Termagant
fSir Peter 3
[ Horatia
/Whiskey 2
[ Grey Dorimant
f Delpini 30
^ Caroline
/Precipitate 24
\ Firetail
/Buzzard 3
\ Dau. of Alexander
( Sir Peter 3
[Rally
(Pot-8-os38
[ Maria
( Trumpator 14
\ Prunella
f Highflyer 13
[Countess
/King Fergus 6
[Sylvia
/Orville 8
[ Eleanor
/Eagle 2
[Dau. of Precipitate
/Buzzard 3
[Miss West
( Alexander 13
\ Dau. of Alfred
Orville 8
(B. 1799)
I Emily
[ (Ch. 1810)
H'
3 1
r-—
+s
B
-4-3 Oi 1
o
02 r-* 1
&
■rj oo |
"fl
— 1
o
kJ-H £rt 1
5
7!
Evander 2
(Gr. 1801)
'Pericles 1
(Br. 1809)
Dau. of
I (Ch. 1812)
I Daughter of
I (1803)
(Selim 2
I (Ch. 1802)
\ Pipy Una
[ (Br. 1803)
(Waxy 18
"_
y.
0
03
-00 /•
0 to 1
1—1
C
833)
a (m I
0 00 |
s-
01
1—1
c,-=
-J
O Q 1
&
B^ '-
Whisker /
(B. 1812)
Dau. of
(B. 1802)
I (B. 1790)
I Penelope
I (B. 1798)
(Delpini 30
J (Gr. 1781)
1 Tipple Cyder
I. (Ch. 1788)
(Muley 6
I (B. 1810)
\ Aquilina
I (B. 1807)
(Quiz 5
J (Ch. 1798)
I Persepolis
[ (Ch. 1803)
98
M
Morisco 12
(B. 1819)
Arethissa
(Ch. 1824)
v<5 cc
-ocr page 486-
REFRACTION (Brown 1842)
THE PRINCESS (Ch. 1841)
Prism 5 (Br. 1836)
GlaucusS (B. 1830)
Sister to Cobweb / (Ch. 1820)
Slane 25 (B. 1833)
o
>
r-------------------------
Elizabeth
(Ch. 1823)
Camel 24
(B. 1822)
Nauino
(Ch. 1823)
Partisan /
(B. 1811)
Filagree
(Ch. 1815)
Phantom 6
(B. 1808)
l)aug
(B
liter of
1819)
Royal Oak S
(Br. 1823)
•C2 0J-«i
— E?
~T»
wS
-Si
Wo &•
^ S
Qc
cd e»
^^
~
M 2
^g
asol
. 180
M O
1*"
s^.
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to
s
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a
o
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.t)
^W
WE.
<
u o
GO iZ'
i—i I--
« e
^- gs
=-,
-,
3&
•"^ ^3
tsp
^ 5
i—i
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M
-I
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50 ^J
el-
GO O
O ^
-2 to
.O
r^
~
Of
W ro
f 2 t?
< <J W U K W W
~
^ti-aj^coHWr^aitT1
W S-SIff W9 |w ^ W| W | te| W |o|
o
^^ o
«5
r--____ CD
&JLJ
5-PS
3 §-"3 3
„= Pi
WK Wt
Qe.Bg WO
■ p ■ 3 ^g
^Ik — Oi sr> ro
toSS o iB
tr cov-
-= ii
a
BU*s?i.
g?5?*
»£ «■ t^ «-
,coo co«
Son
t» ~'s^!^"' S "^ to5' oScor
COfcjSO GOj^GO COMtO ^jO S,1 I-
: o<^
^—^         tO         H^*1         CO         W*         ^"^
CO
rrriirirsriiirififiii
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cw>
y-
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7.
-
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ro
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t>
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cog-to
8
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■g-sg. "g-s
5v
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CO O)         >-.
-ocr page 487-
I
OAKS WINNERS 1846 & 1847
( Pot-8-os 38
\ Maria
( Trnmpator 14
\ Prunella
(Buzzard 3
\ Dau. of Alexander
/Sir Peter 3
\Dau. of Phcenomenon
/Beningbrough 7
1 Evelina
/Stamford 30
\ Sophia
/Eclipse 12
\ Grecian Princess
/Amaranthus 4
t Mayfly
/Eclipse 12
\ Amaranda
/Highflyer 13
^Dau. of Cardinal Puff
/Mercury 9
\Dau. of Herod
/Trentham S
\Dau. of Woodpecker
/Buzzard 3
\Dau. of Alexander
/Shuttle 21
^Dau. of Sir Peter
/Sir Peter 3
\ Fanny
(Anvil 9
~\ Scota
(Waxy 18
J (B. 1790)
| Penelope
V    (B. 1798)
(Selim 2
J (Ch. 1802)
1 Maiden
V    (B. 1801)
(Orville 8
I (B. 1799)
"| Miss Sophia
I (B. 1805)
/Alexander 13
J (Ch. 1782)
"j Brunette
Whale-
bone /
(B. 1807)
Dau. of
(B. 1812)
Master
Henry 3
(B. 1815)
Boadicea
(B. 1807)
—.
-0
'£<*>■
00
r$*.
■ '
-3co
«
V
o cq ^
,Dick
_ .— I Andrews 9
£«. Dau. of
I (B. 1803) '
(Joe Andrews 4
I (B. 1778)
| Daughter of
I (B. 1790)
(Gohanna 24
I (B. 1790)
j Fraxinella
2
PO
I (B. 1793)
(Castrel 2
J (Ch. 1801)
1 Miss Hap
(. (B. 1806)
( Sir Oliver 13
J (B. 1800)
| Scotilla
I. (B. 1795)
O
Bustard 3E
(B. 1813)
1 S3
W. Olympia
(B. 1815)
/Highflyer 13
\Papillon
/Dungannon 33
\ Dau. of Prophet
/Eclipse 12
(Sportsmistress
f Highflyer 13
\ Promise
/Trumpator 14
\Y. Giantess
/Mentor 15
^ Maria
/Mercury 9
\Dau. of Herod
(Trentham 5
\ Coquette
fPot-8-os38
I Maria
/Trumpator 14
^ Prunella
/ Buzzard 3
\Dau. of Alexander
(Highland Fling 12
\ Harriet
/Walton 7
( Julia
/Waxy 18
\ Penelope
/Spadille 3
^ Caelia
(Volunteer 9
\Dau. of Alfred
(Sir Peter 3
(Walton 7 I (Br. 1784)
*2^\ (B. 1799) "| Arethusa
| 5
                      I (Ch. 1792)
(Pot-8-os 38
J (Ch. 1773)
~\ Prunella
Ph
M Parasol
^ I (B. 1800)
I (B. 178
^Smolen-
• skol8
Sorcerer 6
(Bl. 1796)
gSI (Bi-mo)^.^
g ,. j                    (Gohanna 24
pa Jerboa J (B. 1790)
*" I (B. 1803) 1 Camilla
I (B. 1778)
V
Whale-
bone /
(Br. 1807)
(Waxy 18
I (B. 1790)
"| Penelope
v (M
fl r-l
a> CO
> { (B. 1798)
(Rubens 2
Defiance J (Ch. 1805)
(Ch. 1816)1 Little Folly
I (B. 1806)
„.,,,          (Phantom 6
Middle-            lg08)
ton 1        \ Web
(Ch. 1822)^ (B. 1808)
{Highland Fling
12 (B. 1798)
Harriet
(Ch. 1799)
100
";
*8
-ocr page 488-
OAKS WINNERS 1848 & 1849
("Trumpator 14
| V. Giantess
/Sir Peter 3
\Alexina
/Sir Peter 3
\Hyale
f Tandem 17
( Termagant
/Eclipse 12
\ Grecian Princess
/Highflyer 13
/Termagant
/Gohanna 24
/Catherine
/Paynator 18
(Dau. of St. George
/Dick Andrews 9
/Dau. of Gohanna
/Pot-8-os 38
\Y. Camilla
/OrvHle 8
(Eleanor
{Scud / or Sorcerer 6
(Dau. of Precipitate
/Beningbrough 7
/Evelina
/Stamford 30
(Dau. of Whiskey
/Don Quixote 13
( Evelina
("Stamford 30
t Wryneck
('Sorcerer 6
fComus 25 I (Bl. 1796)
(Ch. 1809) | Houghton Lass
! (B. 1801)
(Clinker 6
Clinkerina | (Br. 1805)
r
I (B. 1786)
n         . ("Don Quixote 13
Cervantes j (C£l784)
(B.1806)^-791)
("Golumpus 11
OS
-as
loo
m
«
_ ci
-+J OO
2 SO
Dau. of
(B. 1802)
(Br. 1818)1 Daughter of
l (B. 1810)
(Tramp 3
^Lottery 111 (B. 1810)
(Br. 1820)1 Mandane
I (Ch. 1800)
(Muley 6
Morgiana | (B. 1810)
(Bl. 1820) | Miss Stephenson
I (Ch. 1814)
fOrville 8
CEmilius 28 | (B. 1799)
(B. 1820) I Emily
J
                    l (Ch. 1810)
/ o c^
'o 00
-
2 CO
Miss Went-
worth -I
(Ch. 1819)
Cervantes 8
(B. 1806)
Y. Wryneck
©
(Ch. 1809)
/Pot-8-os 38
( Maria
/Trumpator ii
/Prunella
/Highflyer 13
/ Papillon
/Highflyer 13
( Nutcracker
/Trumpator 14
\Y. Giantess
f Sir Peter 3
(Alexina
/Sir Peter 3
(Horatia
/Coriander 4
(Faith
/ Beningbrough 7
(Evelina
/Stamford 30
/ Dau. of Whiskey
/Saltram 7
( Calash
/Diomed 6
| Giantess
/Sir Peter 3
\ Miss Hervey
/Waxy 18
\ Dau. of Woodpecker
| Hambletonian /
\ Faith
/Hyacinthus 2
/Flora
' is accepted.
( ("Waxy 18
Whalebone) (B;1790)
(Br. 1807) (PfBeX)
(Sir Peter 3
Margaretta | (Br. 1784)
(Br. 1802) "I Daughter of
I (B. 1792)
.oN„
s °
S3
-§i
i-=
<-,-- /
a
O rH
o
Q
f-1 C~>
s» -
60 rt
/'Sorcerer 6
fComus 25 I (Bl. 1796)
(Ch. 1809/1 Houghton Lass
I. (B. 1801)
(Stamford 30
Marciana I (Br. 1794)
(Gr. 1809) 1 Marcia
S3
M
>
Q
<^
l (Gr. 1797)
fOrville 8
("Emilius 28 | (B. 1799)
(B. 1820) 1 Emily
I                    (. (Ch. 1810)
I Whiskey 2
Cressida J (B. 1789)
(B. 1807) 1 Y. Giantess
{ (B. 1790)
mho da nha?£J5
p . j« f (br. 1 / y /)
rS ioYon! Mrs. Barnet
(Br. 1812) (^ (B-1800)
{Camillas 2
(Gr. 1803)
Daughter of
(Ch. 1804)
* The pedigree of " Waverley
101
««
II
/*!«
-ocr page 489-
-----
OAKS WINNERS 1850 & 1851
I Waxy 18
I (B. 1790)
I Penelope
I (B. 1798)
( Selim 2
\
(Ch. 1802)
I Maiden
I (B. 1801)
(Orville 8
j (B. 1799)
I Eleanor
I (B. 1798)
(Precipitate 24
I (Ch. 1787)
I Daughter of
I (B. 1787)
C'Whitelock 2
I (B. 1803)
j Daughter of
I (1799)
I Prime Minister
I (Br. 1810)
I Daughter of
I (Br. 1812)
(Blacklock 2
I (B. 1814)
| Daughter of
I (1817)
j Octavian 8
I (Ch. 1807)
| Daughter of
I (B. 1807)
(Tot-8-os 38
( Maria
(Trumpator 14
(Prunella
f Buzzard 3
(Dau. of Alexander
| Sir Peter 3
(Dau. of Phcenomenon
/ Beningbrough 7
(Evelina
/Whiskey .2
(Y. Giantess
/Mercury 9
(Dau. of Herod
( Woodpecker /
( Dau. of Snap
I Hambletonian /
( Rosalind
( Coriander 4
( Wild-Goose
12/Sancho 17
( Miss Hornpipe Teazle
/Orville 8
(Miss Grimstone
I Whitelock.2
( Dau. of Coriander
/Juniper 9
(Dau. of Sorcerer
(Stripling 2
(Dau. of Oberon
( Remembrancer 9
(Mary
Whalebont
/
(B. 1807)
Dau. of
. (B. 1812)
CO
Is
PQ
mia
821)
O
s
■a--)
0 ^
s-
las.
Muley 6
(B. 1810)
1>>
J-
o
o
W
Dau. of
I (Ch. 1796)
fBlacklock
2
I (B. 1814)
0 C
3b
Wagtail
(B. 1818)
'Velocipede
3
(Ch. 1825)
Miss
Wilkes
( (Br. 1818)
co-
^leS
(Whalebone /
J (B. 1807)
"j Daughter of
I (B. 1802)
/Waxy 18
( Penelope
f Selim 2
( Maiden
/Orville 8
( Miss Sophia
(Alexander 13
( Brunette
/ Whitelock 2
( Dau. of Coriander
(Juniper 9
\ Dau. of Sorcerer
( Sir Peter 3
\ Wren
(Buzzard 3
[ Dau. of Alexander
( Mercury 9
( Dau. of Herod
/Woodpecker /
| Camilla
(Delpini30
| Cora
( Florizel 5
\ Frenzy
/ King Fergus 6
(Dau. of Herod
(Highflyer 13
( Termagant
(Herod 26
1 Dau. of Eclipse
| Ancaster 2
(Dau. of Damascus Arabian
Camel 24
(B. 1822)
- -y-
OO
r—
Touch;
(Br.
Banter
L (Br. 1826)
rN
'Velocipede
<r>
-. tM
3
't-
2 co
2 i-H
(Ch. 1825)
,jQ " -1
hH
S^3
CO
^>o
Rosalba
oo
- (Ch. 1811)
g
fGolumpus
v.
i—i
<^3?
11
H
1—i
**<
r - ©
9 °°
•(B. 1802)
=o
o^-
CO
-u .
1
Lucy Gray
PQ
*■ (Ch. 1804)
,H
(N
03 "1
g
<^-<
r Orville 8
«
?s?
(B. 1799)
JS
3
Miss Grim-
J 8.
stone
3
I (B. 1796)
(Master Henry 3
I (B.1815)
I Boadicea
( (B. 1807)
(Blacklock .2
I (B. 1814)
| Daughter of
I (1817)
(Milo 3
I (Br. 1802)
j Sister to Rubens
I (Br. 1804)
(Gohanna 24
I (B. 1790)
"j Catherine
( (B. 1795)
(Timothy 23
I (B. 1794)
( (B. 1789)
I Beningbrough 7
I (B. 1791)'
I Evelina
I (Br. 1791)
(Weazle 39
I (B. 1776)
I Daughter of
102
-ocr page 490-
OAKS WINNERS 1852 & 1853
/ Pot-8-os 38
| Maria
( Trumpator 14
[Prunella
I Cohanna 24
I Catherine
(Alexander 13
I Rival
(Woodpecker /
| Dau. of Eclipse
(Bagot 41
(Dau. of Gamahoe
/Commodore >£•
(Dau. of Highflyer
/ Bagot 41
( Heroine
/ Highflyer 13
(Papillon
) Dungannon 33
I Dau. of Prophet
| Eclipse 12
I Sportsmistress
/Highflyer 13
( Promise
/Sir Peter 3
[Miss Hervey
I Waxy 18
[Dau. of Woodpecker
( Beningbrough 7
( Evelina
f Star 24
( Dau. of Y. Marske
Whale-
bone /
(B. 1807)
Peri
(B. 1822)'
/Waxy 18
I (B. 1790)
1 Penelope
I (B. 1798)
I Wanderer 11
I (B. 1811)
| Thalestris
__% oj to
n IS
00 / £ ^
Kg
o
{ (Bl. 1809)
/Chanticleer 3
I (Ch. 1787)
|Ierne
I (1790)
/Escape 4*
I (Ch. 1802)
| Y. Heroine
('Sir Peter 3
J (Br. 1784)
I Arethnsa
( (Ch. 1792)
/Pot-8-os38
J (Ch. 1773)
| Prunella
I (B. 1788)
|'Haphazard 35
I (Br. 1797)
I Mrs. Barnet
I (B. 1806)
[ Orville 8
| (B. 1799)
| Daughter of
I (Ch. 1803)
r S
_
-—>
"-^ co
oa
0 N
—1
•« <»
00
T)
8*-w
a*
M
OO
PQ
*-*
rr
i-Bob Booty
23
(Ch. 1804)
Flight
(Ch. 1809)
Walton 7
(B. 1799)
H
X
c
fci
o
Parasol
(B. 1800)
Filho da
Puta 12
(Br. 1812)
Agatha
(Br. 1814)
<n
«.N
-
'g,
m
O
•3rt-
"I
| ,1 oe Andrews 4
(Dau. of Highflyer
IGohanna 24
(Fraxinella
(Waxy 18
(Penelope
/Pot-8-os 38
(Y. Camilla
f Woodpecker /
( Misfortune
| Trumpator 14
(Dau. of Herod
(Gohanna 24
/Chestnut Skim
/Highflyer 13
( Dau. of Eclipse
(Highflyer 13
| Papillon
| Dungannon 33
(Dau. of Prophet
(Eclipse 12
( Sportsmistress
/Highflyer 13
( Promise
f Woodpecker /
/Misfortune
f Alexander 13
/Dau. of Highflyer
fTrumpator 14
'/Y. Giantess
/Coriander 4
(Miss Green
" is accepted.
i Dick Andrew s 9
I (B. 1796)
| Daughter of
I (B. 1803)
("Whisker /
I . (B. 1812)
| Mandane
( (Ch. 1800)
(Buzzard 3
I (Ch. 1787)
I Gipsy
(. (Bl. 1789)
/Election 5
I (Ch. 1804)
| Daughter of
I (Br. 1791)
(Sir Peter 3
I (Br. 1784)
| Arethnsa
1. (Ch. 1792)
/Pot-8-os 38
I (Ch. 1773)
| Prunella
I (B. 1788)
/Buzzard 3
j (Ch. 1787)
I Daughter of
/Whiskey 2 or Sor
I cerer6(B1.1796)*
I Canary
(. (B. 1797)
pedigree of " Sorcerer
103
Tramp 3
(B. 1810)
Dau. of
(B. 1822)
r —
05-
1 o
f
03
o
as
Otis
3. 182
-
\.
fBustard 10
(B. 1801)
Dau. of
(1813)
f Walton 7
(B. 1799)
is-
Parasol
(B. 1800)
Selim 2
(Ch. 1802)
Canary
Bird
(Br. 1806)
• The
,-,
o
5.05
-ocr page 491-
OAKS WINNERS 1854 & 1855
/Sir Peter 3
^ Arethusa
IPot-8-os 38
^ Prunella
/Whalebone / or Seymour 3
\ Dau. of Gohanna
j Selim 2
\ Canary Bird
/Whitelock 2
/Dau. of Coriander
/Phantom 6
/Dau. of Overton
/Whitelock 2
/Dau. of Coriander
(Prime Minister 12
/Dau. of Orville
/Whalebone /
\^ Margaretta
/Castrel.2
^Dau. of Waxy
/Tramp 3
\Mandane
/Cervantes 8
/Anticipation
/Dick Andrews 9
\Dau. of Gohanna
/Whisker /
/ Mandane
| Buzzard 3
\ Gipsy
f Election 5
/Dau. of Highflyer
{ Walton 7
J (B. 1799)
1 Parasol
I (B. 1800)
I'Moses 5
I (B. 1819)
"I Quadrille
I (B. 1815)
(Blacklock 2
I (B. 1814)
"1 Daughter of
(B. 1816)
Blaeklock 2
(B. 1814)
Wagtail
I. (B. 1818)
{Waverley 2
(Br. 1817)
Castrellina
(Br. 1823)
{Lottery 11
(Br. 1820)
Daughter of
(B. 1818)
{Tramp 3
(B. 1810)
Daughter of
(B. 1822)
("Bustard 10
J (B. 1801)
1 Daughter of
I 0813)
/"Partisan /
(B. 1811)
Pauline
{ (B. 1826)
*- CO
0 s-
IN
P3
CI
+S
ea
eetm
2 w
r^
1—( .
02
«B
Starch or
Voltaire
12*
(Br. 1826)
Belinda
-
H
-:
o
(Br. 1825)
The
Saddler 3
(Br. 1828)
Rebecca
(B. 1831)
Liver-
pool 11
(B. 1828)
Otis
(B. 1820)
O ~T
t> CO
- H
M
P 00
| Trumpator 14
( Y. Giantess
/Sir Peter 3
^Alexina
/Sir Peter 3
\Hyale
/Tandem 17
/Termagant
(Eclipse 12
/Grecian Princess
/Highflyer 13
1 Termagant
('Sorcerer 6
(Bl. 1796)
I Houghton Lass
I (B. 1801)
f Clinker 6
J (Br. 1805)
1 Pewet
l (B. 1786)
('Don Quixote 13
J (Ch. 1784)
1 Evelina
(Br. 1791)
00
r 'S
•as
a
w
fComus 25
(Ch. 1809)
Clinkerina
L (Br. 1812;
Cer-
vantes 8
(B. 1806)
Dau. of
s (Br. 1818;
Camel 24
(B. 1822)
Banter
(Br. 1826
^ Panta-
loon 17
(Oh. 1824)
Bombasine
L (Br. 1817)
P2
fGohanna 24
( Catherine
f Paynator 18
/Dau. of St. Georga
/Waxy 18
| Penelope
/Selim 2
\
Maiden
/Orville 8
^Miss Sophia
/Alexander 13
\ Brunette
/Buzzard 3
\Selim's Dam
/Peruvian 27
( Musidora
f Sorcerer 6
/ Wowski
f Alexander 13
^Isis.
(Golumpus 11
(B. 1802)
Daughter of
(B. 1810)
{Whalebone /
(B. 1807)
Daughter of
(B. 1812)
(Master Henry 3
I (B. 1815)
I Boadicea
I (B. 1807)
{Castrel 2
(Ch. 1801)
Idalia
(Ch. 1815)
(Thunderbolt 18
I (Bl. 1806)
I Delta
I (Br. 1810)
6-
r
DO
-r. .
W
o
M
W
u
<
goo
on .
SB.
S-
* " Voltaire " is accepted
104
-ocr page 492-
OAKS WINNERS 1856, 1857, & 1858
f Walton 7
Partisan / J (B. 1799)
(B. 1811)1 Parasol
I (B. 1800)
{Moses 5
(B. 1819)
Quadrille
(B. 1815)
'Starch or (B1%U°°}\?
t-R* i aoflN Daughter of
(Br. 1826) (_ (B» lgl6)
/'Blackloek 2
Belinda J (B. 1814)
(Br. 1825)1 Wagtail
I (B. 1818)
|SirPeter3
\ Arethusa
/Pot-8-os 38
\ Prunella
/Whalebone / or Seymour 3
\ Dau. of Gohanna
/Selim 2
\ Canary Bird
/Whitelock 2
\Dau. of Coriander
/Phantom 6
\Dau. of Overton
/Whitelock 2
\Dau. of Coriander
/Prime Minister 12
\Dau. of 0rville8
/Waxy 18
\ Penelope
/Wanderer 11
\ Thalestris
/Chanticleer 3
\lerne
f Escape 4*
\Y. Heroine
/Waxy 18
\ Prunella
fGohanna 24
\Grey Skim
/Sorcerer 6
\Wowski
/Gohanna 24
1 Fraxinella
^-i CO
p ■ ■
pa
- *0
£-ce
V5«
9.
1—1
O
Sir Her- P
cules 2 \T
(Bl. 1826) I
-H
r^^
U CO
80
2 «
-f
rM OO
OO
O rn _
aS
O^
J=.
tJO
w1
■ tn ^""^
rw
pa
halebone /
(B. 1807)
eri
(B. 1822)
fBob Booty 23
Guiccioli J (Ch. 1804)
(Ch. 1823) | Flight
I. (Ch. 1809)
("Waxy Pope /
(Canteen 5 | (B. 1800)
(B. 1821)1 Castanea
(. (Ch. 1806)
("Thunderbolt 18
P3§
■26
pq —
Bigottini(B. 181
15)11
(Bl. 1806)
aughter of
(B. 1803)
BLINK BONNY (B. 1854) by Melbourne / out of Queen Mary 10, by
Gladiator 22. Won the Derby Stakes 1857, see page 41.
/Pot-8-os 38
\ Maria
/Trumpator 14
\ Prunella
/Highflyer 13
\ Countess
/King Fergus 6
\ Sylvia
| Waxy 18
\ Penelope
/Selim 2
\
Maiden
rOrville 8
. \ Eleanor
/Precipitate 24
^Dau. of Woodpecker
f Hambletonian /
\ Rosalind
/Coriander 4
^Wildgoose
12/Sancho 17
(.Miss Hornpipe Teazle
/Orville 8
\Miss Grimstone
/Whitelock 2
\Dau. of Coriander
/Juniper 9
\Dau. of Sorcerer
/Stripling 2
\Dau. of Oberon
f Remembrancer 9
\Mary
(Waxy 18
(B. 1790)
Penelope
(B. 1798)
00
"3 io
- CO
rDelpini 30
Dau. of | (Gr. 1781)
(B. 1802)1 Tipple Cyder
o 5
O
e*i
'TH
a
-1
cd
. IN 1
Si M
-u
-S°°
c3
m>-i-<
o
n&\
~\
I (Ch. 1788)
('Whalebone /
f Camel 24 I (B. 1807)
(B. 1822)1 Daughter of
I (B. 1812)
(Muley 6
(B. 1810)
Daughter of
(Ch. 1796)
(Whitelock 2
Blacklock^J (B. 1803)
(B. 1814)1 Daughter of
I (1799)
/"Prime Minister
Wagtail | (Br. 1810)
(B. 1818)1 Daughter of
{ (Br. 1812)
(Blacklock 2
I (B. 1803)
m
V
pede 3
(Ch. 182
., 1 Daughter of
°'{ (1817'
fOctavian 8
1 (Ch. 1807)
l Daughter of
[ (B. 1807)
105
Miss
Wilkes ■
(Br. 1818)
-ocr page 493-
OAKS WINNERS 1859 & i860
fSorcerer 6
1 Houghton Lass
( Clinker 6
(Pewet
( Don Quixote 13
( Evelina
/Golumpus 11
( Dau. of Paynator
(Whalebone /
| Dau. of Selim
f Master Henry 3
(Boadicea
(Waxy 18
(Penelope
f Hermes 4
\ Vicissitude
(Dick Andrews 9
(Dau. of Gohanna
f Whisker 1
\ Mandane
( Buzzard 3
I Gipsy
(Election 5
\Dau. of Highflyer
(\Smolensko 18
( Louisa
f Ardrossan 2
(Lady Eliza
/Waxy 18
(Penelope
/Octavian 8
( Dau. of Sancho
/Comus 25
I (Ch. 1809)
j Clinkerina
( (Br. 1812)
/'Cervantes 8
I (B. 1806)
I Daughter of
I (Br. 1818)
("Camel 24
I (B. 1822)
i Banter
I (Br. 1826)
C Whisker /
I (B. 1812)
| Gibside Fairy
I (B. 1811)
/"Tramp 3
I (B. 1810)
| Daughter of
I (B. 1822)
("Bustard 10
I (B. 1801)
I Daughter of
I (1813)
/"Jerry 15
j (Bl. 1821)
I Daughter of
I (Ch. 1817)
/'Whisker /
J (B. 1812)
1 Lady of the Tees
I (B. 1822)
Humphry
Clinker'8
(B. 1822)
Dau. of
(B. 1825)
Touch-
stone a
(Br. 1831)
Emma
(Ch. 1824)
Liverpool
11
(B. 1828)
Otis
(B. 1820)
*N [
r O ^
185
S3 co
U 00
3 r-t -
rQ C
-
NM '—'
^ \
ImSS-
CO,-. (
O 00
*fil
T*
0 J—1 J
ft
CO
1> ^
C/J
d~l
r—
0>
v-i r
-
0 ^
erd
00
-S CO
'X
9 c i
^M
Q-l
Tomboy 8
(B. 1829)
Tesano
(B. 1830)
/Orville 8
( Eleanor
/Eaglet
(Dau. of Precipitate
|Sorcerer 6
\ Golden Locks
/Selim 2
\ Canary Bird
/Waxy 18
(Penelope
( Rubens 2
\ Little Folly
/ Haphazard 35
(Mrs. Barnet
J Smolensko 18
(Dau. of Precipitato
/Waxy 18
( Penelope
/Sir Peter 3
\Dau. of Highflyer
/Sorcerer 6
(Houghton Lass
(Stamford 30
\ Marcia
(Sir Peter 3
\ Miss Hervey
/Waxy 18
(Dau. of Woodpecker
(Hambletoniaii /
(Faith
( Hyacinthus 2
(Flora
is accepted.
" is accepted.
rPhantom 6 /"Mulcy 6
or M12
(B.
(B. 1810)
'l Aquilina
1819) I (B. 1807)
/"Soothsayer 15
a
Katherine
v (Ch. 182i;
J (Ch. 1808)
| Quadrille
fi.
