Cornell hia Library SF 339.W89 187: tbl a: How to tr LIBRARY NEW YORK STATE VETERINARY COLLEGE ITHACA, N. Y. This Volume is the Gift « received through Olin Library Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924001182504 on THE TROTTING HORSE OF AMERICA: HOW TO TRAIN AND DRIVE HIM. REMINISCENCES OF THE TROTTING TURF. BY HIRAM WOODRUFF. EDITED BY CHARLES J, FOSTER. INCLUDING AN INTRODUCTORY NOTICE BY GEORGE WILKES, AND A BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH BY THE EDITOR. NINETEENTH EDITION. REVISED AND ENLARGED, WITH A NEW APPENDIX AND A COPIOUS INDEX. PHILADELPHIA: PORTER & COATES. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1874, by PORTER & COATES, in the Office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1868, by J. B. FORD AND COMPANY, in the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. IN CONFORMITY WITH THE INTENTION AND DIRECTION OF THE AUTHOR, AND MUCH TO THE GRATIFICATION OF THE EDITOR, THIS WORK 18, BY PERMISSION, RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED TO ROBERT BONNER, ESQ, BY WHOM ITS COMPOSITION WAS FIRST SUGGESTED. EDITOR'S PREFACE. HE composition of this work was first suggested by Mr. Rospert Bonner, who fully appreciated the original views and vast experience of Hiram WooprvrrF in all matters pertaining to the art of training and driving the trotting-horse. At the earnest solicitation of Mr. Gzorcr WILKEs (the editor of “ The Spirit of the Times ”’), and of some other of his friends, Hiram agreed to undertake it. They believed, and their arguments induced him to believe, that such a work from him would be a public benefit to the owners of horses, and a service to the horse himself. From the nature of the avocations to which he had devoted himself with unparalleled success for forty years, Hiram WooprvrF was nota ready penman; and therefore it was not until the writer of this introduc- tory preface had promised to act as his amanuensis, and to edit the work, that he consented to go on with it. Its reception, when some chapters had been pub- lished, was such as to establish its value; and all those who had been long acquainted with the author clearly v vi EDITOR’S PREFACE. recognized his strong, original turn of thought, and painstaking anxiety to make it eminently practical and useful, During its composition, there were some de- lays caused by the great application necessary on the part of the author to his business as trainer and driver of horses. He had sometimes as many as twenty in his charge; and he felt that at such periods he could not, with justice to the work itself and to them, continue its composition. To suggestions that the public was eager for the book, and wanted it completed early, he commonly replied that he wanted it completed well. There was, he said, no more reason for hurrying out this, his only work, than there would be in his hurrying on the edu- cation of a horse that he deemed certain to make a trotter. He was no believer in the “forcing” pro- cess, and always contended that the book would he all the better for the extra time he had resolved to devote to it. Nothing could exceed his anxiety to avoid any thing that by misapplication might be mis- chievous. He was eminently a man of clear, strong views, and of few, terse words. Many of the most valuable and well-tried conclusions of his genius and experience will be found set down in his literal words in a very few lines. I have never met with a man who was so quick and direct in coming at the kernel of a question, and who threw away the husk and shell so promptly as utterly worthless. Just before his last illness, the materials for the com oe EDITOR’S PREFACE. vu pletion of the book were all arranged, and [ received his directions to that end. During the progress of the work, I had some hundreds of interviews with hin, during which he dictated the matter now presented to the reader in this volume. It was his custom to read carefully every chapter as it appeared in “The Spirit of the Times,” and he gave a few directions for emendations. These have been strictly followed. His memory was marvellous, not only of events, but of the little details connected with them; and he had such a graphic way of describing matters and things, that his hearers and his readers were carried to the scene and time, and virtually made spectators of the things themselves. He was utterly intolerant of quackery in any shape; and his readers may rely upon it that the only way to develop the gifts and capabilities of the trotting-horse is to employ those elements which Hiram Wooprovrr brought to the composition of this work, — judgment, conscientious painstaking to be right, and much perseverance. CONTENTS. Epiror’s PREFACE. . » +o «© «© «© «© © #© «© #® « Hiram WOODRUFF. . © «© «© © e« © «e« ee e@ e xvii BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF THE AUTHOR. .« » « «o o « xxii L Reason for writing the Book.— Necessity for Practical Experience in Train- ing. — The Author’s Experience. — Improvement in Tracks and Vehicles. —Causes of Improvement in Time.— Originality of the American Sys tem.— Its great Superiority to the English System. — Rules as to Break- ingfromthe Trot. . .« . «o «© « «© »%© «© «© « II. Handling of the Colt.— The Trot a Natural Gait.— Great Speed the Result of Long Handling. —- Method for the Colt. — Moderation best in Feeding. — Early Maturity followed by Early Decay.— The Trotter should last Many Years.—Feeding of Weanlings.—No Physic unless the Colt is Sick.—Feeding of the Yearling.—The Starving System worse than High Féeediag.. « «© #* * © * @© © © © * «# e III. Feeding of the Two-Year-Old.— Mouthing and Bitting. — Lounging. —Tem- per. — Leading on the Road.—Much Walking to be avoided.— When harnessed, a Wagon better than a Sulky.— Amount of Work to depend on Constitution and Condition. — Remedy for Broken Gait. — Pulling to ve avoided.—Increase of Feed. . «6 +» «© 2c © © e@ « IV. Effects of Early Development. — Colts often overworked. — Fast Three-Year- Olds and Four-Year-Olds.— Risk of hurting Stamina. — Earlier Maturity of Running-Horses,— Evils of overtraining Colts. . . .«.« . « V. Actual Training of the Three-Year-Old.— No Physic and no Sweat at firrt. — Danger of “ Ovcrmarking.” — Strong Feed of Oats and Hay.— Bran- 33 44 61 59 x CONTENTS. Mashes.— Rubbing the Legs.—Full Supply of Water. — Management before and in the Race.—Strains likely to stand Early Training. —The Abdallahs. . «© +© © © © e© © © # © # 8@ VI. Characteristics of the Stars.— Of the Bashaws.— The Clays.— The Trus- tees. — Natural Trotters in England. — Of Trotters that paced.—To make Pacers trot. »« ee . oe .- 6 e e . VIL. Horses that pace and trot too. — Not to be trusted on the Course. — Trotters that amble off in a Pace when first out of the Stable.— Speed, and its Relation to Stoutness.— The Gray Mare Peerless.—Styles of Going.- Gait of Flora Temple and Ethan Allen. — Bush Messenger’s Get.— Ver- mont Hambletonian’s Get.— Influence of Messenger. — Hobbling in Jogging. » o + o © © © «© © © © © © « VII. Treatment the Winter before Training.— Frozen and Slippery Roads Bad. —Fattening up, an Evil.—The Feed in Winter.— Treatment in com- plete Let-up. — Clothing. — The Feet. — “‘ Freezing out,” Mischievous. — Horses that need Blistering. — Food and Treatment. — Stabling all Win- ter.— Treatment and Exercise.—Constitution to be kept in View.— Shedding-Time. — Walking Exercise. — Jogging.— No Fast Work at First. —No Physic commonly required. . . © © © © IX. Feed while Jogging.— Brushing in the Work.— Length of the Brush.— ‘Advance of Condition to be noted. —The Feed. — The First Trial. — Of the Sweats. — Feed and Clothing afterwards.— Tight Bandaging bad. . X. Work after the Sweat.— Trial after the Sweat. — Preparation for the Trial. — Amount of Work.—No Arbitrary Rule possible.—- The Mile-Trial. — Of Condition, Game, and Bottom. — Work after the First Race. —Prep- aration for Three-mile Heats.—Much Slow Work reduces Speed. — Time of Three-mile Preparation.— Of the Trials.—Work after the Final Trial. ° ° ° ° e ° e ° e ° e . . \ XI. Btout Horses stand a strong Preparation. —State of the Legs to be watched. —Idlewild and Lady Palmer.—No Device a Substitute for Work.— Ten-mile Preparation.— A Steady Rating Capacity wanted.— The Prep- aration to be Long. —The Feed to be Strong.— Effects of the Work to be watched. — The Trials.— Management of the Race.—The Races of Kentucky Prince and Herothe Pacer.. . .o © «© «© e« « 15 82 106 113 CONTEN £8. XII. aatly Reminiscences. -~ My First Race.— My Second.—. Lady Kate against Time.— Paul Pry against Time.—The Riders of Thirty Years ago. — Requisites of a Good Rider. — Drilling Horses. — Lady Sefton. 7 6 XIII. Messenger’s Son, Topgallant.— His Wonderful Endurance. — My Uncle, George Woodruff. — Topgallant’s Race when Twenty-two Years Old. — His Race when Twenty-four Years Old. — Three-mile Heats. —His Race of Three-mile Heats the next Week. . . «© «© « «© «© « XIV. The Indian Horse Lylee.—Runjeet Singh’s Passion for Horses— The Bat- tles fought for Lylee. — Description of him. — Lady Blanche.— Awful. — His Race with Screwdriver.-- Blanche, Snowdrop, and Beppo. — Death of Blanche. — Ajax and Oneida Chief.— Their Road-Race to Sleighs. — Brown Rattler. « © © 8 © &© & © © «© ww % XV. The Trotter Dutchman. — Description of him. — Pedigree doubtful. — Dutch- man and Locomotive.— Dutchman and Yankee Doodle.— Dutchman, Fanny Pullen, and Confidence. — Dutchman and Lady Slipper. — Dutch- man, Lady Warrenton, Teamboat, and Norman Leslie. — Dutchman and Greenwich Maid.— Dutchman and Washington. — Dutchman, Lady Suf- folk, and Rattler. — Description of Lady Suffolk and Rattler. ee, ee XVI. Dutchman and Lady Suffolk.— Dutchman, Lady Suffolk, Mount Holly, and Harry Bluff. — Dutchman and Awful. — Dutchman against Time, Three Miles. — The Race and Incidents. . e 7 © © 6 . XVII Dutchman and Washington. — Dutchman, Washington, and the Ice Pony. — Washingtor.’s best Mark.— Dutchman and Rifle. — Dutchman, Ameri- cus, and Lady Suffolk.— A Great Race in a Great Storm. — Dutchman, Oneida Chief, and Lady Suffolk. — Dutchman’s Last Race. — His Death. XVIII. Other Performances of Dutchman. — Application of Facts to Principles. — Dutchman’s Steady Improvement.— Endurance of Trotters and Run- ning-Horses compared. . . . . . . . . ° . . i XIX. The story of Ripton.— Description of him. — Ripton and Mount Holly. — Ripton and Kate Kearney. — Peter Whelan and George Youngs. — Rip- ton and Don Juan. — Necessity of Work and Practice. — Ripton, Dutch- man, Confidence, and Spangle. — Ripton, Duchess, and Quaker. — Ripton and Revenge. — Ripton and Lady Suffolk.— A Fast, Close Race. . . 14, 128 136 142 149 : 163 1 mi CONTENTS. xX. Ripton, Brandywine, and Don Juan.—Ripton and Quaker.— Ripton and Spangle.— Ripton, Lady Suffolk, and Washington. —Ripton and Confi- dence.— Ripton and Americus. — Ripton’s Performances in 1842 recapit- ulated. —Conclusion enforced. —Time wanted for Maturity,— Ripton required much Work. . .»« o© «© «© e « 7 6 ee 8 XXI. Ripton’s Three Matches with Americus.—Ripton in Mud.—Ripton in Snow. —Sleighing on the Harlem Road, —Ripton and Confidence. —Owner’s Instructions. — An O1d Horse to be kept Warm between Heats. — Match with Bay Boston. » «© o © © © © © e¢ ee ee 8 XXTT. Ripton and Lady Sutton.—Lady Sutton and Lady Moscow.— Death of Lady Moscow. — Her Burial-place.— Her Produce. — Horses she trotted against.—Ripton and Lady Suffolk.— Ripton, Sorrel Ned, and Snake. —Ripton and Jersey.— Ripton’s Last Race. 7 © © © © -« XXIII. Ability to pull Weight considered.—Form best calculated for it.—Mere Bulk useless.— Long Striders seldom Weight-pullers.— Kemble Jack- son.— Description of him.— Kemble Jackson and Washington. — Kem- ple Jackson and the Nelson Colt.— Kemble Jackson and Black Harry.— Kemble Jackson, O’Blenis, Lady Brooks, and Pelham.— Kemble Jack- son, Mountain Maid, and Flash.—The Kemble Jackson Check.— Kem- ble Jackson, O’Blenis, Pet, Iola, Boston Girl, and Honest John, . . XXIV. O’Blenis against the Field.—Immense Attendance at the Race. — Expecta- tions that Kemble would break. — His Great Victory. —His Early Death. — Weight-pulling Mares. — Lady Palmer. — Peerless-— California Dam- sel.— English Theory about Trotting-Weight. . . 6 8 . XXV. The Gray Mare Lady Suffolk.—Her Pedigree.— Place of Breeding. —Sale to David Bryan. — Description of Lady Suffolk.— Her Performances. — More than Fifteen Years on the Course. — Trotted 138 Races and won 88 Times. — Suffolk and Sam Patch.— Suffolk and Black Hawk. — Suffolk and the Virginia Mare. —Suffolk and Rattler. — Suffolk, Dutchman, and Rattler.— Suffolk and Awful.—Suffolk, Napoleon, Cato, and Ion.— Suffolk, Dutchman, and Rattler again. —Suffolk and Dutchman. , * XXVI. | Regarding Early Maturity.— Lady Suffolk and Apollo.— Lady Suffolk and Dutchman. — Suffolk and Cato.— Suffolk, Lady Victory, and Lafayette. —Suffolk, Henry Celeste, and Cato. — Suffolk and Don Juan, — Suffolk 178 185 192 199 205 211 CONTENTS. xiii and Ellen Jewett. — Suffolk ard Independence. — Suffolk and Dutchman. — Suffolk, Celeste, and Napoleon. — Suffolk against Time. — Suffolk against Bonaparte.— Suffolk and Aaron Burr. 7 6 © «© 6 XXVII. Buffolk, Confidence, and Washington. — Suffolk, Confidence, and Aaron Burr. — Suffolk, Awful, and Aaron Burr.— Suffolk and Riptos.—Suf- folk and Oneida Chief the Pacer.—Suffolk and Americus, Five-mile Heats. — Suffolk, Ripton, and Confidence. — Suffolk and Rifle, vs. Hard- ware and Apology:— Long Tails and Docking. — Suffolk and Ripton. — Suffolk, Beppo, and Independence. — Suffolk, Beppo, and Oneida Chief. —Suffolk, Americus, Ripton, Washington, and Pizarro.—Suffolk J.C. Calhoun, and Fairy Queen. . »© © © «© © © «© «© XXVIII. Suffolk, Brown Columbus, and Americus.— More Races with Americus. — Suffolk and Duchess.—Suffolk and Moscow.—Suffolk, Moscow, and Americus.— Suffolk and James K. Polk the Pacer.— Suffolk and Hec- tor.—Suffolk at Saratoga.— Suffolk and Roanoke the Pacer. — Suffolk and Lady Sutton.—Suffolk and Ripton, between Christmas Day and New Year’s.—Suffolk, Lady Sutton, and Lady Moscow. —Moscow’s son, Privateer.—Suffolk, Sutton, and Americus.— Suffolk and James K. Polk. —Suffolk lamed at Saratoga. Cer ae ee ° . XXIX. Suffulk and Lady Moscow. — Suffolk, Mac, Gray Eagie, and Gray Trouble. — Suffolk and Pelham. — Suffolk, Pelham, and Jack Rossiter. — Lady Suf- folk, Lady Sutton, and Pelham, — Suffolk, Trustee, and Pelham.— Breed- ing of Trustee.— Description of Trustee. — Suffolk and Long-Island Black Hawk. — Description of Black Hawk.— Death of Trustee. . ® XXX. Lady Suffolk in 1850, 1851, 1852, 1853.— Her Retirement-and Death.—The Story of Flora Temple.— Opening Chapter of her History, by George Wilkes. «© © © © © «© © © «© © 0 «© «© «© SX apacity of Small Horses to pull Weight. — Flora Temple and Centreville. — Flora and Black Douglas.—Flora and Young Dutchman.— Flora and Lady Brooks. — Flora and Highland Maid. — Breeding of Highland Maid. — Description of her.— Her Races with Flora. . . . . XXXII. Flora Temple and Tacony.— Description of Tacony.— Flora, Gieen-sfoun- tain Maid, and Lady Vernon. — Description of Green-Mountain Maid. — Flora and Rhode Island. — Flora goes to New Orleans, comes back, and is purchased by Mr, Pettee.— Flora and Maz.— Flora and Jack Waters. 218 247 x1¥ CONTENTS. —Flora and Soutag.— Flora’s Match Twenty Miles to Wagon. — Flora and Know-Nothing. — Description of Know-Nothing, afterwards Lancet. —Flora and Lady Franklin.—Flora and Chicago Jack. — Flora, Frank Forrester, Chicago Jack, and Miller’s Damsel. ». ©» © © © °* 266 XXXII. The Time-Test.—Saddle-Horses.— Riders of Trotters. — Mace, Murphy. and Doble.—Flora and Lancet.— Trusting to Trials. —Flora and Ta- cony.—Flora distances him in 2m. 244s. — The True Explanation of that Heat.—Caution to Young Drivers. » 6 © © «© «© © 24 XXXIV. Flora and Lancet.—The Morgan Horses. —Ethan Allen. — His Breeding. — His Produce.—Flora and Ethan Allen.—Flora’s Winter-Quarters. — Flora and Rose of Washington.— Want of Condition sure to beat any thing. —Value of a Race in Public to produce Condition. q . . Bi XXXV. Introduction of Hippodroming. — Flora, Lancet, Miller's Damsel, and Red- bird.—Flora and Brown Dick.— Flora purchased by Mr. McDonald. — Hippodroming again. — Flora and Prince.—Flora and Ike Cook.— Flora and Reindeer. — The coming Horses, Princess and George M. Patchen. . 288 XXXVI. Flora Temple and Ethan Allen. — Flora and Princess. — Description of Prin- cess. — Her Driver, James Eoff.—His Artful Strategy and Inveterate Humbug.— Princess beats Flora Two-mile Heats.—Flora wins, Mile- Heats, Three in Five. —The Best Previous Time beaten in all the Heats. 295 XXXVI. < Flora Temple and Princess again. — Flora wins Two-Mile Heats. — They go Hippodroming.— Flora trots in 2m. 21}s., with Ike Cook, at Cincinnati. —Her Performance at Kalamazoo.—2m. 193s... ce « - 303 XXXVIII. Flora Temple and George M. Patchen. — Description of Patchen. — His Pedigree. — Patchen’s Early Performances, — Dan Mace as a Driver and Rider. — Flora and Ethan Allen.— Flora and Patehen again.— The best Race ever made by Flora, and the best a Stallion ever made. . . « 309 XXXIX. flora Temple and Patchen, Two-mile Heats. — Flora and Patchen at Phila- delphia.— Outside Interference. . . . coe «© « «816 XL. Flora Temple and Patchen again.— A dishonored Check.— Appeal to aid Decision of th» Judges.—Flora and Brown Dick.—Flora and Ethan Allen, — Flora acd Patchen again. — Flora against Dutchman’s Time. , 328 CONTENTS. XLI. Flo:a Temple and George M. Patchen on a Tour.—Flora and Widow Ma- chree.— Description of Widow Machree. — Flora and Princess again. — Flora and John Morgan.— Breeding of John Morgan. — Description of Wits ee ee a eee a es XLIT. Flora Temple and John Morgan.—The Fastest Two-mile Race that had been trotted.— Remarks upon the Race.—The Three-mile-heat Race. —Flora against Ethan Allen and a Running-Mate.— Flora before Gen. Grant.—The Widow Machree. 2. «© «© «© os 8 XLIII. The King of the Trotters, Dexter. — Description and breeding of him. — His Purchase by Mr. George Alley. —His History prior to his coming to me. —His First and Second Trials. —Dexter’s First Race. —He beats Stone- wall Jackson, Lady Collins, and Gen. Grant. — Dexter and Doty’s Mare. — Dexter, Shark, and Lady Shannon.—Dexter, Shark, and Hamble- tonian. — Dexter hits himself, and is drawn. — Evil of much Scoring. — Dexter’s Trial in N ovember, 2m. 2338. eo 8 © «© «© © «6 XLIV. Dexter’s Three-mile Heats Match with Stonewall Jackson of Hartford. — Description of Stonewall. — Dexter and Gen. Butler.— Dexter and Lady Thorn.— Description of Lady Thorn.— The Three-Mile-Heat, Race under Saddle.— Dexter and Gen. Butler under Saddle.— Dexter, Butler, and George Wilkes.— Dexter against Time, to beat 2m. 19s. a XLV. Dexter and Butler to Wagons, Mile Heats. — Two-Mile Heats to Wagons. — The Best ever made.— Remarks upon the Race. — Dexter at Astoria. — Eoff and George M. Patchen, Jun.— Dexter offered for Sale.— Dexter and George M. Patchen, Jun. — Eoff’s Strategy. . . & 3 XLVI. Dexter sold to George Trussel.— Dexter, Gen. Butler, and Commodore Vanderbilt.— Dexter goes to Budd Doble.— Dexter and George M. Patchen at Philadelphia. . ‘ ov ge ‘ a. tie @ % ‘s XLVII. Dexter, Gen. Butler, and Toronto Chief under Saddle.— Dexter and George M. Patchen, Jun., at Avon Springs. —The Track Short. — Short Track no Record. — Dexter, Patchen, Jun., and Rolla Golddust at Buffalo.— Dex- ter and Butler under Saddles. — Dexter trots in 2m. 188. — Dexter, Patchen, Jun., and Butler, at Cleveland. — Dexter and Patchen, Jun., at Detroit —Dexter and Patchen, Jun., at Chicago.— Dexter and Butler XV 329 . 347 358 - 362 371 » + Xvi CONTENTS. under Saddle. —Dexter and Patchen at Milwaukee.—Same at Ajirian, Toledo, Kalamazoo, and Wheeling. — Dexter and Magoogler the Pacer atPittsburg. 2. «© .« «© +» © © « 8 . o - 379 XLVIII. Dexter, Polly Ann the Pacer, and Patchen, Jun., at Philadelphia. — D« ater, Silas Rich, and Patchen, Jun., at “Baltimore.—Dexter under Saddle against Time.