I (B. 1815)
J (Br. 1807)
| Defiance
I (Ch. 1816)
{Filho da Puta 12
Defence 5
(B. 1824)
VO£3
Clara
(B,
(Br. 1812)
Clari
(Br. 1824)
Tramp3, or /Whalebone /
Waverley I (Br. 1807)
21
            | Margaretta
(Br. 1817) I (Br. 1802)
        „ /'Comus 25
(Or 1820 I (Ch- 1809)
(Gr. 1820- < Marciana
ik)            I (Or. 1809)
Filho da f H»J^Ki»M
CRT 18?2ll Mrs- Baruet
(Br. 1812) ^ (B_ lg00)
("Camillus 2
Treasure I (Gr. 1803)
(Ch. 1810V| Daughter of
I. (Ch. 1804)
* The pedigree of "Morisco"
+ The pedigree of " Waverley
106
Z^
_„
^ °o
r_
-ocr page 494-
OAKS WINNERS 1861 & 1862
fSelim 2
/Buzzard 3
(Dau. of Alexander
/ Williamson's Ditto 7
(Dau. of Mercury
/ Walton 7
(Julia
/ Soothsayer 15
\Web
(Golumpus 11
( Lucy Gray
/ Beningbrough 7
(Evelina
/Don Quixote 13
(Fanny
( Selim 2
(Dau. of Pot-8-os
/Joe Andrews 4
(Dau. of Highflyer
I Gohanna 24
(Fraxinella
f Waxy 18
\ Penelope
(Pot-8-os 38
(Y. Camilla
( Waxy 18
(Penelope
(Canopus 11
(Dau. of Y. Woodpecker
(Castrel 2
(Miss Newton
(Dick Andrews 9
( Vanity
(Sultan 8
(B. 1816)"
I Cobweb
(B. 1821)"
Sandbeck8
(B. 1818)"
Darioletta f
I (Br. 1822)
CTramp 3
(B. 1810)1
| Dau. of
(B. 1822)1
(Ch. 1802)
Bacchante
(B. 1809)
Phantom 6
(B. 1808)
Filagree
(Ch. 1815)
Catton 2
(B. 1809)
Orvillina
(B. 1804)
Amadis 5
(Br. 1807)
Seliraa
(B. 1810)
Dick Andrews 9
(B. 1796)
Daughter of
(B. 1803)
Whisker /
(B. 1812)
Mandane
& CO
^2
n
a-
a
^ so
v
eg
3
;j
&
-
y.
rH
&
00
0
la
11
(Ch. 1800)
Whalebone /
(B. 1812)
Daughter of
(B. 1812)
Merlin 8
(Oh. 1815)
Coquette
(Ch. 1814)
fLapdog 3
(B. 1823)
'-> to
— -?
rt 00
&-'
Grisette
(Ch. 1825)"
w —
( Whalebone /
(Dau. of Selim
( Master Henry 3
( Boadicea
(Blacklock.2
( Dau. of Juniper
| Milo 3
(Dan. of Buzzard
(Gohanna 24
( Catherine
I Timothy 23
( Lucy
/ Beningbrough 7
( Evelina
(Weazle 39
\Datt. of Ancaster
/Whalebone /
(Dau. of Selim
| Master Henry 3
\ Boadicea
(Haphazard 35
I Mrs. Barnet
( Peruvian 27
( Violante
(Beningbrough 7
( Evelina
(Stamford 30
(Dau. of Whiskey
(Waxy 18
( Penelope
(Hermes 4
( Vicissitude
-Touch-
Camel '2-i
s 14 , (B. 1822)
/tj io,i, I Banter
(Br-18'31H (Br. 1826)
C Velocipede 3
Verbena | (Ch. 1825)
(Ch. 1832)1 Rosalba
ed;
-
r<sn
*
/
Q
CD
O CO
Q
fflgj
h-J
»
.2pq
( (Ch. 1811)
fGolumpus 11
fCatton.2 I (B. 1802)
(B. 1809)1 Lucy Gray
I (Ch. 1804)
(Orville 8
Dau. of I (B. 1799)
(Br. 1812)1 Miss Grimstone
M
o
CO
w
(D lO
-
-N
~
OO
4S r^J
to
F—1
J ft
a
&■<
( (B. 1796)
m ,
          /"Camel 24
(B,1831)|B»f1826)
fFilho da Pitta 12
Decoy
         | (Br. 1812)
(B. 1830)"! Finesse
(. (B. 1815)
( Orville 8
'Emilius 28 I
1799)
Emily
(Ch. 1810)
Whisker /
(B. 1812)
Gibside Fairy
(B. 1811)
107
(B. 1820)i
Maria
(B. 1827)1
l|«
-ocr page 495-
OAKS WINNERS 1863 & 1864
{Walton 7
(B. 1799)
Parasol
(B. 1800)
{Smolensko 18
(Bl. 1810)
Jerboa
(B. 1803)
{Royal Oak 5
(Br. 1823)
Daughter of
(B. 1819)
(Octavian 8
(Ch. 1807)
Daughter of
(1806)
{Camel 24
(B. 1822)
Banter
(Br. 1826)
{Priam 6
(B. 1827)
Octaviana
(B. 1815
(Selim 2
J (Ch. 1802)
j Bacchante
{ (B. 1809)
(Phantom 6
(B. 1808)
Filagree
(Ch. 1815)
/Sir Peter 3
\Arethusa
/Pot-8-os 38
(, Prunella
/Sorcerer 6
t Wowski
J Gohanna 24
\ Camilla
/ Catton 2
\Dau. of Smolensko
/Orville 8
\ Orange Girl
/Stripling 2
\Dau. of Oberon
/Shuttle 21
\ Katherine
/Whalebone /
\Dau. of Selim
/Master Henry 3
\Boadicea
/Emilius 28
\ Cressida
/Octavian 8
\Dau. of Shuttle .
/Buzzard 3
\Dau. of Alexander
/Williamson's Ditto 7
\Dau. ofMercury
( Walton 7
\ Julia
(Soothsayer 15
\Web
(Partisan /
(B. 1811)
Fawn
[ (Br. 1823)
£ or
Slane 25
(B. 1833)
Garcia
(Br. 1823)
Touch-
stone 14
(B. 1831)
Crucifix
(B. 1837)
<
pq
H
E>
c-
r^^
« "3
.2 «M
p-i
0
\Ci
Sffl
r-K
rri
aj~
ti
■*•
H
-
CO
c-i
K
S2
"3 .
Sultan 8
(B. 1816)
Sister to
Cobweb
V (Ch. 1820)
(Waxy 18
J (B. 1790)
/ Pot-8-os 38
\ Maria
(Trumpator 14
t Prunella
/Gohanna 24
\ Catherine
/Alexander 13
\Kival
/Woodpecker /
\ Dau. of Eclipse
/Bagot 41
^Dau. of Highflyer
/Commodore >f-
i^Dau. of Highflyer
/Bagot 41
{ Heroine
/Lottery 11
(.Wire
(Teniers 3
\Cora
12 (Haphazard 35
(Mrs. Barnett
/Selim 2 or Soothsayer 15
\ Sprite
/Orville 8
t Emily
(Phantom 6
1 Filagree
(Quiz 5
t Persepolis
(Figaro 11
\Dau. of Tramp
'Whale
b
(B. 1807) \Pe$°#9,
(Wanderer 11
(B. 1811)
cq
Peri
(B. 1822)
r
halestris
(Bl. 1809)
R i
              (Chanticleer 3
B°ooty23 Ijf-1787)
(Ch. W)Ve^90>
(Escape >J-
Flight
         I (Ch. 1802)
(Ch. 1809)1 Y. Heroine
(Verulam /
fcn
fcc
M
W OP.
A*
B
«
I—i
H
a
h-;
*^
i-Vulcan 3
tM SO
(B. 1837)
T-H
S'"'.
ao
"■~<
Mansfield
1-4
££
Lass
(Br
I (B. 1825)
KS
fY. Emi-
uline
2 3
lius /
(B. 1828)
oj
"3 •"• -
fU
3 •
Ordine
! (B. 1833)
1 Puss
I (Ch. 1829)
(Filho da Puta
I (Br. 1812)
\ Variety
I (Ch. 1816)
(Emilius 28
I (B. 1820)
I Cobweb
I (B. 1821)
(Tigris 12
J (Ch. 1812)
| Miss Ann
I (1827)
108
_ --^^—L—.-^-^---------■ ■ , - '
-ocr page 496-
OAKS WINNERS 1865 & 1866
("Whalebone /
(Peri
/Bob Booty 23
[Flight
(Whisker /
[ Floranthe
(Blacklock.2
\ Gadabout
[Selim,?
[ Bacchante
( Tramp 3
\Web
f Orville 8
\ Eleanor
[Marmion 28
\Harpalice
/Waxy 18
[ Penelope
("Selim 2
[ Maiden
/Orville 8
[Miss Sophia
/Alexander 13
[Brunette
/Comus 25
[ Clinkerina
/Oiseau 42
[Wire
/Sir Peter 3
[Dau. of Boudrow
/Meteor 7
[Maid of All Work
rSir Hercules 2
I (Bl. 1826)
| Guiccioli
[ (Ch. 1823)
^Economist 36
/ (B. 1825)
) Miss Pratt
{ (B. 1825)
/'Sultan 8
) (B. 1816)
j Trampoline
[ (Ch. 1825)
{Muley 6
(B. 1810)
Clare
(B. 1824)
i Whalebone /
(B. 1807)
Daughter of
(B. 1812)
/'Master Henry 3
J (B. 1815)
) Boadicea
[ (B. 1807)
/Humphry Clinker
I 8 (B. 1822)
Velvet
(B. 1823)
[Peruvian 27
' (B. 1806)
Musidora
(B. 1804)
rBird-
catcher 11
(Ch. 1833)
Echidna
(B. 1838)
{Glencoe /
(Ch. 1831)
Marpessa
(B. 1830)
■IN ^^
»|_|
so
o
w
Ah
c
r*T
f Camel 24
(B. 1822)
I Banter
I (Br. 1826)
{Bran/
(Ch. 1831)
Idalia
(Ch. 1815)
goo
M
^1!
C
rr-f ^"
/Waxy 18
[ Penelope
/ Octavian 8
[ Caprice
/Rugantino «f"
[Butterfly
(Teddy the Grinder 5
\Lady Jane
/Selim 2
[Bacchante
/Tramp 3
[Web
(Orville 8
[Eleanor
[Marmion 28
[ Harpalice
/Walton 7
[Parasol
/Smolensko 18
[Jerboa
/Whalebone /
[ Defiance
fX. Y. Z. 8
[Janetta
/Selim 2
\ Bacchante
(Tramp 3
[Web
/Waxy 18
\ Penelope
(Haphazard 35
"[Dau. of Orville
          - , /"Whisker /
Economist | (B J812)
,t> -, ooS\l Floranthe
(B. 182o) (_ (B lgl8)
u                f Nabocklish 4
Fa°ny J (Ch. 1810)
(Sultan 8
{Glencoe / | (B. 1816)
(Ch. 1831)1 Trampoline
So
M
rf CO
O 00
« .
{ (Ch. 1825)
/"Muley 6
^
Marpessa J (B. 1810)
(B. 1830) | Clare
{ (B. 1824)
("Partisan /
/•Venison 111 (B. 1811)
°>5J (Br. 1833)") Fawn
a 3 I
                   I (Br. 1823)
B rt I                   /'Defence 5
4(6 I Southdown) (B. 1824)
I (B. 1836)1 Feltona
{ (B. 1819)
| Sultan 8
<m /-Glencoe / I (B. 1816)
?P (Ch. 1831)1 Trampoline
J SI
                   i (Ch. 1825)
'ST'A                    ('Whalebone/
fffl Alea           I (B. 1807)
VQ "- I (Br. 1828)1 Hazardess
I (B. 1818)
109
m
ei
c
H
y
•■£
S3
X
O
H
CO
-ocr page 497-
OAKS WINNERS 1867 & 1868
.Economist | ^^J
J (B. 1825) j1"-)
lr,„„„         fNabocklish 4
FDa"Ln J (<«
1 (Cb. 1823)|M-T-%
/'Sultan 8
fGlencoe / | (B. 1816)
(Ch. 1831)1 Trampoline
I
                    { (Ch. 1825)
j Muley 6
Marpessa | (B. 1810)
(B. 1830) "| Clare
{ (B. 1824)
/Waxy 18
\ Penelope
/Octaviau 8
\ Caprice
(Rugantino ►f"
\ Butterfly
f Teddy the Grinder 5
\ Ladjr Jane
/Selim 2
\ Bacchante
/Tramp 3
1 Web
/Orville 8
/Eleanor
/Marniion 28
\ Harpalice
/"Buzzard 3
/Dau. of Alexander
f Williamson's Ditto 7
/Dau. of Mercury
/Walton 7
^ Parasol
/Orville 8
/ Dau. of Buzzard
/Whalebone /
/ Dau. of Selim
/Master Henry 3
/ Boadicea
/Buzzard 3
/Dau. of Alexander
/Alexander 13
1 Brunette
g GO
M
o
IS
;-
=2
-r-
00
r2~
1—1
T* ^
CQ
_. CO
.5 co
k*
"3 a 1
n
w 1
{-
=8
/"Selim 2
Sultan 8 | (Ch. 1802)
(B. 1816) j Bacchante
{ (Br. 1809)
/"Partisan /
Franceses | (B. 1811)
. (Br. 1829)") Daughter of
I (Br. 1815)
™„„ i,
         (Camel 24
I (B,1831)^anteri826)
TRubens 2
Bertha
        | (Ch. 1805)
(Ch. 1821)1 Boadicea
I (B. 1807)
.2
'3 (j
(Cain 8
/Paulowitz 8
/Dau. of Paynator
/Edmund 12
^ Medora
(Sultan 8
t Cobweb
/Malek 3
/Bessy
/Dick Andrews 9
\Dau. of Gohanna
/Paynator 18
/ Dau. of Beningbrough
/Orville 8
/ Emmeline
/Soothsayer 15
/ Berenice
/Whalebone /
/Peri
/Bob Booty 23
/Flight
/ Master Robert 7
/Dau. of Sir Walter Raleigh
/Waxy Pope /
\Dau. of Champion
(Smolensko 18
/ Louisa
/Ardrossan 2
I Lady Eliza
(Waxy 18
/ Penelope
fOctaviau 8
/Dau. of'Sancho
<D CM
1 -
t- »o
.-.
>>QC
/:■
c8 i—i J
*"•
a-l
CO
l^pa 1
X*
s l
Ion ^          I (B. 1822)
(B. 1835) "| Margaret
I (Br. 1831)
Ellen Mid- (B%™fton/
dleton ^M(BV1833)
(B, 1846){M^18S1)
Little Red f^B%* ,
Rovers?-,1 (B-q18\0)
/Oh 1SoT\ Miss Syntax
(Ch. 182,)^ (Br/lgl4)
/"Edmund 12
Eclat
          I (B. 1824)
(Br. 1830)-j Squib
I (Ch. 1820)
o
/Sir Hercules 2
,J (Bl. 1826)
{Bird
c
p;
o
catcher 11-,,
(Ch. 1833) ( (Ch 1823)
/"Drone 2
*" (Gr. 1832)1 Kiss
r. 1823)
3
[ (B. 1827)
(Jerry 15
(Bl. 1821)
Daughter of
(Ch. 1817)
I
(Whisker /
Tesane
        I (B. 1812)
I (B. 1830) i Lady of the Tees
I (B. 1822)
110
-ocr page 498-
OAKS WINNERS 1869 & 1870
(Cain 8
£ rlon 4
         J (B. 1822)
'gcf (B. 1835) I Margaret
£% I
                   I (Br. 1831)
/Paulowitz 8
(Dau. ofPaynator
(Edmund 12
\ Medora
j Sultan 8
[Cobweb
/Malek3
\ Bessy
/ Dick Andrews 9
\Dau. of Gohanna
/Paynator 18
\Dau. of Beningbrough
/Orville 8
\ Emmeline
/Soothsayer 15
X Berenice
fWaxy 18
\ Penelope
/Selim 2
y Maiden
/Orville 8
[Miss Sophia
/Alexander 13
\ Brunette
/Buzzard 3
(Dau. of Alexander
/Peruvian 27
( Musidora
/Tramp 3
X Mandane
/Cervantes 8
(Anticipation
«jjl
Ellen
Middleton
(Br. 1846)
Little Red
Rover 37
(Ch. 1827)
(B%Set°u/
*—-
> i
w-
p-
TH
f*
«
c—.
5
Hs
a
^_- I
m
,io
H-|
Myrrha
(Ch. 1831)
Tramp 3
(B. 1810)
Miss Syntax
(Br. 1814)
(Edmund 12
Eclat
          I (B. 1824)
(Br. 1830) | Squib
{ (Ch. 1830)
(Whalebone /
Camel 24 | (B. 1807)
(B. 1822) "1 Daughter of
I (B. 1812)
1—1
H
1—1
(Master Henry 3
f3
o
Banter J (B. 1815)
I. (Br. 1826)1 Boadicea
I (B. 1807)
o
H
r Pantaloon |'Ca
(Ch. 1801)
17
I (Ch. 1824)1 Id
alia
>2 ^
(Ch. 1815)
T Lottery 11
'tig
Rebecca | 'Br. 1820)
■ (B. 1831) 1 Daughter of
[ (B. 1818)
a; xx          /"Whalebone/
S"S Jp(B.lS07)
I (Bl. 1826) [le(£ lg22)
(Bob Booty 23
Guiceioli | (Ch. 1804)
^ (Ch. 1823)1 Might
{ (Ch. 1809)
Bay
            (Sultan 8
Middleton I (B. 1816)
/
              1 Cobweb
(B. 1833) [ (B. 1821)
{Velocipede 3
(Ch. 1825)
Care
(B. 1825)
{Touchstone 14
(Br. 1831)
Verbena
(Ch. 1832)
(Catton 2
Miss Bowe J (B. 1809)
I (B. 1834) "| Daughter of
{ (B. 1812)
Bay
            (Sultan 8
Middleton | (B. 1816)
/
              "| Cobweb
(B. 1833) { (B. 1821)
(Oscar 10
Malvina | (Br. 1820)
(Ch. 1830)1 Spotless
{ (Bl. 1809)
111
/Waxy 18
\ Penelope
/Wanderer 11
\Tbalestris
/Chanticleer 3
\ Ierne
/Escape •£>
\Y. Heroine
/Selim 2
(Bacchante
/Phantom 6
X Filagree
f Blaeklock 2
\Dau. of Juniper
/Woful /
(Dau. of Rubens
/Camel 24
I, Banter
/Velocipede 3
X Rosalba
/Golumpus 11
( Lucy Gray
/Orville 8
(Miss Grimstone
/Selim 2
X Bacchante
/Phantom 6
X Filagree
/Juniper 9
| Dau. of Oscar
/Walton 7
| Dau. of Trumpator
V O
-
"*&
1
x
O
<
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S.M
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OAKS WINNERS 1871 & 1872
/Waxy 18
( Penelope
f Octavian 8
I Caprice
| Rugantino >J«
[Butterfly
/Teddy the Grinder 5
[ Lady Jane
/ Selim 2
\ Bacchante
/Tramp 3
I, Web
f Orville 8
/ Eleanor
f Marmion 28
[ Harpalice
/ Sorcerer 6
\ Houghton Lass
/Clinker 6
[ Pewet
/Don Quixote 13
/Evelina
f Golumpus 11
/Dau. of Paynator
( Waxy 18
\ Penelope
f Rubens 2
/Little Folly
| Orville 8
| Emily
/ Whisker /
/ Castrella
Economist I . (R wu)
/■r toocnI Floranthe
(B. 1825) ^ (B 181g)
f.,„„„         fNabocklish 4
FZLn L<°y»")
(Cli.l823)^I-Toole)y
N_
r >^
s&?
r-1
*n
P i-* -<
on
ce
r-H
•g-a
So
0
H
r/j
o3 .--*
60
-+5i>.
0
« co
O 00 J
(3
-CJ H "
68 .
, gffl
f Sultan 8
Glencoe / I (B. 1816)
(Ch. 1831)1 Trampoline
I. (Ch. 1825)
/'Muley 6
Marpessa | (B. 1810)
(B. 1880)1 Clare
I (B. 1824)
(Humphry^ [Co
Clinker 8{
)
CD "tf
" '-'■■
Z co
/■a iqoon) Clinkerina
J (B- 1822) { (Br. 1812)
("Cervantes 8
Dau. of I (B. 1806)
(B. 1825)"! Daughter of
I, (Br. 1818)
fWhalebone /
Defence S | (Br. 1807)
(B. 1824)"| Defiance
{ (Ch. 1816)
fEmilius 28
Emiliana | (B. 1820)
(Ch. 1829)1 Daughter of
l (B. 1822)
■^PQ
CS OO
wo
I
/Waxy 18
[ Penelope
( Rubens 2
/Little Folly
/Comus 25
[ Rosette
/Tramp 3
/Defiance
/Golumpus 11
/ Lucy Gray
] Smolensko 18
/Lady Mary
/Waxy 18
/ Penelope
f Shuttle 21
/ Dau. of Drone
/Waxy 18
/Penelope
/Wanderer 11
/Thalestris
/Chanticleer 3
/Ierne
f Escape ►£«
\Y. Heroine
/Verulam /
/Puss
f Filho da Puta 12
/ Variety
( Emilius 28
/Cobweb
/Tigris 12
/Miss Ann
' is accepted.
(Whalebone /
(Br. 1807)
Defiance
(Ch. 1816)
f Reveller 19
Dau. of I (B. 1815)
(Ch. 1834)1 Design
l (Ch. 1827)
Royal Oak JC^°1809)
(Br. 1823)[D^h1t8c1r8f
/"Whisker /
sis
£ t_jO
£ of
H (M
M
fi«
I Ada
(B.
(B. 1812)
Anna Bella
[ (B. 1807)
^Whalebone /
(B. 1807)
Peri
L (B. 1822)
'Bob Booty 23
(Ch. 1804)
m
1824)'
Sir Her-
cules 2 ■
(Bl. 1826)
Guiccioli
^ -C oo
p IS ,
o
(Ch. 1823)1 Flight
(Ch. 1809)
{Vulcan 3
(B. 1837)
Mansfield Lass
(B. 1825)
(Y. Emilius /
Bathilde J (B. 1828)
(Ch. 1842)1 Ordine
I (1832)
* The pedigree of "The Emperor
112
pj m
■fs c
-ocr page 500-
-ocr page 501-
OAKS WINNERS 1875 & 1876
T Partisan /
I (B. 1811)
\ Pauline
I (B. 1826)
{Starch or Voltain
12 (Br. 1826)
Belinda
(Br. 1825)
/ Castrel 2
J (Ch. 1801)
11dalia
t (Ch. 1815)
{Master Henry 3
(B. 1815)
Boadicea
(B. 1807)
(Partisan /
(B. 1811)
Fawn
(Br. 1823)
Slane 25
(B. 1833)
Garcia
(Br. 1823)
{Touchstone 14
(Br. 1831)
Crucifix
(B. 1837)
(Sultan 8
(B. 1816)
Daughter of
(Ch. 1820)
/Walton 7
\Parasol
/Moses 5
\
Quadrille
fBlacklock 2
\ Dau. of Phantom
fBlacklock 2
{ Wagtail
(Buzzard 3
\Dau. of Alexander
/Peruvian 27
^ Musidora
/0rville8
\Miss Sophia
/Alexander 13
( Brunette
/Walton 7
\ Parasol
/Smolensko 18
\Jerboa
/Koyal Oak S
\Dau. of Orrille
/Octavian 8
\Dau. of Shuttle
/Camel 24
^ Banter
/Priam 6
\Octaviana
f Selim 2
/Bacchante
/Phantom 6
I Filagree
^Gladiator
22
(Ch. 1833)
Lollypop
(Bl. 1836)
Pantaloon
17
(Ch. 1824)
Banter
I (Br. 1826)
si
I""
O CO
o t-i
O .
1-8 M
-
1—1
PM
Venison 11
(Br. 1833)
Queen
Anne
(B. 1843)
'Surplice 2
(B. 1845)
Odessa
I (Ch. 1833)
'N
«
PC
a
&* •
pa
Glaucus 3
(B. 1830)
Octave
(Br. 1830)
{Camel 24
(B. 1822)
Monimia
(B. 1821)
f Birdcatcher 11
I (Ch. 1833)
Echidna
(B. 1838)
(Priam 6
(B. 1827)
Dirce
(B. 1830)
fSultan 8
J (B. 1816)
1 Cobweb
(. (B. 1821)
{Sandbeck 8
(B. 1818)
Darioletta
(Br. 1822)
(Touchstone 14
(Br. 1831)
Vulture
(Ch. 1833)
[Euclid 7
| (Ch. 1836)
1 Martha Lynn
I (Br. 1837)
114
/Partisan /
\ Nanine
/Emilius 28
\Whizgig
/Whalebone /
I Dau. of Selim
/Muley 6
\ Dau. of Precipitate
/Sir Hercules 2
\ Guiccioli
/Economist 36
I Miss Pratt
/Emilius 28
\ Cressida
/Partisan /
\Antiope
/Selim 2
/Bacchante
f Phantom 6
\ Filagree
f Catton 2
\ Orvillina
f Amadis S
\ Selima
/"Camel 24
I Banter
/Langar 6
tKite
f Emilius 28
\ Maria
/Mulatto 5
\Leda
fThe Nob /
(B. 1838)
Hester
V (Br. 1832)
fThe Baron
24
(Ch. 1842)
| Fair Helen
(B. 1837)
'Bay Mid-
dleton /
(B. 1833)
a> P*
h
a
«
red i
uth
E
a
z
Ver
tn
—i
\
m
03
1
2>o
goo
ooo
a"*
B
'■A
< 0.
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w a
o
o
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Barbelle
(B. 1836)
fe
("Orlando 13
(B. 1841)
03
m '—-
•r< CO
5(Q
Eulogy
I. (B. 1843
.                  ......_..
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OAKS WINNERS
1876
& 1877
/Walton 7
(Parasol
/Moses S
\
Quadrille
e/Blacklock 2
(.Dau. of Phantom
f Blackloek 2
X
Wagtail
/Buzzard 3
(Dau. of Alexander
/Peruvian 27
( Musidora
(Orville 8
( Miss Sophia
/Alexander 13
( Brunette
/Whalebone /
(Dau. of Selim
/Master Henry 3
( Boadioea
/Emilius 28
( Cressida
/Don Juan 44
X Moll in the Wad
(Selim 2
[
Bacchante
/Tramp 3
(Web
/Orville 8
( Eleanor
/ Marmion 28
( Harpalice
f**—l
^ 03 1
I
tniea
'. 184
r—
o>« 1
<cCQ
«
X/l
'Gladiator
22
Partisan /
(B. 1811)
(Ch.l833)(^-26)
/'Starch or Voltaii
Lollypop I 12 (Br. 1826)
(Bl. 1836)1 Belinda
{ (Br. 1825)
Pantaloon ftg*^
(Ch. «»,{"* 1816)
TMaster Henry 3
Banter | (B. 1815)
a
£
;:c
I (Br. 1826)
>1]
oadioea
f
[)
f " CS 1
1
e?
0 -^
W CO 1
f—<
O i-H "I
AMEL
(B. 18£
Ambr
(Bl.
O
CO J
(B. 1807)
(Br. 1831)1
Banter
(Br. 1826)
(Priam 6
I (B. 1827)
I Daughter of
[ (B. 1823)
/"Sultan 8
I (B. 1816)
1 Trampoline
Annette
(B. 1835)
/Glencoe /
(Ch. 1831
II
I
(Ch. 1825)
I Marpessa
[ (B. "
Muley 6
(B. 1810)
) 1 Clare
{ (B. 18241
f The Baron Pgf^'11
I (Ch. 1842){^- g)
i                    /Glencoe /
Pocahontasl (Ch. 1831)
I (B. 1837) 1 Marpessa
{ (B. 1830)
TTouchstone 14
Paragoned) (Br. 1831)
(B. 1843)") Hoyden
I (Bl. 1837)
Ellen        P^"15
Home -|n(rl'-m3)
(Ch.l844)}D51838)
/"Cain 8
/Sir Hercules 2
( Guiccioli
(Economist 36
(Miss Pratt
/Sultan 8
(Trampoline
/Muley 6
X Clare
/Camel 24
( Banter
/Tomboy 8
I Roebana
/Sandbeck 8
(Johanna
/Plenipotentiary 6
( Pawn Junior
/ Paulowitz 8
(Dau. of Paynator
/Edmund 12
( Medora
/Smolensko 18
\ Louisa
/Lapdog 3
(Scuffle
/Camel 24
( Banter
(Langar 6
(Kite
/Emilius 28
\ Cressida
/Octavian 8
\I.)au. of Shuttle
°P
M
Sgg
s
a
«
Q
O
<
S
Ion 4
(B. 1835)
I (B. 1822)
~) Margaret
(Br. 1831)
f Jerry 15
/ (Bl. 1821)
"j Fanehon
{ (B. 1834)
/"Touchstone 14
I (Br. 1831)
1 Vulture
{ (Ch. 1833)
{Priam 6
(B. 1827)
Octaviana
(B. 1810)
115
I Ma Mie
I (B. 1839)
fS«
VJ9,
/"Orlando 13
(B. 1841)
I
■*3 00
3 "-1
J3 .
OB
-ocr page 503-
OAKS WINNERS 1878 .& 1879
m , , ("Camel 24
Touchstone | (B 1822)
(Br. 1831) [ *b"1826)
[Dr. Syntax 37
Beeswing J (Br. 1811)
[ Whalebone /
( Dau. of Selim
/Master Henry 3
(Boadicea
/ Paynator 18
(Dam of Beningbrough
f Ardrossan 2
(Lady Eliza
r/Comas 25
( Clinkerina
/Cervantes 8
\ Dau. of Golumpus
/Blaekloek^
\Dau. of Phantom
/Mulatto 5
(Leda
[Sir Hercules 2
\
Guiccioli
(Economist 36
(Miss Pratt
(Sultan 8
\ Trampoline
[Muley 6
"( Clare
/Camel 24
( Banter
/Tomboy 8
\ Eocbana
/Sandbeck 8
(Johanna
|" Plenipotentiary 6
I Pawn Junior
CO
rn CO
I'
(Ch. 1817)
.Melbourne ('Humpliry Clink
.Melbourne | g (B lg22)
fR- kmaiI Daughter of
(Br. 1834) (^ (Bb1825)
(■Voltaire 12
Volley
        ) (Br. 1826)
(B. 1845)1 Martha Lynu
I (Br. 1837)
ccS
M
H
CO —
03 CO
'^5
^rtj
30
A( •
r-H
02
The Baron JBWeatch,. 11
(Ch. 1842)1™-8)
[Glencoe /
Pocahontas | (Ch. 1831)
(B. 1837)1 Marpessa
{ (B. 1830)
QJ
o
pj
-—V
HJ
C CM
fcD1^
>
.-Too
CD
T3 r-» -
53
o
(2 s.
[Touchstone 14
Paragoned) (Br. 1831)
(B. 1843)1 Hoyden
I (Bl. 1839)
15
Ellen
(B.
1833)
Home
(Ch.l844)^1838)
rTouchstone(Ca(m^1^2)
>r> iooin! Banter
(Br. 1831) [ (Br lm)
("Dr. Syntax 37
Beeswing | (Br. 1811)
(B. 1833)1 Daughter of
I (Ch. 1817)
[Orville 8
Emilius 28 | (B. 1799)
(B. 1820)1 Emily
I (Ch. 1810)
[Partisan /
Francesca I (B. 1811)
(Br. 1829)1 Daughter of
I (Br. 1815)
[Partisan /
Venison 11J (B. 1811)
(Whalebone /
| Dau. of Selim
( Master Henry 3
( Boadicea
[Paynator 18
( Dau. of Beningbrough
[Ardrossan 2
\ Lady Eliza
[Beningbrough 7
( Evelina
[Stamford 30
(Dau. of Whiskey
[Walton 7
\ Parasol
/Orville 8
(Dau. of Buzzard
/Walton 7
( Parasol
[Smolensko 18
\Jerboa
[ Royal Oak 5
"(Dau. of Orville 8
[ Octavian 8
(Dau. of Shuttle
/Camel 24
(Banter
/Priam 6
\ Octaviana
/Selim 2
( Bacchante
/Phantom 6
( Filagree
CO
^ -
a,
sF1-
7i -r
as
^
%^£
M
-
«
O
O
rea
(Br. 1833)
I"'
awn
(Br. 1823)
[Slane 25
QueenAnne | (B. 1833)
(B. 1843)1 Garcia
I (Br. 1823)
[Touchstone 14
[Surplice 2 | (Br. 1831)
(B. 1845)1 Crucifix
I (B. 1837)
{Sultan 8
(B. 1816)
Daughter of
(Ch. 1820)
116
eq
M
cfi
3
3f
CO
-ocr page 504-
OAKS WINNERS 1880 & 1881
Weather- fSi^J A^or 12
bit 12 J M.<Brf If2)
/"Touchstone 14
Mendicant J (Br. 1831)
(Br. 1843)1 Lady Moore Carew
(. (B. 1830)
I Bay Middleton /
("Lottery 11
\ Morgiana
/Priam 6
( Dau. of Orville
f Camel 24
( Banter
(Tramp 3
(Kite
/Sultan 8
I Cobweb
/Priam 6
{ Octaviana
/"Whalebone 1
( Defiance
/Middleton /
\ Little Folly
(Cain 8
\ Margaret
( Bay Middleton /
\ Myrrha
("Tramp 3
\ Miss Syntax
/Edmund 12
(.Squib
/Sir Hercules 2
{ Guiccioli
("Emilius 28
( Variation
/Humphry Clinker 8
I Dau. of Cervantes
("Touchstone 14
1 Ghuznee
( Whalebone /
\ Dau. of Selim
/Master Henry 3
[ Boadicea
/Paynator 18
\ Dau. of Beningbrough
("Ardrossan 2
\
Lady Eliza
/Cain 8
t Margaret
(Sultan 8
( Hester
(Bay Middleton /
/Crucifix
("Belshazzar 11
\ Ellen
/Sir Hercules 2
\
Guiccioli
("Economist 36
(Miss Pratt
(Sultan 8
L Trampoline
/Muley 6
(Clare
(Whalebone /
I Dau. of Selim
J Master Henry 3
(Boadicea
/Blacklock 2
\
Dau. of Phantom
f Rowton 29
1 Pucelle
M> [
r~i*—> 1
ra«
s m 1
2 °0 I
OS
a>-i~
00
§ .