— Dexter and Silas Rich at Washington. — Dexter’s Per- formances that Year considered. — Integrity and Capacity of Budd Doble. — No Reason to believe that Dexter then reached his best. — His Fine Points. —Dexter compared to Peerless. —The Auburn Horse. — Grand Combination of Qualities in Dexter, . +» «© «© « «+ 385 : XLIX. On Driving. — Difficulty of laying down Rules. —Importance of a Sensitive Mouth. — The Bit proper for a Colt. — Much Use of “ bitting”” Apparatus mischievous.— The Bits in cold Weather to be warmed before Use.— A light, fine Hand required.— Pulling to be avoided.— Gentleness and Firmness.— The Horse to be harnessed 80 as to be at ease. — Dead Pull an Evil.— Proper Position of the Driver.— The Shift of the Bit.—How to hold the Reins.—Severe Bitsbad, . » »« o »o «© « . 81 L. Of Breaking in Trotting. — A Gaining Break. —Snatching to be avoided. — How to catch the Horse to his Trot.— Nature of the catching-pull.— The Horse to to be steadied when he has caught. —A Break sometimes Desirable.— How to bring it about.—Confidence of the Horse in his Driver.—Sagacity of Horses.—To prevent a Break.—Signs of one coming. . . . . e oe . . . . . . - 308 APPENDIX, «© «© + + © © © «© «© © «© © « « #8 HIRAM WOODRUFF. T has been remarked by philosophers, that the progress of the human race is to be traced more distinctly in the individual his- tory of its great men, than by any other process known to the human observation. It has even been held by some writers, and among them by Napoleon the Third, that the most familiar method by which Providence confers his greatest benefits upon mankind is in the raising up of favored men at certain periods, who, being imbued with the new principles which are to advance the fortunes of their era, are enabled “to stamp the age with the seal of their genius, and to accomplish in a few years the labor of many centuries.” If this agreeable theory is correct, the humble trainer and driver who departed this life at_ Jamaica Plains, Long Island, on the morning of the 15th of March, 1867, may fairly rank among the great men of his period, and be frankly awarded a full share of the honors which are due to those who have been benefactors to their country. "We measure genius, not merely by a man’s social status, but by “the empire of his ideas,” the results which they enforce, and the benefits which inure through them to the world. To bring this principle to its test tor the purposes of our theme, we find that there are but twe nations of the earth which possess a ra¢e of animals known as the trotting-horse. One of these nations is Russia; the other, the United States. In the first-named country, we find an animal proceeding from the Arabian fountain, fused, it is said, upon the Flanders stock, which is called the Orloff trotter; but this breed, though bending the knee when striding, and though having in other respects the trotting action, is considered by good judges as being only half-developed. In this country, on the other hand, we have “a paragon of animals,” which is already the wonder 2 xvii / Xvili HIRAM WOODRUFF. of the world; and which, from the familiar, affectionate, and almost universal use made of him on this continent, and from the growing demand which is made for him in other countries, has already become an American commercial product, of vast impor- tance and proportions. It is certain that this animal is an American production; as much so, in fact, as the thorough- -bred horse, which disdainfully gives weight at Goodwood and Ascot to the purer descendants of his Arabian ancestry, is a creation of the English breeding-stable and the English race-course. And it is ao. certain, that the development of the American trotter to its present marvellous pre-eminence over all other breeds of horses used for harness and road purposes is more due to Hiram Wood- ruff than to any, if not than to all other men who ever lived. Those who know the history of trotting in this country, and who recall to mind the average speed of the fast harness-horse when Hiram identified himself with its advancement, will not hesitate to say, that he doubled the value of the original element on which he worked, and, at the end of a few years, gave a great animal to the country, in place of what had been only a good animal before, It is recognized by those who are versed in’the origin and char- acteristics of the American trotter, that the highest type of that invaluable breed descends from the English thorough-bred horse Messenger, which was imported into this country in the latter part of the last century. Indeed, so widely is this fact acknowledged, that breeders of experience, in view of the excellence of which he was the founder, and of the vast extent of the interest which has proceeded from his loins, have been heard to declare, that, when that old gray came charging down the gang-plank of the ship which brought him over, the value of not less than one hundred millions of dollars struck our soil. If that be true, the man who developed Messenger’s value through his progeny can hardly be . regarded as less than a genius, as well as a public benefactor. It cannot be doubted, therefore, that Hiram Wooprurr was the man of his period for the development of the interest with which he identified himself; and in proportion to the importance of that interest will his merits be valued by posterity. In all the future of our particular turf-history, his figure will loom up to the contem- plation of its followers, as the sole great, man who had been nro. duced, in connection with that interest, down to the day of his de- cease. HIRAM WOODRUFF. i xik But Hiram Wooprorr brought something more to his vocation than a mere intuitive perception of the new principles by which the trotter was to be improved. He brought a generous, cheerful, kindly nature; and his fasulties were insensibly buoyed and sus- tained by that invariable accompaniment of true genius, —a good heart. He had, moreover, one of those happy dispositions of nixed simplicity and candor, which commands at once the cenfi- dence of men, and which, when its influences are applied to the secondary animals, fascinates and subjects them completely to the owner’s will. There is nothing which recognizes the subtle in- stincts of affection so quickly, and which knows them so unmis- takably, as a horse; and much of Hiram’s facility of communica- ting his purpose to the animal he rode or drove or trained pro- ceeded from his power of making it love him. Like Rarey, his doctrine was kindness; and, when he walked through his stables, the undoubted accord which he had established with its glossy in- mates was at once evinced by the low whinnies of welcome which would greet his kindly presence as he went from stall to stall. They knew him for the friend who mixed among them, almost as if he were an equal, and who never ceased to talk to them as if they were his equals when he took them out for their exercise, or even when he encouraged them during the strife of the arena. What would they not do for that man, which he could make them understand? and how could they fail to know his wish, when, in- spiring them with his chirrup, and shaking the bit in their mouths, he “lifted” them, as it were, and sent them whirling with an unknown velocity along the course? Perhaps Flora Temple was the most remarkable instance of the great horseman’s conquest over anima} affection during his career. She loved him with an unmistakable cordiality ; and when he and she were engaged in some of their most notable struggles, the man and horse seemed to be but parts of the same creature, animated by the fury of a common purpose. Many drivers have been heard to wonder how it was that Hiram obtained such a mysterious mastery over his horses on all occa- sions; but the secret was, that he gained their confidence through their affections; and, after that, every thing was easy. The reason why women so easily fascinate a horse is because of the tenderness of their approach ; and, so far as gentleness went, Hiram Woop- RUFF had the nature of a woman. Commanding the horse, therefore, to the absolute extent he did, XX HIRAM WOODRUFF. there is no reason for wonder that he made Lis steed understand himself, as well as know his master. One half of a horse’s speed is in the mind of his rider or driver. When it is known to the world that a horse has made a mile a second or half-second faster. than it was ever. made before, some rider of some other horsey nerving himself with the knowledge of the fact, and infusing that knowledge into his horse by dint of his own enthusiasm, sends him a second or two faster still; and the result of the mental emula- tion is a permanent improvement which never is retraced. Hiram Woonvrurr was the first to take this mental grip of the powers of - the trotting-horse; and the result, in his case, was, that, by dint ot his own mind, he carried him triumphantly over the gap which lies between 2.40 and 2.18. There are yet other characteristics of Hiram Wooprurr, which, in bidding him farewell, we are called upon to notice., Viewed in connection with his peculiar walk in life, these traits are, if possible, more remarkable than his genius; and they arrest the. attention as matters of surprise. We allude to his incorruptible personal integrity under the usual temptations of his station. It is not enough, therefore, to say that Hiram WoopRuFF was an hon- est man. He was more than that; for he was utterly incapable even of sharp practices, or meannesses of any kind. Happen what might, he would not conceal any of his opinions from an employer, or retain an employment by misrepresenting the merits of an ani- mal intrusted to his care. And, when he brought his horse to the arena, it was certain he would be honestly driven, however the. money might be on. The most abandoned men who frequent the trotting-tracks dared not, even after he had been on the turf but a short time, venture to approach him with a dishonorable. proposition ; for they had discovered his invincible integrity, and felt, that, in such case, their exposure was inevitable. In this re- spect, and taking all things together, Hinam Wooprurr may be regarded as a phenomenon. Here is a man, born, as it were, in the very dregs of the stable, thrown constantly amoug the vicious and depraved, and frequently tempted by the most alluring oppor- tunities of profit, who preserves his integrity intact, in the midst of a general society largely tainted with corruption, and during a period in which the honesty of almost every public officer is touched with suspicion. It is not singular, therefore, that no trainer oy driver ever envied Hrram his business or disputed his superiority, HIRAM WOODRUFF. Exi His virtues were above the aim of jealousy; and his mission was as much to prove to bad men the value of leading a good life, as to improve the condition of the horse. He was a boon not only to those of his own order, but to society at large. He never betrayed his trust; never was suspected of a lie; and, if good deeds can charter a man to be regarded as a Christian, Hiram Wooprorr certainly was one. On the 22d of February, he celebrated his fiftieth birthday with his friends at home; and he exhibited on that occasion, while alluding to the “events” for which he stood engaged, the same cheerful confidence which marked all his expectations. He now lies on that slope of Cypress Hill which looks toward the course on which he has earned so much of his renown. Many a throng which will gather during the coming seasons to witness the contests of the horses he had in part prepared will turn gloomily to that cold hill ; and there will be none among them who will not feel that there isa great void iv their midst, and that the Master has gone. Gucrex WILKES. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF THE AUTHOR. BY CHARLES J. FOSTER. “ He was a man! take him for all in all, I shall not look upon his like again! ” UR dear, esteemed friend, Hiram Woodruff, dicd on the morn- ing of Friday, March 15, 1867, and was buried on the following Sunday, in the Cypress-hills Cemetery, between East New York and the house he kept so long. It has become our mournful duty to sketch, as nearly as we may, some incidents of his life, and to show what manner of man he was. Hiram Washington Woodruff was born on the 22d of February, 1817; and consequently, at the time of his death, he was fifty years and twenty-one days old. His father, John Woodruff, afterwards called by his friends and familiar acquaintances “Colonel Ogden,” lived at Birmingham, a small place near Flemington, in Huntington County, New Jersey, where his wife bore him his second son, Hiram. The eldest son was Isaac, and the youngest William. These brothers, with their sister Margaret (Mrs. Nelson), still survive. The Woodruffs were a family of horsemen. The old colonel was noted as a trainer. His brother, George Woodruff, was still more famous in that capacity, and was without an equal perhaps, except Peter Whelan, as a rider of trotting-horses, until his nephew appeared, and surpassed them both. It was at one time intended that Hiram should learn a trade, and that of a hatter was thought suitable. But in him, boy as he was, the call “to horse” was already like that of the xxiii XXIV BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH trumpet to the trooper when it sounds “ boots and saddle.” Very early in life he began to ride; and the fonndation of his future immense and accurate knowledge of horsemanship, in all its branches and in all their details, was laid waile he was a little boy. He was but fifty years old at the time of his death ; and, forty yeare before, he had ridden the famous trotting-horse Topgallant —a son of imported Messenger —at his exercise. Thus the first horse with whom we can certainly associate this most celebrated of trainers, riders, and drivers, was one worthy of his own high re- nown. Upon the merits of this game old horse, who was spavined in both hind-legs, and yet in his twenty-fourth year beat Whale- bone three-mile heats, Hiram loved to dwell. Top-Gallant was one of a lot of famous horses in the stable of George Woodruff, and Hiram learned his first regular lessons in horsemanship from his uncle. His first race was ridden at the Hunting-park Course, Philadelphia, where George had Top- gallant, Whalebone, Columbus, and others of great note, in training. The gentlemen who frequented the ground one afternoon offered a purse, to be trotted for by any horses that the boys could pick up. Young Hiram (he was then fourteen years old) knew that there was at plough in a field hard by a horse called Shaking Quaker, that had trotted on Long Island. This horse he got, and with him he won the purse. In two or three weeks it was followed by another race for a larger amount, Mr. F. Duffy having backed his mare Lady Kate to trot fifteen miles an hour. He selected Hiram and another boy to ride, never imagining that one of them could ride a fast trotter a whole hour without a rest. Duffy, in fact, played a keen game ; for he led the mare up and down by the bridle, with a heavy saddle on, and induced the backers of time to believe that he was going to ride her himself. His money was well laid, and the time for the start was near, when the backers of the watch, to their surprise and confusion, saw little Hiram come out of the bushes, with his light saddle on his arm, to ride the mare. She trotted sixteen miles in a trifle less than fifty-seven minutes, and Hiram rode her eight-miles and three quarters only, Two years later he rode in another time-match, and acquired stil] higher distinction. His father was then keeping the Harlem-park Course; and there Mr. William Niblo had in training, under his own supervision, a gray gelding called Paul Pry, a grandson of im- ported Messenger. ‘This horse was matched for two thousand OF THE AUTHOR. XV dollars a side, to trot sixteen miles an hour, with two hundred and fifty dollars a side on every quarter over that distance up to seventeen and three-quarter miles. Hiram rode Paul Pry at his work, and was chosen ta steer him in his race on the Union Course. The confidence Mr. Niblo had in the strength, endur- ance, and judgment of the lad of sixteen was signally justified by the event. Hiram rode the horse eighteen miles in a fraction less than fifty-nine minutes, and the last quarter was jogged out at that. Considering the great difficulty there is in riding fast trotters many miles at a time, and recollecting the fact that Pal Pry was a puller, this. was a very remarkable feat; and those among the trainers and amateurs who looked ahead must have concluded that in this lad there was the stuff of which great men are made. Some have said that Hiram Woodruff first dis- tinguished himself by riding Dutchman; but it is an error. He was famous before Dutchman had left the string-team which hauled the brick-cart. At this time, and for many years afterwards, Hiram was a model of strength, grace, activity, and suppleness. He was a swift runner and a mighty jumper and leaper, as well as a bold and skilful rider; and his stamina was afterwards found to be such, that Jack Harrison, a noted matchmaker of those days, publicly offered to back him to ride different horses a hundred miles in five hours. The offer was not accepted; for the sports- men had already learned, that, with uncommon fine constitutional stamina, young Woodruff possessed sinews of steel, nerves that could not be shaken, and an intuitive sagacity which made him master of almost any situation, and capable of accomplishing almost any feat. All this, too, was accompanied by a cheerful modesty of disposition, which endeared him to his associates, and a high rectitude of principle, which his friends can now justly boast was never in his whole life impaired. His integrity, indeed, through life, has been of that adamantine and obstinate degree that it never took the seeming of a flaw. It was of that high quality which may be compared to, the constancy and courage of a bull-dog of true English breed, which may be cut up piecemeal, but can never be subdued. It was while here at Harlem that Hiram was fortunate enough to win the affections of Miss Sarah Ann Howe, a young lady of great personal beauty and much sweetness of disposition. His fa- Xxvi BIOGRAPHICAL SKET.H ther soon moved to the old Centréville House, aear the Centreville Course; and Hiram went with him. On Christmas Day, 1836, and therefore before he had quite arrived at his twentieth birthday, liram Woodruff was married to Sarah Ann Howe, at Jamaica. He took his young bride home with him to his father’s; and now, over his grave, after his more than thirty years of wedded life have ended, his friends can truly say that never was man more blessed in an excellent wife than he, in her he loved so well, and has left to mourn behind him. Tt was not long after his marriage when Dutchman came into his hands. The first race he won with him was against Lady Suf- folk and Rattler. The latter was trained and ridden by William Whelan, brother of Peter of famous memory, and himself now sur- vivor of his old and valued friend Hiram. Out of this race grew that at three-mile heats between Dutchman and Rattler, which was won by the former in four heats. The two friends latterly, in their reviews of what happened thirty years ago, used to ride this race again. Hiram would show how it was won; and Whelan argue that it was lost because Rattler was a poor feeder, and so, at that time, not quite equal to Dutchman in lasting qualities. These young riders and trainers were now “the coming men.” George Woodruff and Peter Whelan were to have successors as great, if not greater, than themselves. The seas soon separated the young men. Whelan went to England with Rattler, where he beat every thing with ridiculous ease, and issued a challenge to the world, Thereupon an English merchant of New York sounded Hiram Woodruff, to ascertain whether he would go to England to train and ride Dutchman if the horse were purchased. Hiram was not very anxious to leave his home and his young wife; but his confi- dence was great in Dutchman, and he consented to go. But the bargain for the horse went off. His owners were offered two thousand seven hundred dollars and a black mare, then in Hiram’s hands, for him. They wanted three thousand dollars and the mare. Whelan thinks that Rattler micht have de- feated Dutchman in England, as the former had got to feeding strong there. But Hiram has often told us that the probabilities were all the other way, as Dutchman’s great speed was only just coming to him when he beat Rattler in the race of four heats. In Hiram’s hands, Dutchman performed three. great feats. The first was the defeat of Rattler in the great race of four threc-mile heats, OF THE AUTHOR. xxvii ‘The s.cond was the distancing of Awful, three miles in harness, in 7m. 41s. The third was the time-match, three miles, in which the mark, still standing at the head of the record, 7m. 324s., was made. Hiram has always maintained, and no doubt with good reason, that Dutchman could have greatly surpassed this. In the second mile, which was trotted in 2m. 28s., Isaac Woodruff, who was on the running companion, conceived that Hiram was going too fast, and called to him to pull. The third mile was in 2m. 30s., and Dutchman was pulled all the way. It was Hiram’s conviction that he could have trotted this in 2m. 26s. This very remarkable horse was not coarse, as many suppose him to have been. He showed breeding in form as well as bottom, and was savage in dis- position. After his time-match he went to Philadelphia, and Hiram beat him two or three times with Washington. But he returned into Hiram’s hands, and trotted his famous races with Americus under his direction. Hiram Woodruff had then just reached his twenty-sixth year, and had fully entered upon that career of hard work and useful- ness which was increasing in importance every day, which finally made him one of the best known and most renowned men in America, and in which his genius, his faithfulness, and his sagacity enabled him to do his country weighty and honorable service. The greatest nations, and many of the greatest men that have ex- isted in-the world, have held, that, next to the improvement and culture of mankind itself, the improvement and cultivation of the horse is one of the best and mightiest of tasks. Our country is distiuguished abroad, as well as at home, for having effected the greatest and most surprising improvement in the horse of daily use, the trotter, that is mentioned in the annals of horsemanship, from the period of the misty fables of Castor, Pollux, and Chiron the Centaur, down to this day. Now, for this improvement the country is more indebted to Hiram Woodruff than to any other man—or any ten men. Nobody with any character for sense and veracity will dispute this. Before he had done with Dutchman on the turf, Ripton had come to Hiram Woodruff; and this “whitelegged pony” soon became as great a favorite with him, as great a prodigy with the public, and as great a scourge to those who stood against him, as Jutchman had been. He it was that first made two miles in 5m. %s., in harness, going against Lady Suffolk; and he finally became XXVii BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH such a thorn in Bryan’s side, that he declared the mare should not trot against him any more, unless it was under saddle. It was in driving Ripton against Americus, that Hiram displayed one of his finest exhibitions of coolness, craft, and science. He won the race against Americus when a hundred to five hed been laid on the latter horse. Ripton was one of Hiram’s prime favorites. is fine speed, his stoutness, his grand action, his turbulent spirits, and indomitable game, were themes that Hiram never tired of when he had once begun. To hear him and Dan Pfifer, who took care of the “white-legzed pony,” go on about him, with Sim Hoagland and Whelan to drop in suggestive and sage remarks here and there, was a treat indeed. The “white-legged pony” was also a prime favorite with Hiram’s devoted friend Oliver Marshall. Friends! when shall we truly realize that the tongue which spoke with such wisdom, enthusiasm, and terse eloquence, at these, our well-remem- bered sittings, is silent now forever ? It is beyond the scope of this sketch, even to mention by name all the horses which Hiram trained, rode, and drove. His own work (which follows) may be referred to as regards those of most renown who preceded the era of Flora Temple. He was always fond of the Messenger blood. Beginning with old Topgallant, and coming along down with Paul Pry, grandson of Messenger; Lady Suffolk, his granddaughter; Ajax and Hector, sons of Ab- dallah; and then to the Hambletonians, of whom he made the wonder, Dexter, — what famous horses of that famous strain came to his hands to have their excellencies made manifest! Flora her- self has a dash of the blood; and she, too, was the work of Hiram’s strong, patient, and cunning hand. When he was twenty-cight years old, Hiram removed to Harlem, and became proprietor of the track there which his father had had. He kept it two years, and then removed to Boston, where he was proprietor of the Cambridge Course from 1847 to 1850. When he returned to New York, he went into business in the Union Saloon, Broadway; which he kept in partnership with Albert Losee. But the City was not by any means the place for Hiram. His was a spirit, which delighted in the country, by hill and stream, and where, with hand upon the shoulder of his horse, he could hear the booming of the wild waves on the beach. So, near “old Long Island’s sea-girt shore,” in the spring of 1851, he took the house at the foot of the hill, on the Jamaica Road, between East New York and the Corners ; and this OF THE AUTHOR. xxix. was known far and wide for two or three years as “ Hiram Wood- ruff’s.” When he left that, it was to remove to the house in which he died; and here his friends of late years were wont to assemble in great numbers around him. He had now reached his prime, and gained a station and esteem with the world at large such as no other man in the like capacity had ever attained to. Hundreds of thousands who had never seen the man held him in regard; and all through the regions of the West his name was in their mouths, familiar as a household word. In the Eastern States, too, he was very much respected and beloved. He often.visited Boston and Previdence, and these trips were his great holidays. His arrival at these places was the signal for general rejoicing. Troops of friends crowded round him to express their satisfaction, and mani- fest their attachment. When thus away from home, the deep and abiding love he cherished for his wife was seen by his nearest friends in his behavior. She was never out of his thought; and when his friends got him to stay a day or two longer, he always sent despatches home. He loved music; and one there was in the Eastern States who used to sing a song called “ My Sarah.” This never failed to move Hiram to tears. One other recreation he greatly enjoyed. It was his custom to go down upon the shores of Jamaica Bay, in the summer time, and there, camping out in a shady grove with a few friends, spend the days in fishing. Oliver Marshal and Henry Collins were common- ly his associates in these excursions. Dan Pfifer was often there; and Sim Hoagland drove over to the camp most days. Hiram and Dan had matches at fishing as they had at training and driving. Hiram took great catches of blue-fish when’ they were running ; but in spite of all his delicate manipulations of the line, — and he had a finger as true as that of a player on a harp-string, — he could never catch a sheep’s-head. Pfifer caught a few; but there was another of their friends who beat them both, far and away, in eatching this delectable and noble fish. It was William Shaw, another fine horseman, whose youth and manhood had been mostly passed in training runners. His death, some time ago, was suita- bly noticed. He went home ill from a party at Hiram’s, given to celebrate the wedding of his daughter to young Hiram Howe, and never left his bed alive. He died of a relapse of fever, contracted in the service of his country at New Orleans during the great war. Henry Collins was always on the fishing-excursions, and amused XXX BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH the others by his sallies of dry, quaint wit. His death was not long after that of Mr. Shaw; and it was a heavy blow to Hi- ram, Collins had been such a loving, faithful friend and compan- jon. It is, indeed, to be especially remarked, that Hiram Wood- ruff had, above most men, the gift of inspiring true affection. It was the pure sincerity and simplicity of his nature which effected this. He was as open and frank as a child: he could not even think a rascality ; and rascals as well as honest men knew it. Then his kindliness of disposition, and generosity, won the heart at once. If a neighbor wanted any thing, —if the poor, the sick, the aged, or the feeble wanted aid, —he gave it; not patronizingly or pomp- ously, but just as though he was paying them something that he owed. Alas! we have looked our last upon this great, loving, charitable, child-like man. He was not of a demonstrative nature, except among his cher- ished and trusted friends; but the least sign of suffering, or need of sympathy, in any one, opened the flood-gates of his heart. His face was square, with immense firmness about the jaw. His fore- head was broad and lofty; his eye, a deep, dark gray. It was eminently a thoughtful face; and there was a sweetness in his smile which will not be forgotten. Of late years the writer of this has been closely intimate with Hiram, and has eften pondered over his virtues and great parts. His scrupulous regard for the feelings of others was always shown when he mentioned other trainers and drivers. In the composition of his book he carefully avoided any thing that could by possibility wound or injure any of them. It was, too, his pleasure to mention them individually, so that he might leave a testimony to their capacity and worth. This was so like the man! He would do good by stealth. He began his work on the American Trotter at the earnest solicitation of Mr. Wilkes and other friends, who felt convinced, and at last con- vinced him, that, out of his vast store of wisdom and experience in relation to trotting-horses, he might set down much that would be of value to the world. It was highly appreciated. The people hailed it all over the country. English papers copied chapter after chapter at length; and his old horsemen friends harangued each other about it, declaring, “It’s capital, I tell you; and every word jest like Hiram! I didn’t -know that he could write any thing more than a letter; but, in writing about horses, he can beat ’emall\” Hiram himself took pride and interest in it; and here OF THE AUTHOR. xxxi in again he manifested another trait in regard to his wife. As soon as the paper arriv2d, containing his latest chapter, he peremp- torily ordered it to be taken up to Mrs. Woodruff. “ For,” said he to us, “she reads it out to the ladies that call upon her; and, be- tween you and me, she thinks it good!” Poor friend! he had great and just confidence in his wife’s capacity; but when ordering “The Spirit” up-stairs, as soon as it arrived, much to the dis- satisfaction of some who wanted to read it down-stairs, it never occurred to.him that he could have as many copies as he pleased. His uncle George and Crepe Collins were much pleased with ths work as it progressed; so were Oliver Marshall and Sim Hoag- land. Some fools thought he was not the author of it; as if any other living man but he, no matter what might be that man’s ca- pacity, could have produced it. His opinions about horses and horse-matters were decided when once formed; but he was far-seeing and cautious in the making of them. Mr. Bonner’s gray mare, Peerless, was at the very top of his esteem, — his model of a fast and lasting trotter. Like Rip- ton, Kemble Jackson, Flora ‘Temple, and so many others, she was formed by him. Dexter stood as high as any for racing-purposes. Hiram amazed us when, early in that famous. horse’s career, he predicted that he would beat the world. Many thought him al- most crazy to match Dexter against Stonewall Jackson of Hart- ford, three-mile heats. Dexter’s two greatest races in his hands were the two-mile heats to wagons; in which he beat Butler the second heat in 4m. 564s.; and the mile heats, three in five, in har- ness, in which he beat Butler and Vanderbilt in five heats. But- ler won the first and second heats, and Eoff considered that he had the money in his pocket. Odds of ten to one were laid upon the black horse, and great sums were pending. Dexter was sore and lame. Nothing but a mighty effort could save the race; but the great master of the art, the King of American Horsemen, was behind the brown gelding, and he now displayed one more of his grand masterpieces. He won the third heat. The fourth he won in the unprecedented time of 2m. 244s.; and Vanderbilt was dis tanced. The backers of the Contraband stood aghast. The men from the South Side gave a roar that might have been heard at Jamaica Bay. “We have got you,” they cried to the friends of Butler: “ Eoff is a-captain, but this is the Old Field-Marshal hera behind Dexter!” Thousands were present; but there was not a S XXxii BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH sound to be heard, save the tramp of these famous horses, as their wore famous drivers brought them along, in scoring for the decid- ing heat. Eoff drove with immense resolution and skill; but the hand of the great master was upon the reins of Dexter, and he won the fifth heat in the marvellous time of 2m. 244s. “ Now, Tl tell you what it is,” said a gentleman who had lost heavily on the race: “it is twenty or thirty per cent. in favor of any horse that Hiram Woodruff drives, —I don’t care who drives the other! I’ve paid dear enough for that opinion; and it’s mine!” Lady Emma was another held very high in the judgment of Hiram, and her owner was fast in his dearest esteem; but, at the end of the last season that the great trainer and driver was ever to see, the horse of his heart was Mr. Bonner’s chestnut, the fa- mous Auburn Horse. Very late last fall we took one of our ac- customed drives over to Hiram’s, and found all about the place in a sort of pleasant commotion. Hiram Howe, Pelham John, Long Tom Farrell, Dan Delahay, and several others, were full of what the Auburn Horse had done that morning. Nothing was ever seen like it, they averred, since old Pocahontas the pacer dis- tanced Hero in 2m. 174s. The horse had, unquestionably, come up the stretch with such an electric burst of speed as had amazed the spectators. It never was Hiram’s practice to talk about his horses to Mrs. Woodruff; but, on this occasion, he had no sooner returned from the course, than he went in, and told her that,he had never ridden so fast behind a trotter in his life as on that morning. This we had from Mrs. Woodruff the same day. When we reached Hiram, in the stable-yard, he made use of the very same expression. While we were talking, Mr. Bonner drove up. We all three went to the box, and Hiram stripped the chestnut. “He is,” said he, “the best balanced big horse in America!” After- wards, we all three stood in the autumn sun, by the garden-gate, and a conversation ensued. Hiram said, “I rode faster behind him this morning than ever I rode in my life.” Mr. Bonner was silent; and, it being our custom to stand up for the absent, we determined to put in a word or two for the gal- lant gray. So we said, “ Now, look here, Hiram: you rode at the rate of two minutes to the mile behind Peerless for a quarter. Capt. Moore will swear to it. Do you mean to say that you rode faster behind the Auburn Horse than behind the gray mare?” OF THE AUTHOR. Xxxiil “Faster than behind the gray mare? Faster than I ever rode behind any horse!” said he, with his resolute eye aud grave smile. Mr. Bonner was silent as Hiram said this with his hand up- raised; but we determined to have another word, so we at it again argumentatively. Hiram looked over toward the sea, where the sun was shining in the southern board; and he said, “If the weather holds good a few days longer, and there is a fair day and track next week, something will be done! ” “What do you think it will be?” He smiled and said, “ Mr. Bonner wants to know what I think, no doubt; and I don’t mind telling you what I expect, because you never blow things.” “Yes, yes: now, what do you expect?” “To wipe out all that has ever been done on this island.” “You mean all that has ever been done in harness?” “ All that has ever been done at all. Listen, now: I am not given to exaggeration, and I want to keep within limits. I am confident that I can drive that horse the first half-mile in 1m. 8s. If I can’t bring him home the other half in 1m. 10s. I ought to be horsewhipped. That will be 2m. 18s.” It happened that the weather got cold and bleak immediately after that delicious afternoon, and the course was not in order again; so the great trial never came off. Knowing the care, knowledge, and vast experience which Hiram brought to the making up of his opinions, and having witnessed the gravity and earnestness with which he advanced this as his settled conviction, we fully believe, that, under favorable circumstances, the chestnut could have done what he said. Therefore, we say that the Au- burn Horse filled his eye at the last moment when there was great ambition and speculation in it; and was the last, as well as the greatest, in point of speed, of those world-renowned trotters which were stabled in Hiram Woodruff’s vast brain and mighty heart. During the winter, Hiram’s health had not been good. He had several attacks of illness; and when he got a little better, he would get up and go about as though he had not been sick. This made strong calls upon his constitutional stamina, which had once been as good and perfect as his honesty and pluck. At his birth- day, on the 22d of February, he was well, and singularly happy Xxxiv BIOGRAPITICAL SKETCH and genial. He dined with his friends; consented to the wish of Mr. Parkss, of Brooklyn, to sit for his portrait, to be presented to his wife; and, finally, had the pony (the fifty-miler), brought into the parlor, among his friends, in order that he might expatiate upon his rare merits. Six days after that we saw Hiram for the last time, a fortnight before his death; and never, since our friend- ship began, did we see him more cheerful, bright, and genial than he was upon that day. It was a spring day, light and mild: wa found Hiram in the yard, and he hailed us with a cheery halloa, “Tm glad you’ve come: I’m getting ready for the next campaign | First of all, come and look at Quicksilver and Rosamond.” We answered that we were impatient to look at Pocahontas and Strideaway. He said, “Time enough.” We looked at the horses. We looked at his hogs. We surveyed the renowned mare and‘ her son. He never was more happy, never more plea- sant and wise. We said how we rejoiced to find him looking and feeling sowell. He put his hand upon our shoulder; and, with the smile we all knew and loved so well, he said, “I am not as well as I look, but I am better than I was most of the winter.” We then went and looked over his wagons and sulkies, which had all been painted and put in order for the season he was never to see. We talked about his book, and the plan of its conclusion was settled. “You must come here often,” said he: “I want to see you very often.” We replied, that, when the roads got good, we would often drive over : but he replied that there was no need to wait for the roads, Te had a plan to meet that difficulty: it was, that he would get a saddle and bridle, and we must ride over on horseback. “You can jump up and slip over here any time on horseback; and I'll see