■—■
^) C
SD3
PQ
0 w 1
PC V
"3
'■§ (Cowl 2
I (B. 1833)
(B. 1842) 1 Crucifix
(B. 1837)
Defence S
(B. 1824)
II
#1
O
H
a
o
D
l (Ch. 1838)
i Folly
I (Ch.
1830)
Wild           I
Dayrell 7 -I
(Br. 1852) |
Dan. of I
(Ch. 1841)1
Ion 4
(B. 1835)
Ellen Middleton
(Br. 1846)
Little Red Rover
37 (Ch. 1827)
Eclat
W
s f.
PC
3 PC
(Br. 1830)
Birdcatcher 11
(Warlock 9
(Ch. 1833)
(Ro. 1853)") Elphine
{ (B. 1837)
/"Melbourne /
Leila
           | (Br. 1834)
(B. 1852) "j Meeanee
■»
__JB1_1844)
/'Camel 24
J (B. 1822)
| Banter
{ (Br. 1826)
/•Touch-
stone 14
(Br. 1831)
Ooo
h
/"Dr. Syntax 37
Beeswing I (Br. 1811)
(B. 1833) 1 Daughter of
[ (Ch. 1817)
/Ton -^
Tadmor 12 | (B. 1835)
(Br. 1846)1 Palmyra
{ (Br. 1838)
/'Cowl 2
Miss Sellon I (B. 1842)
(B. 1851) 1 Belle Dame .
[ (Ch. 1839)
Spc
Oi —
n
-^
■i
r«^|
— 2
THE
^ * f
869)
<I> 00 1
"8 '
r-t
-go
^3
OQ^-l
.,                ^Birdcatcher 11
£e „. I (Ch. 1833)
B
(Ch.
"24ij Echidna
W42) I (B. 1838)
/"Glencoe /
Pocahontas | (Ch. 1831)
(B. 1837) 1 Marpessa
[ (B. 1830)
, rp__„-i
          /"Camel 24
J (Br. 1831){BX1826)
f Voltaire 12
I Sacrifice
I (Br. 1847
^<J3
(Br. 1826)
irginia
(Ch. 1835)
117
-ocr page 505-
OAKS WINNERS 1882 & 1883
, Weather- iSh^ ^,or 12 { J***"*"
bit 12 J, <Brj If2)         
Br. 1842) [»-WJ
|                    /Touchstone 14
Mendicant | (Br. 1831)
(Priam 6
t Dau. of Orville
| Camel 24
I Banter
I (Br. 1843)1 LadyMooreCarew (Tramp 3
{ (B. 1830)
           \Kite
(Bay Middleton / ( Sultan 8
rCowl 2 | (B. 1833)
(B. 1842) I Crucifix
I
                    I (B. 1837)
/"Defence 5
Diversion | (B. 1824)
(Ch. 1838)1 Folly
I (Ch. 1830)
^ Cobweb
( Priam 6
^ Octaviana
| Whalebone /
(Defiance
| Middleton /
\ Little Folly
(Birdcatcher 11
\ Echidna
/Glencoe /
( Marpessa
f Partisan /
\ Pauline
| Plenipotentiary 6
X Myrrha
f Touchstone 14
\ Vulture
/-Rataplan
3          1
(Ch. 1850) V
he Baron 24
(Ch. 1842)
ocahontas
(B. 1837)
(Gladiator 22
"een J (Ch. 1833)
m"?M« 1 Daughter of
I <B- 1843> { (B 1840)
„ ,,.          (Orlando 13
Tedding- | (B1841)
ton 2
Miss Twickenham/Rockingham /
\Electress
/Humphry Clinker 8
\Dau. of Cervantes
/Pantaloon 17
( Honoria
| I
(Ch. 1838)
("Melbourne /
Queen of I (Bl, 1834)
nE°%i* I Birthday
(Br. 1854) \ (B / ,
fc«
I Walton 7
\ Parasol
| Moses 5
\
Quadrille
e ( Blacklock 2
\
Dau. of Phantom
| Blacklock 2
\
Wagtail
( Buzzard 3
\ Selim's Dam
| Peruvian 27
( Musidora
(Orville 8
| Miss Sophia
(Alexander 13
^ Brunette
f Birdcatcher 11
(Echidna
f Glencoe /
( Marpessa
( Humphry Clinker 8
\ Dau. of Cervantes
/Gladiator 22
\ Dau. of Plenipotentiary
( Brutandorf 11
\ Primette
(Mulatto 5
\
Linda
f Sir Hercules 2
\
Guiccioli
f Clarion 6
\ Annette
„, ,.           (Partisan /
*»»       PaSine811)
(Ch. 1833) ^ a(B 1826)
(Starch or Voltair
Lollypop ! 12 (Br. 1826)
(Bl. 1836)"| Belinda
{ (Br. 1825)
Panta
          (Caatrel 2
1 17 I (Ch- 1801)
(Ch"l824)\Id^1815) ^
("Master Henry 3
Banter
        I (B. 1815)
(Br. 1826)1 Boadicea
I (B. 1807)
r,, ,
           (The Baron 24
us ' (Ch-1842)
/rfi -1 o, n\1 Pocahontas
(Oh. 1849) [ (B. 1837)
*a CM
E6 **
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S'-M
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(B. 1854)
J (Br. 1834)
I Queen Mary
i (B. 1843)
( Physician 21
I (B. 1829)
| Morsel
I. (B. 1836)
(Birdcatcher 11
I (Ch. 1833)
| Agnes
I (Br. 1844)
118
-
rThe Cure 6
(B. 1841)
3'<
m
Miss Agnes
(Br. 1850)
^
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OAKS WINNERS 1884 & 1885
/"Touchstone 14
J (Br. 1831)
| Beeswing
I (B. 1831)
/"Melbourne /
I (Br. 1834)
} Volley
I (B. 1845)
/'Touchstone 14
I (Br. 1831)
1 Vulture
[ (Ch. 1833)
/'Alarm 19
I (B. 1842)
j Daughter of
I (Br. 1837)
/"Gladiator 22
| (Ch. 1833)
| Lollypop
I (Bl. 1836)
/"Pantaloon 17
J (Ch. 1824)
j Banter
[ (Br. 1826)
/"Venison 11
I (Br. 1833)
] Queen Anne
I (B. 1843)
("Surplice 2
I (B. 1845)
"j Odessa
[ (Ch.1833)
(Camel 24
( Banter
/ Dr. Syntax 37
I. Dau. of Ardrossan
(Humphry Clinker 8
) Dau. of Cervantes
/Voltaire 12
^Martha LyTnn
(Camel 24
( Banter
( Langar 6
/Kite
(Venison 11
I Southdown
(Glencoe /
\ Alea
(Partisan /
\ Pauline
/Starch or Voltaire 12
( Belinda
/Castrel.2
\ Idalia
f Master Henry 3
L Boadicea
/Partisan /
\ Fawn
(Slane 25
\ Garcia
(Touchstone 14
(_ Crucifix
/Sultan 8
| Sister to Cobweb
/ Whalebone /
(Dau. ofSelim
(Master Henry 3
\ Boadicea
(Paynator 18
I Dau. of Beningbrough
(Ardrossan 2
\ Lady Eliza
(Cain 8
I Margaret
(Sultan 8
(Hester
/Bay Middleton /
I Crucifix
(Belshazzar 11
\ Ellen
( Sir Hercules 2
I Guiccioli
( Economist 36
t Miss Pratt
(Sultan 8
(Trampoline
f Muley 6
\ Clare
OVhalebone /
(Margaretta
/Comus 25
\ Mareiana
( Partisan /
( Pauline
(Brutandorf 11
^ Wagtail
" is accepted.
Newmin-
ster8
(B. 1848)
The Slave
(B. 1852)
3> O
Orlando 13
(B. 1841)
Torment
I (B. 1850)
Sweetmeat
21
(Br. 1842)
Jocose
(B. 1843)
Kingston
12
(B. 1849)
Flax
(B. 1855)
Ml °
g 00
4a
P3
(Ml
o
pa
>
w
SB
pqoo
; =
3-
("Camel 24
I (B. 1822)
I Banter
Touch-
stone 14
00
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.3 rH
a .
(B,i83^7^1826)
f Dr. Syntax 37
Beeswing | (Br. 1811)
(B. 1833) 1 Daughter of
{ (Ch. 1817)
flon-*
Tadmori2/ (B. 1835)
(Br. 1846)"| Palmyra
I (Br. 1838)
("Cowl .2
Miss Sellonl (B. 1842)
(B. 1851) ] Belle Dame
{ (Ch. 1839)
fThe Baron (Bigatch.il
J(Ch.l842)}™-8)
("Glencoe /
Pocahontas) (Ch. 1831)
<- (B. 1837) 1 Marpessa
I (B. 1830)
/"Tramp 3, or
[Don John.? Mft*"
I (Gr. 1820-21)
(Gladiator 22
Miss Sarah I (Ch. 1833)
(B. 1842) | Easter
{ (B. 1835)
* The pedigree of " Waverley
£
•3 s
2 °°
■t—' Ci
IS
PS)
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OAKS WINNERS 1886 & 1887
/Camel 24
(Banter
/Dr. Syntax 37
(Dau. of Ardrossan
f Humphry Clinker 8
[ Dau. of Cervantes
/Voltaire 12
(Martha Lynn
/Camel 24
(Banter
(Langar 6
/Kite
/Venison 11
( Southdown
/Glencoe /
(Alea
/The Baron 24
( Pocahontas
/The Libel 14
I Splitvote
/Sultan 8
( Cobweb
("Malek 3
\ Bessy
( Laneroost 3
( Barbelle
(Inheritor 4
(Dau. of Waverley
/'Gladiator 22
\Lollypop
/Muley Moloch 9
1 Rebecca
("Touchstone 14
/■jNewmm- I
ster 8 -! p
(Br. 1831)
jeeswing
« o
irlfO
(B.1848)[^B 183-8)
/'Melbourne /
I (Br. 1834)
j Volley
\ (B. 1845)
/'Touchstone 14
I (Br. 1831)
j Vulture
{ (Ch. 1833)
f Alarm 19
| (B. 1842)
The Slave
(B. 1852)
Orlando 13
. (B. 1841)
Torment
PQ
o
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(8881
Petr
ura
I860)
>
(B. 1850)1 Daughter of
[ (Br. 1837)
!>•
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00
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St Albans | (Ch lm)
(Ch. 1857)f ^1851)
i?ii„„ htm fBay Middleton /
^0^ UK™*
=
53
>> C
Por
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flS
£
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Van Gal5
(Br. 18
(Br. 1844)
..(mI Little Cassino
os) I, (Br. 1843)
Sweet
Hawthorn
(Br.
/""Sweetmeat 21
| (Br. 1842)
I -A-lice Hawthorn
^ ^g_ lg38)
^To„,.v,;„ /'Touchstone 14
ster 8 -' (              '
m lSdS^ I Beeswing
(B. 1848) |^ (R 18|g)
/'Melbourne /
The Slave j (Br. 1834)
/Camel 24
( Banter
/'Dr. Syntax 37
(Dau. of Ardrossan
/Humphry Clinker 8
(Dau. of Cervantes
/Voltaire 12
(Martha Lynn
(The Baron 24
1 Pocahontas
("The Provost 4
( Otisina
/Liverpool 11
(Otis
/Gladiator 22
(Dau. of Plenipotentiary
/Smolensko 18
( Louisa
(Muley 6
/Glare
(Pantaloon 17
(Pasquinade
/"Redshank 15
(Lady Day
/Humphry Clinker 8
( Dau. of Cervantes
("Touchstone 14
/Emma
C Economist 36
I Fanny Dawson
/ Speculation 15
I Foam
© O
(B. 1852)1 Volley
o
IKettle- pa
(B. 1845)
ataplan 3
drum 3
50)
(Ch.l858)[Hgla1846)
fLanercost 3
Haricot | (Br. 1835)
(Br. 1847)1 Queen Mary
I (B. 1843)
.Jeremy fJe"2»
Diddler 3-,1(iiL 1821)
fBr lfml | Marpessa
(The Libel 14
Madeleine I (Br. 1842)
(B. 1853)1 Redbreast
I (Ch. 1845)
WestAus-p1.^01"™/
tralian7 j,,(Bl- ?834)
<-& mm\ Mowenna
(B. 1850) [ (R mg)
fHarkawaj- 2
Maria
          | (Ch. 1834)
(Ch. 1845) | Suspicion
I (Ch. 1835)
120
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OAKS WINNERS 1888 & 1889
^Birdcatcher 11
/ Sir Hercules 2
t Guiccioli
/ Plenipotentiary 6
\ My Dear
j Touchstone 14
(Decoy
/ Melbourne /
^Secret
f Birdcatcher 11
\ Echidna
fGlencoe 1
y Marpessa
f Faugh-a-Ballagh 11
\ Espoir
/The Prime "Warden 17
\Miss Whinney
/Camel 24
( Banter
/Dr. Syntax 37
\Dau. of Ardrossan
(Ion 4
\ Palmyra
/Cowl 2
\ Belle Dame
/Birdcatcher 11
[ Echidna
/ Glencoe /
\ Marpessa
/Camel 24
I Banter
/Voltaire 12
t Virginia
r<* (
** 00
1
.9>-M
So
Spa
M
m
Oxford 12 J (Ch. 1833)
(Ch. 1857)1 Honey Dear
{ (B. 1844)
fFlatcatcher 3
Whisper | (B. 1845)
(B. 1857)1 Silence
{ (B. 1848)
rSt00k-         fT^hBT84n2f
well 3 -L((4 18,i2/
rr<h isioi Pocahontas
>>
£
0
*Q
a
v„
0
CO
n
T--
1—1
A
0
K
00 5 pQ 00 J
i-h i-h ^aj j
(Ch. 1849) ^ (B 1M7)
fEthelbert 12 '
Isoline I (Ch. 1850)
(B. 1860)1 Bassishaw
{ (B. 1847)
rsr«„™-„ /Touchstone 14
r"5'
30 -f
(B. 1848){B--f3)
TTadmor 12
eclusion I (Br. 1846)
il
(B. 1857)1 Miss Sellon
I (B. 1851)
.'Stock-         j
well 3 - t
(Ch. 1849) It
he Baron 24
(<Vf2)
^hJ£g
|I
Touchstone 14
Alcestis I (Br. 1831)
(Bl. 1860)1 Sacrifice
s ^s
(Br. 1847)
/Camel 24
[ Banter
/Dr. Syntax 37
[Dau. of Ardrossan
(Ion 4
\
Palmyra
fCowl 2
\ Belle Dame
.Z/Brutandorf 11
/Don John's dam
/Camel 24
\ Lady Elizabeth
/Sheet Anchor 12
[Miss Letty
/Taurus 22
\ Esmeralda
/Partisan /
\ Pauline
/Starch or Voltaire 12
\ Belinda
/Venison 11
\Zeila
/"Pantaloon 17
\ Banter
/Camel 24
\ Banter
/The Merry Monarch S
\
Cestus
(Voltaire 12
\ Martha Lynn
/"The Cure 6
\Miss Agnes
f "5 ■*
-I
KB
TTadmor 12
Seclusion | (Br. 1846)
»• (B. 1857)1 Miss Sellon
( (B. 1851)
s.-
.M
2
(B.
ovite iB^TS3T0S
("Weatherbit 12
Diomedia | (Br. 1842)
(B. 1850)1 Taurina
{ (Ch. 1843)
fGladiator 22
Med
Sweet-
(Ch. 1833)
^g
meat 21 -
^,1842)}^^
f Buckthorn 8
Volatile I (B. 1849)
(S. 1855)1 Jocose
I (B. 1843)
/Touchstone 14
I (Br. 1831)
o
.a
fA
'I (B°ni858)|L^
1849)
I Voltigeur 2
"S I Fair Agnes I (B. 1847)
^ (B. 1863)1 Little Agnes
I (B. 1856)
121
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OAKS WINNERS 1890 & 1891
( Voltigeur 2
I (Br. 1847)
"I Mrs. Ridgway
l (B. 1849)
{Flying Dutchman
3(B. 1846)
Merope
(B. 1841)
(Harkaway 2
(Ch. 1834)
Pocahontas
(B. 1837)
(Ion 4
J (B. 1835)
1 Little Fairy
I (B. 1841)
flthuriel.2
J (Br. 1841)
1 Miss Bowe
{ (B. 1834)
(Pantaloon 17
I (Ch. 1824)
| Decoy
{ (B. 1830)
(Melbourne /
(Br. 1834)
Clarissa
(B. 1846)
Camel 24
(Bl. 1822)
Daughter of
(B. 1829)
/Voltaire 12
( Martha Lynn
/Birdcatcher 11
\Xan Darrell
| Bay Middleton /
\Barbelle
( Voltaire 12
\ Velocipede's Dam
/Economist 36
\ Fanny Dawson
/Glencoe /
\Marpessa
/Cain 8
\ Margaret
{Hornsea 15
Lacerta
/Touchstone 14
\ Verbena
/Catton 2
\Dau. of Orville
( Castrel 2
y Idalia
(Filho da Puta 12
\ Finesse
/Humphry Clinker 8
\Dau. of Cervantes
/Pantaloon 17
\ Dau. of Glencoe
/Whalebone /
\Dau. of Selim
/Brutandorf 11
\Mrs. Cruickshanks
r Vedette 19
(Br. 1854)
Flying
Duchess
I. (B. 1853)
[King
Tom 3
(B. 1851)
Adeline
(B. 1851)
Long-
bow 21
(B. 1849)
Leger-
demain
(B. 1846)
,Y. Mel-
bourne 25
I (B. 1855)
Brown
Bess
(Br. 1844)
II
pq
c
spq
-2
CO
o
H
Melbourne /
(Br. 1834)
Mowerina
(B. 1843)
Birdcatcher 11
(Ch. 1833)
Daughter of
(B. 1845)
Stockwell 3
(Ch. 1849)
Catherine Hayes
(B. 1850)
Adventurer 12
(B. 1859)
Darling's Dam
(B. 1850) »
The Baron 24
(Ch. 1842)
Pocahontas
(B. 1837)
Paragone 2
(B. 1843)
Ellen Home
(Ch. 1844)
Voltaire 12
(B. 1826)
Martha Lynn
(Br. 1837)
Latmcelot 14
(Br. 1837)
Miss Nancy
(B. 1845)
122
/ Humphry Clinker 8
\Dau. of Cervantes
/Touchstone 14
\Enima
/Sir Hercules 2
\ Guiccioli
/Hetman Platoir^
\Whim
/The Baron 24
\ Pocahontas
/ Lanercost 3
\ Constance
/Newminster 8
1 Palma
/Birdcatcher 11
\Dau. of Hetman Platoff
/Birdcatcher 11
\ Echidna
/Glencoe /
1 Marpessa
f Touchstone 14
\ Hoyden
/Redshank 15
\ Delhi
/Blacklock 2
{ Dau. of Phantom
/Mulatto S
\Leda
/Camel 24
^ Banter
/Cain 8
\Dau. of Brutandorf
'West Aus-
tralian 7
(B. 1850)
Darling's I
Dam * {
(B. 1850) I
, Bella-
drum 22
(B. 1866)
Bon
Accord
' (B. 1867)
a *
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IMS
r* (
Lyon
1863)
Lord
(B.
/•Stock-
well 3 \
(Ch. 1849) I
Paradigm I
. (Br. 1852)~
Volti-
geur 2
(Br. 1847)
Julia
(Br. 1852)"
1 &
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OAKS WINNERS 1892 & 1893
f Voltigeur 2
Vedette 19 | (Br. 1847)
(Br. 1854)") Mrs. Ridgway
[ (B. 1849)
FIvine ^Flying Dutchm
Ciss ' 3 (B. 1846)
(B. 1853)f(^841)
King Tom fHg-g4f
(B. 1851){P-^
/'Ion ■/
Adeline | (B. 1835)
(B. 1851)1 Little Fairy
[ (B. 1841)
t „„„],„ flthuriel .2
Longbow | (Br>1M1)
CR -iojoO ^iss Bowe
(B. 1849) ^ (B_ lg34)
TpffPr          ? Pantaloon 17
/ Voltaire 12
I Martha Lynn
/ Birdcatcher 11
[ Nan Darrell
an / Bay Middleton /
( Barbelle
/ \'oltaire 12
( Velocipede's Dam
(Economist 36
\ Fanny Dawson
f Glencoe /
[ Marpessa
| Cain 8
I Margaret
) Hornsea 15
\ Lacerta
/ Touchstone 13
( Verbena
( Catton 2
\
Dau. of Orville
/ Castrel 2
\
tdalia
I Filho da Puta 12
^ Finesse
/ Humphry Clinker 8
( Dau. of Cervantes
/Pantaloon 17
\ Dau. of Glencoe
t Whalebone /
(Dau. of Selim
/ Brutandorf 11
[ Mrs. Cruickshanks
r«;
m
« f
r ©^
jS 10
s?
isi
*rr
&.
i-H
° v.
M
H
I (Ch. 1824)
846)1
Decoy
(B. 1
(B. 1830)
Y. Mel- P^bo""e '
bourne 25-L/Br-1884>
(B.1855)[C^a848)
T>                  /Camel 24
B'B°™        | (B1.1822)
l(Br. 1844){D-^0f
ffi CO
+J 00
J3iH
SO .
( Voltigeur 2
r Vedette 19 | (Br. 1847)
(Br. 1854)1 Mrs. Ridgway
{ (B. 1849)
I Flvinff /F]yinS Dutchman
' Tuctess ' 3 (B. 1846)
(B. 1853)}^841)
n» ion\ I Pocahontas
(B. 1861) [ (B. 1837)
?Ion4
Adeline | (B. 1835)
(B. 1851)1 Little Fairy
{ (B. 1841)
/ Voltaire 12
( Martha Lynn
I Birdcatcher 11
I Nan Darrell
/ Bay Middleton /
( Barbelle
/ Voltaire 12
\ Velocipede's Dam
/ Economist 36
I Fanny Dawson
/Glencoe /
\ Marpessa
/ Cain 8
\ Margaret
(Hornsea 15
( Lacerta
/Camel 24
(Banter
(Pantaloon 17
i Rebecca
| Muley 6
{ Lacerta
/ Bay Middleton /
\ Camilla
( Pantaloon 17
| Phryne
( Muley Moloch 9
I Rebecca
/The Baron 24
( Pocahontas
f Touchstone 14
1^ Beeswing
.3 So
Ofl-H
o
C5^
jtt
w
,Lord of the
Isles 4
Touchstone 14
(Br. 1831)
(B. 1852) ^ (ch_ ms)
/The Little Known
Miss Ann | 11 (B. 1836)
(B. 1846)1 Bay Missy
o
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if.
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(B. 1838)
fStockwell 3
AVoodbine | (Ch. 1849)
(B. 1860)1 Honeysuckle
{ (Br. 1851)
123
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OAKS WINNERS 1894 & 1895
/Voltaire 12
(Martha Lynn
/Birdcatcher 11
\Nan Darrell
I Bay Middleton /
\Barbelle
( Voltaire 12
\ Velocipede's Dam
/Economist 36
\ Fanny Dawson
/Glencoe /
\ Marpessa
/Cain 8
/Margaret
( Hornsea 15
\Lacerta
/ The Baron 24
{ Pocahontas
(Gladiator 22
/ Dau. of Plenipotentiary
/The Baron 24
( Pocahontas
(Flatcatcher 3
/ Extempore
| Ion 4
\ Ellen Middleton
J Birdcatcher 11
I Prairie Bird
/Touchstone 14
( Beeswing
| Sleight of Hand 3
[ Sister to Lecontield
j'Voltigeur 2
Vedette 19 I (Br. 1847)
(Br. 1854)1 MM. Ridgwa
I. (B. 1849)
™ •
             /'Flying Dutchman
i tsl- Mfim6)
lr- m f Harkaway 2
King Tom I (ch^ ^
CR IRfill 1 Pocahontas
(«■ 1»51) ^ (B 1837)
("Ion 4
"B.2
1—I
Adeline
(B. 1851)
J (B. 1835)
1 Little Fairy
V03 —
I
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-
<
I—1
<
I (B. 1841)
Fl
CO
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1—
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B
A
/"Rataplan 3
J (Ch. 1850)
1 Queen Marv
\ (B. 1843)"
fStockwell 3
I (Ch. 1849)
(Ch. 1862)I Jeu d'Esprit
I (B. 1852)
-W
SST
Eh
ja.
a .
jam
j-\\rild Dayrell 7
The Rake /) (Br. 1852)
(B. 1864) 1 England's Beauty
I. (Ch. 1850)
The
(Xewminster 8
(B. 1848)
Madame Stodare
(Ch. 1850)
/ Birdcatcher 11
/Echidna
(Glencoe /
( Marpessa
(Partisan /
1 Pauline
f Plenipotentiary 6
/ Myrrha
/Birdcatcher 11
/Echidna
/Glencoe /
/Marpessa
/Touchstone 14
/Decoy
/Emilius 28
( Maria
/Camel 24
/ Banter
/Dr. Syntax 37
/ Dau. of Ardrossan
(Ion 4
\ Palmyra
/Cowl 2
/Belle Dame
/ Humphry Clinker 8
/Dau. of Cervantes
/Pantaloon 17
/ Dau. of Glencoe
/Orlando 13
\ Miss Twickenham
(Don John 2
\ Miss Lydia
(The Baron 24
Rataplan 3 | (Ch. 1842)
(Ch. 1850)1 Pocahontas
I (B. 1837)
n
                f Gladiator 22
w6n              (Ch. 1833)
(£348) {»&&>*
Stockwell [The Baron 2!
MS
(Ch. 1842)
-,„.„,/ Pocahontas
lb49) { (B. 1837)
fFlatcatcher ;
I (Oh,
(B. 1845)
1 Extempore
I. (B. 1840)
/Touchstone 14
J (Br. 1831)
1 Beeswing
I (B. 1833)
(Tadmor 12
| (Br. 1846)
1 Miss Sellon
i Jeu
l\ d'Esprit
(B. 1852)
frTewmin-
ster 8
(B. 1848)
I Seclusion
(B. 1857)
(B. 1851)
{Melbourne /
markaa '
(B1846)
Mel-
^s-
(Teddington 2
| Dau. of I (Ch. 1848)
(Ch. 1855)1 Maid of Masham
{ (Ch. 1845)
124
-ocr page 512-
OAKS WINNERS 1896 & 1897
/'Touchstone 14
I (Br. 1831)
"j Beeswing
[ (B. 1833)
rTadmor 12'
J (Br. 1846)
"| Miss Sellon
{ (B. 1851)
(The Baron 24
J (Ch. 1842)
| Pocahontas
I (B. 1837)
/'Moss Trooper 18
J (Br. 1839)
"| Queen Mary
{ (B. 1843)
/'Weatlierbit 12
J (Br. 1842)
1 Mendicant
[ (Br. 1843)
|XW1 2
J (B. 1842)
"| Diversion
(. (Ch. 1838)
/'Sweetmeat 21
J (Br. 1842)
1 Jocose
I (B. 1843)
/'Melbourne /
(Br. 1834)
Mystery
(B. 1842)
/ Camel 24
t Banter
/Dr. Syntax 37
(Dau. of Ardrossan
/Ion 4
\
Palmyra
/ Cowl 2
\
Belle Dame
/ Birdcatcher 11
tEchidna
fGlencoe /
I. Marpessa
("Liverpool 11
( Dau. of Emilius
/Gladiator 22
( Dau. of Plenipotentiary
/Sheet Anchor 12
\ Miss Letty
( Touchstone 14
( Lady Moore Carew
/ Bay Middleton /
\ Crucifix
/'Defence 5
I Folly
/ Gladiator 22
\ Lollypop
/Pantaloon 17
\ Banter
f Humphry Clinker 8
[Dau. of Cervantes
/'Jerry 15
\ Nameless
Newmin-
ster 8
(B. 1848)
Seclusion
(B. 1857)
Stock-
well 3
(Ch. 1849)
ISraxey
(B. 1849)
Beads-
man 13
(Br. 1855)
Madame
Eglentine
(B. 1857)
r«c^
*S
c
(868
r".
0
rH
a
ga
(J
• m
H
S
1---1
(Si
C
kJ
H.a
O
opq
•n* .
, g TO
-
-
H
<
/Maca-
-1 roni 14
I (B. 1860)
Secret
I (Br. 1853)
I
■am
(Gladiator 22
I (Ch. 1833)
j Belle de Nuit
{ (1844)
j Nuny Kirk 8 or
The Cossack /
| (Ch. 1844)
I Hervine
{ (1848)
/ Partisan /
\ Pauline
( Y. Emilius /
\ Ordine
/HetmanPlatoff.2
( Joannina
/"Mr. Wags 15
\ Poetess
/'Touchstone 14
( Vulture
/'Birdcatcher 11
( Pocahontas
/Melbourne /
( Mowerina
/Lanercost 3
(Dau. of Tomboy
/Whisker/
\ Floranthe
(Nabocklish 4
\Miss Tooley
/'Sultan 8
( Trampoline
/Muley 6
\ Clare
rSelim 2
\Dau. of Walton
/Sir Oliver 13
\ Scotilla
/Walton 7
|_ Parasol
/FilhodaPutal2
(_ Agatha
a
/■rH t~t
CD t>-
IN-
l—
*»J3
30
ao
.
p-l
j3
V
J
/"Ventre St.
Gris5
(B. 1855)
Favourite
I (1863)
/'Chatta-
nooga 3
(B. 1862)
Summer-
side
(Br. 1856)
Hark-
away 2
(Ch. 1834)
Pocahontas
(B. 1837) '
(Orlando 13
I (B. 1841)
I Ayacanora
I (B. 1854)
/' West Australian'
I (B. 1850)
I Ellerdale
I (Br. 1844)
("Economist 36
I (B. 1825)
| Fanny Dawson
[ (Ch. 1823)
(Gleneoe /
(Ch. 1831)
| Marpessa
3 (N
O CO
rf r-/
•CM
©
c
■Jl
18
so,,-
eg
M
a
I (B. 1830)
/'Langar 6
p
Epirus 13
(Ch. 1834)
J (Ch. 1817)
| Olympia
(B. 1815)
{Partisan /
(B. 1811)
Frailty
(B. 1821)
lofi
Cyprian
(B. 1833)
OF
Pedigree of "The Palmer" is accepted.
125
-ocr page 513-
OAKS WINNERS 1898 & 1899
/Touchstone 14
^ Beeswing
/Melbourne /
\ Volley
/Rataplan 3
\Hybla
f Mango or Laneroost 3
\ Queen Mary
f Voltigeur 2
\Mrs. Ridgway
/ Flying Dutchman 3
\ Merope
("Windhound 3
^ Alice Hawthorn
/Stockwell3
\ Honeysuckle
/Touchstone 14
i Beeswing
(Slane 25
\ Southdown
J Touchstone 14
|_ Vulture
/Voltaire 12
(Martha Lynn
/Humphry Clinker 8
IDau. of Cervantes
/ Pantaloon 17
( Dau. of Glencoe
(The Doctor 21
\Myrrha
/Acteeon 28
1 Beatrice
,-Lord
. Clifden 2-!