about the saddle and bridle to-morrow.” It is in some sort a consolation, that, at our last parting from this valued friend, he felt so happy, and was so kindly disposed to us. On the Sunday week following, he was taken sick with bilious vomiting in the middle of the night. Andrew Howe, his relative and confidential steward, was lying in the house sick, and died the next day. Hiram got worse; and a despatch was sent for his friend Mr. Marshall, who arrived on Thursday morning at day- light. Sim Hoagland had been constant in his attentions to his friend. Mrs. Woodruff was, of course, in sore distress, but still hopeful. The doctor, as Mr. Marshall entered, declared that a OF THE AUTHOR. XXXV change had taken place, and that he had great hopes. But this was fallacious. Even then the ‘Single warrior, in sombre harness mailed, Dreaded of man, and surnamed the Destroyer, The rampart wall had scaled.” Hiram was anxious to talk then, but Mr. Marshall wanted him to keep quiet; so he left him with Mrs. Woodruff, who had made him some beef-tea. Towards night he grew weaker and weaker. Through the long, sad watches of that mournful night he failed gradually, but retained his consciousness. Fondly pressing the hand of his dear wife, and with many a look of affection cast upon the brother of his heart, Marshall, and Hiram Howe, he gradually sank away, and died without a groan or pang, as a baby falls to sleep. It was ten minutes to four o’clock in the morning when he died; and the last clearly articulate word that he spoke was “Horse!” , The news of his death caused an extraordinary sensation. Thousands who had never seen him — business men, professional men, and idlers— spoke of it as the event of the time, and always with kindness and regret. It was the same all over the country, for there was not a man in America, except perhaps General Grant, esteemed by a greater number of people than Hiram Woodruff. The funeral was held on Sunday, in the afternoon. The weather was terrible for the season; and the roads so bad, that it was only by work like that with which pioneers precede an army, that the house of mourning was reached by many from a distance. The snow lay thick and deep, and fell all day. The wind howled from the east. White-bearded Winter had come back to shiver over the grave of this great, honest man. Nevertheless, there was a great concourse of people at the funeral. Full of attachment and regret, they had come from all parts to pay the last tribute of love and respect to their friend. The place was crowded in every part. About a hundred and fifty carriages and large sleighs were under the sheds all about. Some of them had been drawn by four horses ; and this was a wise forethought on the part of their owners. Hiram Jay in the parlor, in a handsome coffin of rosewood with silver-plated furniture. We say Hiram, because, as he lay there, he looked so natural and composed, that he seemed no cold corpse, but a composition that still had life in it, and might awake and XXXVi BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF THE AUTHOR. speak at any instant. The scene was very affecting. The coun- try people, who knew and loved Hiram well, had come from their farms and villages. When these stout yeoman looked upon his calm, quiet face, with its sweet smile, they broke down at once; and “eyes albeit unused to the melting mood” swam over with tears. Some few, including Dan Pfifer, could not trust themselves to meet him face to face. All the trainers and drivers were there, with most of the eminent owners of fast horses. The ladies were there in great numbers; and this was truly fitting, for Hiram was always distinguished for his ceremonious politeness to them. He was, in fact, when seen at his best, in person, in dress, in manners, and in mind, a thorough gentleman. The service was performed by the Rev. Mr. Munn, of East New York, in an impressive man- ner. And then the procession, with its mourners, and Oliver Marshall, Simeon D. Hoagland, William Whelan, Joseph Croch- eron, John Crooks, John I. Snedeker, and Wellington Simonson as pall-bearers, streamed along through the snow, to the cemetery- gate, and wound its way up the hillside, and past the lofty monu- ment, to the grave. It was a long time ere the most had reached the place; and many, indeed, never got there at all until after the clods from the spade fell on the coffin, and smote upon our ears all mortal fate. Hiram Woodruff lies near the summit of a lofty hill, which overlooks the south side of the Island and the great waters upon which he loved to sail. The beauties and the grandeur of nature are all about his last resting-place. When it is bleak and stormy, as it was that day, the sough of the wind seems to bear with it the deep roar of the majestic ocean. When it is fine, there is no lovelier spot on all the Island; and, standing near his place of rest, one can look out far and away over a world of life and fertile land and busy waters. Peace to him who sleeps on that hallowed summit! THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. I. Reason for writing the Book. — Necessity for Practical Experience in Train- ing. — The Author’s Experience. — Improvement in Tracks and Vehicles. — Causes of Improvement in Time.— Originality of the American System.—Its great Superiority to the English System.— Rules as to Breaking from.the Trot. HAVE often had applications from gentlemen in vari- ous parts of the country for advice and instruction in regard to the treatment of their horses, to which I have been unable to make satisfactory replies. My time has been too much taken up in training and driving the large number of horses placed in my care to admit of my writing letters, though I have always been willing to give such information as I could to those who sought it of me. In the course of the work I have now undertaken, the gentlemen who have applied to me, and those who might wish to do so, but yet, knowing my constant occupation, have refrained, will find all that it is in my power to communicate in regard to the management of trotting-horses. The persuasions and assur- ances of some of my friends have induced me to believe that the results of my thoughts and experiences, plainly set down, and illustrated here and there by such anecdotes and recol- lections of our famous trotters as, being in point, may most readily present themselves to my mind, will be interest- ing to the readers of this my work, and useful to the 37 38 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. vast number of persons who now keep good road-horses, if not fast trotters. It was not without some hesitation that I agreed to devote a whole winter to the work I have begun. I found, upon reflection, that it would not be very easy for me to convey in print my own ideas upon the sub- ject of training and driving; and my own experience with some hundreds of trotting-horses has convinced me, tlat any hope of teaching a man how to put a horse in condition by rule would be entirely fallacious. I say, then, at the outset, that this work is to be taken more as a guide and finger-post, showing the way to practical experience, than as a substitute for experience itself. Such general method as I have pursued with good results, I shall communicate; but I cannot undertake to relate the circum- stances constantly arising among horses in training, which have called, and always will call, for varied applications and abatements of the rule. Of these, the man in charge of the horse must be ‘the judge as they present themselves; and, if ~ he is not able to determine how far the gencral method may be intensified or relaxed in the case in hand, it is safe to say, that it will be more a lucky accident than any thing else if the trotter is fit when he comes to the post. I say, without any qualification, that a man can no more train horses by means of rules ascertained beforehand by other people than one can cure the complaints the human frame is subject to by books written by the most learned of the faculty. It would be a great deal easier for a clever man to write a good book upon a given complaint than to cure a case of it; and, if the writer was taken with the disorder himself, I have no doubt he would pitch his book on one side, and send for a practising physician. The fact that the man who is his own attorney has a fool for a client has passed into a proverb; and this is another instance of worthlessness of book-learn- mg, taken by itself. Yet books are very necessary for the making of doctors and instruction of lawyers ; and so, when I say that the work THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 39 T am going to produce is only calculated to be useful when used as a stepping-stone to experience, I do not really under- value it, as some may think. Besides, I intend to make it interesting to the general reader, as well as to him who is in quest of the rules and maxims of the trainer’s art. I also wish it to be understood at the outset, that very many clever horsemen will differ with me in regard to some of the things I shall lay down as proper to be pursued. I know it will be very often said by some of my associates of years ‘gone by, as they read these pages, “‘Old Blocks’ is wrong in regard to so-and-so;” but I can assure the reader that I shall recommend nothing but what I have tried, and in a measure proved myself. It is more than thirty years since I began to handle trot- ting-horses, and more than five-and-twenty since I had charge of Dutchman, the best, take him for all in all, of the old-time trotters. Somethings are done differently now from what they were then; yet there has not been any great change in the method we then pursued, nor has there been, in my opinion, as much change and improvement in our horses as some imagine. It is true that there are more fast trotters now than there ever were before, that the best time has been much cut down of late years, and that the driving on the road is a deal more rapid now than it was then. But then it is to be remembered that the tracks are now much better ordered than they were in former times, that the vehicles for trotting have been much lightened and improved, and that a corresponding improvement in roads and road- wagons has taken place. Besides, there are hundreds of horses trained nowadays to one that was handled by a really competent man then; and thus a greater amount of speed is developed in the multitude. And though it is not alto- gether clear why it should be so, there is no doubt in my mind about this, viz., that, as the excellence of the multitude increases, the excellence of the best among them will reach a higher standard. Except in exceptional cases, it is easier 40 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. to be the best among a few than the best among many; for the reason that among the many the mark necessary to be attained will generally be higher and more difficult. The improvement in the time of our trotters is, then, to be laid to the account of several causes; which include improvement in courses, vehicles, methods of training, style of driving, and in the trotting-horse himself. The system of teaching, training, driving, and riding the trotting-horse of this country has long been an art of itself, quite different, as far as I have heard, from that pursued in other countries. I look upon the English as a nation of horsemen, and their success with hunters and racers has been very great: but, ever since I can remember, we have been as much superior to them in handling the fast trotter as we are now. When Rattler was taken over there, twen- ty-five years ago, the gentleman who had the horse took good care to take William Whelan along to steer him; and, when the party got above themselves, and challenged the world, it was not resolved to buy Dutchman, and carry him across the water to clip their combs, until, after much press- ing, I had agreed to go, too, to drive him. A difference of only three hundred dollars in the price of Dutchman pre- vented our voyage to England. The gentleman —bhe was English, but had lived some years in this country — offered twenty-seven hundred dollars, and a black mare I then had in charge, for the horse. The Philadelphia party wanted three thousand dollars and the black mare; and so the deal fell through. If it had been consummated, the challengers in England, with Whelan and Rattler, would soon have found Woodruff and the Dutchman in the little island, come to take it up. So there we should have been,—a real American party, — disputing across the Atlantic, in the land of our ancestors, for pre-eminence in the sport our own country had already exalted and dignified at home. The handling of the English trotting-horses at that time was ag much inferior to the American system as their horses were LHE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 41 0 ours; and, though I say it myself, who belong to the pro- fession, it is not unfit to be said, that the American system of breaking, training, and driving, has mainly made our trotters what they are. ‘The English had the stock all along, just as much as we had; and it is our method of cultivation and perseverance that has made the difference between their fast trotter of a mile in three minutes and ours of two minutes and twenty-five seconds, or thereabouts. According to the best information at my command now, I find that a three-minute trotter in England is about as scarce an article as a two-thirty horse is here. This is the result of our method of breeding, training, and driving the _ trotting-horse in this country, aided by the enterprise and ingenuity which provide vehicles, harness, and all the para- phernalia of that combination of lightness with strength which is upon the plan of the best trotting-horse himself. It is, however, only fair to observe, that the English have had some rules in their match-trotting which probably acted as a hinderance to the making of the best time of which their horses were capable. The penalty of a break was such that the rider or driver would be afraid to push his horse up to the top of his speed. If it was a harness or wagon race, the , driver was compelled to pull up, and back the wheels when his horse broke. Liver so little backing of the wheels would do; but he was compelled to back them some. If it was under saddle, the rider had to turn his horse round when he broke. These rules must have been detrimental to the making of fast time, though as fair for one as another of the parties engaged in the match. Our American rule on this subject favors speed; and some think, indeed, that, as often administered, it favors breaking and running, to the disad- vantage of the steady, honest horse that keeps to his gait, and wins, if he wins at all, by trotting. Our law on this point is good enough, however, provided it is lawfully administered; and it does not operate as a check to the driver in obtaining the best speed of which his 42 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. -- horse is capable. I ‘do not myself admire those horses which are more relied upon to win for aptness in breaking and running a little when in a tight place, than for down- right speed and bottom at a fair trot; but, as I have said to gentlemen who have complained that such was the case, the remedy is sufficient, if the judges will fearlessly apply it. If the judges did this, we should soon hear no more about drivers “learning horses to break.” I think that the pride of our art in training and driving is to teach them to maintain their trot, and not to break. If the horse may break and run, I can easily see how it may be beneficial to teach him to break; but if, when he breaks, he is to be im- mediately pulled to a trot, or pulled up, I think it will be better to teach him not to break. My remarks in this chapter are merely prefatory, as will be seen. Indeed, we must jog along gently with this matter until we have got through certain preliminary work, and put the fast trotter into regular training. I purpose, then, to take a firm hold of the reins, and increase the speed until the parties interested in the performance think that we are going along fast enough, and can stay the distance, even though it be three-mile heats. It must, however, never be lost sight of by the reader, in the course of this work, that Iam a practical man, one mainly governed by the teach- ings of experience, and therefore not inclined to the laying- down of mere theories in regard to the training and general treatment of horses. If I had had less to do with them for nearly forty years, I might be more positive in my asser- tions than I now intend to be. Between the outward forms of such trotters as Dutchman, and Peerless, or Flora Tem- ple, there is a vast difference; and between these types, more or less nearly approaching the one or the other, the variety of form is immense. I have been led to believe that the constitutional differences, including temper, dispo- sition, and that intangible but very potent quality called pluck, are as numerous as the varieties of form. Now, in THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 43 the management and training of the horse, the general rules which are applicable in nearly all cases must be re- laxed, or stringently followed, according to the constitu- tion, disposition, and capacity of the individual horse in hand. It would be easy enough for me to say, “Give the horse in training plenty of work, but not too much.” ‘The advice would be good, though general. The trouble would be in finding out how much was plenty and not too much. Here the judgment and experience of the man in charge would have to be carefully exercised; and if, by perusing this work as it progresses, the reader can master some of my experience, and make it his own, I shall be satisfied. IL: Handling of the Colt, — The Trot a Natural Gait.— Great Speed the Result of Long Handling. — Method for the Colt. — Moderation best in Feeding. — Early Maturity followed by Early Decay.—The Trotter should live Many Years. — Feeding of Weanlings.