'Newminster 8
(B. 1848)
r&^Taeny I The Slave
(B. 1860) ^ (B 18.2)
| T ,             (Kettledrum 3
I
(Br. 1868) { (Brl847)
C Vedette 19
Galopin 3 I (Br. 1854)
(B. 1872)1 Flying Duchess
I (B. 1853)
(Thormanby 4
(Ch. 1857)
Woodbine
(B. 1860)
00
u
in
Pi
c
p
■«!
02
3=
15 m
Cambuscan |
19
'Newminster 8
(B. 1848)
,"*
(Ch.l861)[A--850)
fOrlando 13
Little LadyJ (B. 1841)
(B. 1858) 1 Volley
I (B. 1845)
«
O
r.
a
rY. Mel-bourne 25 <(B. 1855)
(Br. 1834)
I Clarissa
(B. 1846)
("Malcolm 7
<!2
a) .
o u
an
^[skbie \ h- 1843>
Tn\iii SKn\1 Daughter of
(Ch.l850)|. (Ch. 1834)
Stockwell 3
(Ch. 1849)
Marigold
(Ch. 1860)
{Thormanby 4
(Ch. 1857)
Ellen Home
(Ch. 1844)
('Sweetmeat 21
J (Br. 1842)
"| Jocose
I. (B. 1843)
("The Cure 6
I (B. 1841)
| Miss Agnes
I (Br. 1850)
(Weatherbit 12
I (Br. 1842)
"I Mendicant
I (Br. 1843)
Cowl 2
(B. 1842)
1 Diversion
\ (Ch. 1838)
('Wild Dayrell 7
' (Br. 1852)
Daughter of
(Ch. 1841)
Warlock 9
(Ro. 1853)
Leila
(B. 1852)
126
f The Baron 24
\ Pocahontas
/Teddington 2
\ Sister to Singapore
/Melbourne or Windhoimd 3
\ Alice Hawthorn
/Redshank 15
t Delhi
f Gladiator 22
\ Lollypop
/Pantaloon 17
\ Banter
/Physician 21
\ Morsel
/Birdcatcher 11
( Agnes
(Sheet Anchor 12
\Miss Letty
(Touchstone 14
1 Lady Moore Carew
| Bay Middleton /
\ Crucifix
/Defence 5
1 Folly
(Ion 4
\ Ellen Middleton
/Little Red Rover 37
^ Eclat
f Birdcatcher 11
\ Elphine
/Melbourne /
^Meeanee
Doncaster5
(Ch. 1870)
T3 .
Rouge Rose
(Oh. 1865)
Macaroni
14
(B. 1860)
Polly
Agnes
(Br. 1865)
Beadsman
13
(Br. 1855)
Madame
Eglentine
(B. 1857)
Buccaneer
14
(B. 1857)
Fairy
(B.1860)
SI
15
"i (
fh^
s ■*
<#
3 H
r-3 CO J
OO
Ph ■
r~l
oP3
=0
j3~—
<->
H v
m
b
M oo
___.____ ..)__iL
.
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WINNERS OF THE ST. LEGER
129                       2 k
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...........               ........
-ocr page 518-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1777 & 1778
I
Godolphin
Arabian •£■
> ,
f 5PP
.3 ■*
CD .-H
SO
gpo
O
Cade 6
(B. 1734)
Matchem's
Dam
(1735)
(Bald Galloway 15
[Sister to Chaunter
/Jigg *r-
(Sister to Mixbury
/Makeless ►£•
\Dau. of Brimmer
I Roxana
I (Ch. 1718)
/'Partner 9
J (1718)
j Brown Farewell
( (Br. 1710)
/"Godolphin
J Arabian >£■
| Sister to Blaze
[ (Ch. 1730)
(Yg. True Blue 3
(Gr. 1718)
pq
SO
White-
nose "f-
(Flying Childers 6
(Confederate Filly
(Honywood's Arabian «£■
( Byerly Turk Mare
(Oxford Dun Arabian >£•
•f Darcy Black-legged Royal
I Mare
M on
3 .
(B. 1742)
Miss
Slamerkin
(1729)
Godolphin
Arabian >£•
Grey
g
o
x
'-
o
«
1 Danghtei
of
Bald Galloway 15
Daughter of
/St. Victor Barb ■£
(Grey Whynot
(Snake ►£>
(Grey Wilkes
Robinson
(Gr. 1723)
"j
~ (Cullen
n I Arabian >J"
{Almanzor •$•
(Ch. 1713)
Sister to Bay
Bolton
(Darley Arabian >%•
\ Hautboy Mare
(Grey Hautboy •$<
Sir M. Pierson's famous
I Mare, by Makeless
w
Dau. of
z-
(Godolphin
m 5" I Arabian -4"
00
-r
i^
i—
u~
1^
1 -
"* i
r-H
S
'-
m
>■
<U
fflS
*-
■"
^
/-Bald Galloway 15/St. Victor Barb •£■
®£-1
« rt I Roxana
(Grey Whynot
/Akaster Turk «f>
(Cream Cheeks
(Curwen Bay Barb ►£■
(Dau. of Old Spot
( Brimmer •£■
(Dau. of Place's White Turk
°P ( (Ch. 1718)") Daughter of
Partner 9
(Ch. 1718)
Brown
Farewell
(Br. 1710)
Jigg«p
Sister to Mixbury
'Makeless •£■
Daughter of
13
i—i
p
-;
o
H
II
TGodolphin
I Arabian «J«
I Roxana                 /Bald Galloway 15
( (Ch. 1718)          (Sister to Chaunter
(Flying Childers 6 (Darley Arabian »J-
(B. 1715)
           \ Betty Leedes
Lath 6
(B. 1732)
Bay Basto
(B. 1729)
j Sister to S
oreheels (Basto 6
(Partner's Dam
131
-ocr page 519-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1779 & 1780
Godolphin
Arabian 4"
paid Galloway 15
Roxana                ------
(Ch. 1718)1 Daughter of
f St. Victor Barb •%>
{
Grey Whynot
/ Akaster Turk 4*
t Cream Cheeks
f Darley Arabian 4"
I Betty Leedes
| Grey Grantham 4*
\Dau. of Paget Turk
/Jigg +
^Sister to Mixbury
( Greyhound 4*
^Chesnut Lay ton
| Darley Arabian 4"
j Betty Leedes
f Snake 4"
1 Grey Wilkes
/Bay Bolton 37
^Dau. of Jigg
/Crab 9
(^ Sister to Sloven
Opq
'l1
f Flying Childers 6
Steady 6 I (B. 1715)
(Gr. 1735) j Miss Belvoir
CPartner 9
Dan. of J (Ch. 1718)
------ "| Daughter of
I (1720)
j" Bartlet's
Childers 6
fr.
--
72)
on 9
750)
t^.
" 1
■d
O
*n
Squirt 11
(Ch. 1732)
Daughter of
t Patriot 24
J (Br. 1729)
"l Daughter of
I (1728)
( Godolphin
| Arabian 4*
\ Daughter of
I (Ch. 1727)
j-Crab 9
I (Gr. 1722)
\ Daughter of
Dau. of
Blank 15
(B. 1740)
Dau. of
/ Bartlet's Childers 6
I Flying Whigg
(Alcock's Arabian 4"
/Snip's Dam
/Dyer's Dimple 4->
^Dau. of Bethell's Castaway
,M
'Bartlet's
Childers 6
Daughter of
( Blacklegs 4""
I (1725)
"j Daughter of
/Godolphin
Arabian 4"
"j Daughter of
I (Ch. 1727)
f Bolton Starling
) Darley Arabian 4"
I Betty Leedes
/Snake 4"
/Grey Wilkes
/Mulso Bay Turk 4-
^Dau. of Coney skins
/Bay Bolton 37
(_Dau. of Cub
Squirt 11
(Ch. 1732)
00
©
-
i-
r$
1
--
-
--.
PQ
The Ruby-
Mare
Blank 15
(B. 1740)
Bay
Starling
/Bartlet's Childers 6
\ Flying Whigg
24 f Bay Bolton 37
/Camilla's Dam
f Partner 9
\_Dau. of Greyhound
-a •-.
SO •
(Gr. 1727)
j Meynell
(Ch. 1736)
/"Godolphin
I Arabian 4"
"> 00
(Jigg +
/Sister to Mixbury
Partner 9
Spinster
I (Ch. 1735
(Ch. 1718)
Bay Bloody
rfa
J
Bloody Buttocks 4*
j Dau. of Greyhound
Buttocks
(B. 1729)
^Godolphin
Regulus 111 Arabian 4"
(B. 1739) i Grey Robinson
/Bald Galloway 15
| Dau. of Snake
f Flying Childers 6
/Confederate Filly
/Fox 6
^Dau. of Darley Arabian
CO
A"
05
(Gr. 1723)
(Blaze 4"
(B. 1733)
Dau. of
I
Daughter of
132
-ocr page 520-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1781 & 1782
Flying Childers 6 / Darley Arabian 4"
(B. 1715)
           \Betty Leedes
Sister to Soreheels f Basto 6
( Partner's Dam
(Clumsey 11
( Bay Peg
/Bay Bolton 37
[ Dau. of Newcastle Turk
Snip 9
(Br. 1736)
r-S
(Jj{
Sister to
Slipby
(1740)
Blank 15
(B. 1740)
Dan. of
pq
j'Godolphin
I Arabian 4*
I Little Hartley
{ Mare (Ch. 172
/'Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
I Daughter of
/'Partner 9
J (Ch. 1718)
j Daughter of
/'Bloody
I Buttocks 4*
a?
■3
■s
t-<
^
s 1
-o
5
»l
a
i-fl
(Bartlet's Childers 6
) | Flying Whigg
(Godolphin Arabian 4"
i Grey Robinson
| Lonsdale Bay Arabian 4*
I Bonny Lass
{■Kgg 4"
I Sister to Mixbury
/ Almanzor 4"
1 Dau. of Grey Hautboy
3/
3
Traveller
37
(B. 1735)
Grey
Bloody
Buttocks
(Gr. 1733)
Ball 4.
(B. 1736)
I Daughter
(Flying Childers
I (1715)
I Confederate
/Greyhound 4"
[Brown Farewell
6 /Darley Arabian 4".
I Betty Leedes
/Grey Grantham 4"
1
I Dau. of Rutland's Black Barb
Lath 6
                   /Godolphin Arabian 4"
I (B. 1732)            (Roxana
I Bay Basto             /Flying Childers 6
I (B. 1729)            I Sister to Soreheels
Crazy
(Ch. 1747
^5B
/'Godolphin
Cade 6        I Arabian 4*
(B. 1734) "j Roxana
{ (Ch. 1718)
/'Partner 9
Dau. of J (Ch. 1718)
(1735) | Brown Farewell
{ (Br. 1710)
/'Snip 9
/ Bald Galloway 15
I Sister to Chaunter
/ Jigg 4.
I Sister to Mixbury
(Makeless 4*
I Dau. of Brimmer
/Flying Childers 6
[ Dau. of Basto
(Fox 6
\Gipsey
("Snap /
J (Br. li
Dau. of
I (Br. 1736)
50)1 Daughter of
I (1740)
IS
/'Cullen Arabian 4" f
I              -------              I
I Lady Thigh           f Partner 9
I (Ch. 1731)          "t Dau. of Greyhound
D
w
1—1
U3
M
H
"3 -"^ J
ERA
to1
1."*-
p
r-i
b!»|
ffl
s*-
0 [
Godolphin
Arabian 4*
Little
Hartley
Mare        "j F
(Ch. 1727)1
Bartlet's Childers ( Darley Arabian 4"
6
                        (Betty Leedes
/ William's Arabian >f
[ Points
Cullen
Arabian 4"
A3
is
(Godolphin Arabian 4"
\ Roxana
/Young Greyhound 4
\
Dau. of Partner
/Cade 6
Miss Cade J (Ch. 1734)
(Ch. 1750)"| Miss Makeless
I (B. 1737)
188
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ST. LEGER WINNERS 1783 & 1784
f Byeiiy Turk 4"
(Dau. of Spanker 4"
Jigg 4.
1
("Partner 9 |
'2 3 (Gh.1718)
"j Sister to Mixbury JCurwen Bay Barb
I. ------              \Dau. of Old Spot
?Fox 6                    f Clumsey 11
I (B. 1714)            (Bay Peg
I Milkmaid              { Snail 4"
I (1720)                \ Dau. of Shield's Galloway
/'Flying Childers 6/Darley Arabian 4"
I (B. 1715)            1 Betty Leedes
| Confederate Filly f Grey Grantham >f«
I------               (Dau. of Rutland's Black Barb
?Bethell's
Arabian 4"
Meliora
(1729)
Ho
{'-
Blaze 4"
(B. 1733)
w
&rf
Selima
(1733)
O
S3
c
c
S
w
/Graham's Champion 4"
(Dau. of Darley Arabian
/Bartlet's Childers 6
( Dau. of Snake
/"Blacklegs 9
(Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Grey Robinson
/Smith's Son of Snake 4"
\ Dau. of Montagu
( Blaze 4"
\ Dau. of Hip
fYg. Greyhound 4
\Dau. of Curwen Bay Barb
f Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Little Hartley Mare
/Traveller 37
1 Miss Makeless
I Daughter of
(Squirt 11
I (Ch. 1732)
Marske 8
(Br. 1750)] The Kuby Mare
/'Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
| Mother Western
' q S1 — L (
o
/'Sampson 4"
I (B. 1745)
I Daughter of
<N
>>
o
N
~
*
CJ .
Uh
Tc
^
Engineer
(Br. 1756) ^™g^r
C Blank 15
Dau. of | (B. 1740)
(Ch. 1763)1 Lass of the Mill
I (1745)
/"Partner 9
Tartar 48 | (Ch. 1718)
(Ch. 1743)/ Meliora
I (1729)
Blaze 4*
/Jigg 4"
(Sister to Mixbury
/Fox 6
(Milkmaid
(Flying Childers 6
( Confederate Filly
f Bethell's Arabian 4"
( Dau. of Graham's Champion
r'-o-z?
c-i °o
o
-f
r3i^
O r-4-i
i-~
w^.
IM
Cypron
(B. 1750)
(B. 1733)
"j Selima
I (1733)
JGodolphin
w J
Blank 15
(B. 1740)
Dau. of
(1751)
Cade 6
' Arabian 4*
/ Daughter of
I (Ch. 1727)
TRegulus 11
J (B. 1739)
\ Daughter of
I Godolphin
f Bartlet's Childers 6
I Plying Whigg
f Godolphin Arabian 4"
\Grey Robinson
/Soreheels 9
(Dau. of Makeless
-d w
*-^
(
w
h-1
~ .-^
<
«*;
w
_
ft.
CO
O r-H J
5 ^g
a
CO
o
.13
MO
«
I
-—-i
' Arabian 4"
(B. 1734) 1Roxana
{ (Ch. 1718
f Bald Galloway 15
1 Dau. of Akaster Turk
Little          J Bartlet's Childers/ Darley Arabian 4"
Hartley |
Mare
        | Flying Whigg
(Ch. 1727)1 (1715)
(Crab 9
Oroonoko 7 | (Gr. 1722)
(Bl.
1745)/Miss Slamerkin
I (1729)
(Traveller 37
Dau. of J (B. 1735)
------ j Miss Makeless
I (B. 1739)
134
( Betty Leedes
/"William's Arabian 4"
(Points
/Alcock's Arabian 4"
(Sister to Soreheels
fYg. True Blue 3
1 Dau. of Oxford Dun Arabian
/Partner 9
( Dau. of Almanzor
(Yg. Greyhound 4
\ Dau. of Partner
<v a
o
&
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ST. LEGER WINNERS 1785 & 1786
/"Partner 9
(Tartar 48 | (Ch. 1718)
(Jigg 4"
( Sister to Mixbury
ras-
(Ch. 1743/| Meliora
I (1729)
/Fox 6
/Milkmaid
*#
T3 ■£>■
1-
© r-i **
( Blaze 4*
Cypron | (B. 1733)
(Flying Childers 6
1—t
\ Confederate Fill}'
PS
I (B. 1750) ] Selima
I (1733)
/Betliell's Arabian 4*
3-
(Dau. of Graham's Champion
( Godolphin
'Blank 15 f Arabian •£"
'1
q9
-a-
(B. 1740) 1 Daughter of
{ (Ch. 1727)
/Bartlet's Childers 6
/Flying Whigg
E^
be
Is.
00
X
la
(Regulus 11
Dau. of | (B. 1739)
/Godolphin Arabian 4"
\ Grey Robinson
T—
(it
I (1751) 1 Daughter of
/Soreheels 9
1 Dau. of Makeless
t>>
(B-
("Bartlet's Childers /Darley Arabian ►£>
SLIP(
/-
'Squirt 11 | 6
/Betty eedes
1—1
on 9
750)
(Ch. 1732)1 Daughter of
/Snake 4*
I Grey Wilkes
is
1—1
■a."
/'Patriot 24
/Bay Bolton 37
0
pd
£6
Dau. of J (Br. 1729)
( Dau. of Jigg
0
l>»
------1 Daughter of
I (1728)
/Crab 9
C-
( Sister to Sloven
' 0
-
/"Godolphin
''Regulusill Arabian-^
05
1
-fj
Q
(B. 1739) "| Grey Robinson
I (Gr. 1723)
(Bald Galloway 15
60
tc 1
(Dau. of Snake
1 r
(Snip 9
Dau. of I (Br. 1736)
/Flying Childers 6
l^
( Dau. of Basto
3
>. (1758) i Daughter of
/ Cottingham 4"
( Warlock Galloway
I (B. 1745)
'Godolphin
kl5
740)
Arabian 4*
r—
Little (Bartlet's Childei
s / Darley Arabian 4"
Hartley J 6
\ Betty Leedes
^
Mare 1 Flying Whigg
(William's Arabian 4"
.W<
, (Ch. 1727) I (1715)
( Points
(Snip 9
'Snap / | (Br. 1736)
(Flying Childers 6
\ Sister to Soreheels
»-«
n_
x
s6
s
00
bflio
(Br. 1750)] Daughter of
I (1740)
(Fox 6
(Gipsey
>—1
=5
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(Regulus 11
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(Godolphin Arabian 4"
>,
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{Grey Robinson
4
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, (1749) ""j Daughter of
(Bartlet's Childers 6
( Dau. of Honywood's Arabian
(Partner 9              (Jigg 4"
I (Ch. 1718)          /Sister to Mixbury
1 Meliora                 /Fox 6
{ (1729)                /Milkmaid
(Blaze 4"                (Flying Childers 6
I (B. 1733)            (Confederate Filly
"j Selima                   (Betliell's Arabian 4"
(, (1733)                 ( Dau. of Graham's Champion
(Cade 6                  /Godolphin Arabian 4*
I (B. 1734)            (Roxana
j Daughter of          (Partner 9
[ (1735)                \ Brown Farewell
(Regulus 11           /Godolphin Arabian 4*
| (B. 1739)           (Grey Robinson
j Miss Starling,       /Starling 24
( jun. (1752)         (Ringbone
13.5
Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743
Cypron
(B. 1750)
=;:
''Matchem 4
(B. 1748)
Brown
Regulus
(Br. 1759)
»fi
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Highflyer 13 (B. 1774)
Flora 3 (B. 1768)
Highflyer 13 (B. 1774)
Angelica
(B. 1761)
Squirrel 4
(B. 1754)
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Angelica
(B. 1761)
Rachel
(1763)
Squirrel 4
(B. 1754)
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(1763)
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(B. 1758)
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ST. LEGER WINNERS 1789 & 1790
/'Bartlet's Childers
/ Darley Arabian 4*
I Betty Leedes
fSnake 4*
(Grey Wilkes
/Bay Bolton 37
I Dau. of Jigg
(Crab 9
( Sister to Sloven
[Squirt 11
(Ch. 1732)
ii
I Daughter of
( Patriot 24
! (Br. 1729)
I Daughter of
I (1728)
("Godolphin
I Arabian 4*
I Grey Robinson
I (Gr. 1723)
/'Snip 9
I (Br. 1736)
I Daughter of
I (B. 1745)
i>o Dau. of
Regulusll
(B. 1739)
a
I Bald Galloway 15
( Dau. of Snake
/Flying Childers 6
( Dau. of Basto
/Cottingham 4*
(Warlock Galloway
Dau. of
I (1758)
Cripple »f>
Dau. of
5 !P
/"Flying Childers 6
(Duchess
/Whitefoot 4-
( Dau. of Stanyan Arabian
(Flying Childers 6
I Confederate Fillv
/Hip 4.
( Dau. of Spark
fGodolphin Arabian 4"
(Grey Robinson
f Blacklegs 4"
(Dau. of Bay Bolton
THarapton Court
I Childers 13
I Hackney's Dam
(Blaze 4-
I (B. 1733)
I Daughter of
fRegulus 11
I (B. 1739J
"I The Ruby Mare
"3 pq
CO
V Vf
Sampson >}*
(B. 1745)
Dau. of
! (B. 1757)
Vo
/'Partner 9
I (Ch. 1718)
I Mcliora
I (1729)
/'Blaze 4"
I (B. 1733)
I Selinia
I (1733)
/'Marske 8
J (Br. 1750)
I Spiletta
( (B. 1749)
[Engineer 36
J (Br. 1756)
I Daughter of
{ (Ch. 1763)
f Snip 9
J (Br. 1736)
I Daughter of
I (1740)
I Blank 15
I (B. 1740)
I Daughter of
I'Godolphin
I Arabian 4"
I Little Hartley
I Mare (Ch. 172
fdillen Arabian
I Miss Cade
I (Ch. 1750)
137
/Jigg +
I Sister to Mixbury
(Fox 6
/ Milkmaid
/Flying Childers 6
/Confederate Filly
/ Bethell's Arabian 4"
\ Dau. of Graham's Champion
/Squirt 11
/The Ruby Mare
(Regulus 11
(Mother Western
(" Sampson 4"
(Dau. of Yg. Greyhound
/"Blank 15
i Lass of the Mill
/Flying Childers 6
( Dau. of Basto
/Fox 6
/ Gipsey
(Godolphin Arabian 4"
( Little Hartley Mare
fRegulus 11
(Dau. of Lonsdale Bay Arabian
f Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743;
Cypron
(B. 1750)
N
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(Ch. 1764)
Dau. of
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(Br. 1750)
^3 CD
Dau. of
0
^
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land 15
(B. 1741)
Dau. of
v (B. 1756)
(Bartlet's Childers 6
7) "(Flying Whigg
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/Cade 6
(Miss Makeless
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ST. LEGER WINNERS 1791 & 1792
("Squirt 11
J (Ch. 1732)
( Bartlet's Clulders 6
/Dau. of Snake
I Blacklegs 4*
\ Dau. of Bay Bolton
| Godolphin Arabian 4"
l_Grey Robinson
/Smith's Son of Snake 4*
^ Dau. of Montagu
f Alcock's Arabian 4"
\ Sister to Soreheels
Yg. True Blue 3
• Dau. of Oxford Dun
| Arabian
(Partner 9
/ Meliora
f Old Starling 24
\ Dau. of Flying Childers
Marske 8
f2?
(Br. 1750)'! The Ruby Mare
("Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
I Mother Western
Crab 9
(Gr. 1722)
Miss Slamerkin
(1729)
(Tartar 48
! (Ch. 1743)
I Daughter of
j" Godolphin
I Arabian 4"
j Roxana
I (Ch. 1718)
("Partner 9
(Ch. 1718)
\ Sister to Sampson
I (Ch. 1723)
TGodolphin
Arabian 4*
I Daughter of
I (Ch. 1727)
(Rib 21
I (Gr. 1736)
| Meynell
I (Ch. 1736)
Spiletta
(B. 1749)
£S
Black and
All Black 7
(Bl. 1743)
o
o
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Ix]
•-
-1
'■j
Fanny
(1751)
-
Cade 6
nion
755)
(B. 1734)
S2
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£<*
Meynell
b
.
, (Ch. 1736)
t-
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4J
-
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'Blank 15
£
ghter c
. 1760)
(B. 1740)
Dau. of
, (Gr. 1751)
(Bald Galloway 15
/Dau. of Akaster Turk
fJigg 4*
(Sister to Mixbury
Greyhound 4"
Dau. of Curwen Bay Bail)
/Bartlet's Childers 6
I Flying Whigg
fCrab 9
/Doll
("Partner 9
/ Dau. of Greyhound
| Partner 9
J (Ch. 1718)
I Meliora
I (1729)
(Blaze 4"
I (B. 1733)
\ Selima
I (1733)
("Godolphin
Arabian 4"
Migg 4-
\ Sister to Mixbury
f Fox 6
/Milkmaid
("Flying Childers 6
/ Confederate Filly
( Bethell's Arabian 4"
/Dau. of Graham's Champion
(Tartar 48
(Ch.1743;
Cypron
(B. 1750)
Cygnet 6
(Gr. 1753)/ Blossom
("Crab 9
(Sister to Yg. Miss Belvoir
I (Cartouch 4
'-! Dau. of Hampton Court
\ Chestnut Arabian
( Flying Childers 6
\ Old Ebony
/Bartlet's Childers 6
(Dau. of Snake
( Blacklegs 4"
/Dau. of Bay Bolton
("Godolphin Arabian 4*
(Grey Robinson
fSmith's Son of Snake 4*
I Dau. of Montagu
('Young Cartouch
I (1731)
Ebony
v (B. 1728)
f Squirt 11
! (Ch. 1732)
1 The Ruby Mare
f Regulus 11
I (B. 1739)
"l Mother Western
("Godolphin
1 Arabian 4"
"j Daughter of
I (Ch. 1727)
fOroonoko 7
J (Bl. 1745)
\ Mixbury
I (Ch. 1751)
138
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o
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fMarske 8
(Br. 1750)
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a
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f Blank 15
(B.1740)
Dau. of
(" Bartlet's Childers 6
I Flying Whigg
(Crab 9
/Mrs. Slamerkin
/Regulus 11
I Little Bowes
- -rmflrnl
-ocr page 526-
ST. LEGER WINNERS
& 1794
r793
('Partner 9
(Ch. 1718)
/Jigg 4-
\ Sister to Mixbury
( Fox 6
\ Milkmaid
(Flying Childers 6
( Confederate Filly
/Bethell's Arabian 4"
( Dau. of Graham's Champion
/Tartar 48
(Ch.1743) | Meliora
7<) 00
in
9 1-1
CD
(1729)
f Blaze 4"
I (B. 1733)
I Selima
I (1733)
/"Godolphin
Arabian 4"
Cypron
(B. 1750)
p
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Cygnet 6
(Gr. 1753)"! Blossom
(" Crab 9
\ Sister to Yg. Miss Belvoir
11 Cartouch 4
- Dau. of Hampton Court
\ Chestnut Arabian
/ Flying Childers 6
(Old Ebony
(Partner 9
( Meliora
(Blaze 4*
\ Selima
(Snip 9
( Dau. of Fox
(Regulus 11
\Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
("Flying Childers 6
i Sister to Soreheels
(Fox 6
(Gipsey
(Cade 6
(Miss Partner
(Son 4« of Bay Bolton 37
( Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
("Young Cartouch
I (1731)
Ebony
*- (B. 1728)
('Tartar 48
I (Ch. 1743)
I Cypron
I (B.1750)
Dau. of
&q-
W
E~
ni ">■
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I—1
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Lpa
\
-■'
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
/"Snap /
. Curiosity | (B. 1750)
I (Br. 1760)1 Daughter of
I (B. 1749)
>1
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►Soa
/Snip 9
Snap / I (Br. 1736)
(Br. 1750)1 Daughter of
I (1740)
{YgL Cade 4
Flora          I (B. 1747)
(B. 1755) "j Midge
(Squirt 11
Marske 8 | (Ch. 1732)
(Br. 1750)"| The Ruby Mare
("Bartlet's Childers 6
(Dau. of Snake
( Blacklegs 4"
(Dau. of Bay Bolton
j Godolphin Arabian 4"
\ Grey Robinson
/Smith's Son of Snake 4"
I Dau. of Montagu
( Alcock's Arabian 4"
(Sister to Soreheels
/Yg. True Blue 3
( Dau. of Oxford Dun Arabian
f Partner 9
( Meliora
(Old Starling 24
(Dau. of Flying Childers
_/ Jigg "F
(Sister to Mixbury
(Fox 6
(Milkmaid
/Flying Childers 6
(Confederate Filly
(Bethell's Arabian 4"
(Dau. of Graham's Champion
/Godolphin Arabian 4*
( Roxana
/ Partner 9
( Brown rTarewell
f Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Sister to Blaze
f Yg. True Blue 3
i Dau. of Oxford Dun
Arabian
(Regulus 11
£ O Spiletta
I (B. 1749)
I (B. 1739)
I Mother Western
O
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(ai. un) ^ (1729)
/"Tartar 48
Fanny
         | (Ch. 1743)
(1751) 1 Daughter of
(Partner 9
Tartar 48 I (Ch. 1718)
(Ch.1743) 1 Meliora
( (1729)
1'Blaze 4"
Cypron | (B. 1733)
(B. 1750) ] Selima
I (1733)
(Cade 6
Matchem*) (B. 1734)
(B. 1748) 1 Daughter of
I (1735)
.Whitenose 4"
Duchess f (R1742)
(B. 1748) "1 Miss Slamerkin
( (1729)
139
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ST. LEGER WINNERS 1795 & x796
j' Squirt 11
I (Ch. 1732)
I The Ruby Mare
/ Bartlet's Childers 6
( Dau. of Snake
( Blacklegs 4*
\ Dau. of Bay Bolton
I Godolphin Arabian 4"
\^ Grey Robinson
I Smith's Son of Snake 4"
\ Dau. of Montagu
/Alcock's Arabian 4"
\ Sister to Soreheels
/Yg. True Blue 3
I Dau. of Oxford Dun Arabian
/Partner 9
( Meliora
| Old Starling 24
(Dau. of Flying Childers
( Partner 9
1 Meliora
| Blaze 4"
(Selima
| Godolphin Arabian 4*
\ Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
f Regulus 11
(Dau. of Soreheels
( Godolphin Arabian 4*
(Roxana
| Partner 9
I Brown Farewell
f Babraham 15
(Dau. of Starling
f Crab 9
\ Snap's Dam
/Partner 9
(Meliora
(Blaze 4"
(Selima
| Godolphin Arabian 4*
/Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
| Regulus 11
^Dau. of Soreheels
| Flying Childers 6
\ Sister to Soreheels
f Fox 6
/Gipsey
/Godolphin Arabian 4"
( Grey Robinson
fSmith'sSon4"of'BayBolton37
\ Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
| Alcock's Arabian 4*
( Snip's Dam
f Partner 9
( Bonny Lass
( Godolphin Arabian 4"
( Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
I Crab 9
(Spinster
| Squirt 11
I The Ruby Mare
|'Regulus 11
\ Mother Western
f Cade 6
^Dau. of Partner
(Snap /
(Dau. of Regulus
Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
2^
f Regulus 11
J (B. 1739)
1 Mother Western
Spiletta
(B. 1749)
Black and I ,„ ,►„„>
All Black 7 J J*-,,,1722).