—No Physic unless the Colt is Sick. — Feeding of the Yearling. —The Starving System worse than High Feeding. : HE training of the trotting-horse is really to be com- menced from the time he is handled when a colt; for it is not simply the putting of him in su@h bodily condition as may enable him to exert all his powers, but also the careful and continued cultivation of his gifts as a trotter. What- ever encourages his tendency to make the trot his best way of going, is a part of his training; and therefore the natural disposition to trot must be improved from the very first. I have heard it said by some that there is no natural disposi- tion in a horse to trot, or rather was none until men had handled him, and induced him to use that mode of action. It is a very common notion that the horse has but two natural paces,— the walk and the gallop,— and that trotting is wholly artificial. I have seen this set down in some books, but I venture to deny it. My conviction is, that the trot is natu- ral to the horse; and I feel bound to give some reasons for my belief. In the first place, then, I ask whether a colt can now be found any where that does not trot sometimes, and that when he is by the side of his dam, before ever the hand of a man has been laid upon him? If it is said that this results from the long -domestication of his ancestors, my reply will be, that it happens among the produce of horses whose ancestors for-more than a century —ay, for 44 : THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 45 more than two—have never been used for trotting pur- poses, and never were taught to trot at all, if it is true that the Arabs of the Desert only use their horses at the two so- called natural paces, —the walk and the gallop. Besides, although I have never been in foreign parts myself, I have been informed by gentlemen of observation and credit, whose means of noticing this point have been wider if not greater than my own, that wild horses trot when moving about at ease, or at play, or coming towards an object. It is true, that, if they are at all alarmed, they immediately strike into a gallop; but this only shows that the gallop is the best natural pace for speed, and not that the trot is no natural pace. J am also informed that other wild animals of desert places, such as wild asses, zebras, quaggas, and the like, sometimes trot; and, if I had not been told so, I should have inferred it from the fact that almost every ani- mal that goes on four legs, whether domesticated among us or wild in our country, trots at times. Deer trot in the woods: I have seen them do it. The largest and noblest of our native animals is the elk, and he is a trotter. If any of my readers, when riding in the Central Park, will take occasion to observe the elk that was sent to Mr. Wilkes from St. Louis for that institution, I will bet a trifle that they will see her trot, and go a pretty good trot, too, if she is put up to her best pace. Away, then, with the notion that the trot is wholly an artificial gait. If it were, I think the attempt to breed trotters would have been a failure; whereas, everybody knows that it has been success- ful. There is, however, a mixture of truth in the assertion that the trot is an artificial gait. It is not the readiest way for the horse to go at speed. A very poor running-horse — I mean a turf-horse —could distance the best trotter that ever was started; and the best trotters never reach their best speed until they have undergone a good deal of hand- ling and cultivation. This handling, from the very first day that the colt begins to eat, should be very different, in 46 THE TROTTING HORSE OF AMERICA. my judgment, from the method I have seen the best breed- ers and trainers of thoroughbred runners adopt with their stock. Now, to begin with the colt. Just as soon as the mare is quiet while you are doing so, you may handle the colt. Do it in such a manner as to make him tractable and kind. Speak softly to him, encourage him to come up and smell of your hand; and, when you touch him, do so gently and soothingly. From the first week of the horse’s life until the last, you will find that he will be inclined to do what you require of him, provided you can make him understand what it is. Some men that have hold of horses apparently don’t know themselves, and therefore it is not to be won- dered at that the horse don’t. Just as soon as you get familiar with the colt, which will be very soon if you com- mence while he is very young, rub his head occasionally, pat him, and sometimes pick up one of his legs. Do it gently; and by so doing you will teach him to let it be done quietly when the time comes at which it must be done somehow. It is understood, of course, that the mare and colt have shelter at night, and run out during the day, — on fine days, at any rate. Now, if the young one is never touched until you want to take hold of him for some needful purpose, you will find that he has become wild, and will try to break things before you can manage him. The breeders of race-horses understand this very well, and they commonly take great pains with their colts. But as to early feeding, their method is one which I advise the breeders of trotters not to follow. It is, that as soon as the colt will eat bruised oats, which will be at less than two months old, he is to have all that he can consume. _ N’ ay, I find that one gentleman, and one of a great deal of ability, too, in that line, advises to begin with giving him oatmeal] in gruel before he can eat the bruised oats. This is to be followed up with four quarts or more of oats a day, when he is weaned, besides the pasturage. I say to the reader of THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 47 this, do no such thing with the colt that is to be a trotter, — or, rather, do it with great moderation. Never mind oat- meal gruel; never mind bruised oats while he is with hig dam. The milk of the mare, she being kept in good heart, and the grass, will afford her colt all the nourishment he needs, and ought to have. This is Nature’s plan: the other is the “forcing system,” and ever so much more artificial than the trotting-gait. I do not undertake to disparage the method pursued by the race-horse men, so far as it only concerns their own purposes. That purpose I take to be early maturity ; and I am convinced that very early maturity will not be advisable in the case of the fast trotter. Early maturity means early decay, in nineteen cases out of every twenty. Now, in order that a horse may become a first-rate trot- ter, it is necessary that he should last a good while. He won’t jump up to his greatest excellence at three years old, or at six either, if his excellence is going to be very great; but will probably be improving most when the thoroughbred horse of the same year has been long gone from the turf. I don’t know of a single thing in nature that comes to maturity early and lasts long. This system, then, is not calculated for the trotter; because to be great it is absolutely necessary that he should last long. The case is different as regards the running-horse; for his career may be brief, and yet very brilliant. It is to be considered, too, that the constitution of the colts is different. The thoroughbred horse is naturally inclined to mature at an earlier period than any other, I think; and it is certain, that, being of a leaner and more wiry build, he may stand high feeding at an earlier period than the half-bred trotter. And besides all this, I have other reasons against giving young colts much grain. The physiologists all agree, that, in order to thrive, the horse, young or old, must not only have his stomach supplied with a sufficient quantity of nutritious food, but also with enough matter not so highly 48 THE TRUTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. autritious to distend it. A horse or a colt fed only on the substances which go to make up his substance would starve, though you gave them to him in the greatest abundance. Why this is they do not know, and I am sure I don’t; but it seems to me that it is a reason for not cloying the young animal with all the highly-nutritious food he will eat. If his appetite is satisfied with oats, he will not be likely to eat the grass and hay that nature requires. There is another thing on this point which has occurred to me, but I only throw it out as a suggestion. While the animal is young, a good distension of the stomach is calculated to produce that roundness of rib which we see in so many of our best horses. Now, this capacity of the carcass, if it proceeds in part from proper distension of the stomach,— and by that I do not mean the paunch,—is not going to be obtained by the feeding of food in the concentrated shape. Bulk is required; and the pulp and essence need not be given in large quantity until the organization is formed, and extraordinary exertion is required of the horse. When the colt is weaned, I should give him from three pints to two quarts of graina day. The quantity may be varied according to his size; for, if he gives indications of a large frame and loose habit, he will require more than a compact colt, who keeps in good order, and fills out with substance as he grows up. The pasturage is still the main thing; and, if that is good, two quarts of grain will be much better than more of the latter, and little or nothing to be picked up on the bare herbage. With proper care and attention, a good bite of grass may be secured for the colts until very late in the fall; and they should have all the hay they will eat when it begins to fail. The grain should be oats of good quality. I do not like to let colts have corn at all when young; and even to old horses I think it should be fed very sparingly. In the winter of the first year, the colt must have a good place to run in, and be well housed at night, and regularly fed and watered. It THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 49 must be understood, from what I have said above, that he is never to be turned out to take his chance among a lot of promiscuous stock, old horses, cows, calves, heifers, and what-not. If he is, you may look for a wretched young thing, standing shivering on the hillside, and hardly able to put one leg before the other, instead of the gay and frisky colt that you had when he nibbled the growing grass by the side of his dam. All along, from the time of his weaning, it will do good, and can do no harm, to give him a nice, warm mash, with a few oats mixed through it, now and then. It does the whole system of the alimentary canal good, im- proves the digestion, and increases the nutrition. There need be no fear of its scouring the colt; and, in cases of scouring, I have very often found that it cured it. Give the colt no physic unless you are sure that there is something the matter with him. Physic is to cure sickness. Its pre- vention belongs to diet, careful observation, and general treatment. When the colt is a yearling, his allowance of oats may be increased to four quarts a day. His other food must be good and abundant; and that is to be the main-stay. My principle is to give oats sparingly until the time comes to put the horse to some work; and I think it will commonly result in this: that the horse will have all the size that in the order of nature he should have had, and be of a much hardier, healthier, and more enduring constitution than he would have been if he had been forced along rapidly by means of all the highly-stimulating food that he could be got to consume. It will take longer to mature him by feed- ing only moderately of grain at this early period, but he is meant to last longer; and I repeat that early maturity is not favorable to long endurance. By the other method, you may show me a colt at two years old that looks more like a horse than mine will at three; and at three more like a grand horse than mine will at five. But now I shall begin to overtake you. When yours is five or six, he is at 4 50 THE TROTTING-IIORSE OF AMERICA. his very best, perhaps past his best. Put them together at eight, and I have got by far the best and most useful horse. At ten, you have probably got no horse at all worth men- tiouing: while mine is now “all horse,” and in his true prime. " If anybody thinks to follow the old starving, corn-stalk fodder, fed-in-the-snow system, under cover of what I have said on this subject, he must go to the devil his own road. My system is one of generous feeding, but not of stuffing a young colt with all the highly-stimulating food he can pos- sibly be got to swallow. Above all, avoid Indian corn in all shapes for young colts, and take care that they have plenty of pure water. If there is not a running-stream in the pasture where they are kept, be sure that they are watered at least three times a day, and that they have all they want. We shall next come to the regular breaking, harnessing, and driving of the young colt in his two-year-old stage, which is of very great importance to his after character. Il. Feeding of the Two-Year-Old.— Mouthing and Bitting. — Lounging. — Tem- per.—- Leading on the Road.— Much Walking to be avoided. — When harnessed, a Wagon better than a Sulky.— Amount of Work to depend on Constitution and Condition. — Remedy for Broken Gait.— Pulling to be avoided. — Increase of Feed. N the two-year-old, in spring, the grain is to be increased .. to five, or even six quarts, of good oats a day; and now the colt is to be mouthed and bitted. He should have a good loose box, with an outside lot attached. It is unne- cessary to describe the processes of mouthing, bitting, and lounging. The latter must not be continued long at a time. Half an hour will be enough; but, if he takes it well and steps off gayly, you may keep him moving a little longer. He must be lounged round both ways, changing the direc- tion from time to time; for so giddiness will be prevented, and the bit brought alternately to both sides of the mouth. Great care must be taken not to overdo the thing at this time; for, when the colt gets fatigued and worried, his tem- per begins to suffer as well as his condition. It would be easy to repair the latter, but the mischief done to the former in early life can seldom be repaired. I am convinced that nine out of ten of the horses we find mischievously dis- posed, or even positively vicious and treacherous, are so by reason of having been improperly handled when young. There was Dutchman — he was not a sulky horse nor vi- cious by nature. You could get him to do his best when- ever you called for it on the course or the road, but in the stable, look out! He wanted a great deal of watching. If a man attempted to put his harness on or take it off, 61 52 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. without tyirg him up, he was lucky to get away with the loss of most of his clothes. Dutchman would take hold like a bull-terrier, and shake till his, hold came away. He was also a kicker. In ordinary cases, I would not give much for a horse of this temper for the performance of any thing very great upon the course; but like Flying Childers and English Eclipse, both of whom, I am told, were ill-tem- pered, and ill-formed in some points, Dutchman was “a horse above ordinances.” In handling the two-year-old trotter, then, the utmost care, as well as gentleness and firmness, should be exer- cised. In former times, it was not customary to handle colts until they were five years old; but experience has since shown that they can very well be broken at two years old, and can be got to trot at three. The matter depends not upon the doing, but upon the manner of its doing. If the breaker or owner finds that the young thing can trot a lit- tle, and is always hankering to see him “do it again,” or do a little better, he will soon have one that can’t and won’t do any thing worth his or anybody else’s seeing. Progress, “to be good and safe, must be gradual, but it should be con- tinual. There is no sense at all in working a colt along so that he can trot well at three or four years old, and then turning him out until he is five or six. He should be kept at it gently, so as to hold fast all he knows at least; and this he is sure to do if not forced off his legs. When the colt has been mouthed, bitted, and lounged in the lot, he will be led out upon the roads, and thus accus- tomed to meet and pass vehicles, horsemen, cattle, and the like. He is then to be broken to the saddle; during which process he should be ridden about the country roads, and not kept out so long at a time as to become leg-weary. The weight upon his back must be remembered; and the rider should often ease him by dismounting, and leading him. A great deal less walking is now given to horses of all ages than was formerly the case. When I was a boy, and riding THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERIOA. 53 fur my uncle, an immense deal of walking exercise was thought to be beneficial. I used to ride horses as much as twenty miles a day, at a walk; and it was deemed needful to do this all along during their preparation. I have long seen the fallacy of that, and discontinued it. The old no- tion was, that it improved the horse’s bottom; but I am sat- isfied that the usual effect was to make him leg-weary, to dog the heart out of him with this monotonous, tread-mill sort of work, and so take away his speed. He-might go a distance then, in the race, because he went comparatively slow. It must always be remembered that a slow horse can keep at his best pace longer than a fast horse can at his, though in condition, bottom, and game they be equal. In training horses now, I usually walk them but once a day, and then only for a comparatively short distance. When the colt is broken to the saddle, his work in har- ness is to be commenced. It should be to a skeleton wag- on, not to a sulky; for the reason that, with the four wheels to the former vehicle, the weight will be kept off his back. Many use the sulky, but I am satisfied that the wagon is best. There will be no difficulty in getting the colt to draw if he has been handled rightly up to this time. Our system in this is radically different from that of the Eng- lish, as I am informed. Instead of putting the colt into the shafts of a single vehicle, and coaxing him to go off nicely with it, by which means, when he starts, he feels that he is doing something, and soon becomes satisfied and likes it, the English begin his harness-work by putting him into a double-break wagon, which weighs about half a ton, by the side of an old horse. When the colt is at home be- tween the shafts, begin to drive him moderately. Take ham sometimes on the track, and at other times on the road. Don’t keep him dogging along at the same rate, but give him lively spurts now and then. By this means he will extend himself without hurting himself, and will improve in speed. As long as he does this, you are doing right, and 54 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. he is doing well. As soon as he seems to get tired of it, and appears to be either restive or sluggish, let him up a little. You must watch for these symptoms carefully; for this is a critical time. If you overdo him much now, it will be a long while before he is himself again. The work must be according to his constitution, to the rate of his growth, and to his heartiness of feeding. This jogging will probably be about five or six miles a day, and the spurts not above a quarter of a mile. He must be care- fully watched to ascertain whether he improves or not. If not, he is to be let up a bit; for his improvement at this age ought to go on all the time, und will if he is all right. Rapid improvement, however, must not be expected: ever so little will do, but it ought not to stop altogether. At this time, you will often see him break his gait; and this is an indication that he has had too much work for his age, and has got sore on it. But it may not arise altogether from overwork; therefore, put the rollers on, and work him gently, changing them from leg to leg as required. The colt now finds something on his legs, besides the boots, which was not there before; and it will alter his way of going. He must be nicely handled now. You must use all your obser- vations and best judgment, with a light but firm hold of the reins. In all probability, he will trot square again with the rollers on; and, as soon as he does so, let him up fora little while. When the broken gait shows, he must not on any account be kept on without a change; for, if he is, it may become confirmed. On the other hand, I never like to let them up until I have got them to trot square again; for, if they are so let up, they may not trot square again when their work is resumed. In all his work, the colt is to be taught to go along without being pulled hard. His mouth may be easily spoiled for life by teaching him to tug at the bit now; and he is not at all likely to make a fast trotter, if to trot he must always have his weight upon the driver’s arms. There have been some fast trotters and stayers that THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 55 were hard pullers; but they would have been better horses but for that fact. Still, it is to be remembered, that, when going fast, the colt or horse will often want to get his head down, and feel the bit sensibly. He will not, in nine cases out of ten (or cannot, which comes to the same thing), do his best without it. The object of the driver should then be to support him with as little pull as possible, but still to support him. The horse with a good mouth will always feel the driver’s hand; and, when the latter is as skilful as he ought to be for the handling of the first-rate, fast trot- ter, he may play upon the rein with a touch like that of a harper upon the strings, and the horse will answer every touch with the music of the feet and wheels. On the other ‘hand, if, when the colt takes hold of the bit, the driver