(Bl. 1713) j^Miss blamerkm
(" Tartar 48
Fanny
         | (Ch. 1743)
(1751) | Daughter of
so
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E
Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
(Herod 26
(B. 1758)
V
ypron
(B. 1750)
I Blank 15
I (B. 1740)
| Daughter of
I (1751)
[Cade 6
Matchem 4 | (B. 1734)
(B. 1748) 1 Daughter of
I (1735)
i'Alcides 4
R
.
Dau. of
(1764)
I (B. 1753)
| Daughter of
I (Gr. 1751)
(Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
TO /
U "& I
30
CD 1^ I
r-
p£<
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W~
f Herod 26
B. 1758)
I Cypron
I (B. 1750)
Blank 15
I (B. 1740)
| Daughter of
I (1751)
("Snip 9
Rachel
(1763)
Snap /
I (Br. 1736)
(Br. 1750)1 Daughter of
I (1740)
Miss
            f Regulus 11
II
Cleveland-,
(1758)
(B. 1739)
Midge
(Crab 9
("Spectator / I (Gr. 1722)
(B. 1749) "I Daughter of
I
                    I (B. 1735)
(Blank 15
Nancy
         I (B. 1740)
. (Gr. 1754)1 Daughter of
{ Marske 8
f Eclipse 12 I (Br. 1750)
(Ch. 1764)"| Spiletta
I (B. 1749)
/'Matchem 4
I Rarity         ! (B. 1748)
(B. 1769) 1 Snapdragon
{ (Br. 1759)
140
£
c
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53 £1
g«TH
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U
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ST. LEGER WINNERS 1797 & 1798
/Jigg 4-
( Sister to Mixbury
(Fox 6
/ Milkmaid
/Flying Childers 6
(Confederate Filly
/ Bethell's Arabian 4"
(Dau. of Graham's Champion
(Partner 9
| (Ch. 1718)
"| Meliora
{ (1729)
/Blaze •}"
J (B. 1733)
"| Selima
I (1733)
/Godolphin
I Arabian 4"
| Daughter of
I (Ch. 1727)
| Cade 6
I (B. 1734)
I Daughter of
I (1744)
(Cade 6
I (B. 1734)
| Daughter of
I (1735)
I Snap /
J (Br. 1750)
| Daughter of
iSnap /
J (Br. 1750)
J Daughter of
/'Old England 15
I (B. 1741)
"l Daughter of
I (B. 1756)
f -r
— l
■N
:/,
in
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z
r-H J
=
pa
Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
Cypron
(B. 1750)
■>
Blank 16
(B. 1740)
/■Bartlet's Childers 6
\ Flying Whigg
/ Godolphin Arabian 4"
( Koxana
| Partner 9
(Bay Bloody Buttocks
/ Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Roxana
(Partner 9
(Brown Farewell
/Snip 9
\ Sister to Slipby
/Cullen Arabian 4*
/Lady Thigh
/Snip 9
(Sister to Slipby
/Blank 15
\ Dau. of Regulus
/"Godolphin Arabian 4"
( Little Hartley Mare
f Cullen Arabian 4-
(Miss Cade
jyt-
1'eggy
(B. 1753)
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Matchem 4
(B. 1748)
Dau. of
(1762)
N
Goldfinder
(B. 1764)
Dan. of
I (B. 1766)
fPartner 9
( Meliora
/Blaze 4-
1 Selima
/Godolphin Arabian 4*
(Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
/Regulus 11
(Dau, of Soreheels
/■Tartar 48
| (Ch. 1743)
"l Cypron
I (B. 1750)
/Blank 15
I (B. 1740)
~\ Daughter of
I (1751)
/Godolphin
I Arabian 4"
"l Daughter of
I (Ch. 1727)
/Rib 21
| (Gr. 1736)
"| Daughter of
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Rachel
(1763)
Blank 15
(B. 1740)
^-1
( Bartlet's Childers 6
/Flying Whigg
/Crab 9
(Doll
( Wynn Arabian 4"
( Dau. of Governor
/Bartlet's Childers 6
/Dau. of Snake
f Blacklegs 4"
I Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Snip 9
(Sister to Slipby
( Marlborough 4"
(Natural Barb Mare
f Bartlet's Childers 6
(Dau. of Snake
/Patriot 24
(Dan. of Crab
/Godolphin Arabian 4"
I Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
/ Crab 9
(Dau. of Dyer's Dimple
o
>,
Q 8 Dau. of
><
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39
DO
Ch. 1787
if Ml
/Squirt 11
Marske 8 | (Ch. 1732)
(Br. 1760)1 The Ruby Mare
/Snap /
| Dau. of ! (Br. 1750)
Daughter of
/Squirt 11
Syphon 9 | (Ch. 1732)
(Ch. 1750)1 Daughter of
/Blank 15
Charlotte J (B. 1740)
JP
(Ch. 1756)
11 Daughter
of
141
-ocr page 529-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1799-1801
("Marske 8
I (Br. 1750)
| Spiletta
(. (B. 1749)
Black and All
Black 7
(Bl. 1743)
Fanny
(1751)
1 Tartar 48
I (Ch. 1743)
I Cypron
I (B. 1750)
iSnip 9
J (Br. 1736)
I Sister to Eegulus
I (B. 1743)
('Tartar 48
| (Ch. 1743)
I Cypron
I (B. 1750)
(Eclipse 12
I (Ch. 1764)
I Daughter of
I (1767)
i'Matchem 4
I (B. 1748)
| Daughter of
I (1762)
(Engineer 36
(Br. 1756)
f Squirt 11
/The Ruby Mare
(Regulus 11
[Mother "Western
/Crab 9
j Miss Slamerkin
f Tartar 48
I. Dau. of Old Starling
f Partner 9
^ Meliora
(Blaze >J"
^Selima
/Flying Childers 6
^Dau. of Basto
(Godolphin Arabian >J*
^Grey Robinson
( Partner 9
[Meliora
(Blaze «J*
t Selima
/ Marske 8
^Spiletta
( Brilliant 6
[Dau. of Shepherd's Crab
| Cade 6
) Dau. of Partner
/Snap /
V Dau. of Cullen Arabian
/ Sampson 4"
\Dau. of Yg. Greyhound
fRegulus 11
V Dau. of Traveller
Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
-1.-.
Polly
(Ch. 1756)
M
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( Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Dau. of
(Gr. 1757)
-
H
=
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5
c
_
Herod 26
(B.1758)
Dau. of
(1772)
m
Alfred 12
(B. 1770)
Dau. of
(1770)
j Daughter
of
1797) by Pot-8-os 38 out of Huncamunca 3, by
Won Derby Stakes, 1800. See Page 13.
CHAMPION (Bay C.
Highflyer 13.
f Tartar 48
I (Ch. 1743)
~\ Cypron
{ (1750)
("Cade 6
I (B. 1734)
"j Daughter of
!jMatchem 4
(B. 1748)
Duchess
(B. 1748) *
("Snap /
(Br. 1750)
Daughter of
I. (B. 1749)
["Godolphin
I Arabian 4"
I Roxana
I (Ch. 1718)
{Partner 9
(Ch. 1718)
Brown Farewell
(Br. 1710)
("Godolphin
Arabian«{"
\ Grey Robinson
I (Gr. 1723)
fCrab 9
| (Gr. 1722)
l Ebony
I (B. 1728)
142
/Partner 9
^ Meliora
("Blaze "J"
^ Selima
("Godolphin Arabian -x"
[ Roxana
/Lonsdale Arabian >f
[Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Cade 6
V Dau. of Partner
/Whitenose >%•
{Miss Slamerkin
/Snip 9
(Dau. of Fox
fRegulus 11
[ Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
f Herod 26
(B.1758)
I Miss
Ramsden
5  to
CD *-< .
6   .
8P
fDux 7
(B. 1761)
-
a pq Curiosity
(Br. 1760)
6
i—i
P
C
("Cade 6
(B. 1734)
Dau. of
I (1735)
/Bald Galloway 15
I^Dau. of Akaster Turk
/Jigg 4-
\ Sister to Mixbury
fMakeless «f*
^ Dau. of Brimmer
d co
Ui<
'Regulus 11
(B.1739)
/Bald Galloway 15
^ Dau. of Snake
/Alcock's Arabian 4"
( Snip's Dam
("Flying Childers 6
/Old Ebony
V So
Yg. Ebony
(Br. 1742)
-ocr page 530-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1802 & 1803
/' Marske 8
J (Br. 1756)
I Spiletta
{ (B. 1749)
( Black and All
Black 7
•      (Bl. 1743)
I Fanny
I (1751)
(Tartar 48
| (Ch. 1743)
| Cypron
I (B. 1750)
f'Matchem 4
J (B. 1748)
| Duchess
I (B. 1748)
/Tartar 48
I (Ch. 1743)
I Cypron
I (B. 1750)
i'Blank 15
I (B. 1740)
I Daughter of
I (1751)
I Cripple >J>
•  Daughter of
f Sampson 4«
(B. 1745)
(Squirt 11
(/The Ruby Mare
/ Regulus 11
[ Mother Western
J Crab 9
1 Miss Slamerkin
I Tartar 48
( Dau. of Starling
(Partner 9
I Meliora
/Blaze ^
[Selima
(Cade 6
/Dau. of Partner
fWhitenose >f>
(Miss Slamerkin
( Partner 9
I Meliora
/ Blaze -i-
l Selima
f Godolphin Arabian «J-
/Little Hartley Mare
f Regulus 11
( Dau. of Soreheels
(Hampton Court Childers «f-
/Dau. of Whitefoot
(Blaze »J«
[Dau. of Hip
('Regulus 11
/The Ruby Mare
(Cade 6
[ Dau. of Partner
)Snap /
[Dau. of Cullen Arabian
/Tartar 48
[ Cypron
f Marske 8
[ Dau. of Blank
/Partner 9
( Dau. of Almanzor
I Bloody Buttocks >f-
| Dau. of Greyhound
/Godolphin Arabian «$•
[ Dau. of Soreheels
f Akaster Starling 4"
[ Look-at-me-Lads
/Bartlet's Childers 6
[Dau. of Snake
/Blacklegs "J.
[Dau. of Bay Bolton
f Godolphin Arabian >£■
[ Grey Robinson
(Smith's Son of Snake •}■
[ Dau. of Montagu
/Jigg .f,
[Sister to Mixbury
[Fox 6
\ Milkmaid
f Godolphin Arabian «|«
[ Large Hartley Mare
/Sweepstakes 44
[Sister to Sloven
r Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
601^
Polly
V (Ch. 1756)
W
'Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Uff.
Pyrrha
(B. 1771)
_>
■-
o5-
("Herod 26
(B. 1758)
60^
as
Rachel
(1763)
Tantrum 21
(B. 1760)
Canta trice
30
a
s
^
&C I
9
(3 .
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S
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CD
LH
I
Daughter of
(B. 1757)
Matcliem 4
(B. 1748)
{Conductor
rnu t^n! Daughter of
(Ch.l76/)[ (1f62)
p
(B. 1758)
)au. of
D
r
arina
(B. 1766)
("Traveller 37
(B. 1735)
| Grey Bloody
Buttocks
{ (Gr. 1733)
(Matchless 13
r j_,
5
r
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£4
fig
Pm
»r~
3'"*-
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P2PQ
Squirrel -^
(B. 1754)
Dove
I (B. 1754)
B. 1764) \ Daughter of
{ (Bl. 1755)
("Squirt 11
Marske 8 | (Ch. 1732)
(Br. 1760)1 The Ruby Mare
/"Regulus 11
Spiletta | (B. 1739)
(B. 1749) " Mother Western
C Partner 9
Tartar 48
          (Ch. 1718)
s
X
3
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(Ch. 1743)1
Meliora
(1729)
Mogul 15
Dau. of
| Daughter of
143
•*
-ocr page 531-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1804 & 180
( Bartlet's Childers 6
( Dau. of Snake
(Blacklegs 4"
^Dau. of Bay Bolton
I Godolphin Arabian 4"
LGrey Robinson
/ Smith's Son of Snake 4"
\Dau. of Montagu
'. I Hartley's Blind Horse 13
I Bay Brocklesby
| Looby 30
(Margery
( Godolphin Arabian 4"
) Dau. of Danger
I Bustard 9
\ Charming Molly
(Partner 9
\ Meliora
( Blaze 4*
( Selima
( Godolphin Arabian 4*
( Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
I Regulus 11
(Dau. of Soreheels
(Bartlet's Childers 6
( Dau. of Snake
| Patriot 24
(Dau. of Crab
( Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Grey Robinson
(Snip 9
1 Dau. ofCottingham
(Bartlet's Childers 6
\ Dau. of Snake
/ Blacklegs 9
\ Dau. of Bay Bolton
(Godolphin Arabian 4"
\ Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
(Bolton Starling 24
(Meynell
/Snip 9
(Sister to Slipby
/Cade 6
\ Dau. of Little John
/Tartar 48
\ Cypron
f Godolphin Arabian 4-
\Dau. of Hobgoblin
I Partner 9
\ Meliora
/Blaze 4-
t Selima
f Godolphin Arabian 4*
\Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
/Cade 6
(Dau. of Partner
I Godolphin Arabian 4*
I Roxana
/Partner 9
\ Brown Farewell
/Forester 23
I Grey Bloody Buttocks
(Cade 6
\Miss Partner
Squirt 11
(Ch. 1732)
The Ruby Mare
f
|
Marske 8
(Br.1750)
Spiletta
I (Ch.1749)
t» i—1
("Regulus 11
J (B. 1739)
I Mother Western
Q
O
w
Croft's Forester 2
(Ch. 1736)
Daughter of
(. (Ch. 1744)
(Coalition Colt 9
I (B. 1739)
| Daughter of
('Tartar 48
J (Ch. 1743)
| Cypron
I (B. 1750)
[ Blank 15
J (B. 1740)
I Daughter of
I (1751)
/'Squirt 11
I (Ch. 1732)
I Daughter of
j'Regulus 11
1 (B. 1739)
OJ
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)
(Ch.1750)
Dau. of
0
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Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Rachel
(1763)
l£ J
MM
W
Syphon 9
(Ch.1750)
| Tandem's
Da
- {
Daughter of
(1758) ______
(Squirt 11
(Ch. 1732)
The Ruby Mare
N
fMarske 8
(Br. 1750)1
I Blank 15
Dau. of I (B. 1740)
(Ch. 1759)1 Bay Starling
PQ
(Snap /
J (Br. 1750)
\ Daughter of
I (1751)
(Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
"| Daughter of
I (1752)
(Tartar 48
J (Ch.1743)
I Cypron
I. (B. 1750)
(Blank 15
I (B. 1740)
I Peggy
I (B. 1753)
(Cade 6
I (B. 1734)
I Daughter of
I (1735)
fCornforth's
Forester 4
\
(Ch. 1746)
Milksop
^ (Ch. 1753)
144
j-Vauxhall
Snap 20
| (Br. 1761)
Hip
. (B. 1775)
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Matchem 4
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Jocasta
(Ch. 1767)
-ocr page 532-
PAULINA (Bay F. 1804)
J» Q o'Q ^'q N d W O Q 5P bo 2 T
swaoo 9,0 h o w o
af a; or o » £*<3 ^ ^ ^ ^
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ST. LEGER WINNERS 1808 & 1809
f Tartar 48
| (Ch. 1743)
~| Cypron
{ (B. 1750)
/Blank 15
/"Partner 9
( Meliora
(Blaze 4"
(Selima
/Godolphin Arabian 4*
(Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
(Regulus 11
( Dau. of Soreheels
/Flying Childers 6
( Dau. of Basto
| Fox 6
(Gipsey
f Godolphin Arabian 4"
(Grey Robinson
(Son 4" of Bay Bolton 37
(Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
(Squirt 11
(The Ruby Mare
( Regulus 11
( Mother "Western
/Crab 9
( Dau. of Partner
(Blank 15
\ Diana
("Partner 9
(Meliora
/Blaze 4"
( Selima
("Snip 9
\Dau. of Fox
{Shepherd's Crab 4
(Miss Meredith
Herod 26
(B. 1758
^0 f
t-21
oj t^
-h
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00
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r-~
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pq
w I
Rachel
(1763)
I (B. 1740)
1 Daughter of
I (1751)
(Snip 9
Snap /
        | (Br. 1736)
(Br. 1750)1 Daughter of
I (1740)
MissCleve-P^"
land              ' (13- 1<39>
(Marske 8
rEclipse 12 | (Br. 1750)
(Ch. 1764)1 Spiletta
I (B. 1749)
('Spectator /
I Miss Rose | (B. 1749)
(1766) ) Daughter of
I (B. 1757)
(Tartar 48
fHerod 26 I (Ch. 1743)
(B. 1758) "| Cypron
I (B. 1750)
(Snap /
Dau. of | (Br. 1750)
(B. 1767) 1 Daughter of
I (B. 1760)
rM
•_>
-
x;
t-
I
O
/"«>.
VM
60"-'
/"Tartar 48
f Partner 9
( Meliora
(Blaze 4"
( Selima
(Godolphin Arabian 4*
(Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
/Regulus 11
( Dau. of Soreheels
(Godolphin Arabian 4"
( Roxana
('Partner 9
( Brown Farewell
(Bartlet's Childers 6
(Dau. of Snake
/Mogul 15
( Camilla
/Tartar 48
( Cypron
(Blank 15
( Dau. of Regulus
f Traveller 37
(Grey Bloody Buttocks
(Snap /
( Dau. of Regulus
("Squirt 11
(The Ruby Mare
(Regulus 11
(Cypron
(Tartar 48
( Cypron
f Goldfinder /
(Dau. of Sedley's Arabian
fHerod 26
(B. 1758)
I (Ch. 1743)
1 Cypron
I (1750)
/"Blank 15
Rachel J (B. 1740)
(1763) 1 Daughter of
I (1751)
(Cade 6
Matchem 4) (B. 1734)
(B. 1748) 1 Daughter of
I (1735)
("Squirt 11
J3
*%
Dau. of
(1750)
High-
flyer 13
(B. 1774)
Flora
J (Ch. 1732)
"J Lot's Dam
("Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
"| Rachel
I (1763)
{Squirrel 4
(B. 1754)
M
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Angelica
(B. 1761)
rti i. n ("Marske 8
My t oJ (Br. 1750)
Marske 26-! tV,,,, i
(Ch 1772H Daughter°'
(Ch. 177*1} ^ (B. 1757)
/"Herod 26
1 OS
»
Dau. of
I (B. 1758)
| Sister to Doctor
146
-ocr page 534-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1810 & 1811
(Tartar 48
(Ch. 1743)
Cypron
(B. 1750)
{Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Daughter of
(Marske 8
(Br. 1750)
Spiletta
(B. 1749)
("Locust 33
/"Partner 9
( Meliora
/"Blaze •£■
\Selima
f Marske 8
\ Spiletta
/Engineer 36
( Dau. of Blank
/Squirt 11
/The Ruby Mare
/"Regulus 11
(Mother Western
fCrab 9
\Dau. of Fox
/Cade 6
( Miss Makeless
/Tartar 48
( Cypron
/"Blank 15
( Dau. of Regulus
/Marske 8
(Spiletta
/Tartar 48
(Dau. of Mogul
/Cade 6
( Dau. of Partner
f Squirt 11
(Dau. of Mogul
f Sweepstakes 44
(Dau. of Bay Bolton
/Hutton's Spot 4
(The Ruby Mare
SO
►3
J^
Dau. of
(Br. 1758
J (B. 1744)
) 1 Mother Beecham
o
I (B. 1749)
OS
o
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B
fHerod 26
f flier'13          <B'1758>
,l*\llA, 1 Rachel
(B. 1/74) [ (1763)
(Eclipse 12
Queen Mab I (Ch. 1764)
(Ch. 1785) | Mercury's Dam
I (Ch. 1757)
V,
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>
t-
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\m
f Matchem 4
•g _ f Ranthos 24 | (B. 1748)
m£ (B. 1763) | Pratt's Old Mare
|S!
                   I (1750)
to j 1                    ("Sweepstakes 44
15 Dau. of I (Ch. 1743)
"| Daughter of
I (1748-9)
Matchem 4
(B. 1748)
/Cade 6
( Dau. of Partner
(Snap /
(Dau. of Cullen Arabian
/Traveller 37
(Grey Bloody Buttocks
f Matchless 13
[ Dau. of Ancaster Starling
/Herod 26
(Dau. of Cygnet
("Spectator /
(Horatia
(Cade 6
(Dau. of Partner
/Babraham 15
(Dau. of Foxhunter
/Tartar 48
(Cypron
/Blank 15
( Dau. of Regulus
f Godolphin Arabian >f<
( Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
/Rib 21
( Dau. of Wynn Arabian
(Squirt 11
(The Ruby Mare
("Snap /
( Dau. of Marlborough
/Squirt 11
( Dau. of Patriot
(Blank 15
(Dau. of Crab
<* (
rr". ~
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Conductor I
(Ch. 1767) [^^ 0f
{Squirrel 4
(B. 1754)
Dove
f
CO
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1 i
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9*
w
(B. 1764)
(Florizel 5
Diomed 6 | (B. 1768)
(Br. 1777)1 Daughter of
(. (B. 1763)
/"Matchem 4
Giantess | (B. 1748)
(B. 1769) 1 Molly Longlegs
a-
>
'SI
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O
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x
{ (B. 1753)
„. ,
            ?Herod 26
Hfl]gh-,          (B. 1758)
flyer 13 ■[ -V. ,
(B. 1774) (*$&,
(Blank 15
Countess | (B. 1740)
(Gr. 1760)1 Daughter of
/'Marske 8
I (Br. 1750)
"I Daughter of
f CO ,_l
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("Syphon 9
J (Ch. 1750)
I Charlotte
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Dau. of
(Ch. 1772)
0 V
(Ch.
1756)
147
-ocr page 535-
ALTISIDORA (Ch. F. 1810)
OTTERINGTON (Bay C. 1809)
CO
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Maudane 11 (Ch. 1800)
Dick Andrews 9 (B. 1797)
r
Daughter of 20 (B. 1805)
Golumpus 11 (B. 1802)
Yg. Camilla
(B. 1787)
Joe Andrews 4
(B. 1778)
ifH
Pot-8-os 38
(Ch. 1773)
Daughter of
(B. 1790)
Calabria
(B. 1795)
Expectation 3
(Br. 1796)
Catherine
(B. 1795)
Gohanna 24
(B. 1790)
Sports-
mis tre
(Ch. 1
Eclipse
(Ch. 1
Dau. o
(1777)
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ST. LEGER WINNERS 1814 & 1815
("Cade 6
\ Dau. of Partner
(Snip /
(Dau. of Cullen Arabian
/Traveller 37
(Grey Bloody Buttocks
{Matchless 13
[Dau. of Ancaster Starling
(Tartar 48
( Cypron
| Blank 15
(Dau. of Regulus
(Moses 4"
( Miss Vernon
/Snap /
| Dau. of Regulus
/Tartar 48
(Cypron
/ Blank 15
\ Dau. of Regulus
/ Traveller 37
\ Grey Bloody Buttocks
/Snap /
( Dau. of Regulus
(Marske 8
(Spiletta
| Herod 26
| Doris
( Moses »£•
( Miss Vernon
( Spectator /
( Horatia
„ ,           / Matcheni 4
Conductor | (B mg)
7r<L i-<"r\ I Daughter of
(Gh. 1/67)[ (1f62)
/'Squirrel 4
Brunette J (B. 1754)
(Br. 1771)1 Dove
I. (B. 1764)
it- i.<i         fHerod 26
Highflyer | (R 175g)
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(B. 17/4) [ (1768)
/'Otho 4
Otheothea | (B. 1760)
(Br. 1772)1 Daughter of
I (B. 1764)
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Highflyer | (B. 1758)
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gannon 33-]
(B. 1780)
(Ch. 1764)
Aspasia
I (1775)
rOtho 4
Pastorella J (B. 1760)
(B. 1774) j Diomed's Dam
I (B. 1763)
f Tartar 48
\ Cypron
| Blank 15
( Dau. of Regulus
/Snip 9
( Dau. of Fox
f Regulus 11
( Midge
(Squirt 11
\ The Ruby Mare
(Regulus 11
I Mother Western
I Cade 6
( Miss Partner
( Old Starling 24
( Dau. of Bartlet's Childers
/Marske 8
( Spiletta
( Sportsman 32
1 Golden Locks
(Tartar 48
\ Cypron
(Snap /
I Miss Windsor
( Tartar 48
i Cypron
(Cade 6
( Dau. of Lonsdale Arabian
(Traveller 37
(Grey Bloody Buttocks
( Blank 15
\ Dau. of Cullen Arabian
r
. ■<*
m
i-
SH 1
.£»M
h
w^
pq
.
o
• i.n         /'Herod 26
.Highflyer   ( (fi mg)
/t> i--ii   I Rachel
(B. 17/4)  I (17fl8)
(Snap /
Papillon | (Br. 1750)
(Br. 1769)1 Miss Cleveland
C. 1812)
-
Hapl
aHJ
s
»id
-
I (1758)
(Marske 8
Eclipse 12 I (Br. 1750)
(Ch.l764)"| Spiletta
I (B. 1749)
(Yg. Cade*
Clio
             | (B. 1747)
I. (Gr. 1760) | Daughter of
t Eclipse 12
Pot-8-os 38 I (Ch. 1764)
(Ch. 1773)1 Sportsmistress
{ (Ch. 1765)
(Herod 26
Maria
          | (B. 1758)
(B. 1777) "I Lisette
I (B. 1772)
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Miss Ramsden
W
(Ch. 1773)
/'Squirrel 4
J (B. 1754)
"I Principessa
{ (Br. 1762)
149
Heinel
(B. 1771)
..■■
-ocr page 537-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1816 & 1817
("Tartar 48
\ Cypron
/Blank 15
\ Dau. of Regulus
/ Snip 9
/Dau. of Fox
(Eegulus 11
\ Midge
( Tartar 48
\ Cypron
/Eclipse 12
\Dau. of Engineer
/Herod 26
\ Miss Barforth
/Young Cade 4
(Dau. of Regulus
{ Marske 8
\ Spiletta
("Black and All Black
\ Fanny
/Tartar 48
\ Cypron
(Matchem 4
\ Duchess
/Marske 8
1 Dau. of Blank
/Lofty 4
\Riot
/Herod 26
\ Miss Barforth
f Young Cade 4
/Dau. of Regulus
("Herod 26
| (B. 1758)
High-
n:
7ZWin» 1 Rachel
(B- 1<74) [ (1763)
("Snap /
Papillon I (Br. 1750)
(Br. 1769)"| Miss Cleveland
I (1758)
,,,               (Herod 26
Phceno-            (B l75g)
TchOIrf80)lFrellzy
(On. 1/80) (_ (Ch_ 1774)
I Fitzherod 4
o
y
[H
^^
•-^
M ©
ci
c; Oi
3
£*^-
S-l T-H
G
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o
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Dau. of
I (B. 1773)
l Daughter of
Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Polly
(Ch. 1756)
(Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
I Pvrrha
I (B. 1771)
(Yg. Marske 19
I (B. 1771)
I Flora
I (Ch. 1765)
fFitzherod 4
| (B. 1773)
I Daughter of
r. .
w
o
c
=
Eh
til
King
Fergus 6
Ch. 1775)
f
Dau. of
(B. 1780)
Ruler 31
(B. 1777)
WE
Charmer's
^
         Dam
("Marske 8
\ Spiletta
("Black and All Black 7
1 Fanny
/Tartar 48
(Cypron
("Matchem 4
\ Duchess
/Tartar 48
\ Cypron
f Blank 15
i Dau. of Regulus
I Cripple •}<
I Dau. of Hampton Court
Childers
/Sampson "J"
(Dau. of Regulus
/Tartar 48
\ Cypron
/Blank 15
/Dau. of Regulus
/Cade 6
1 Dau. of Partner
/Squirt 11
/Dau. of Mogul
/Squirt 11
/The Ruby Mare
f Blank 15
/Bay Starling
/Tartar 48
/ Cypron
/Starling 24
/Coughing Polly
("Eclipse 12
| (Ch. 1764)
/: (King
r~
lc?l F^JU Polly
I (Ch.lVV
(Ch. 1756)
Herod 26
au. of J (B. 1758)
(B. 1780) 1 Pyrrha
I (B. 1771)
,„. ,            ("Herod 26
W".,          (B. 1758)
?yel;" 1 Rachel
(B. 1774) [ (1763)
(Tantrum 21
(B. 1760)
Cantatrice
pq
WE5
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Q
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+3 OD
u:
!>■
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at
("Herod 26
%*"-
              (B. 1758)
?Zer112.>l Rachel
(B-1"4) I (1763)
("Matchem 4
Maiden I (B. 1748)
(Ch. 1770)1 Daughter of
3
33
d
■1
B 1"-. 1
o
w
I'-'i
a
c
5
1qS
\ (1750)
v
                l" Marske 8
if' i -to) (Br. 1750)
Srtwffl laughter of
(B. 1771) [ (C£ 1759)
f Herod 26
Tuberose I (B. 1758)
(Gr. 1772)1 Grey Starling
I (Gr. 1745)
150
-ocr page 538-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1818 & 1819
(Matchem 4
\ Dau. of Snap
/Squirrel 4
\ Dove
( Florizel 5
\ Dau. of Spectator
(Matchem 4
\ Molly Long Legs
/Herod 26
^ Rachel
(Snap /
\ Miss Cleveland
/ Eclipse 12
| Polly
( Yg. Marske 12
| Dau. of Cade
/Marske 8
(Spiletta
("Black and All Black '
( Fanny
(Tarter 48
\ Cypron
(Matchem 4
\ Duchess
f Squirt 11
\ Dau. of Patriot
Conductor 12
(Ch. 1767)
Brunette
(Br. 1771)
Diomed 6
(Ch. 1777)
Giantess
(B. 1769)
Highflyer 13
(B. 1774)
Papillon
(Br. 1769)
King Fergus 6
(Ch. 1775)
Lardella
'Trumpator
14
(Bl. 1782)
o a
Giantess
(B. 1790)
Sir Peter 8
(Br. 1784)
f°^
& ,
ia
$
»-.
<M
Js
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a 9
X
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pH
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Alexina
(Ch. 1788)'
King
Fergus 6
(Ch. 1775)
Dau. of
(B. 1780)
«
H
a
j
^—*
w
CO
OD
Ed
r-t
H
^h'
Eclips
(Ch.
12
1764
Polly
(Ch. 1756)
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Pyrrha
. (B. 1771)
Syphon 9
(Ch. 1750)
Daughter of
I
- ~.