does nothing but hold on like grim death to a dead darkey, it soon becomes a pulling-match between them ; and, before the colt is of age to trot fast and stay a distance, his pulling has become a vice of the most troublesome and mischievous description, his mouth has become so callous that he pulls a wagon and driver along by the reins instead of the traces, and, by the dead drag between him and the man behind him, he loses a great deal of the power that will be wanted to sustain him when the pinch comes. It is not to be forgotten, however, that many trotting-horses must be pulled considerably to get them to trot fast, and keep tret- ting. When this is the case, it is utterly useless to expect to get rid of the pull and preserve the trot by means of sub- stituting a severe bit for the plain snaffle. It will not do at all; because it is not a certain amount of severity on the mouth that the horse wants, but a sort of stay, upon which he can fling himself in the flying trot, and without which he is either unable or unwilling to put out his best efforts. There was a notable instance of this in the trotting-horse Alexander, which was taken to England many years ago, and could not be got to trot a bit by those who had purchased him, expecting great things. Afterwards Bill Wheian went 56 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. over with Rattler; and the gentlemen who had Alexander no sooner saw him ride the former against the Birmingham mare than they got him to go and look at Alexander. Whelan found the horse in his stable, well taken care of, and in fair condition; so that, at first, he was at a loss to know why he would not trot. However, he told them to throw a saddle on him, and let him take a little jog with him. Torthwith, the groom came out of the harness-room with a bridle and bridoon-bit; whereupon says Whelan, “What are you going to do with that?” “Put it on Alexander.” “No, you don’t!” says Whelan, and went into the room to look out a bridle and bit for himself. There was, he says, a tremendous array of all sorts of bits, and instruments of torture, that had been got together “to hold Alexander.” He managed, however, to find a plain snaffle, and put that on him. Everybody there looked at him as if he was a luna- tic; but Bill jumped into the saddle, and jogged away with Alexander. He coaxed him, and clucked to him; and by and by Alexander, as he lengthened his stride and quick- ened his action, began to pull upon the plain snaffle. But Whelan was something of a puller himself; and, instead of his pull being the main haul of strength and stupidity, the hand of a master was upon the bridle. He warmed Alex- ander up in a good stretch, and then brought him back by the starting-place at such a rate as amazed the Englishmen present. “That’s the way we ride our trotters in America,” said Whelan. “ Alexander is as good as ever he was. You may match him against any thing in this country but Rattler; and J’ll engage he won’t lose it, if I ride him.” A match was soon made; and the American horse Alex« -ander, ridden by Whelan, won it with ridiculous ease. I have mentioned this for the purpose of impressing upon the reader the immense importance of a light, firm, sensational hold upon the.reins. Mere dragging is of the utmost mis- THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 57 chief. There is a kind of magnetic touch which the horse no sooner feels than he seems inspirited and animated with new life; and this is especially the case when he is a little tired. ‘The right kind of touch and movement of the reins and bit is worth more in an emergency than all the whip- cord and whalebone in the world. As the training, or rather breaking, of the two-year-old goes on, and his growth advances with the season, his feed may be increased. He may have six quarts of oats, or even eight, if he is large and a good worker, with as much good hay as he will eat up clean. This, however, is to be reduced when there is occasion to stop his work and exercise; for instance, when he has been let up after having been going with a broken gait. He ought to be allowed to nibble a lit- tle fresh grass night and morning, and should sometimes have two or three carrots sliced up with his feed. Some will say, “ When he has been let up, there is a fine chance to physic him:” but my maxim is, that, if the colt is in good bodily health, and the operations of the internal organs are going on right, he does not need physic; and there is no use in a violent interference with the course of nature. In the morning, before the colt is hitched up to go to work, give a slight feed, —say a quart and a pint of oats, —and let him drink about two quarts of water. On days that his work is not to be done early, his feed in the morning may be in- creased; but its quantity should be regulated by the hour at which he will be driven. At night, he is always to have all the water he wants. His temper and disposition are to be carefully watched, and so are those of the lad who takes care of him. The boy ought to have a pride in, and an affection for, a colt in his charge; and, if he has not, he shall not be long about a colt of mine. A lad who does not show an active liking for the horse he looks after almost always neg- lects him; and, wherever I detect the absence of this feeling in one about my stables, I change his occupation, or send him away altogether. But, as a genezal rule, the boys are 58 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMER.CA. very fond of their horses, especially of colts that show prom- ise; and, in these cases, it is more likely that they will do harm by over-feeding than by neglect. This is to be looked after; for, though the amount of feed be measured out to each lad, I have known many that will be always watching slants to get an extra quart of oats for their colts, or will even carry ears of corn about in their pockets to shell into the manger. See that the colt is fed as you wish him to be, rather than as the boy who looks after him wants to feed him. IV. Effects of Early Development. — Colts often overworked. — Fast Three-Year Olds and Four-Year Olds. — Risk of hurting Stamina. — Earlier Maturity of Running-Horses. — Evils of over-training Colts. HE question as to whether the early development of trotting-horses will have a tendency to impair their endurance in point of time is one of great interest and im- portance. Theoretically, some years ago, it was generally held that it would do so; but there is some reason to believe that this was a mistake. Still, I am satisfied that unless the work is given in a limited and judicious manner, there will be very great danger of its having a pernicious effect on the young colt. At present, we have hardly seen enough of the young trotters trained at three and four years old to determine, absolutely, whether the practice is altogether prudent or otherwise. A great deal depends upon the con- stitution and development of the colt himself; and still more, perhaps, upon the sagacity and care of the man who has him in charge. In many casés which have come under my observation, young things have been overworked; and, when it was found that they began to hitch and hobble, a good let-up would do more to restore the stroke than any thing else. It is quite certain to my mind that there is some risk in the training of colts to such a mark as shall fit them to trot mile heats at three years old; and some that have displayed uncommon fast time in public at their three and four year old stages, would probably have been much better off to-day, if they had never been put through 59 60 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. the strong preparation necessary to the accomplishment of those feats. It does not follow, however, that a subsequent failure of a horse to carry out his early promise resulted from the fact that he was trained at an early age. These colts are liable to the vicissitudes which attend other horses; and, therefore, they may go amiss in a manner which in nowise depends on their early work. Still, there is a presumption where a fast colt gives out at a time of life when he ought to improve, that he had too much work for his stamina at three or four years old; and, with one of much promise at three, I should decline to match him, unless I was convinced that I had a tolerably easy thing. It is not the fast trotting that will do the mischief, but the amount of work needful to put the youngster in fix for a repeating race. Yet it is» well known that some colts and fillies who did great things in public at three and four years old have since turned out good horses. It will have been gathered from what I have said hereto- fore, that my system contemplates the development of much speed without much work. Some may say that this is impossible; but my experience is that it is quite practicable, and a great deal more likely to be followed by the result desired, than keeping the colt continually hammering at all he knows. The system which I have laid down heretofore for the management of the two-year-old is still to be fol- lowed in its general principles when he is three, with such modifications as his increase of age justifies. It will be much better to err on the side of a little indulgence, than to run the risk of knocking him off his legs ahd so over- board, by too much work. The first race that I remember between three-year-old trotters was some thirty-four years ago. It took place on the Hunting-Park Course, Philadel- phia, and there were three engaged. Peter Whelan had Gipsy, George Woodruff had a gray filly that I looked after, and there was another cne. Gipsy won it in two THE TROTTiNG-HORSE OF AMERICA. 61 heats, and the time was somewhere about three minutes and seven seconds. We thought it gocd at that period, and so it was. In considering the fast time made by our best trotters of late years, we ought not to forget that the tracks and all the appliances have been improved, as well as the horses. Go upon the Fashion and Union courses in the trotting-season, and you will find them so ordered as to be as smooth as a bowling-alley. It is scarcely necessary to say that the courses thirty years ago were very different. The next very prominent trot between young horses was that in which Ethan Allen defeated Rose of Washington when they were four years old. It was the first time that a young stallion had appeared in public at that age; but Holkam and Roe had great confidence. Ethan was indeed a superior colt, and has since turned out a superior horse. He had a good one to beat, too, in Rose of Washington ; and she has also turned out well. It cannot be said that their training and race hurt either of them; but it must not be forgotten that both were in the hands of wary and experienced men. ‘Their time (2m. 36s.) was the best then, but it has since been very much reduced in Kentucky. Lady Emma affords another instance of speed and handling when young, with subsequent improvement into a first-rate, fast, and lasting trotter. At three years old she went half a mile in public in one minute nineteen and a half seconds, and a mile in two minutes fifty-two seconds, or thereabouts. The training and racing she had as a three-year-old did not at all impair her bottom, as her more recent performances have abundantly shown. In this regard, I look upon Lady Emma as a strong case in point. She steadily increased her speed every year of her training, and in bottom she was second to none. A friend of mine, who is a noted admirer of running- horses, has always insisted that this mare was thrown back to some ancestor in the pedigree of Old Messenger — very likely Flying Childers himself, he says. It is true that she i} 62 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. looked like a thoroughbred four-miler ; but I would not take it upon me to affirm that the likeness came from such a remote ancestor. Shepherd Knapp and Jessie were another pair that were trained early, and with no ill-effect, even though their race was one of uncommon severity. They were four years old, and trotted five heats, the best of which was two minutes and forty seconds. It was the second heat, and was won by the filly after she had previously won the first. Upon seeing the time of this heat, I concluded that the colt could beat her; and he won the three subse- quent heats, the best of them being in two minutes forty- one seconds. But though, in view of his recent doings in France, it cannot be said that this severe race did the colt any permanent injury, it would be too much to affirm that it did him any good. Next year, while in training for his match with Harry Clay, he continually hit himself in the elbows, by reason of excessive knee-action as it appeared; and this prevented the bringing of him up to the mark. This horse recently trotted two miles and a half in France, in six minutes and fourteen seconds; which is a trifle better than the rate of two-thirty to the mile. The mare Cora was another very fast trotter at an early age. She went in two minutes and thirty-seven and a half seconds, at three years old, in Kentucky; and her improve- ment since has been very marked. She was sent to me by her then owner in 1866, but did not remain long enough to be put in condition. Within a week or ten days, she was sold for a very large sum to a gentleman of great ex- perience and knowledge in respect to trotting-horses. Like Lady Emma, this mare is noted for bottom as well as speed, —a proof, I think, that her early training never hurt her stamina. But I do not say that she would not have been just as good without quite so much of it as she had at three years old; and, unless there is some great object in view, I should not subject a good three-year-old to a strong prepa- tation. If, however, a man can sell a colt at three or four THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA, 63 years old, for eight, nine, ten, or eleven thousand dollars, by being able to show great speed and ability to repeat, it is an object worth some risk and trouble. It is by no means certain that the colt will ever attain to the rank of a first-rate trotter, even though he be very fast at three or four years old, and the training by which his precocious speed was developed has not hurt his stamina, his temper, or his legs. I think that the first class of trotting-horses will still be very select; though, other things being equal, a fast four-year-old is more likely to reach it than one not so fast. The instances we have had, however, of wonderful trot- ters that never exhibited any extraordinary speed until they were from six to ten years old, cannot be disregarded. I shall have occasion to particularize them hereafter, when we come to speak of the training of the matured trotter. Mean- time, I need only mention Flora Temple, Mr. Bonner’s mares Peerless and Lady Palmer, and the late little horse Prince. But as long as customers are to be found for fast three and four year olds at very high rates, they will cer- tainly be trained; and my object is to induce the owners and handlers to guard against the forcing severity and the heart-breaking dogging with which the process is too often accompanied. There is another reason likely to be sufficient to induce gentlemen to train three-year olds; which is, that it is often desirable to show the produce of stallions at as early a period as possibie. This has no doubt operated quite as strongly with the Kentucky breeders as the desire of get- ting high prices for the colts they trotted. All the fast colts that they have shown there have not, however, been equally fortunate with Cora. Ericsson, who made the best four-year-old time, and another that went with him, have not improved upon their colt form. The gray colts raised by Mr. Alexander, and recently sold at high figures to gen- tlemen in this vicinity, may have better luck. Another gray that showed much speed and cleverness at 64 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. a very early age was Mr. Hall’s colt, Young America, by Hoagland’s Gray Messenger. He trotted two races at two years old, on this Island, and won them both. In the first trot he beat a colt by Ethan Allen, and in the next defeated Rocky Hill. The time of this last was about three min- utes and six seconds. The produce of this gray horse of Hoagland’s inherit the trotting gift very strongly from him, together with the hearty constitution and cast-iron legs that have commonly been found united in the descend- ants of Old Messenger. Another thing was, that he got most of them gray and in his own likeness. The premature death of this horse was much to be regretted; for his cover seems to have been almost, or quite, as sure to bring a trotter as that of Hambletonian. His colt out of the Flatbush Maid, and another one of the same age out of Lady Moscow, have had the benefit of a good sound tuition without any forcing and they are a very good example of what may be done with four-year-olds without hurting them in the smallest degree. Blonde is another of the same strain and stamp, and there is a suspicion out that she is very fast. The colt Bruno, by Hambletonian, out of a mare said to be of French origin, is another very remarkable instance of great trotting speed early developed. There is no question in my mind about his ability to have beaten any thing that has yet appeared upon the trotting-turf at four years old; und as there is no reason to believe that he has been at all injured by his training up to this time, the presump- tion is that he will be in the first class of trotters. Taken altogether, I look upon Bruno’s three-year-old race as more remarkable than that of Cora in Kentucky, though her three-year-old time was about a second better than he made. The long-scoring, the repeating of the heat, and the shutting-up of an enormous gap during the last, con- tributed to enhance the marvel of the performance. It may be doubted whether the taxing of a three-year- old’s speed and endurance with such severity ought not to THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 65) be avoided. My own opinion is against it; and therefore I should not make a match in which a colt of that age was likely to be called upon to exert all his powers, unless the circumstances were extraordinary. A great deal, however, depends upon the constitution and forwardness of the colt. A handy, vigorous, clean-actioned little fellow like Bruno, may be more fit to trot a race at three years old than a gangling, loose horse would be at five. The trainer and owner, with all the circumstances before them, must judge for themselves: but, as a general rule, do not treat your colts worse than you do your criminals; if the matter is doubtful, give the colt the benefit of the doubt,— refuse to conclude the match if it is not made, and pay forfeit if it is. When I say doubtful, I do not mean the winning of the money, because that is always doubtful, but the inflicting of an injury upon the colt, either to his legs, temper, or stamina, by too much exertion in preparing or in trotting. If, after all, a man makes up his mind to risk young things in tight places, where the violent and continued exertion of all their powers will probably be called for, it may be well enough for him to approach in his system of raising and feeding his colts, the forcing method of the running-horsemen. In order that the colt may be able to stand up under the treatment calculated for an older horse, he must be made o/d as soon as possible; and strong feeds of oats from the first time he can be got to eat them is the way to do this. Thereby the time of maturity may be anticipated; but at the expense of the thoroughness of the maturity, I think, and certainly at the great risk of ita endurance. As I before had occasion to state, rapid arrival at maturity is almost always followed by premature decay, and this is especially the case with things forced by high feeding when very young. It is also to be kept in mind that the running-colt, during his training and ‘his race, has some compensation for his youth in the way of weight, which the young trotter cannot have. A two-year-old colt 66 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. running in this country will only carry a very light boy, and the three-year-old weight is but ninety pounds for colts and eighty-seven for fillies; whereas the young trotter will have to pull as much as George Wilkes, Lady Emma, or General Butler, in a race in harness. Moreover, the run- ning-race for two-year-olds is commonly but a short dash; while the three-year-old trotter is called upon to go races of heats, and the four-year-old mile heats, three in five. But if, after all is said, the owner of the promising three- year-old determines to match and train him, he had better be sure that the preparation is not too severe. It will be better to rely upon the speed and goodness of the colt, and the ability and management of the driver to win, than to screw the young thing up to the pitch of condition at the risk of upsetting him. If the colt is overtrained now, he is not only damaged for the time being, but the injury to his legs, temper, or constitution, will very likely be permanent. There are colts, just as there are some old horses, that will stand almost any thing, and no amount of ignorance and reck- lessness seems sufficient to spoil them; but these are the ex- ceptional cases, to be avoided, not imitated. With all the care that we can take, and all the caution that we can exercise, we shall find enough of our promising youngsters disappoint us in the expectations we have formed, without running the risk of ruining them by tasks too severe for the immature condition of their bones and sinews, and for that lack of seasoning which accompanies their early years. I admit, that, when a man has a fast colt, the temptation is strong to earn honor and profit by the public display of his powers: but in almost every instance it ought to be resisted; for its _ premature indulgence is too often like the conduct of the improvident savages, who cut down trees to get at the fruit, V. Actual Training of the Three-year-old. — No Physic and no Swev* at first. — Danger of “ Overmarking.” — Strong Feed of Oats and Hay. — Bran- Mashes.— Rubbing the Legs. — Full supply of Water. — Management before and in the Race. — Strains likely to stand Early Training. — The Abdallahs. AVING given my views as to the prudence of train- ing a three-year-old colt for a race, I shall now make some remarks upon the course advisable to be followed where the match has been made and the race is to come off. The colt may have been kept in the stable all the winter, or he may have had the run of a lot on fine days, with a loose box at night. In either case, his work in the spring is to be exactly like that which he was called on to do in the fall of his two-year-old stage, beginning very gently, and tak- ing care never to keep him so long at it as to fret and discourage him. No physic is required, nor is any sweat demanded to begin with. It is to be remembered that the growing animal does not make internal fat like an old horse, and that the system has not attained the firmness and hard- ness which will bear scraping and squeezing to be drawn fine. If a colt is stripped of his fat and reduced in flesh as old horses are, his growth is stopped, and the muscular development that is now in process is interfered with to the lasting disadvantage of the animal. Therefore, the utmost caution is required in dealing with them; and the effect of the work is to be carefully watched from day to day by the person having them in charge. Before the work is begun at all, it must be apparent that the colt is full of health, and 67 68 HE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. possessed of that buoyancy and elasticity of spirit which a young thing ought to have anyhow, and which are abso- lutely necessary to bear him up under the treatment to which he is now to be subjected. If he is bold and familiar, and a little given to mischief, so much the better; that is a very different thing from vice, and much to be preferred to flightiness and nervousness. Begin with a little walking exercise every day, and from that proceed to moderate work in harness. See that every thing is done to make the colt enter into his work with good pluck, and take care that the jogging is not carried so far as to make it monotonous and disgusting to him. It should not be confined to the course, but he may be driven about the country-roads when they are good; and the spurts of speed in which he is indulged should be lively but short. By this means he will always leave off with a desire to go a little farther, and will dash out with alacrity when he is called upon to go again. The speed will be increased, in nine cases out of ten, by this treatment; and the gait will be maintained square and open. Speed can neither be created uor preserved by forcing when young. If the colt goes frisking and playing along, he feels well at his jogging, and you may send him a trifle farther in his spurts. But if, on the other hand, he looks dull and jaded, and requires to be urged, save him. Ht will do harm instead of good to keep him at it: for he is in danger of being “overmarked ;” and, if that once takes place in the course of this his first prep- aration, you had better pay forfeit, and give him a long let-up. So, also, if he begins to hitch and hobble in his gait, you must let him up in his work. It is of no use to keep on in hopes that he will go square again. The more you keep on, the worse the mischief will be. Study the disposition of the colt. If you cannot understand him, it is not at all likely that he will understand you. I have seen many very promising three-year-old colts broken in their gaits, and got to paddling, solely by the THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 69 obstinacy of the man in charge, who had determined to “make trotters out of them.” It was this foolish attempt at “making” that prevented their being trotters in good time. The three-year-old colt, of the two, is more diffcult to deal with than the two-year-old. The former is shedding his colt’s teeth, his mouth is broken, his gums sore, and his system more or less fevered. His food is not thoroughly masticated, and sometimes he will not consume his usual: quantity. There is a vastly greater difference between him and an old horse, than between him and a two-year-old, in solidity of bone, in duration of sinew, and development of muscle. The difference between the two and three year old, in reference to their ability to stand work, is one of degree only, and not of kind. When the two- year-old is well formed, hardy and lusty for his age, he is more fit to take work than a three-year-old with a broken mouth and fevered system. It being discovered, however, that the colt in. training 1s doing well, the system I have indicated is to be pursued in such degree as his constitu- tion and disposition call for. The feed is now to be according to his size, appetite, andwork. Light, nine, ten, or, in some extraordinary cases, even twelve quarts of oats a day may be given. Once ina while he may have a very little corn; but there is no real occasion for it, except in case of a poor feeder. There is no doubt at all about the fact that oats are the best food for a horse. They supply the greatest quantity of the constitu- ents of the muscular fibre which the horse is always expending, while corn supplies the fatty matter in greatest quantity. Therefore, keep the corn for the bullocks and hogs, and give oats to the horses. Some say that corn may be fed to colts, because its silicious particles go to make up bore; but enough of these earthy matters will be found in the hay, in the husks of the oats, and in the water. In this training the colt is to have all the hay that he will eat up clean. His general: health and the condition of his 70 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. bowels are to be watched, and a bran-mash is to be given when it is thought that it will be beneficial. It may usu- ally be ventured on at least once a week, unless there is a tendency to looseness. Its effects are comforting and sooth- ing, and it promotes the secretions as well as empties the bowels. He is to be fed and to have a little water before going to work, in the same way as I have laid down in regard to the colt at two years old. The legs of the colt may be hand-rubbed a little during his course of training; but they do not want it like those of a, battered-up old horse: and my motto is that what is not wanted ought not to be attempted. Water is to be kept away from the legs of the colt as much as possible: they are to be kept clean by means of the brush and cloth. As his work goes on, his brushes may be extended to a quarter of a mile; but he is always to be kept well within himself. It is to be borne in mind that there are no great things to be done with him this year, except to develop his speed, and see to it that he is kept in good health. More will have to be done in conditioning by and by; but it will bea year or two, perhaps three, before he is fit to stand the “grand preparation,” as our friends the race-horse men call the thorough-training process. Meantime, it is to be thought, that if he has had his health, has stood his work well, and has shown an increase of speed, you will be want- ing to see what he can do towards the race. But you must withstand the temptation to do any thing like what he will be called on to do in public; for, if he does it for you now, it is likely enough that he will not be able to do it on the day in question. ight or ten days prior to the race, having ascertained that he feels in good health and strong heart, brush him half a mile. You can tell by the way he finishes, and by how he feels afterwards, whether he will be likely to stand the mile-heat out and to repeat it. Unless the trainer can form a judgment in this matter, there is very little chance for the colt in the race, except the other man THE ‘TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 7) is equally incapable of forming an estimate of his colt’s stamina without repeating him. During the whole course of the work, the colt is to have a full supply of water every day; but he is to have it at different times, and not to be allowed to distend himself with a great quantity of water at one time. The night before the race, the muzzle is to be put on, if he is a gross feeder, and is likely to eat the straw of his bedding. Before this, the usual quantity of oats and about a pound and a half of hay may be given. If the colt has been in the habit of drinking a large allowance of water, he may have two-thirds of a pailful before he is muzzled for the night; but, if he has usually only consumed a small quantity, do not give him quite so much. This water will all have been absorbed and thrown out of the system again before he is called upon to act. Next morn- ing early, before he goes out to walk, let kim have two quarts of oats, and about the same quantity of water. Usually, he need only take walking exercise on this morn- ing; but if he happens to be a strong, hearty fellow, and given to be riotous in disposition, he ought to be jogged. four or five miles. At about eleven o’clock feed him from @ quart to three pints of oats, and from half a pound to a pound and a half of hay. Less than half a pound is not sufficient to stay the stomach; more than a pound and a half is likely to be mischievous, and to interfere with the wind. Between those quantities, the trainer must judge accord- ing to the disposition and constitution of the colt. He is not to be drawn fine and reduced like an old horse; but, at the same time, he must not be called upon to perform the tnusual feat before him with any thing like a full stomach. If he is distressed after the heat, and seems weak, give him a little gruel, or a small quantity of wine and water; or you may even administer a little good brandy. It is astonish- ing what a dose of brandy will sometimes do for a horse when he is badly off, ard it looks as if he was going to be 72 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. beaten. It will not do, however, to be giving brandy unless it is clearly required; and here, again, the trainer must use his own judgment, and have firmness enough to follow its dictates. There are always enough outsiders, who, having nothing at stake and no responsibility, will give advice gratis ; but it is commonly to be disregarded. In deciding upon what a colt may be safely called upon zo do at an early age, his breed, as well as his form, disposi- tion, and constitution, must be taken into account. Those strains which are related more or less closely to the blood- horse may be trained at an earlier period, and will stand more work, than the colder-blooded sorts. This is well understood by those who prepare the steeple-chasers of England and Canada. Some of these horses are quite thoroughbred, some nearly thoroughbred, and some not above half-bred. Now, it has been found by experience, that of two horses apparently alike in stoutness and excel- lence of constitution, but one nearly thoroughbred and the other only half-bred, the amount of work which will improve the wind and speed, and harden the condition, of the former, will almost certainly overmark and ruin the chance of the other. Then the muscles shrink, and become soft and unstrung, instead of increasing in volume and consistency ; then the eye is dull, and the feed is no longer consumed with relish in sufficient quantity. The breed is therefore to be considered as well as the natural constitution of the individual horse in hand. The stock of the famous horse Abdallah, who was by Mambrino, a thoroughbred son of imported Messenger, woull almost all stand training at an early age; and what is, perhaps, more important, it did not appear to impair their future durability. It is now thirty years ago since I trode two famous trotting-horses of his get. One of them, \jax, was foaled in 1834; the other, Hector, the next year, 1835. At five years old, they were both capital trotters ; and by and by, when we come to speak of the trotting- THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 73 horses with which IT have had to do in the course of my career, I shall have more to say about them. Fourth of July, a gray horse by Abdallah, was another good trotter at five years old. Medoc was another of his get that was justly noted; and there was Brooklyn Maid, a very fast mare, and a noted sticker. In 1840, when she was only five years old, this mare trotted a fifth heat in two minutes and thirty-six seconds. Considering that this was twenty- five years ago, it must be regarded as a capital performance. The Abdallahs came on early, and lasted long. They were commonly full of spirits, wild and playful as kittens, with first-rate stamina, and always ready to trot. Through this grandson of his, the strain of old Messenger was diffused east and west in this country; and at this day it seems to have parted with none of its blood-like, speedy, and endur- ing qualities. His son Hambletonian also gets produce which stand work early, and promise to be in nowise defi- cient in endurance. During the time he was in Kentucky, Abdallah did a great deal for the trotting-horse out there; and they have wisely re-enforced the infusion by further importations of the Messenger blood. When it is considered that their trotting-stallions have been very often well-bred, and then put to. thoroughbred mares, it must go far to account for the extraordinary feats performed there by colts that were only four years old. I see no absolute reason to deny the statement made, that Mr. Alexander’s colt Bay Chief, by Mambrino Chief, out of a thoroughbred mare, trotted half a mile, at four years old, in one minute and eight seconds. It is to be regretted that the wounds he got in the battle with the guerillas have ruined him. Ericsson’s mile—the fourth heat—in two minutes thirty and a half seconds was an astonishing thing for a four-year-old, especially when it is added that it was done to a wagon. It does not appear upon the record that this was the case, for the way of going is not set down; but I learn from a gentleman of unquestionable veracity, 74 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. whv had to do with the colt at the time, that he trotted to @ Wagon. Kentucky Chief, who won the first heat, and afterwards went to California, where he died, was another good one. He went in harness. Idol was another very fast one when young; and Brignoli was thought to be about as good as they are made. Royal George was another very fast one; and quite recently there have been Mr. Alexander’s gray geldings Dudley and Bull Run, and his bay stallion Bay Chief. The information as to Morgan Chief, or Ericsson, as he is now called, having trotted that mile in two thirty and a half, to wagon, came from a gentleman who had an inter- est in him at the time, and brought a trotter from Kentucky to me to be trained last fall. He said, too, that he was a great, overgrown colt, standing about sixteen and a half hands high, and could trot faster to a wagon than he could to a sulky. That was the same meeting where Cora made her two minutes thirty-seven and three-quarters, and Medoc, since called John Morgan, won at two and three mile heats. VL Characteristics of the Stars. — Of the Bashaws.— The Clays.— Tho {rus tees. — Natural Trotters in England.— Of Trotters that paced.— To make Pacers trot. HE produce of American Star are hardly as safe to train early as those of Messenger through Abdallah, Mambrino Chief, &c., by reason of their being more fragile about the legs. When, however, the two lines are combined, this is rectified; and the cross seems to make a very fine, fast trotting-horse, as near perfection as may be. Such is ‘Mr. Bonner’s gray mare Peerless, who was by Star out of a gray mare full of the Messenger blood... She is the fastest that I (or, indeed, anybody else) have ever driven to a wagon. Dexter is another capital instance of the value of this cross. Some of the Stars have given out in the legs; but their pluck is so good that they stand up to the last, when little better than mere cripples. It is no wonder that they have great game and courage; for Star’s grandsire was the thor- ough-bred four-miler Henry, who ran for the South, on the Island here, against Eclipse, in 1823. I went to see the race, and got a licking for it when Icame home. The Mes- senger cross gives the Stars size, strength, and bone, and counteracts their hereditary tendency to contraction of the feet. It would not do to breed the Stars in-and-in, as has answered so well with the descendants of Messenger. Wid- ow Machree, a daughter of Star, was a very fast, game mare. and an all-day trotter. The little horse Bolly Lewis was another good one by him, and Goshen Maid still another. She went the fourth heat to a wagon in 2.32}. 