- —
/'Tandem 17
(B. 1773)
Tuberose
(Gr. 1772)
          /
Regulus 11
I
Dau. of Snip
/Tartar 48
I Cypron
/Starling 24
\ Coughing Polly
("Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
"| Grev Starling
I (Gr. 1745)
(Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
| Frenzy
I (Ch. 1774)
fEclipse 12
I (Ch. 1764)
| Daughter of
I (Br. 1758)
("Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
I Queen Mab
I (Ch. 1785)
/Ranthos 24,
I (B. 1763)
\ Daughter of
/'Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
\ Countess
I (Gr. 1760)
("Phcenomenon 2
I (Ch. 1780)
I Faith
I (Gr. 1779)
("Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
i Miss Spindle-
shanks
I (B. 1770)
|'Yg. Marske 12
.1 (B. 1771)
| Daughter of
151
/Tartar 48
\ Cypron
/Eclipse 12
\ Dau. of Engineer
("Marske 8
| Spiletta
(Locust 33
t Mother Beeeham
/Herod 26
I Rachel
( Eclipse 12
\ Mercury's Dam
/"Matchem 4
I Pratt's Old Mare
/'Sweepstakes 44
I Dau. of Hutton's Spot
/Herod 26
(Rachel
f Blank 15
\ Dau. of Rib
/Herod 26
\ Frenzy
/Pacolet 9
^ Atalanta
/Marske 8
I Spiletta
J Omar 9
I Dau. of Starling
/Marske 8
\ Dau. of Blank
(Arbitrator 8
| Daphne
Phceno-
menon 2
(Ch. 1780)
Laura
(B. 1778)
Oberon 9
(B. 1790)
Dau. of
I (Ch. 1779)
,N;
IO
o
Npf
1—1
fc o
o
p
tH
5 -~
<
of 34 (18
(Delpini 30
(Gr. 1781)
Caroline
(Ch. 1793)
f Gun-
powder 9
(Ch. 1784
s~
«
Dau. of
"•
-ocr page 539-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1820 & 1821
C Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
I Rachel
l (1763)
/"Snap /
I (Br. 1750)
j Miss Cleveland
I (1758)
/'Eclipse 12
j (Ch. 1764)
I Aspasia
I (1775)
( Prophet 12
1 (Ch. 1760)
| Virgo
I (Gr. 1764)
/'Eclipse 12
J (Ch. 1764)
I Amaranda
I (1771)
/■Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
| Daughter of
I (1777)
/ Conductor 12
I (Ch. 1767)
| Brunette
I (Br. 1771)
/"Highflyer 13
J (B. 1774)
I Otheothea
I (Br. 1772)
/'Eclipse 12
(Tartar 48
( Cypron
( Blank 15
( Dau. of Regulus
(Snip 9
( Dau. of Fox
I Regulus 11
(Midge
| Marske 8
( Spiletta
f Herod 26
( Doris
I Regulus 11
(.Jenny Spinner
J Snap /
(Dau. of Regulus
| Marske 8
( Spiletta
(Omnium 4
( Cloudy
| Herod 26
( Rachel
I Cardinal Puff 4
(Dau. ofTatler
/Matchem 4
\ Dau. of Snap
I Squirrel 4
(Dove
(Herod 26
( Rachel
f Otho 4
\ Dau. of Snap
M
'
5
1-
5
-
^
.ft
PQ
05
Highflyer
13
(B. 1774)
Papillon
(Br. 1769)
Dungan-
non 33
(B. 1780)
Dau. of
(Gr. 1777)
/"Joe
Andrews 4
(B. 1778)
| Dau. of
(B. 1790)
l«iO
13 l^
0
t, 0
0 0
■g 00
jsmJ
60
3-A
3 *-"
a"
1.
Trumpator
(Bl. 1782)
Dau. of
(B. 1793)
( Marske 8
(Spiletta
(Snap /
^ Dau. of Regulus
/Tartar 48
(Cypron
( Matchem 4
( Brown Regulus
/Cade 6
(Dau. of Partner
(Snap /
( Dau. of Cullen Arahian
(Traveller 37
(Grey Bloody Buttocks
(Marske 8
(Dau. of Blank
(Matchem 4
( Dau. of Snap
(Squirrel 4
(Dove
(Florizel S
( Dau. of Spectator
(Matchem 4
( Molly Long Legs
(Eclipse 12
(Dau. of Tartar
(Herod 26
(Maiden
(Herod 26
(Rachel
(Eclipse 12
(Young Hag
!Saltram 7
(Ch. 1780)"
Calash
(B. 1775) '
Conductor
12
(Ch. 1767)
I Noisette
I (B. 1774)
I (Ch. 1764)
I Virago
I (Gr. 1764)
/Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
I Teresa
I (B. 1767)
(Matchem 4
I (B. 1748)
| Daughter of
I (1762)
(Squirrel 4
\
(B. 1754)
| Carina
■as
be,
I (B. 1766)
o"
CO
r-1
3th-
:-
£-4
c*
O ^
"j
^3
Trumpator
14
(Bl. 1782)
Y. Giantess
V (B. 1790)
(Conductor 12
I (Ch. 1767)
| Brunette
I (Br. 1771)
(Diomed 6
J ^Br. 1777)
"I Giantess
[ (B. 1769)
{Mercury 9
(Ch. 1778)
Daughter of
(B. 1779)
/"Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
| Tiffany
I (Gr. 1775)
'E
3
sw /
;
O^ 1
i
htei
179
t
W> .
-B
1 to
1
C3C5
33
«-(
■ Precipitate
24
(Ch. 1787)
Y. Tiffany
(Gr. 1787)
The pedigree of " Mannion " is accepted.
152
-ocr page 540-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1822 & 1823
(Marske 8
(Spiletta
( Sportsman 32
\ Golden Locks
/Tartar 48
( Cy pron
/Snap /
\Miss Windsor
("Matchem 4
(Dau. of Snap
(Squirrel 4
\Dove
(Herod 26
(Rachel
(Snap /
(Julia
("Marske 8
( Sjiiletta
( Sportsman 32
(Golden Locks
(Tartar 48
(Cypron
(Snap /
\ Miss Roan
(Tartar 48
(Cypron
( Blank 15
V Dau. of Regulus
(Eclipse 12
(Sportsmistress
/Goldfinder /
( Dau. of Old England
{Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Sportsmistress
(Ch. 1765)
/"Herod 26
Maria
          | (B. 1758)
(B. 1777) 1 Lisette
I. (B. 1772)
                ('Conductor 12
Trmnpator | (Ch my)
r-< S
pg
Brunette
1
=.;*•
<BL 1782>l*JBr. 1771)
^Highflyer 13
J (B. 1774)
a
IE
Prunella
V (B. 1788
-
V
romise
(Br. 1768)
fEclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
>
(1799;
ander
1786)
n
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a
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^
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o
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a
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Pot-8-os38
(Ch. 1773)"! Sportsmistress
I (Ch. 1765)
f Herod 26
Lavender i (B. 1758)
(B. 1778) 1 Daughter of
I (1765)
tj- i.a         ("Herod 26
Highflyer | (B_ 175g)
,„ .— .. \ Rachel
(B. l/,4) [ (m3)
(Pot-8-os 38
Co-heiress I (Ch. 1773)
(Ch. 1786)1 Manilla
I (Br. 1777)
pq
( Marske 8
( Spiletta
(Omnium 4
( Cloudy
(Herod 26
( Rachel
(Cardinal Puff 4
\ Dau. of Tatler
j Eclipse 12
(Dau. of Tartar
/ Herod 26
1 Maiden
(Sweepstakes 44
\ Miss South
(Woodpecker /
I Everlasting
(Tartar 48
(Cypron
fCade 6
( Dau. of Lonsdale Arabian
(Matchem 4
(Duchess
f Snap /
| Dau. of Regulus
(Tartar 48
\ Cypron
/Eclipse 12
( Dau. of Engineer
/Cade 6
I Dau. of Partner
(Regulus 11
( Yg. Ebony
p
/-Joe
If?
Andrews^
| (B. 1778)
3'"1-
2*
Dau. of
*
V (B. 1790)
('Eclipse 12
I (Ch. 1764)
| Amaranda
I (1771)
(Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
"j Daughter of
n
M
( ~
5
I (1777)
("Mercury 9
I (Ch. 1778)
"j Daughter of
I (B. 1779)
("Trentham S
J (B. 1766)
j Daughter of
I. (B. 1785)
j" Herod 26
I (B. 1758)
Miss Ramsden
Dux 7
(B. 1761)
Curiosity
(Br. 1760)
Herod 26
(B. 1758)
Frenzy
. (Ch. 1774)
(Matchem 4
(B. 1748)
Daughter of
(Ch. 1763)
158
Gohanna24
(B. 1790)
-3 S
9tA
Fraxinella
(B. 1793)
Wood-
pecker /
(Ch. 1773)
Misfortune
(Br. 1775)
fPhceno-
menon 2
(Ch. 1780)
Miss West
(Ch. 1777)
-
B
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33 -
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MEMNON (Bay C. 1822)
.TERRY (Black C. 1821)
(75
H
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Manuella 11 (B. 1809)
Whisker / (B. 1812)
Louisa 15 (Br. 1813)
Smolensko 18 (Bl. 1810)
.------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------,
Sorcerer 6
(Bl. 1796)
Thomasina
(Ch. 1804)
Q5; tag
Orville 8
(B. 1799)
Mandane
(Ch. 1800)
Dick Andrews 9
(B. 1797)
Penelope
(B. 1798)
Waxy 18
(B. 1790)
(
Y. Camilla
I (B. 1787) '
Dau. of
b (B. 1790) "J
fPot-8-os 38
(Ch. 1773)-
Joe An-
drews 4 \
(B. 1778)
—i
(Ch. 1773)
Camilla
. (B. 1778)
' Woodpecker /
Highflyer 13
(B. 1774)
Daughter of
. (1777)
"Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Sportsmistres;-
. (Ch. 1765)
> IS
—. 3 .^o ,-,
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MATILDA (Bay F. 1824)
TARRARE (Bay C. 1823)
CO
H
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Juliana S (B. 1810)
Comas 25 (Ch. 1809)
Henrietta 6 (B. 1807)
Catton 2 (B. 1809)
Platina
(Ch. 1792)
Gohanna 24
(B. 1790)
Houghton Lass
(B. 1801)
Sorcerer 6
(Bl. 1796)
Daughter of
(1798)
' | O —, ^
2 OS o
Sir Solomon 24
(B. 1796)
Lucy Gray
(Ch. 1804)
Golumpus 11
(B. 1802)
«r
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THE COLONEL (Ch. C. 1825)
ROAVTON (Ch. C. 1826)
-ocr page 544-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1830 & 1831
f Highflyer 13
J (B. 1774)
"j Papillon
[ (Br. 1769)
/Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Clio
(Gr. 1760)
Pot-8-os 38
(Ch. 1770)
Maria
(B. 1777)
Woodpecker I
I (Ch. 1773)
1 Heinel
I (B. 1771)
/'King Fergus 6
1 (Ch. 1775)
/Herod 26
\ Rachel
(Snap /
(Miss Cleveland
/Marske 8
( Spiletta
("Yg. Cade 4
(Dau. of Starling
(Eclipse 12
(Sportsmistress
(Herod 26
(Lisette
(Herod 26
(Miss Ramsden
('Squirrel 4
\ Principessa
/Eclipse 12
I Polly
(Herod 26
( Pyrrha
f Herod 26
\ Rachel
/Tantrum 21
(Oantatrice
(Eclipse 12
I Aspasia
( Vertumnus or Eclipse 12
(Dau. of Compton Barb
(Herod 26
( Frenzy
/Yg. Marske 12
(Dau. of Silvio
Sir Peter 3
(Br. 1784)
Miss
Hervey
I (Ch. 1775)
f Waxy 18
(B. 1790)
Dau. of
I (B. 1788)
is ft;
n
N
^Bening-
brough 7
n
Daughter of
(B. 1780)
(B. 1791
K
Highflyer 13
(Br. 1774)
Termagant
;m
Evelina
(Br. 1791)
Dungannon 33
(B. 1780)
Daughter of
(1786)
Phcenomenon 2
(Ch. 1780)
Daughter of
(1780)
i-Lurcher 12 |
(B. 1789) "j
O
Miss
Cogden
(B. 1790)
13M
Toe Andrews 4
(B. 1778)
Daughter of
) Eclipse 12
( Amaranda
/Highflyer 13
( Dau. of Cardinal Puff
(Mercury 9
( Dau. of Herod
/Trentham 5
( Dau. of Woodpecker
/Marske 8
(Spiletta
(Sportsman 32
(Golden Locks
(Herod 26
( Miss Ramsden
/Trentham 5
\ Coquette
/'Matchem 4
\ Dau. of Snap
(Squirrel 4
\ Dove
(Herod 26
(Miss Ramsden
/Snap /
(Miss Cleveland
/ King Fergus 6
( Dau. of Herod
/Highflyer 13
( Termagant
/ King Fergus 6
( Dau. of Herod
/Herod 26
(Dau. of Skim
rDick
,M o
a-
(B.W97)\ (B:i790)
/"Gohanna 24
Dau. of I (B. 1790)
(B. 1803) "j Fraxinella
I (B. 1793)
("Eclipse 12
IJ
Pot-8-os 38
)
(Ch. 1773)1 Sportsmistress
(Ch. 1765)
2 °
d o
sS 00
a .
(So
("Woodpecker /
aj (Ch. 1773)
Y. Camill
(B. 1787)
| Camilla
I (B. 177*
Ed
5& fwfo?
(Bl. 1782)^—71)
/'Woodpecker /
(Ch. 1773)
-
N
~
V.
0H,
>—<
&
»
H
O
GO
=
o
-5
'-----
lX<
(gS
(B. 1788)
^Orville 8
(B. 1799)
J Anticipa-
I tion
I (Ch. 1802)
j Middlesex
I (Br. 1772)
/'Beningbrough 7
J (B. 1791)
1 Evelina
{ (Br. 1791)
/"Beningbrough 7
1 (B. 1791)
Expectation
(Gr. 1779)
157
"a
*%
-ocr page 545-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1832 & 1833
("Eclipse 12
1 Polly
| Herod 26
( Pyrrha
/Herod 26
( Rachel
("Tantrum 21
( Cantatrice
f Eclipse 12
( Virago
(Herod 26
( Teresa
( Florizel 5
\Dau. of Spectator
(Matchem 4
(Molly Long Legs
/Eclipse 12
( Dau. of Tartar
/Herod 26
( Maiden
f Herod 26
( Miss Ramsden
("Herod 26
(Yg. Hag
("Eclipse 12
(Polly
/Highflyer 13
( Monimia
("Highflyer 13
(Countess
(" Phcenomenon 2
( Atalanta
t, •            fK
.Bemng-           
King Fergus 6
— ^75)
00 « JS"V&1V Daughter _
afj (B-1791) 1 (B?1780)
7 . |
                    /-Highflyer 13
5« Evelina | (Br. 1774)
V (Br. 1791)1 Termagant
rSaltram 7
("Whiskey 2 \ (Br. 1780)
( B. 1789) "| Calash
- a
03 r-i
"3m
I (B. 1775)
fDiomed 6
, Y. Giantess | (Ch. 1777)
I (B. 1790) "I Giantess
I (B. 1769)
("Mercury 9
^^ fGohanna24 | (Ch. 1778)
a o (B. 1790) 1 Daughter of
J 3 J                I (B. 1779)
1  j"l™         . /Woodpecker/
l (Ch. i794)|D-f f-;
Hambl
tonian
fKing Fergus 6
, | (Ch. 1775)
* -\ r        — " -
§ i UTim) \
(Gr. 1782)
rDelpini 30
| (Gr. 1781)
"
Helen
L'SO Hele:
fe""" v
(Gr. 1801)1 Rosalind
(Ch. 1788)
/Conductor 12
"( Brunette
fDiomed 6
( Giantess
f Highflyer 13
( Papillon
/King Fergus 6
( Lardella
/Highflyer 13
(Papillon
/Phoenomenon 2
(Rally
/Syphon 9
(Dau. of Regulus
/Tantrum 21
(Cantatrice
/Herod 26
(Dau. of Cygnet
fSnap /
(Julia
f Marske 8
(Spiletta
{ Squirrel 4
(Ancaster Nancy
/Matchem 4
(Dau. of Snap
/Squirrel 4
\
Dove
J Herod 26
( Rachel
fSnap /
(Julia
Trunipator 14
(Bl. 1782)
Sorcerer
IN in
(Bl. 1796)1 Yg. Giantess
I (B. 1790)
tt , . ("Sir Peter 3
Lasf        I <Br" 1784>
(B. 1801) (A1(ectal788)
("Sir Peter 3
~i
-r. CO
3 IH
a _■
o ^
00
5
£>
S3 t-h
£
•a «
j3
5 IH J
0<
-M .
1
as
Clin
(Br
Clinker 6 | (Br. 1784)
(Br. 1805)1 Hyale
I (Ch. 1797)
("Tandem 17
Pewet
         ! (B. 1773)
(B. 1786)1 Termagant
p .,             ("Florizel 5
<B" J'84) [ (Br. 1768)
{Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Daughter of
(1775)
„„
                ("Conductor 12
^14          <Ch"1767>
fffl 1782Y1 Bnette
(Bl. 1782) ^ (Br 1771)
                 ("Highflyer 13
PePI»f- I (B. 1774)
I (Br. 1,87) [ (Br. 1788)
158
N
(sal00
-ocr page 546-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1834-1836
(Eclipse 12 t/
\ Sportsmistress ^i/'
I Herod 26
(Pot-8-os 38
rWaxy 18 I (Ch. 1773)
(B. 1790) 1 Maria
I (B. 1777)
(Trumpator 14
Penelope | (Bl. 1782)
(B. 1798) 1 Prunella
I. (B. 1788)
/"Buzzard 3
(Selim 2 \ (Ch. 1787)
(Ch. 1802)1 Daughter of
(Sir Peter 3
/MP *-»
BN
O O
fQ CO
\Lisette ftp
I Conductor"i2 ^
A\
|B
I Brunette ^* ^
| Highflyer 13
(Promise /■ i/
/Woodpecker / t/
\ Misfortune 3 ^/
(Alexander 13
(Dau. of Highflyer y ^
/Highflyer 13
^2
/a*
fz
,=>i
I, ' ii-
D
y-v ^
ijje
Maiden
| (Br. 1784)
/ Papillon J */
( Phenomenon 2 y/
\ Matron 2-«t
(King Fergus 6
(Dau. of Herod "7
(Highflyer 13 '
\ Termagant P 1/
(Sir Peter 3 V'
\ Horatia J ^
I Daughter of
(. (Ch. 1788)
(Beningbrough 7
I (B. 1791)
\ Evelina
I (Br. 1791)
,..               (Stamford 30
M's\. J (Br. 1794)
Sn, 1 Sophia '
(B. 1805) [ £ im)
-
c
H
-r.
td
o
fc>
o
Z '''
1 « </>
r« r
eg
S S
CO
6a-
£
53 cq
la
Mas
O
n.
/Buzzard 3 r"
J
(Huncamunca 4 i/
(Marske 8
\Spiletta lt-^
( Forester .2 >S
( Dau. of Coalition Colt /J
(Old England 15
\ Dau. of Second <f i^"""
/Matchem -rf ^
\ Dau. of Ancaster Starling f^s ^y
fAlex-
ander 13
(Ch. 1782) I
! B Brunette
Eclipse 12
(Ch. 1764)
Grecian Princess
(Ch. 1770)
'Amaranthus 4
(B. 1766)
a
I Mayfly
I (B. 1771)
QUEEN OF TRUMPS (Br. 1832) by Velocipede 3 out of Princess Royal 2
by Castrel 2. Won the Oaks (1835), see page 94.
/Herod 26
(Miss Ramsden
|Dux7
\ Curiosity
/Eclipse 12
(Grecian Princess
(Highflyer 13
\ Dau. of Alfred
/Highflyer 13
\ Papillon
/ Dungannon 33
( Dau. of Prophet
/Florizel 5
\ Dau. of Spectator
(Matchem 4
\ Molly Long Legs
/Herod 26
\ Rachel
/Snap /
\ Miss Cleveland
/Florizel 5
\ Dau. of Spectator
/Woodpecker /
\Ruth
(Tartar 48
\Cypron
/Feather 6
\ Ancaster Crazy
/Marske 8
\Spiletta
(Herod 26
\Rutilia
(Woodpecker .
| (Ch. 1773)
1 Misfortune
/"Buzzard 3
(Ch. 1787;
(Br. 1775)
("Alexander 13
Dau. of I (Ch. 1782)
------ ~\ Daughter of
I"
!^
a
QO
Sn
51 2
pi
J CO
60 _■ 1
c6 O
Lq-
("Sir Peter 3
Walton 7 I (Br. 1784)
(B. 1799) 1 Arethusa
{ (Ch. 1792)
/"Diomed 6
Y. Giantess | (Ch. 1777)
(Br. 1790)1 Giantess
I (B. 1769)
at
d
2.
i—i
w
(Highflyer 13
8 ("Sir Peter 3 ! (B. 1774)
'go (B. 1784) "| Papillon
Jgl
                    { (Br. 1769)
g'-'l                    (Diomed 6
k« Fanny         I (Ch. 1777)
4
W \
'--
CO
T".
g
■s
ca m
%
a cb
4P r-1 -
*U
o
\J
(Ch. 1790)") Ambrosia
I (B. 1783)
(Herod 26
Anvil 9
(B. 1777)
I (B. 1758)
1 Daughter of
[ (Br. 1761)
^Eclipse 12
Scota
           I (Ch. 1764)
(B. 1783) "| Harmony
I (1775)
159
-ocr page 547-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1837 & 1838
(Eclipse 12
I Polly
I Herod 26
\ Pyrrha
f Herod 26
\ Rachel
/Tantrum 21
(Cantatriee
(Highflyer 13
1 Papillon
/Eclipse 12
\ Countess
/Saltram 7
(Calash
f Dorimant 40
\ Dizzy
(Woodpecker /
\ Misfortune
(Alexander 13
/Dau. of Highflyer
/Highflyer 13
V Countess
(King Fergus 6
\ Sylvia;
/Conductor 12
/Brunette
(Diomed 6
/Giantess
(Woodpecker /
( Misfortune
(Matchem 4
\
Princess
!King Fergus 6
(Ch. 1775)
Daughter of
(B. 1780)
( Highflyer 13
| (B. 1774)
\ Termagant
/•Sir Peter 3
I (Br. 1784)
\ Horatia
I (Ch. 1778)
f Whiskey 2
J (B. 1789)
| Grey Dorimant
I (Gr. 1781)
i Buzzard 3
J (Ch. 1787)
I Daughter of
CDelpini 30
I (Gr. 1781)
\ Tipple Cyder
I (Ch. 1788)
('Trumpator 14
I (Bl. 1782)
~i Yg. Giantess
{ (B. 1790)
/ Buzzard 3
I (Ch. 1787)
| Puzzle
I (B. 1778)
fBening-
^ I brough 7
: (B. 1791)
«
00
Se
Evelina
(Br. 1791)
Stamford
30
(Br. 1794)
Dau. of
(Ch. 1799)
5.
00 .
ia8
Castrel 2
(Ch. 1801)
Miss
Newton
- (Gr. 1804)
Sorcerer 6
(Bl. 1796)
Hornby
Lass
(B. 1796)
00 >o
a 00
So
o
—1 o
o rt
O
(Eclipse 12
/ Sportsmistress
/Herod 26
/ Lisette
(Conductor 12
/Brunette
/Highflyer 13
( Promise
/Herod 26
I Rachel
/Snap /
(Miss Cleveland
| Herod 26
/ Rachel
/Matchem 4
(
Miss Starling
/Conductor 12
( Brunette
(Diomed 6
/Giantess
(Highflyer 13
/Papillon
I King Fergus 6
\ Lardella
(Highflyer 13
/ Papillon
/Eclipse 12
/Countess
/ Pot-8-os 38
/ Lavender
/Pacolet 9
( Atalanta
is accepted.
[Pot-8-os 38
| (Ch. 1773)
| Maria
I (B. 1777)
fTrumpator 14
j (Bl. 1782)
| Prunella
I (B. 1788)
/Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
| Papillon
{ (Br. 1769)
("Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
1 Nutcracker
I (B. 1767)
fTrumpator 14
(Bl. 1782)
Yg. Giantess
{ (B. 1790)
f Sir Peter 3
J (Br. 1784)
j Alexins
i (Ch. 1788)
(Sir Peter 3
I (Br._l784)
1 Horatia
{ (Ch. 1778)
Coriander 4
(B. 1786)
1 Faith
I (Gr. 1779)
T—1
** (
oo
' <o r^
r-H
go
CQ
e8 b
N
J3W
>-,
r~
-
n-
Waxy 18
(B. 1790)
Penelope
I (B. 1798)
Sir Peter 3
(Br. 1784)
Jm
Dau. of
(B. 1792)
rSorcerer 6
(Bl. 1796)
Houghton
Lass
I (B. 1801)
Stamford
30
(Br. 1794)
Marcia
(Gr. 1797)
11
go
a \.
The pedigree of " Waverley'
160
-ocr page 548-
LAUNCELOT (Brown C. 1837. Brother to Touchstone)
CHARLES XII. (Brown C. 1836)
CD
H
r
w
O
w
Banter 14 (Br. 1826)
Wagtail 21 (B. 1818)
Voltaire 12 (Br. 1826)
Camel 24 (B. 1822)
Boadicea
(B. 1807)
Master Henry 3
(B. 1815)
Prime Minister 12
(Br. 1810)
Daughter of
(B. 1816)
Blackloek 2
(B. 1814)
Daughter of
(B. 1812)
Daughter of
(Br. 1812)
Whalebone /
(B. 1807)
cd
OcoS"
vt B
-:
See
OS u
tfi O d D w j »
M .■—■, [a ,—x O -—- E0 '—s ■< -—\ f-* '—-. ^**.
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— m " oi B ** oo ►* to S '» =
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BLUE BONNET (Bay F. 1839)
Maid of Melrose 20 (Br. 1829)
-
■A
ea
H
a
r Pete
uzzar
au. o
runel
B
B
aria
~n
►tj pj
<n
•-S
few
o
croc
M
t-i
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s
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DHMMD^
fa
14
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labria
pectatio
imella
ningbro
elina
umpator
p
CPU
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OMte oot
2.-5 s'B
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fa CD 03 O P «.
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x ?? 2 IS
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• tj ! CL tt £C
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2, a 2so 2^
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-ocr page 550-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1843 & 1844
Smolensko (^796)
(Bl/l810)[W-SklW)
(Orville 8
Louisa | (B. 1799)
(Br. 1813)1 Thomasina
( (Ch. 1804)
(B.1809)fg^>
(Whitworth 2
Lady Eliza | (B. 1805)
(B. 1813) 1 Daughter of
I (B. 1793)
/"Trumpator 14
Sorcerer 6 | (Bl. 1782)
(Bl. 1796)"| Yg^Giantess
f Trumpator 14
(Yg. Giantess
/Mentor 15
(Maria
/ Beningbrough 7
( Evelina
( Timothy 23
\Violet
/Fortitude 4
(Xantippe
( Volunteer 9
(Wiinbleton
(Agonistes 3
(Dau. of Jupiter
(Spadille 3
(Sylvia
(Conductor 12
( Brunette
(Diomed 6
( Giantess
/Highflyer 13
(Papillon
(King Fergus 6
( Lardella
(Herod 26
( Rachel
(Blank 15
\ Dau. of Bib
(Eclipse 12
(Polly
f Espersykes 15
I^Dan. of Babraham Blank
*—.
, P»>r^ 1
09
h
CN
a;
£
00-
>>
9
0
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a
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p
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5
P"H
3^
*-.
oO
^2.
(B. 1790)
(Sir Peter 3
I (Br. 1784)
"| Alexina
{ (Ch. 1788)
/"Highflyer 13
I (B. 1774)
l Countess
( (Gr. 1760)
/"King Fergus (
I (Ch. 1775)
j Columbine
I (1781)
Houghton
Lass
(B. 1801)
fDelpini 30
(Gr. 1781)
Miss
Muston
(B. 1790)
-3
Q
SO
(Pot-8-os 38
I (Ch. 1773)
I Maria
I (B. 1777) •
(Trumpator 14
| (Bl. 1782)
| Prunella
I (B. 1788)
(Gohaiina 24
I (B. 1790)
I Catherine
[ (B. 1795)
(Alexander 13
| (Ch. 3782)
] Rival
I (Br. 1800)
(Woodpecker /
I (Ch. 1773)
| Daughter of
I (B. 1778)
rBagot 41
(B. 1780)
Daughter of
'Commodore >J«
(Ch. 1793)
Daughter of
{ (B. 1791)
fBagot 41
I (B. 1780)
Heroine
163
(Eclipse 12
( Sportsmistress
(Herod 26
( Lisette
(Conductor 12
( Brunette
(Highflyer 13
\ Promise
(Mercury 9
(Dau. of Herod
/Woodpecker /
( Camilla
(Eclipse 12
\ Grecian Princess
(Sir Peter 3
( Hornet
(Herod 26
(Miss Ramsden
(Eclipse 12
I Rosebud
(Herod 26
(Marotte
(Gamahoe ȣ>
\ Patty
JTugg *
(Smallhopes
(Highflyer 13
/Shift
/Herod 26
( Marotte
/Hero ►£■
(Dau. of Snap
rWaxy 18
(B. 1790)
- o
O CO
I r£j )—I
Penelope
. (B. 1798)
Wanderer
11
(B. 1811)
Thalestris
v (Bl. 1809)
o
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fed
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rcvi ^-s
^_^
ooty
1804
828
M
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5
(JT
Chanti-
cleer 3
(Ch. 1787)
Ierne
(1790)
c
'Escape »J«
(Ch. 1802)
I
v^g
Yg.Heroine
-ocr page 551-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1845 &
fPot-8-os38
\ Maria
/Trumpator 14
\ Prunella
{Gohanna 24
Catherine
/Alexander 13
t Rival
/ Woodpecker /
\ Dau. of Eclipse
( Bagot 41
\Dau. ofGamahoe
f Commodore ►£■
\Dau. of Highflyer
/Bagot 41
( Heroine
/Pot-8-os 38
(Maria
/Trumpator 14
\ Prunella
/Stripling 2
\
Dau. of Oberon
/Anvil 9
\ Madcap
( Hambletonian /
\ Rosalind
/Coriander 4
\
Wild Goose
/Beningbrough 7
( Evelina
/Sir Peter 3
\ Matron
/ Trumpator 14
(Yg. Giantess
/ Sir Peter 3
(Alexina
j Sir Peter 3
VHyale
/Tandem 17
\ Termagant
f Eclipse 12
\ Grecian Princess
/ Highflyer 13
\ Termagant
/Gohanna 24
\ Catherine
/ Paynator 18
\ Dau. of St. George
/Beningbrough 7
I Evelina
/Whiskey 2
\ Young Giantess
{Gohanna 24
Chesnut Skim
("Hambletonian /
\ Helen
/Sorcerer 6
(Houghton Lass
f Cervantes 8
\ Sally
/Soothsayer 15
\ Blowing
/Aniadis 5
\ Paulina
Whale- f (aByi790)
^e/oft7v1 Penelope
(Br. 180/)^ (B_ jVqs)
f Wanderer 11
Peri
            I (B. 1811)
(B. 1822) "| Thalestris
I (Bl. 1809)
■p .
              ("Chanticleer 3
Boot 23 ' (Ch- 1787)
(COh°.1804)\I('™90)
f Escape 4*
Flight         I (Ch. 1802)
. (Ch. 1809)1 Yg. Heroine
SO -—v
CJ CD
wg
w'
\ 3-a
=2
("Waxy 18
Whisker /
(B. 1812)
(B. 1790)
"j Penelope
S r*.
O .
^ CO
o ~
o
I (B. 1798)
(Octavian 8
Floranthe | (Ch. 1807)
(B. 1818) 1 Caprice
I (B. 1797)
I Whitelock 2
Blacklock^l (B. 1803)
(B. 1814) "| Daughter of
P5
P-i 00
I (1799)
(Orville 8
3« Gadabout | (B. 1799)
*~"\ (Br. 1812)1 Minstrel
I (B. 1803)
K
(Sorcerer 6
fComus 25 I (Bl. 1796)
(Ch. 1809)1 Houghton Lass
I (B. 1801)
f Clinker 6
| Clinkerina I (Br. 1805)
(Br. 1812)1 Pewet
I (B. 1786)
n
         . f Don Quixote 13
00
OS
CO
8
(B.1806)
(Ch:i784)
\ Evelina
II
o
^ V
(Br. 1791)
("Golumpus 11
Dau. of I (B. 1802)
(Br. 1818)1 Daughter of
I (B. 1810)
fOrville 8
fMuley 6 J (B. 1799)
(B. 1810) 1 Eleanor
I (B. 1798)
I Election 5
| Dau. of I (Ch. 1804)
(Ch. 1815)1 Fair Helen
CO
y.
c
'-
h
■«)
H
O
S ^<o<
(Gr. 1808)
i'Comus 25
| (Ch. 1809)
1 Maritornes
I (Br. 1813)
("Interpreter 17
J (B. 1815)
1 Galatea
L (Br. 1816)
164
Confed-
erate S
(B. 1821)
Sybil
(B. 1822)
no
-ocr page 552-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1847-1850
/'Dick Andrews 9
I (B. 1797)
I Daughter of
\ (B.1808)
I Whisker /
I (B. 1812)
| Mandaue
I (Ch. 1800)
('Buzzard 3
I (Ch. 1787)
\ Gipsy
I (Bl. 1789)
^Election 5
J (Ch. 1804)
I Daughter of
I (Br. 1791)
fGolumpus 11
J (B. 1802)
I Lucy Gray
{ (Ch. 1804)
fBeningbrough 7
I (B. 1791)
I Evelina
I (Br. 1791)
(Don Quixote 13
I (Ch. 1784)
] Fanny
{ (B. 1796)
(Selim.2
I (Ch. 1802)
| Daughter of
I (B. 1794)
(Joe Andrews 4
I Dau. of Highflyer
(Gohanna 24
^Fraxinella
/Waxy 18
^Penelope
(Pot-8-os 38
\Yg. Camilla
(Woodpecker /
(Misfortune
(Trumpator 14
\Dau. of Herod
(Gohanna 24
(Chesnut Skim
(Highflyer 13
(Dau. of Eclipse
(Gohanna 24
^ Catherine
(Timothy 23
[Lucy
(King Fergus 6
^Dau. of Herod
(Highflyer 13
( Termagant
(Eclipse 12
^Grecian Princess
(Sir Peter 3
\ Dau. of Diomed
( Buzzard 3
^Dau. of Alexander
(Pot-8-os 38
\ Editha
(■Tramp 3
(B. 1810)
o °o
| Dau. of
(B. 1822)
w
f Bustard 10
| (B. 1801)
Dau. of
I (B. 1813)
c
-
c
:3 ^
H
<X>
rH "1
CO
"S .
00
93 -.___■
tJ2
(■*
&
^Catton 2
(B. 1809)
Orvdllina
I (B. 1804)
M
Amadas 5
(Br. 1807;
'
,3 =o
Ffl
Selima
(B. 1810)1
Iq £
SURPLICE (Bay C. 1845) by Touchstone 14 out of Crucifix 2, by Priam 6.
Won the Derby Stakes 1848, see page 37.
THE FLYING DUTCHMAN (Brown C. 1846) by Bay Middleton / out of
Barbelle 3, by Sandbeck 8. Won the Derby Stakes 1849, see page 37.
VOLTIGEUR (Br. C. 1847) by Voltaire 12 out of Martha Lynn 2, by
Mulatto S. Won the Derby Stakes 1850, see page 38.
165
*
-ocr page 553-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1851 & 1852
Waxy 18
(B. 1790)
\ Penelope
I (B. 1798)
(Selim 2
I (Ch. 1802)
1 Maiden
I (B. 1801)
(Orville 8
I (B. 1799)
"| Miss Sophia
I (B. 1805)
f Alexander 13
J (Ch. 1782)
I Brunette
I (1771)
{Trumpator 14
!(B1. 1782)
Daughter of
I'Beningbvough 7
|Pot-8-os 38
\ Maria
f Trumpator 14
( Prunella
/Buzzard 3
\Dau. of Alexander
/Sir Peter 3
\Dau. of Phcpnomenon
(Beniugbrough 7
\ Evelina
f Stamford 30
\ Sophia
/Eclipse 12
(Grecian Princess
(Amaranthus 4
\ Mayfly
) Conductor 12
\ Brunette
/Mark Anthony 13
\Signora
{King Fergus (i
Dau. of Herod
/Carbuncle 37
\Dau. of Prince T'Quassaw
(Fortitude 4
\
Xantippe
/Volunteer 9
(Wimbledon
/Agonistes 3
(Dau. of Jupiter
/Spadille 3
(Sylvia
Whalebone
/
(B. 1807)
Dau. of
(B. 1812)
r Master
Henry 3
I (B. 1815)
Boadicea
(B. 1807)
;x
^K
-
QO
GC
t—
d
M
- t£
a
o \ 03 .
P=.
W
k s
+j CO „
CO
C3 •""*
CO
>. ■
I—1
»,g
PC
t-« ^-^
L
Q
Paynator
18
(Br. 1791
Dau. of
(B. 1791)
I Jenny Mole
an
a
(
5
uf--
05
K r-c I
& CO
CD
s~\
so -■
^30
Qw\
I (B. 1787)
Ardrossan fJolm Bul1 13
Aiclrossan | ^ch_ 17g9)
(B. 1809) \MJS;
(Whitworth 2
(B. 1805)
Daughter of
(B. 1793)
Whalebone /
(Br. 1807)
Peri
(B. 1822)
Bob Booty 23
(Ch. 1804)
Flight
(Ch. 1809)
Whisker /
(B. 1812)
Floranthe
(B. 1818)
Blacklock 2
(B. 1814)
Gadabout
(Br. 1812)
Selim 2
(Ch. 1802)
Bacchante
(Br. 1809)
Tramp 3
(B. 1810)
Web
B. 1808)
Orville 8
(B. 1799)
Eleanor
B. 1798)
Marmion 28
(B. 1806)
Harpalice
(1814)
166
/Waxy 18
\ Penelope
/Wanderer 11
(Thalestris
/Chanticleer 3
\lerne
/Escape <J"
(Yg. Heroine
(Waxy 18
\ Penelope
/Octavian 8
( Caprice
/Whitelock 2
(Dau. of Coriander
/Orville 8
(Minstrel
/Buzzard 3
(Dau. of Alexander
/Williamson's Ditto 7
(Dau. of Mercury
/Dick Andrews 9
\ Dau. of Gohanna
/Waxy 18
( Penelope
/ Beningbrough 7
(Evelina
/Whisky 2
(Yg. Giantess
/Whisky 2
(Yg. Noisette
/Gohanna 24
\ Amazon
{Sir
Hercules .2 -.
(Bl. 1826) I
Guiccioli
(Ch. 1823)"!
O
in
CM
Pi
-
cd
pq
5 oo
a co
■"O co
H
'pH-
Economist
36
(B. 1825)
Miss Pratt
o
(B. 1825) '
cSultan 8
(B. 1816) 1
| Trampo-
line
(Ch. 1825) I
f Muley 6
(B. 1810) 1
Clare
{ (B. 1824) 1
w
Es
M
c
Q
v.
r*>s-
So
M
II
pp
V.W
-ocr page 554-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1853 1855
"WEST AUSTRALIAIST (Bay C. 1850) by Melbourne / out of Mowerina 7,
by Touchstone 14. Won the Derby Stakes 1853, see page 39.
I Pot-8-os 38
( Maria
/Trumpator 14
(Prunella
/Gohanna 24
(Catherine
("Alexander 13
( Rival
/Woodpecker /
(Dan. of Highflyer
/Bagot 41
(Dau. of Gamahoe
/Commodore >f<
/Dan. of Highflyer
/ Bagot 41
(Heroine
/Whitelock 2
(Dau. of Coriander
/Pot-8-os 38
(Yg. Camilla
/Sorcerer 6
(Houghton Lass
/ Stamford 30
(Marcia
/Waxy 18
( Penelope
f Wanderer 11
/Thalestris
/Waxy 18
/Prunella
/Sorcerer 6
( Dan. of Precipitate
Waxy 18
(B. 1790)
| Penelope
I (B. 1798)
/"Wanderer 11
I (B. 1811)
S*
Whalebone
/
(B. 1807
w
X
Peri
(B.
1822) | Thalestris
s «<
,„ , „ . / Chanticleer 3
rBob Booty /rn
,-„-,
23          ' J (Ch. 1/8/)
o
«
w
a
&j
o-
H
CO
J*
O
r-
W
2
(Ch. 1804)1
iIerne
I (1790)
/"Escape 4"
12
06
PQ
Flight         I (Ch. 1802)
(Ch. 1809
)|Y(
. Heroine
r> i j f r Blacklock .2
Brutandorf | (R lgu)
/u i qoi \ I Mandane
(B. 1821) ^ (ch_ lg00)
/'Comus 25
Don John's] (Ch. 1809)
Dam
          | Marciana
I. (Gr. 1809)
n-
                /'Whalebone /
Hercules A _(*• W)
(B1-1824H (B-1822)
(Waxy Pope /
Mary Anne J (B. 1806)
------ | Witch
Id
IS oo
sa
/'Orville 8
(Emilius 28 J (B. 1799)
(B. 1820) 1 Emily
I. (Ch. 1810)
/Scud /
) Beningbrough 7
(Evelina
/Stamford 30
\ Dau. of Whiskey
1 Beningbrough 7
(Eliza
/Hambletonian /
(Rally
/Hambletonian /
(Rosalind
/Coriander 4
(Wild Goose
/ Sancho 17
/ Miss Hornpipe Teazle
/Orville 8
(Miss Grimstone
/Sorcerer 6
(Wowski
/ Orville 8
( Thomasina
/John Bull 13
(Miss Whip
(Whitworth 2
\ Dau. of Spadille
f Sir Peter 3
\Pewet
/Buzzard 3
(Calash
/ Sorcerer 6
( Wowsk
J Coriander 4
(Fairy
JSoo
f5 qq
pa
Sea-Mew
(B. 1815)
Blacklock
2
(B. 1814)
Wagtail
(B. 1818)
J (B. 1804)
ence 5
E -
,_%
p-.
(N
£
i~
=« £
OO
J
IS-
4^
1—1
o
to
^is
fc>>
M-t 23
02
1 Goosander
{ (B. 1805)
( Whitelock 2
| (B. 1803)
| Daughter of
I (1799)
/Prime Ministerl2
J (Br. 1810)
1 Daughter of
£
g
'<°sr
i—i
>->CSi
O oo
h
„jj —i -
ffl
Cj .
OCQ
I-
Lh w
Vri
w
[ (Br. 1812)
fSmolensko 18
(Bl. 1810)
X
o
M
M
<
Jerry 15
(Bl. 1821) | Louisa
I (Br. 1813)
(Ardrossan 2
Dau. of I (B. 1809)
(Ch. 1817)1 Lady Eliza
{ (B. 1813)
("Sir Paul 8
Tiger 2 I (B. 1802)
(B. 1810) 1 Lady Charlotte
I (1799)
fSmolensko 18
Wilna
         I (Bl. 1810)
(Br. 1818)1 Morgiana
I (B. 1804)
167
I™
"*
-ocr page 555-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1856 & 1857
("Waxy 18
I (B. 1790)
j Penelope
I (B. 1798)
("Wanderer 11
j (B. 1811)
I Thalestris
I (Bl. 1809)
Chanticleer 3
/Pot-8-os 38
( Maria
J Trumpator 14
/Prunella
(Gohanna 24
(Catherine
f Alexander 13
/Rival
/Woodpecker /
(Dau. of Highflyer
/Bagot41
/ Dau. of Gamahoe
/Commodore >J*
(Dau. of Highflyer
/Bagot41
( Heroine
/King Fergus 6
I Dau. of Herod
(Highflyer 13
I Termagant
/Sir Peter 3
( Horatia
( Whiskey 2
( Grey Dorimant
/Buzzard 3
(Dau. of Alexander
/Shuttle 21
(Dau. of Sir Peter
/King Fergus 6
\ Dau. of Herod
CPipator 14
( Dau. of Highflyer
^
rN I
CO
ii 'Z^'
CO
® S
CO
.—1 :m
I—(
S) 00
i> i—1 -
&
0
_Si
5.
CO
Whale-
bone /
(B. 1807)
Peri
(B. 1822)
rBob
(Ch. 1787)
.- S? Booty 23 1 T (cil
|S|
90)
("Escape »J>
Flight
         | (Ch. 1802)
(Ch. 1309)1 Yg. Heroine
("Beningbrough
Orville 8 | (B. 1791)
(B. 1799) "| Evelina
{ (Br. 1791)
('Stamford 30
Emily         | (Br. 1794)
(Ch. 1810)1 Daughter of
(Ch. 1799)
-_'
a
°o.—,
(N O
GO (N
=j CO
•m i—t ..
BfQ
W"
Castrel 2
(Ch.1801)
f
Bustard 35
(B. 1813)
Johanna
Southcote
(Ch. 1811
I Miss Hap
I (B. 1806)
I Beningbrough 7
. I (B. 1791)
\ I Lavinia
; I (Ch. 1802)
.grH
u2«
l Whalebone /
{Camel 24 | (B. 1807)
(B. 1822) "I Daughter of
[ (B. 1812)
j" Master Henry
Banter
        | (B. 1815)
(Br. 1826)1 Boadicea
{ (B. 1807)
(Selim 2
Langar 6 | (Ch. 1802)
(Ch. 1817)1 Daughter of
I (Ch. 18
(Waxy 18
(Penelope
/Selim 2
( Maiden
3 /Orville 8
/Miss Sophia
/Alexander 13
(Brunette
/Buzzard 3
I Dau. of Alexander
("Walton 7
(Yg. Giantess
f Castrel 2
"(Miss Hap
/Sir Oliver 13
( Scotilla
( Beningbrough 7
1 Evelina
(Stamford 30
( Dau. of Whiskey
/Waxy 18
( Penelope
( Hermes 4
\ Vicissitude
(Golumpus 11
( Lucy Gray
/Orville 8
(Fanny
12 /Haphazard 35
/Mrs. Barnet
fCamillus 2
(Dau. of Hyacinthus
~ v
mA
("Bustard 35
J (B. 1813)
| Olympia
I (B. 1815)
("Orville 8
I (B. 1799)
| Emily
I (Ch. 1810)
(Whisker /
I (B. 1812)
I Gibside Fairy
{ (B. 1811)
("Catton 2
I (B. 1809)
I Desdemona
I (Br. 1811)
("Filho da Puta
I (Br. 1812)
| Treasure
t (Ch. 1810)
1(58
Kite
(B. 1821)
{Emilius 28
(B. 1820)
Maria
(B. 1827)
Mulatto 5
(B. 1823)
M 00
Leda
"(B. 1824)
-
-ocr page 556-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1858 & 1859
Whalebone /
/Waxy 18
( Penelope
(Wanderer 11
\Thalestris
/Chanticleer 3
(Ierne
f Escape 4"
(Yg. Heroine
/Buffer 4-
( Spinster
(Sir Walter Raleigh 4
|_Miss Tooley
/Waxy 18
( Prunella
f Champion 3
\ Brown Fanny
( Buzzard 3
( Dau. of Alexander
(Williamson's Ditto 7
(Dau. of Mercury
/Walton 7
( Julia
(Soothsayer 15
IWeb
JMuley 6
I Aquilina
| Soothsayer 15
IQuadrille
(Castrel 2
(Miss Newton
/Trumpator 14
I Prunella
,1*      ran
Tw    Here
£ S3      (Bl.
ules 2-1
1826)
(B. 1807)
Peri
(B. 1822)
("Bob Booty 23
Guiccioli | (Ch. 1804)
V. (Ch. 1823)"| Flight
I (Ch. 1809)
§0
B
( °
d
<n
c3
a «
.goo
O
* 1
^0
V
("Master Robert 7
Drone 2 | (Gr. 1811)
(Gr. 1823)1 Daughter of
{ (Br. 1817)
fWaxy Pope /
Kiss
            I (B. 1806)
(B. 1827) 1 Daughter of
{ (1810),
("Selim 2
J (Ch. 1802)
1 Bacchante
I (Br. 1816)
/"Phantom 6
J (B. 1808)
I Filagree
I (Ch. 1815)
Phantom 6 or
Moriseo 12 *
(Sultan 8
(B. 1816)
T3 00
re
pq
Cobweb
(B. 1821)
Taurus 22
(Ch. 1826
r
(B. 1819)
Katherine
(Ch. 1821)
("Merlin 8
J (Ch. 1815)
1 Pawn
Problen
(Ch. 1823)
(B. 1808)
<s
ftel
-H
O ^-v
■r
"S *
B co
~
P^ZJ
B
a .
a C2
*N
43
r
09
I Whitelock 2
{
Dau. of Coriander
/Pot-8-os 38
(Yg. Camilla
/Sorcerer 6
(Houghton Lass
/Stamford 30
\ Marcia
/Orville 8
\ Emily
/Whiskey 2
lYg. Giantess
/Selim 2
{
Bacchante
/Soothsayer 15
(Web
/Waxy 18
( Penelope
| Selim 2
/Maiden
/Orville 8
( Miss Sophia
/Alexander 13
(Brunette
(Pot-8-os 38
\ Maria
/Trumpator 14
( Prunella
/Sir Peter 3
(Arethusa
/Orville 8
( Lisette
Brutan-
dorf 11
(B. 1821)
("Blacklock 2
I (B. 1814)
1 Mandane
1 (Ch. 1800)
("Comus 25
Don John's | (Ch. 1809)
r
Dam
Priam 6
(B. 1827)
Joanna
arciana
(Gr. 1809)
("Kmilius 28
I (B. 1820)
1 Cressida
I (B. 1807)
("Sultan 8
O
v a b
I (B. 1816)
(Br. 1830)1 Filagree
I (Ch. 1815)
('Whalebone /
("Camel 24 | (B. 1807)
(B. 1822) 1 Daughter of
{ (B. 1812)
("Master Henry 3
Banter
        | (B. 1815)
(Br. 1826)"| Boadicea
I (B. 1807)
("Waxy 18
Whisker / | (B. 1790)
(B. 1812) "I Penelope
(B. 1798)
**
H
H
(S
CS
^
O
^2
(Walton 7
|T
Twinkle \J£$»>.
(B. lg21) JDaughter of
a
The pedigree of "Monaco" is accepted.
169
-ocr page 557-
ST. LEGER WINNERS i860 & 1861
/Whalebone /
\Peri
(Bob Booty 23
{ Flight
/Whisker/
\. Floranthe
/Blaeklock 2
|_ Gadabout
/Selim 2
\ Bacchante
(Tramp 3
\Web
/Orville 8
\ Eleanor
/ Marmion 28
\ Harpalice
/Buzzard 3
\Dau. of Alexandei
/Peruvian 27
( Musidora
/Whalebone /
(Dau. of Selim
(Master Henry 3
(Boadicea
(Welbeek /
\ Maniac
/Comus 25
(.Helen
/Gohanna 24
\Chesnut Skim
(Stamford 30
^ Miss Judy
rBird-
ca tcher 11
(Sir Hercules 2
I (BI. 1826)
(Ch. 1838)\G—23)
(Economist 36
4 i—I
i O Echidna
(B. 1825)
(B. 1838) 'I Miss Pratt
I (B. 1825)
(Sultan 8
Glencoe / | (B. 1816)
(Ch. 1881)1 Trampoline
I (Ch. 1825)
(Mnley 6
Marpessa | (B. 1810)
(B. 1830) "1 Clare
I (B. 1824)
„ . ,         (Castrel 2
is
:~
m~\
*
<
-
l-J
,—,
<l
00
F-
I-»
cc
-d
v-:
<N
«*
( 'H
CM
*#
aj
CO
J3
1-1 1
3
^
OS
33
ja
H
P
J (Ch. 1801)
(Ch.
18Z4JI (Ch. 1815)
Pas-
quinade
(Br. 1839) I
Camel 24
(B. 1822)
Banter
(Br. 1826)
(Bedlamite 4
St. Luke 2) (Ch. 1823)
I (Ch. 1817)
(Election 5
Electress I (Ch. 1804)
(Ch. 1819)1 Daughter of
I (B. 1805)
£^
-
^ ojO
TT rl            I ®ir Hercules 2
catcher 11 Jf^f6)
(Ch. 1833) y (Ch lg23)
(Economist 36
/Whalebone /
(Peri
(Bob Booty 23
{ Flight
(Whisker /
^ Floranthe
(Blaeklock 2
\
Gadabout
(Selim 2
X
Bacchante
(Tramp 3
[Web
/Orville 8
X Eleanor
/Marmion 28
( Harpalice
/Dick Andrews 9
( Anticipation
(Whisker /
( Mandane
/Buzzard 3
\ Gipsy
(Election 5
\Dau. of Highflyer
(Walton?
\ Parasol
/ Moses 5
X
Quadrille
5 /Emilius 28
( Harriet
/Whalebone /
/Gift
is accepted.
22-
GL^                    I.
Echidna | (B. 1825)
(B*. 1838) "| Miss Pratt
{ (B. 1825)
(Sultan 8
.Glencoe / | (B. 1816)
(Ch. 1831)"l Trampoline
I (Ch. 1825)
(Muley 6
Marpessa
(B. 1830)
Liverpool
' 11
(B. 1828)
Otis
(B. 1820)
Gladiator
22
I (B. 1810)
j Clare
I (B. 1824)
(Tramp 3
J (B. 1810)
| Daughter of
I. (B. 1822)
(Bustard 10
I (B. 1801)
j Daughter of
I (1813)
(Partisan /
I (B. 1811)
i-
-
o
~
-
■0
O O r-t
SPS .
H S3 fa
« SP5
(Ch- 183S)\P»U m)
(Plenipotentiary
II
w
Dau. of
(B. 1840)
I (Ch. 1831)
"I Myrrha
O1
I (B. 1830)
The pedigree of " Lanercost'
170
-ocr page 558-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1862 & 1863
(Whalebone /
/Peri
/Bob Booty 23
/Flight
/Whisker /
\ Floranthe
(Blacklock 2
\
Gadabout
/Selim 2
(Bacchante
/Tramp 3
/Web
/Orville 8
( Eleanor
(Marmion 28
( Harpalice
/Waxy 18
\ Penelope
/Selim 2
\
Maiden
("Orville 8
(Miss Sophia
(Whitelock 2
\
Dau.^ of Coriander
/ Buzzard 3
(Selim's Dam
/Peruvian 27
( Musidora
/Sorcerer 6
\ Wowski
(Alexander 13
\ Isis
T,. ,            /"Sir Hercules 2
* i -n (Bl. 1826)
catcher 11^ .V- . .. '
(Ch. l^j6^*,)
(Economist 36
Echidna | (B. 1825)
(B. 1838) "I Miss Pratt
\ (B. 1825)
(Sultan 8
Glencoe / | (B. 1816)
(Ch. 1831)1 Trampoline
I (Ch. 1825)
TMuley 6
M
sn
-
30
1—1 _
~
»
9J
O
H
o
o
«
Marpessa
(B. 1830)
I (B. 1810)
1 Clare
-
<y
««(
s
w
M
I (B. 1824)
(Whalebone /
(B. 1807)
1*
§00
(Camel 24
(B. 1822)
j Daughter of
(B. 1812)
/'Master Henry 3
I (B. 1815)
| Boadicea
I (B. 1807)
Banter
(Br. 1826)
^
->
r
o -*
*o 52
5 to
ohJ
o .
^K«_
L
„ . ,         (Castrel 2
Pantaloon | (Ch_ lm)
(Ch. 1824) j1*1^ lgl5)
(Thunderbolt 18
Bombasine | (Bl. 1806)
a
(Br. 1817)1 Delta
Br. 1810)
(Whalebone /
I (B. 1807)
"| Daughter of
t. (B. 1812)
(Master Henry 3
(Waxy 18
/Penelope
(Selim 2
\ Maiden
(Orville 8
/Miss Sophia
(Alexander 13
/ Brunette
(Trumpator 14
(Dau. of Mark Anthony
/ Beningbrough 7
(Jenny Mole
/John Bull 13
( Miss Whip
(Whitworth.2
(Dau. of Spadille
(Sorcerer 6
(Houghton Lass
/Clinker 6
(Pewet
/Don Quixote 13
(Evelina
/Oolumpus 11
/ Dau. of Paynator
(Whitelock 2
\ Dau. of Coriander
/Phantom 6
/Dau. of Overton
/Catton 2
X Desdemona
(Filho da Puta 12
1 Treasure
i*
{Camel 24
(B. 1822)
Banter
(Br. 1826)
(B. 1815)
i Boadicea
Eh
I (B. 1807)
t-, „          (Paynator 18
Dr. Syntaxj fa mi)
Daughter of
m.
(Br. 1811) |^»g*t«
(Ardrossan 2
Dau. of J (B. 1809)
V (Ch. 1817) I Lady Eliza
[ (B. 1813)
tt t. (Comus 25
w
v«c
M
P
'^
J
.-----s
c
is
q
OO
M
Q
PQ
s
"~-"
H-i
( 03 ^
f
;§g (B. 1822)
Clinkerina
(. (Br. 1812)
(Cervantes 8
Dau. of I (B. 1806)
(B. 1825) 1 Daughter of
{ (Br. 1818)
(Blacklock 2
Voltaire 12 | (B. 1814)
(Br. 1826/1 Daughter of
{ (B. 1816)
in- n
          (Mulatto 5
%£ UB-1823>
(Br.l837)|LfBa1824)
171
0>
»
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*"*'
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-ocr page 559-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1864 1868
BLAIR ATHOL (Ch. C. 1861) by Stockwell 3 out of Blink Bonny 10, by
Melbourne /. Won the Derby Stakes 1864, see page 45.
GLADIATEUR (Bay C. 1862) by Monarque 19 out of Miss Gladiator S,
by Gladiator 22. Won the Derby Stakes 1865, see page 45.
LORD LYON (B. C. 1863) by Stockwell 3 out of Paradigm /, by Paragone
2. Won the Derby Stakes 1866, see page 46.
(Sir Hercules 2
I (Bl. 1826)
I Guiccioli
I (Ch. 1823)
I Economist 36
I (B. 1825)
"| Miss Pratt
{ (B. 1825)
fSultan 8
J (B. 1816)
I Trampoline
I (Ch. 1825)
/'Muley 6
I (B. 1810)
"| Clare
I (B. 1824)
(Whalebone /
/Peri
/Bob Booty 23
i Flight
/Whisker /
\Floranthe
/Blackloek2
^Gadabout
| Selim 2
\ Bacchante
I Tramp 3
/Web
/Orville 8
\ Eleanor
/Marmion 28
^Harpalice
/Whalebone 1
^Dau. of Selim
(Master Henry 3
^ Boadicea
| Jerry 15
\Dau. of Ardrossan
/Velocipede 3
I Miss Garforth
/Catton 2
^Orvillina
/Selim 2
(Dau. of Skyscraper
/Emilius 28
^ Harriet
/Waxy 18
(Pawn
'Bird-
catcher 11
(Ch. 1833)
Echidna
(B. 1838)
in *~*
is.
2 O
a
CO
Glencoe /
(Ch. 1831
+5 !>•
O CO
Marpessa
I. (B. 1830)
r-*
Touchstone
m
N_
14
^->
' QJ CO
(Br. 1831)
H
CN
o co -
y.
OO
w
i—1
sp.
Hoyden
pa
Ph
k (Bl. 1837)
£ •*><
/
ACHI
aradigm
Home
1844)
Redshank
15
(B. 1833)
^
^ ri
^
Delhi
(Bl. 1838)
(Camel 24
(B. 1822)
Banter
(Br. 1826)
(Tomboy 8
I (B. 1829)
\ Rocbana
I (Ch. 1831)
fSandbeck 8
I (B. 1818)
j Johanna
I (Ch. 1813)
('Plenipotentiary 6
I (Ch. 1831)
1 Pawn Junior
I. (Br. 1817)
FORMOSA (Ch. F. 1865) by Buccaneer 14 out of Eller 18, by Chanticleer
23. Won the Oaks 1868, see page 110.
172
-ocr page 560-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1869- 1871
/"Tramp 3
( Mandane
/Muley 6
/Miss Stephenson
/Emilius 28
\Cressida
/Orville 8
\ Dau. of Buzzard
f Whalebone /
( Dau. of Selim
/Master Henry 3
\ Boadicea
f Dick Andrews 9
\Dau. of Gohanna
/"Bustard 35
\ Olympia
/Whisker /
/Dau. of Delpini
/Camel 24
\ Monimia
/Blacklock.2
\ Wagtail
/Velocipede 3
/Miss Wilkes
/Jerry 15
(Dau. oi'Ardrossan
/Tramp 3
/Kite
/Sultan 8
\ Cobweb
/ Velocipede 3
(Care
CM
rSheet
Anchor 12
/"Lottery 11
J (Br. 1820)
?Rr"T8821 I Morgiana
(Br. 1832) (^ (BL lg20)
? Priam 6
I Miss Letty J (B. 1827)
(B. 1834) I Daughter of
{ (Br. 1815)
Touchstone j^lsli)
(Br. 1831){B-f lg26)
LSooreJ2«m"^)
(B. 1830) |*J» lg21)
m. ix.          ("The Colonel 8
Chatham I (ch_ lm)
(Ch. 1839)|H^r1832)
f Laurel 21
Dau. of I (Br. 1824)
(B. 1840) | Flight
{ (Br. 1831)
Gameboy (T°mb}
/r>i iojo\1 Lady Moore Carew
(Bi. 1842) y ^ 1830)
(Bay Middleton /
(B. 1833)
Blue Devils
(Ch. 1837)
«PQ
■—
• 2
^
-
2
?P.
-
aj oo
^S
("Whalebone /
( Dau. of Selim
/Master Henry 3
\ Boadicea
/ Paynator 18
(Dau. of Beningbrough
/Ardrossan 2
\ Lady Eliza
/ Comus 25
/Clinkerina
/Cervantes 8
\ Dau. of Golumpus
/Blacklock.2
\ Dau. of Phantom
/Mulatto 5
(Leda
/Selim 2
\ Bacchante
/Phantom 6
\ Filagree
/Catton 2
\Orvillina
("Amadis 5
\ Selima
f Whalebone /
t Dau. of Selim
/Master Henry 3
\ Boadicea
/Comus 25
\ Rosette
/Morisco 12
\ Waltz
rr i a /"Camel 24
k
louchstone
(B. 1822)
(Br. 1831) ] *
anter
(Br. 1826)
("Dr. Syntax 37
Beeswing | (Br. 1811)
(B. 1833) 1 Daughter of
I (Ch. 1817)
„ ,,            /"Humphry Clinker
Melbourne | 8 fB_\m)
(B, 1834)\D-^5f
fVoltairc 12
Volley
         I (Br. 1826)
(B. 1845) "I Martha Lynn
I (Br. 1837)
Bay
            fSultan 8
Middleton' (B. 1816)
/
              1 Cobweb
(B. 1833) I (B. 1821)
fSandbeck 8
Barbelle | (B. 1818)
(B. 1836) ~| Darioletta
I (Br. 1822)
Touchstone f0^1,^
(Br. 1831)f anter
/"Reveller 19
Zillah
          | (B. 1815)
(Ch. 1835)1 Morisca
I (B. 1826)
a
■■3
CO)
-
a
o
a
P*
=
s ^^
.-—*
5 <£>
^ ^
W5
ff 3
H
(5 ►:"
;-
tccl
BQ
-*
?>w
^i
N
pa
>:
3
o
by
HANNAH (Bay F. 1868) by King Tom 3 out of Mentmore Lass 3,
Melbourne /. Won the Oaks 1871, see page 112.
173
-ocr page 561-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1872-1875
( Whalebone /
( Dau. of Selim
/ Master Henry 3
(Boadicea
(Paynator 18
(Dau. of Beningbrougli
(Ardrossan 2
(Lady Eliza
00
_S co
0
"S^
•Z0
00
^ 00 J
r->
S3
pq
is-
N
£
,          (Camel 24
rTs0tone"l4        (B;1822)
(Br. 18.31) re«1826)
("Dr. Syntax 37
Beeswing I (Br. 1811)
(B. 1833) "| Daughter of
fl
r ®
s
CD ^-.
0
■T3
ssJ
0
H-l
,—" rrv
B~
I (Ch. 1817)
(Humphry Clinker ( Comus 25
( Clinkerina
( Cervantes 8
(Dau. ofGolumpus
/B!acklock2
(Dau. of Phantom
(Mulatto 5
(Leda
(Sir Hercules 2
\Guiccioli
(Economist 36
(Miss Pratt
I Sultan 8
( Trampoline
( Muley 6
I Clare
/Whalebone /
(Peri
(Bob Booty 23
(Plight
(Jerry 15
(Dau. of Ardrossan
I Prime Minister 12
( Maniac
.            ,        8 (B. 1822)
bourne / - n lu -'
/« 1 onj \ Daughter of
(Br. 1834) [ (BS1825)
( Voltaire 12
Volley         ! (Br. 1826)
(B. 1845) "I Martha Lynn
I (Br. 1837)
-
f2
W
O
r& —
i
1 °
CO
a m
^2 i—t J
to
00
i—i
tf--
&J
mi x>         I Birdcatcher 11
Tie Baron | (Ch_ lm)
(Ch. 1842) I ™- 8)
(Glencoe /
Pocahontas | (Ch. 1831)
(B. 1837) ~\ Marpessa
I (B. 1830)
>
cfl
0 ^
a *°
fH
i
a
&*-•-
fcO
^
M
-HO
TW™1             fSii- Hercules .2
catherll ("6)
(Ch.1833)^—823)
C Tomboy 8
Moonbeam | (B. 1829)
(Ch. 1838)"I Lunatic
I (B. 1818)
MARIE STUART (Ch. F. 1870) by Scottish Chief 12 out of Morgan La
Faye 5, by Cowl 2. Won the Oaks 1873, see page 113.
APOLOGYlChTF. 1871) by Adventurer 12 out of Mandragora~4~
by Rataplan 3. Won the Oaks 1874, see page 113.
/Sir Hercules 2
( Guiccioli
/"Economist 36
\Miss Pratt
( Sultan 8
\ Trampoline
(Muley 6
(Clare
The Baron
24
("Birdcatcher 11
I (Ch. 1833)
-~N
OO
gco
M .
& ^
02 ^-
(Cn.l842)[™-8)
(Glencoe /
Pocahontas | (Ch. 1831)
(B. 1837) i Marpessa
(B. 1830)
ollC
CM
rd
>■> f
*>.
+3
d^
QO
<J
a -*
r-t
0 10 1
■H
cq co J
0
o3
0
3
Humphry Clinker ( Comus 25
Mel-             f
( Clinkerina
(Cervantes 8
( Dau. of Golumpus
/Partisan /
( Pauline
/Plenipotentiary 6
( Mvrrha
(Camel 24
( Banter
(Langar 6
(Kite
(Orville 8
(Emily
(Rowton 29
( Dau. of Sam
8 (B. 1822)
b
rRr"l83411 Daughter of
(Br. 1834) ^ (B_ lg25)
Queen
Mary
(B. 1843)
Gladiator 22
I (Ch. 1833)
j Daughter of
( (B. 1840)
/"Touchstone 14
Orlando 13 I (Br. 1831)
hj
—1
r~.
C3
-
CO
OO
1-----1
T-H
<
Crf
CQ
"
^«^
£2 >-~
Jw CO
O -H
M
(B. 1841) 1 Vulture
I (Ch. 1833)
(Emilius 28
io Stamp         I (B. 1820)
£ — (B. 1842) I Receipt
I (Ch. 1836)
("Bay Middleton / /Sultan 8
53 (Hesperus 6 J (B. 1833)            (Cobweb
I S? (B. 1849) 1 Plenary                 (Emilius 28
135 J                    I (Br. 1837)           (Harriet
pqM
,,                (Emilius 28            (Orville 8
*»£■ I (B.1820)         JEmily
?b ia^\ "I Mustard                (Merlin 8
(B. 1844) ^ (Ch> lg24)         ^Morel
174
-ocr page 562-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1876 1878
r™ , /'Camel 24
Ts°totl4 1 (B18S2)
(Br. 1831)\Ba(^1'1826)
/Whalebone /
CD
(Dau. of Selim
O
' hi 00
(Master Henry 3
I Boadicea
CD
00
a-1
(Dr. Syntax 37
Beeswing | (Br. 1811)
(Paynator 18
rH
is
(Dau. of Beningbrough
M
F
03
(B. 1833) 1 Daughter of
( Ardrossan 2
M
fc , (Ch. 1817)
\ Lady Eliza
••
OJ ,—-^
/Humphry
(■Mel- Clinker 8
bourne / ■! (B. 1822)
J Comus 25
1 Clinkerina
1 -
00
0
(Br. 1834) Daughter of
/Cervantes 8
r—
'p
533-
{ (1825)
(Dau. of Golumpus
O
0
Sffl
f Voltaire 12
Volley 1 (Br. 1826) •
(Blacklock 2
>>
H —
\ Dau. of Phantom
4
v (B. 1845) 1 Martha Lynn
I (Br. 1837)
/Mulatto 5
\Leda
=•-
W
rrr , (Camel 24
TZnelii <B-1822)
(Whalebone /
_
rco
(Dan. of Selim
as
O ^
biujie i» -I Ranter
(Br. 1831)|Ba(nBtlf1826)
/Master Henry 3
\ Boadicea
o"
a "-1
(Langar6
Vulture | (Ch. 1817)
/Selim 2
-
00
-gPQ
\ Dau. of Walton
.^
O^
(Ch. 1833)1 Kite
/Bustard 35
Ci«
I (B. 1821)
\ Olympia
0
1—1
(Venison 11
( Partisan /
eS
Alarm 19 | (Br. 1833)
\ Fawn
H
aS
(B. 1842) "I Southdown
I (B. 1836)
/Defence S
e3
a <->
\ Feltona
(Glencoe /
( Sultan 8
'h£
Dau. of | (Ch. 1831)
\ Trampoline
, (Br. 1837)1 Alea
/Whalebone I
\Hazardess
I (Br. 1828)
SILVIO (Bay C. 1874) by Blair Athol 10 out of Silverliair /, by Kingston
12. Won the Derby Stakes 1877, see page 51.
JANNETTE (Bay F. 1875) by Lord Clifden 2 out of Chevisaunce /, by
Stockwell 3. Won the Oaks 1878, see page 116.
175
-ocr page 563-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1879 & 1880
{Orlando 13
(B. 1841)
Cavatina
(Ch. 1845)
("Planet 6
I (B. 1844)
1 Alice Bray
I (B. 1848)
f The Baron 24,
Sting 22 or The
Emperor 5 *
i (Ch. 1841)
Poetess
I (B. 1838)
I" Gladiator 22
I ■ (Ch. 1833)
| Lanterne
I. (1841)
(Camel 24
I (B. 1822)
| Banter
( (Br. 1826)
i Priam 6
I (B. 1827)
I Daughter of
( (B. 1823)
? Sultan 8
I (B. 1816)
j Trampoline
(. (Ch. 1825)
("Muley 6
I (B. 1810)
"I Clare
I. (B. 1824)
("Touchstone 14
( Vulture
| Redshank 15
\ Oxygen
/Bay Middleton /
\ Plenary
f Venison 11
(Darkness
I Defence 5
~\
Dau. of Reveller
/Royal Oak S
(Ada
/"Partisan /
( Pauline
f Hercule 3
| Elvira
f Whalebone /
(Dau. of Selim
("Master Henry 3
( Boadicea
f Emilius 28
\ Cressida
f Don Juan 44
(Moll in the Wad
/Selim 2
\ Bacchante
| Tramp 3
\Web
/Orville 8
( Eleanor
f Marmion 28
( Harpalice
Trum-'
pator /
(Gh. 1856)
Dan. of
. (B. 1853)
cm"
_
Mon-
arque 19
(B. 1852)
II
I.W
pa
Constance
(, (1848)
SO
-1
C:
<U
-r
ros
2-
.a
5
s
«4
Touch-
stone 14
(Br. 1831)
Annette
(B. 1835)
p
c
-
»-
fGlencoe /
(Ch. 1831)
Marpessa
( (B. 1830)
fBirdcatcher 11
1 Echidna
/Glencoe /
( Marpessa
/Touchstone 14
( Vulture
/Glaucus 3
\ Hester
/Whalebone /
(Peri
/Bob Booty 23
(Flight
/Partisan /
( Nanine
/Banker 42
( Dau. of Beningbrough
f Smolensko 18
( Louisa
f Selim 2
( Pope Joan
/Camel 24
(Banter
/Reveller 19
(Dau. of Orville
/Sir Hercules 2
\ Guiccioli
/Touchstone 14
(Brocade
/Sultan 8
( Rachel
/Cervantes 8
1 Dau. of Camillus
-. , n ("The Baron 24
Stockwell J (Ck lg42)
,m ,o,n\l Pocahontas
(Ch. 1849) [ (B lg37)
?Orlando 13
«
Ti ■£?
f <N
OJ CO
.-*■,
ri4co
Cr,
d"J
8
«.s
r-H
<Dffl
■5-—
5Q
Eh
Bay Celia
I (B. 1841)
| Hersey
(B. 1851)
(B. 1842)
•'• ■-
Faugh-a- (Bit Hercules 2
Ballagh | (Bl. 1826)
11
            1 Guiccioli
. (Br. 1841) I (Ch. 1823)
("Glaucus 3
Milkmaid | (B. 1830)
I (Br. 1843)1 Dame Durdan
I (B. 1830)
O
as
fJerry 15
J (Bl. 1821)
a
~
H
X
M
P9
O
/'Jericho /
'li
(Br. 1842)1 Turquoise
• I (Br. 1825)
{Touchstone 14
(Br. 1831)
Harmony
(B. 1826)
,,r         , fBirdcatcher 11
.Womersley I (ch_ im)
(B. 1849) j«42)
{Hampton 5
(Ch. 1833)
Daughter of
(B. 1824)
•is
id
O
C3  Tf
O  oo
a  ■-1
sS       .
o
' The Emperor's " pedigree is accepted.
176
-ocr page 564-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1881-1883
IROQUOIS (Brown C. 1878) by imp. Leamington 15 out of Maggie B. B.
4, by imp. Australian 11. Bred in America. Won the Derby Stakes
1881, see page 53.
f Selim 2
\ Bacchante
J'Phantom 6
\ Filagree
/ Catton 2
\
Orvillina
/Amadis 5
\
Selima
/ Walton 7
( Parasol
f Moses S
\
Quadrille
I Priam 6
'l Eva
f Actason 28
\ Belvoirina
/Sir Hercules 2
\ Guiccioli
f Economist 36
\Miss Pratt
/"Sultan 8
\ Trampoline
/Muley 6
\ Clare
/Camel 24
\ Banter
/Langar 6
\ Kite
/Blacklock 2
\ Dau. of Phantom
/Mulatto 5
\ Leda
fBay             fSultan 8
Middletonl (B. 1816)
/
               j Cobweb
(B. 1833) I (B. 1821)
(Sandbeck 8
(B. 1818)
Darioletta
(Br. 1822)
On"
SO*-'
.S«
r M
iJ
V)
a ^
JS
•rH TO
o
-t->
a
r^ S
a
^w
n, j. .• fPartisan /
Gladiator J (B lgn)
(Ch. 1833)\P^Un1e826)
fYg. Emilius / or
ft
8,
Boutique
(1848)
Giges 2 *
(1837)
Belvedere
*\
>
O
w
p
H
to
[ (B. 1836)
rThe Baron
24
fBirdcatcher 11
| (Ch. 1833)
__i OS
® 00
-S3
(CI, 1842)1^^38)
(Glencoe /
Pocahontas I (Ch. 1831)
(B. 1837) ] Marpessa
1
-J
K
0)
d
co «?
anti
Is
flrt-
y
,=; >j
>><->«
I (B. 1830)
(Touchstone 14
Orlando 13 | (Br. 1831)
(B. 1841) i Vulture
{ (Ch. 1833)
rVoltaire 12
VivandiereJ (Br. 1826)
(Br. 1848)"j Martha Lynn
(Br. 1837)
*m o
5 co
?!
t-H i—I "
00
r-i
o *
SB
A
U
v_^-
'Flying        ("Bay Middleton
Dutchman] (B. 1833)
3
               I Barbelle
(Br. 1846) I (B. 1836)
fSlane 25
Payment I (B. 1833)
(Ch. 1848) I Receipt
/ / Sultan 8
\ Cobweb
/Sandbeck 8
\ Darioletta
f Royal Oak 5
\ Dau. of Orville
/Rowton 29
\Dau. of Sam
f Paulowitz 8
(Dau. of Paynator
/"Edmund 12
( Medora
/Langar 6
\01ympia
/Camel 24
\La Danseuse
/Sir Hercules 2
\
Guiccioli
/Economist 36
(Miss Pratt
/Sultan 8
\ Trampoline
/Muley 6
\ Clare
f Camel 24
\ Banter
/Lottery 11
( Dau. of Cervantes
/Blacklock 2
(Dau. of Phantom
/Actseon 28
(Comedy
[ (Ch. 1836)
(Cain 8
(B. 1822)
Margaret
(Br. 1831)
fElis 13
Cuckoo | (Ch. 1833)
(Ch. 1843)1 Reel
{ (B. 1836)
The Baron |Bgatebe3r 11
(CI, 1842) j™- 8)
/"Glencoe /
Pocahontas) (Ch. 1831)
(B. 1837) 1 Marpessa
I (B. 1830)
Annandale | (Bf lg31)
(Br. 1842)\R^7831)
Xf ,              fVoltaire 12
fB. 1842) [^tlm
CO
'■—
ex
OJ
CO
is
1-i J
id
o
Sto
O
i
fa
i—<
to
o
Vffj
<3 00
Qffl
* "Giges " accepted.
177
2n
-ocr page 565-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1884-1887
(Touchstone 14
/Camel 24
( Banter
/Dr. Syntax 37
(Dau. of Ardrossan
f Royal Oak 5
(Dau. of Orville
/Defence 5
\
Feltona
(Camel 24
( Banter
/Langar 6
(Kite
/Blacklock.2
(Dan. of Phantom
/ Mulatto 5
(Leda
J Comus 25
1 Clinkerina
/Cervantes 8
(Dau. ofGolumpus
(Castrel 2
(Idalia
(Glencoe /
( Frolicsome
/Touchstone 14
( Vulture
/Whisker /
(Garcia
/Venison 11
\ Queen Anne
T—I
""
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, is =d
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So
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ew
minster 8^
(B. 1848)
(Br. 1831)
Beeswing
oa ^ ri
I (B. 1833)
(Slane 25
I (B. 1833)
"| Southdown
I (B. 1836)
/"Touchstone 14
The Arrow
(B. 1850)
s
N
Orlando 13
(B. 1841
J (Br. 1831)
1 Vulture
I (Ch. 1833)
( Voltaire 12
(Br. 1826)
«■-n
S pq Volley
^ "" \ (B. 1845) 1 Martha Lynn
I (Br. 1837)
-
m
w
cj
oq
<D
8
-1
Hi
l^
,3 -<-
i-H
SB
H
so
{Humphry
Clinker 8
(B. 1822)
Daughter of
(B. 1825)^
( Pantaloon 17
Clarissa I (B. 1824)
(B. 1846) | Daughter of
I (B. 1837)
(Orlando 13
Marsyasl2| (B. 1841)
(Ch. 1851)"| Malibran
I (B. 1830)
t, „ /"Kingston 12
Rose of | (Bb1849)
B
'83
Kent
"j England's Beauty /Birdcatcher 11
(Ch. 1850)
(B. 1859) I
(Prairie Bird
MELTON (Bay C. 1882) by Master Kildare 3 out of Violet Melrose 8, by
Scottish Chief 12. Won the Derby Stakes 1885, see page 56.
ORMONDE (Bay C. 1883) by Bend Or / out of Lily Agnes 16, by Macaroni
14. Won the Derby Stakes 1886, see page 56.
w * a /'Melbourne /
/■Wert Am-J (B 1884)
(B. 1850) [ (B 1843)
{Birdcatcher 11
(Ch. 1833)
Daughter of
(B. 1845)
(Newminster 8
/Humphry Clinker 8
\Dau. of Cervantes
/Touchstone 14
\ Emma
/Sir Hercules 2
\
Guiccioli
(Hetman Platoff 2
\Whim
/Touchstone 14
\ Beeswing
/Muley Moloch 9
( Fanny
/Emilius 28
(Variation
/Bay Middleton /
(Dau. of Rubens
(Emperor 5
\
Poetess
/Gladiator 22
(Taffrail
/The Baron 24
1 Pocahontas
/Liverpool 11
(Espe ranee
/ Blaeklock 2
(Dau. of Juniper
/Viator 22
(Lady Fractious
/Touchstone 14
(Ghuznee
(Hetman Platofif.2
\ Dau. of Velocipede
"<Ng
1m
pa
(
(Br. 1866)1 Peggy
( (Bl. 1840)
(Pompey 9
Mary Jane I (B. 1840)
(Br. 1856)/ Ratafia
I (B. 1842)
/~ii j- i fMonarque 19
Gladiateur | ^ fay
rn -i D«o\ 1 Miss Gladiator
(B. 1862) ^ (1854)
(Rataplan 3
a5 to
o
(rSfQ
a
13
N
X
T*
<
875
ugh
L869
KIL
(Br. 1
rd Go
(B.
^Cl .
J
B
(Br.l861)iEspoir
1850)
(B. 1841)
/"Velocipede 3
JKTnS       J (Oh. 1826)
f Trumps 2\,/ „.,,
rJ <«»•»*•) I (1887)
. j                    (Assault 20
I Patience I (B. 1845)
V (B. 18501 1 Newton Lass
I (Br. 1843)
178
e
III
-ocr page 566-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1888-1897
SEABREEZE (Ch. F. 1885) by Isonorny 19 out of St. Marguerite 4, by
Hermit 5. Won the Oaks 1888, see page 121.
DONOVAN (Bay C. 1886) by Galopin 3 out of Mowerina 7, by Scottish
Chief 12. Won the Derby Stakes 1889, see page 58.
MEMOIR (Brown F. 1887) by St. Simon 11 out of Quiver 3, by Toxophilite
3. Won the Oaks 1890, see page 122.
COMMON (Brown C. 1888) by Isonomy 19 out of Thistle 4, by Scottish
Chief 12. Won the Derby Stakes 1891, see page 59.
LA FLECHE (Brown F. 1889) by St. Simon 11 out of Quiver 3, by Toxo-
philite 3. Won the Oaks 1892, see page 123.
ISINGLASS (Bay 1890) by Isonomy 19 out of Deadlock 3, by Wenlock 4.
Won the Derby Stakes 1893, see page 60.
tst                 /"Touchstone 14
NeW" . _ (Br. 1831)
minster 8 -{ D v
f Camel 24
/ Banter
/Dr. Syntax 37
\ Dau. of Ardrossan
/Humphry Clinker 8
\ Dau. of Cervantes
/ Voltaire 12
^ Martha Lynn
( Camel 24
( Banter
/Langar 6
/Kite
/Venison 11
^ Southdown
/Glencoe /
(Alea
| Camel 24
\ Banter
/Pantaloon 17
\Rebecca
n/Muley 6
^Lacerta
/Bay Middleton /
\ Camilla
/Cain 8
^ Margaret
/Bay Middleton I
\
Myrrha
/Gladiator 22
\ Lollypop
/Muley Moloch 9
\Dau. of Emilius
<N
•S3
(B. 1848)
Beeswing
(B. 1833)
/"Melbourne /
1 (Br. 1834)
The Slave
- (B. 1852)
1 Volley
«
(B. 1845)
[Touchstone 14
Orlando 13) (Br. 1831)
(B. 1841) | Vulture
t (Ch. 1833)
/"Alarm 19
Torment J (B. 1842)
(B. 1850) I Daughter of
I (Br. 1837)
t i c ii I Touchstone 14
Lord of the I Br
Isles 4 i tj ■ tt i
/t> io-o\ *aIr Helen
(B. 1852) [ (Ch lg43)
/"The Little Know-
Miss Ann I 11 (B. 1836)
(B. 1846) "| Bay Missy
{ (B. 1842)
Wild Day- j °(ng 1835)
i
,
&
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at
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Ob
G
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B
rell 7
(B. 1?
,ON 1 Ellen Middleton
U> { (Br. 1846)
("Sweetmeat 21
Nettle
         I (Br. 1842)
(Br. 1852)] Wasp
I (Br. 1839)
SIR VISTO (Bay C. 1892) by Barcaldine 23 out of Vista 4, by Macaroni
14. Won the Derby Stakes 1895, see page 61.
PERSIMMON (Bay C. 1893) by St. Simon 11 out of Perdita II. 7, by
Hampton 10. Won the Derby Stakes 1896, see page 61.
GALTEE MORE (Bay C. 1894) by Kendal 16 out of Morganette5, by Spring-
field 12. Won the Derbv Stakes 1897, see page 62.
1T9                    2 N 2
-ocr page 567-
ST. LEGER WINNERS 1898 & 1899
(Oxford 12
( Birdcatcher 11
^Honej' Dear
(Flatcatcher 3
^Silence
/The Baron 24
( Pocahontas
/Ethelbert 12
\ Bassishaw
f Touchstone 14
\ Beeswing
f Tadmor 12
\ Miss Sellon
/ Voltigeur 2
\Dau. of Gardham
/Stockwell 3
\ Garland
f Birdcatcher 11
\ Echidna
fGlencoe /
\ Marpessa
(Melbourne /
\Clarissa
/Sweetmeat 21
\ Alice Hawthorn
/Bay Middleton /
^Barbelle
/Ion 4
\ Lysisca
/Harkaway 2
y
Poachontas
/Flatcatcher 3
(.Extempore
Ol
"Sterling 12
•—-s 1—1 ^r-
CO >»*>
(B. 1862)
QO
-—
« CO
! 19 (Ch.
02 ^-^ 1
Isola Bella
«
. (B. 1868)
1895)
=3
("Hermit 5
gg (Ch. 1864)
■_'
O
4r
-=
H £ 1 Dau. of
0
~" I (B. 1865)
M.
K
-3
O
> ^ fRataplan 3
T3 F*
(Ch. 1850)
h
ijoo
to
00
sS r-i J
f-1 ^
Young
>
00
i—1
SB
Alice
laq
w
L (B. 1865)
^
o
>>
^Massimssa
T3
^S
17
rag
tO 00
*> rH
(Br. 1866)
H
J3 ■
Jeu des
^O
Mots
1.2
I (B. 1861)
! | (Ch. 1857)
| Whisper
[ (B. 1857)
?Stockwell 3
J (Ch. 1849)
| Isoline
I (B. 1860)
(Newminster 8
J (B. 1848)
) 1 Seclusion
[ (B. 1857)
/'Skirmisher 2
J (Br. 1854)
I Vertumna
[ (Ch. 1859)
(The Baron 24
| (Ch. 1842)
"j Pocahontas
[ (B. 1837)
|'Yg. Melbourne 25
J (Br. 1855)
| Sweet Hawthorn
I (Br. 1858)
(Flying Dutchman
3 (Br. 1846)
Calpurnia
(1856)
/"King Tom 3
J (B. 1851)
I Jeu d'Esprit
I (B. 1852)
FLYING FOX (Bay C. 1896) by Orme 11 out of Vampire 7, by Galopin 3.
Won the Derby Stakes 1899, see page 63.
180
-ocr page 568-
INDEX TO CLASSIC WINNERS
Achievement, 172
Aimwell, 5
Airs and Graces, 126
Altisidora, 148
Amato, 32
Ambidexter, 137
Ambrosio, 140
Amiable, 124
Andover, 40
Annette, 71
Antonio, 151
Apology, 113
Archiduke, 12
Ashton, 146
Assassin, 4
Attila, 34
Augusta, 87
Ayrshire, 57
Azor, 21
Barefoot, 153
Baron, The, 164
Bay Middleton, 31
Beadsman, 42
Bellina, 77
Bellissima, 76
Bend Or, 53
Beningbrough, 139
Birmingham, 157
Blair Athol, 45
Blink Bonny, 41
Bloomsbury, 32
Blucher, 20
Blue Bonnet, 162
Blue Gown, 47
Bonny Jean, 118
Bourbon, 131
Bridget, 67
Brigantiue, 111
Briseis, 80
Bronze, 80
Brown Duchess, 107
Busybody, 119
Butterfly, 106
Cadland, 27
Ceelia, 74
Caller Ou, 170
Camelia, 115
Canterbury Pilgrim, 125
Caractacus, 44
Cardinal Beaufort, 15
Caroline, 87
Catherine Hayes, 103
Cedric, 25
Ceres, 68
Champion, 13
Charles XII., 161
Chorister, 157
Cobweb, 89
Cockfighter, 142
Colonel, The, 156
Common, 59
Corinne, 86
Coronation, 33
Cossack, The, 36
Cotherstone, 34
Cowslip, 135
Craig Millar, 174
Cremome, 49
Crucifix, 97
Cymba, 101
Cyprian, 95
Daedalus, 10
Dangerous, 29
181
-ocr page 569-
t
THOROUGHBRED
Hermit, 46
Hippia, 110
Hippolyta, 72
Hollandaise, 131
Imperatrix, 133
Impe'rieuse, 168
Industry, 96
Iris, 102
Iroquois, 53
Isinglass, 60
Jack Spigot, 152
Jannette, 116
Jeddah, 62
Jenny Howlet, 117
Jerry, 154
John Bull, 9
Kettledrum, 43
Kilwarlin, 178
Kingcraft, 48
Kisber, 51
Knight of St. George, 167
L'Abbesse de Jouarre, 121
Ladas, 60
Lady Evelyn, 101
■La Fleche, 123
Lambkin, The, 178
Landscape, 85
Lapdog, 26
La Sagesse, 124
Launcelot, 161
Lilias, 90
Limasol, 125
Little Wonder, The, 33
Lonely, 119
Lord t'lifden, 171
Lord Lyon, 46
Lounger, 141
Macaroni, 44
Maid of Orleans, 81
Maid of the Oaks, 69
Mameluke, 26
Mango, 160
Manuella, 83
Marchioness, 104
Margrave, 158
Marie Stuart, 113
Marquis, The, 171
Matilda, 155
182
THE BRITISH
Daniel O'Rourke, 39
Deception, 96
Didelot, 11
Diomed, 3
Doncaster, 49
Don John, 160
Donovan, 58
Duchess, The, 150
Dutch Oven, 177
Eager, 8
Ebor, 150
Eleanor, 13
Election, 16
Elis, 159
Ellington, 41
Emilius, 24
Euguerrande, 114
Ephemera, 77
Faith, 68
Faugh-a-Ballagh, 163
Favonius, 48
F^eu de Joie, 107
Fidget colt, 11
Filho da Puta, 149
Fille de 1'Air, 108
Flying Dutchman. The, 37
Flying Fox, 63
Formosa, 110
Frederick, 27
Fyldener, 145
Galata, 93
Galopin, 50
Galtee More, 62
Gamester, 169
Gamos, 111
Geheimniss, 118
George Frederick," 50
Ghuznee, 97
Gladiateur, 45
Governess, 105
Green Mantle, 91
Gulnare, 90
Gustavus, 23
Hambletoniau, 140
Hannah, 112
Hannibal, 15
Harvester, 55
Hawthorndeu, 173
Hermione, 74
«
-ocr page 570-
*
INDEX TO CLASSIC WINNERS
Petrarch, 175
Petronius, 146
Pewet, 137
Phantom, 18
Phenomenon, 134
Phosphorus, 31
Placida, 115
Platina, 75
Plenipotentiary, 30
Poison, 98
Pope (Waxy), 17 "
Portia, 73
Pretender, 47
Priam, 28
Prince Leopold, 21
Princess, The, 99
Pussy, 94
Pyrrhus the First, 36
Queen Bertha, 108
Queen of Trumps, 94
Quiz, 142
Rayon d'Or, Xt*f~l
Refraction^fifT^"^
"09
eine, 112
Medora, 84
Melton, 56
Memnon, 154
Memoir, 122
Mendicant, 100
Merry Hampton, 57
Merry Monarch, The, .35
Meteora, 79
Miami, 100
Middleton, 25
Mimi, 122
Mincemeat, 104
Mincepie, 105
Minuet, 84
Miss Jummy, 120
Miss Letty, 95
Mrs. Butterwick, 123
Morel, 81
Moses, 24
Mundig, 30
Musa, 126
Music, 83
Musjid, 42
Neva, 85
Newminster, 166
Nightshade, 71
Nike', 76
Ninety Three, 139
Noble, 6
Nutwith, 163
Octavian, 147
Octavius, 19
Omphale, 134
Oriana, 82
Orlando, 35
Ormonde, 56
Orville, 143
Ossian, 177
Otterington, 148
Our Nell, 98
Oxygen, 92
Pan, 17
Paragon, 135
Paris, 16
Parisot, 75
Pastille, 88
Paulina, 145
Pelisse, 79
Pero Gomez, 173
Persimmon, 61
Remembrancer, 143
Reve d'Or, 120
Reveller, 151
Rhadamanthus, 8
Rhedycina, 102
Robert the Devil,
176
Rockingham, 158
Rowton, 156
Ruler, 132
Sailor, 23
Sainfoin, 58
St. Albans, 170
St. Blaise, 54
St. Gatien, 55
St. Giles, 29
St. Patrick, 152
Saltram, 4
Sam, 22
Sancho, 144
Satirist, 162
Saucebox, 167
Scotia, 78
Seabreeze, 121
Sefton, 52
j Sergeant, 5
183
-ocr page 571-
THE BRITISH THOROUGHBRED
Thormanby, 43
Throstle, 179
Tiresias, 22
Tommy, 132
Tormentor, 109
Touchstone, 159
Trifle, 70
Turquoise, 91
Tyrant, 14
Van Tromp, 165
Variation, 92
Vespa, 93
Volante, 73
Voltigeur, 38
Warlock, 168
Waxy, 9
Wenlock, 174
West Australian, 39
Whalebone, 18
\Vrheel of Fortune, 116
Whisker, 20
Wild Davrell, 40
Wildfowler, 180
William, 149
Williamson's Ditto, 14
Wings, 89
Yellow Filly, The, 70
Young Eclipse, 3
Young Flora, 136
Young Traveller, 138
Zinc, 88
Serina, 1.33
Shotover, 54
Shoveler, 86
Silvio, 51
Sir Bevys, 52
Sir Harry, 12
Sir Hugo, 59
Sir Peter Teazle, 6
Sir Tatton Sykes, 164
Sir Thomas, 7
Sir Visto, 61
Skyscraper, 7
Smolensko, 19
Songstress, 103
Soothsayer, 147
Sorcery, 82
Spadille, 136
Spaniel, 28
Spinaway, 114
Spreadeagle, 10
Stavelev, 144
Stella, 69 ■
Stockuell, 166
Sumiiierside, 106
Sunbeam, 169
Surplice, 37
Symmetry, 141
Tag, 72
Tarrare, 155
Tartar, 138
Teddington, 38
Tctotum, 67
Thebais, 117
Theophania, 78
Theodore, 153
THE END
Printed by R. & R. Ci.ark, Limited, Edinburgh
/•»•>