75 76 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. The Bashaws were not commonly trained early; and they were not natural trotters in the same degree as the horses of the Messenger line. The Bashaws originated from Grand Bashaw, a horse imported from Barbary ; and they have been principally represented through his son, Young Bashaw, and his sons, Black Bashaw, Andrew Jackson, and Saladin. Black Bashaw did not trot in yablic; neither did Abdallah, Messenger’s grandson. The latter never was in harness in his life; but you could jump on him bare-backed, and he would go right away a fifty-clip. In those days, entire horses were not trained. It was thought that they would be ruined for service if they were “put through the mill” for racing purposes; and so, when they showed a good gait, they were reserved for the stud. The notion also prevailed, that it would ruin a trotter to train him before he was five or six years old. The only Bashaw that I know of that trotted at three years old was the gray filly before mentioned, beaten by Gypsy in 1830. My uncle, George Woodruff, had a very high opinion of the Bashaws. He handled more of them, including Lantern and George Washington, than any other man, I think. He had old Topgallant, a son of im- ported Messenger, and a noted old-time trotter. More will have to be said about that class of horses hereafter. Young Bashaw became much noted through his son An- drew Jackson, who was one of the first stallions that ever trotted in public. His best performance was at Centreville some thirty years ago— it was 1835: he went two miles in 5.18. He got Long-Island Black Hawk, who was the first horse that trotted a mile in 2.40 to a 2501b. wagon. It was against Jenny Lind, who went to a skeleton wagon, and won the second heat in 2.38. The stallion beat her the race, which was the first he ever went. Black Hawk won the stallion stake on Union Course in 1849. He beat Cas- sius M. Clay; and St. Lawrence paid forfeit. This Long- Island Black Hawk was a capital horse. He could pull any weight, and was good for a long distance, as the race of THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 77 tlree-mile heats in which he beat Americus showed. The wagons-and drivers weighed 350 Ibs. He is not to be con-_ founded with the tribe of Black Hawks that left the trot- ing-place up in Vermont, and flew all over the Western country, some years ago. This was a horse of another stamp altogether. U have said that I did not think the Bashaws quite equal to the Messenger line for natural trot- ting. It is, however, hard to separate them, as the dam of Young Bashaw’s dam was a Messenger mare; and the lines have been otherwise closely mingled. George Woodruff is of opinion that Black Bashaw, who was the sire of Awful, Lantern, &c., would have got as many fast trotters as any horse that ever lived if he had had good mares. He stood at ten dollars, and hardly everreceived a good mare. After- wards, his fee was raised to twenty dollars; but he still had common mares. The Monmouth-Eclipse mare, that was the dam of Lightning, was an exception. Awful was a capital trotter — perhaps the best of the Black Bashaws. George Woodruff drove him in 2m. 25s. over Point-Breeze Park, in a trial, before he brought him on here. It is said that Henry Clay, a son of Andrew Jackson, is still living in this State. He got Cassius M. Clay, who was the sire of George M. Patchen. The dam of this last famous trotter was said to have been got by a son of im- ported Trustee. Trustee got but few trotters. The chest- nut horse, so-called, who went twenty miles in harness, was by far the best of the few he got; and I believe that his dam, Fanny Pullen, put the trotting action into him. There was another got by imported Trustee, called Trus- tee, Jr., who trotted ten miles well. There have been other Clays who got a few very good trotting-horses about here ; but, as their produce was not trained early, it is unnecessary to mention them in this connection. And there have been some whose reputed pedigrees were too uncertain to be relied on. Prince, the Buffalo horse, burnt last fall in Massachusetts, was one that nobody can tell any thing 78 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. about. The other Prince, the chestnut horse that beat Hero the pacer ten miles, was a thoroughbred, according to the accounts I have had. I had supposed that Lady Palmer was the only thoroughbred trotter in this country; but they say that Prince was got by Woodpecker out of a thoroughbred mare by Langford, and was first trained te run. Little attention as there has been paid to the cultivation of the trotting tendency in England, I find that there have been some thoroughbred trotters there, and some that were very nearly thoroughbred. A gentleman who is well in- formed in the matter tells me that a large number of the horses got by Lord Grosvenor’s Mambrino, the sire of Mes- senger, had the natural trotting gift; that Infidel, by Turk, was a natural trotter, and, after he was put out of training as a race-horse, trotted fifteen miles an hour on the road between Newcastle and Carlisle; Scott, by Blank, was another; and Pretender, by Hue and Cry, out of a thor- oughbred Pretender mare, another. And further, that he saw Von Tromp, half-brother io Flying Dutchman, whipped and spurred above an eighth of a mile before he could be got out of a fast trot into a gallop. This horse is now in Russia; and it is a reasonable opinion, that, if he were here, he would get good trotters out of trotting-mares, and put the staying stuff into them. Having been got by Laner- cost, out of Barbelle, his blood is very stout. I think there can be but little doubt of the fact, that the only infusion of thoroughbred blood into the trotting-horse to be relied on to improve the latter as a whole ought to come from fami- lies, who, as thoroughbreds, have shown a disposition to bend the knee, and trot. Those having a strong dash of the Messenger blood would be apt to succeed; and it has suc- ceeded in some notable instances. John Morgan was out of a Medoc mare; and Medoc was by American Eclipse, who was out of Messenger’s daughter, Miller’s Damsel. I know of a thoroughbred colt now in training as a runner, that THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 79 shows right smart trotting action. It is believed that he can go a four-minute clip, and that. without the least educa- tion. I attribute it solely to the Messenger blood there is in him, Eclipse having been his grandsire. It is a circumstance not to be passed over without notice, that a number of our fast trotters were pacers first, and were trained as such before they struck a trot. After some time they changed their gait, and not only went fast, but were squar2 and steady as well. Pelham was a notable instance of this. He came off the ice from Maine, where he had been a very fast pacer; and, in 1846, I got him in Boston. From the time he struck a trot he improved right along, and soon became an uncommon good one. Horace Jones had him afterwards, and then Whelan. He made the best time on record, in harness, in a race against Lady Suffolk and Jack Rossiter, — 2.28. The mare won it, but Pelham got two heats. He was a square-gaited horse as a trotter. Pilot was another pacer that quitted it for a bet- ter gait, and went like a humming-bird as a trotter. When he first struck a trot it surprised his owner; but he improved so rapidly, that, before very long, he trotted in 2.28} at Providence. Another very remarkable instance was that of Cayuga Chief. This horse was not only a pacer, but single-footed when at a moderate rate, like the old Narraganset pacers. He belonged to a livery-stable keeper at Worcester, Mass., and was let out as a hack. His easy gait and fine appear- ance—he was-brown, with a blaze in the face, and very handsome — made him a great favorite with the ladies; and, whenever there was a riding-party, he was spoken for beforehand Iy some of the belles. He paced fast when called upon; but, carrying a lady, he always went ambling off single-footed, in the easiest and most gentle style. He was at this until nearly the fall of 1839, and then the ladies of Worcester had to say good-by to their favorite as a sad- dle-horse. One day he struck a trot, and went very fast 80 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. His improvement was as rapid as that of Pelham and Pilot, perhaps more so; for in 1840 he trotted his first race at Centreville, and did two miles in five minutes and fifteen seconds. Tip was another fast pacer that saw the error of his way of going, and took to trotting. He belonged to Rochester, and was afterwards sold to a gentleman in Jersey. Asa pacer he was very fast. After he had begun to trot, Spicer got him, and he trotted in public low down in the thirties. As a general rule, those horses that have been pacers have been very steady, and, when trotting fast, have seemed afraid to break. But some of them have caused a good deal of disappointment and some profanity by taking to pacing again all of a sudden, in the middle of a race, or even in the middle of a heat. There was a roan horse called Dart, that had been a pacer, but had struck a trot, and he was in my charge. He could go like a bullet; for I have driven him a quarter of a mile to a wagon in thirty- four seconds, with my watch in my hand. Finally he was matched, and we thought we had a good thing of it; and so we should if the brute hadn’t kicked over the milk-pail. He won the first heat easily; but in the next, when quite within himself, he suddenly struck a pace, just as if he was determined to show the company that he could go both ways. All my efforts to get him down to a trot were fruit: less. Dart wouldn’t trot; and so, when we came to the gate, I just made him dart out of the course, without going near the judges. Still, I should not be afraid of this in a pacer that had taken up a trot and gone:that gait a reasonable time with steadiness. A trotting-horse is so much more, valuable than a pacer, that, if I had one of the latter that; could go in 2.20, I should watch carefully for the chance to make a trotter out of him. Any pacing-horse can be made to trot by putting rails down, and making him move over them. His fore-feet will get over clean; but he cannot shuffle his hind-feet over at a THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 81 pace without hitting, and he must trot very soon or fall down. This method is sometimes adopted; but it xs much better when the horse strikes a trot himself without these impediments. This he is most likely to do after having been driven a good distance and got tired. The reason that should prevent. us from driving a trotter when tired, for fear of making him break his gait, will rather be for driving the pacer when a little tired; for his gait is not one that we wish to preserve, and this is a means towards the changing of it. It is more laborious than any other way of going. The trotting-horse, moving the near fore- leg and the off hind-leg together, and then the off fore-leg and near hind-leg together, keeps upright, and is like a ship sailing steady on an even keel. The pacer, moving both near legs together and both off legs together, has a rocking motion, like that of a ship in a rolling sea. The pacer, though knowing no other gait but a gallop or a walk be-~ sides his pace, is likely to change it for the first time when he has been driven so far with that movement as to become tired. If he then strikes a trot it eases him; and it then becomes the business of the driver to encourage him in his new gait by every means. The best way to proceed with a pacer that has struck a trot in this manner is put the roll- ers on him the next time he goes out. The effect is the same on him as on the young trotter whose gait has been broken. They must be changed from leg to leg as occasion ‘may require; and when a pacer is got to a square trot, he is to be kept at it by the nicest kind of handling.. Other fast pacers beside those I have mentioned have made trot- ters. Among them there was American Doe. Sim Hoag- land handled her; and drove her trotting in 2m. 39s., he weighing more than two hundred pounds. 8 VIL Horses that pace and trot too.—Not to be trusted on the Course.— Trotters that amble off in a Pace when first out of the Stable. — Speed, and’its Relation to Stoutness.—The Gray Mare Peerless. — Styles of Going. — Gait of Flora Temple and Ethan Allen.— Bush Messenger’s Get. — Vermont Hambletonian’s Get. — Influence of Messenger. — Hob- bling in Jogging. LAST spoke of the natural and fast pacers which had I afterwards taken to trotting, and made fine horses for the course at that gait. It must be added, that much care and patience are necessary in the treatment and handling of them while they are in the time of transition between the pace and trot and not thorough at either. Some remain all their lives capable of pacing and trotting: and these are useless for the course, by reason of the fact, that, if matched to pace, they may strike a trot, and so lose; and, if matched to trot, they may fall into a pace, and lose that way. But they are often fine, lasting road-horses, able to go a distance, and to make such fast brushes by pacing that no road-trot- ter can get by them. It was one of this sort that beat the dam of Flatbush Maid on the road; and it was only by changing the gait that it was done. That mare, the dam of the Maid, was a good one. The horse who got the little bay out of her was a pacer, —a chestnut. I recollect his winning a race here years ago. He had good blood in him, and could trot as well as pace. The mare was one of the Messenger tribe, —a gray, flea-bitten about the head and neck. Besides those who pace and afterwards make reliable trotters, and those who pace sometimes and trot sometimes, 82 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 83 there is a class that begin from a walk in an ambling pace, and go from that into the finest kind of a fast and steady trot. Some of our very best trotters of old times, and modern days as well, have had this habit of going off in a little pacing amble before they squared away in the flying trot. I like this kind. They begin with this kind of dainty amble, and some might think that they couldn’t trct much; but it is only like the play of the tiger before he makes his spring. It is interesting to note the difference in trotting-horses as they begin, before they get into the stride. Old Topgallant was one of those that go ambling off, though it was not invariable with him: it was with Tacony and with Lady Moscow. Duchess, who beat Lady Suffolk, was another that began with this sort of amble. Sontag was another; and, more than that, she was a natural pacer before they made a trotter of her. It may be judged that she was a good trotter; for when Whelan had her she beat Flora Temple, who was in Warren Peabody’s hands. But Flora did not stay beat long. The very next week I took her, and beat Whelan and Sontag without much trouble. Three of the best mares in the country now may be noticed as going off with the kind of dainty amble that I have mentioned as a characteristic of Topgallant, Tacony, Lady Moscow, and Sontag. Mr. Bonner’s gray mare Peerless always does it, and so does the famous chestnut Lady Palmer. The other I now call to mind is the young gray mare that Dan Pfifer has, — Mr. Lorillard’s Blonde. She goes off in just such a way. This young mare is going to be very remarkable if she has luck. She was by Hoag- land’s Gray Messenger, and her dam by Old Abdallah. ‘The old mare was a vicious jade, and of no use whatever except for the blood that was in her. She could kick higher than a man’s head, and frightened one or two in this neighborhood, who tried to drive her, into fits. But the anicn between her and Hoagland’s horse just hit the bull’s- eye. The produce, Blonde, has been in Pfifer’s hands ever 84 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. since she was broken, and she is now “as fast as a ghost.” She is only five years old, and has trotted a quarter of a mile in thirty-two seconds and a half. If she gets steady; as there is reason to believe she will with further handling, experience, and age, she is going to be one of our very best trotters. Some people say, “What’s the use of a horse going a quarter fast?” Now, they must go a quarter fast before - they can go a mile fast; and, when I have one that can go a quarter at that rate at five years old, I shall take very good care that she don’t go that lick any farther just then. I drove Mr. Bonner’s gray mare Peerless a quarter of a mile in thirty seconds, and it was to a wagon. I mentioned before that she was the fastest I ever drove to a wagon, or that anybody else ever did. It was on the Union Course. Capt. Moore timed her, unknown to me, or to any one else but himself. He had his race-horses there then, and almost slept with one eye open. Afterwards he came up to my house, and began to question Crepe Collins, and some of the others, about the gray mare “that Hiram had been driving.” The opinion of many then was, that, though fast, .she could only go a quarter of a mile; and I wanted them to think so. Crepe knew it, and made some misunderstand- able sort of an answer. The others assured the captain that she was of “no account.” But he was certain that he had timed her right; and, to make sure that there was no mis- take in the distance, he went and got his chain and boy and measured the ground. This mare, that people thought then could only go a quarter, carried me afterwards two miles to a wagon, Hoagland’s weight some three hundred and eleven pounds, and finished well up with Lady Palmer, who is the best-bottomed mare-to weight in the world, and one of the fastest. Gray Eddy was another of the kind that always amble off; and a capital horse he was. Flora does not amble to begin; but, in jogging off slow, she goes rolling and tumbling THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 85 along, as if she had no gait at all, and was capable of none. But when she squares away, and begins to deliver the real stroke, she has as fine and even a trot as any horse in the world. Her gait, in the rushes of lightning-speed when she darts up the stretch, is as square as ever was seen. It would be impossible for her to go as fast as she does if there was any hitch about her then. Ethan Allen goes right out of his tracks in a square trot from the beginning, and very few can head him for half a mile. Ned Forrest and Daniel D. Tompkins, the two that trotted at Philadelphia for $5,000 a side, went square from the walk like Ethan. That match was three-mile heats, to go as they pleased, on the Hunt- ing-park Course, at Philadelphia, in 1838. General Cad- wallader owned Ned Forrest, a black horse of unknown pedigree. Mr. Walton owned Daniel D. Tompkins, and George Youngs rode him. He came from Massachusetts, and was of the Maine, or Bush-Messenger, blood. That Bush Messenger was one of the last colts that old Messen- ger got, if not the very last. James Hammil rode the black horse; but Daniel D. won the first heat in such style that General Cadwallader sold out his chance in the race for five hundred dollars. Anderson & Spicer, of New York, bought it, and put Forrest in harness. Spicer got in and drove him, but the other won it without any trouble. Daniel D. Tompkins-was brought from Massachusetts to New York in 1834. I handled him then. He was a good little horse, a chestnut, under fifteen hands, with pluck enough for the biggest that ever trotted. This Bush, or Maine-Messenger, line was another very good ramification of the Messenger blood, and of great value to Maine and Massachusetts. The horse got a large number of fine trotters and some first-rate ones. The latter were nearly all chestnuts. I mentioned this fact to the friend who sometimes comes here to “talk horse” with me; and says he, “ Now here’s a glorious confirmation of the old maxim, ‘ Like produces like, or the likeness of some 86 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. ancestor!’ The Gray Messengers take after Mameino, old Messenger’s sire; these chestnut-Bush Messengers take after Blaze and Flying Childers, the sire and grandsre of Sampson, who got Engineer, Mambrino’s sire. New, here you see, Hiram, is a proof.” “Stop!” says I. “What you say is all very fue; but L think it just as likely that the Bush Meseonyets dam was a chestnut, as that his colts were thrown back to Flying Childers.” The Bush Messenger, besides Daniel D. Tompkins, got Gen. Taylor, a very famous trotter and sticker: he was also a chestnut. Henry was another of the tribe, and the same. Independence another, and achestnut. And Fanuy Tullen another of the same color. She had Trustee, the twenty-miler, by imported Trustee ; and he was also a chest- nut horse. Considering the good blood he inherited on both sides, it is no great wonder that he was a horse of such bottom and' endurance. The Eaton horse, in Maine, is a near descendant of the Bush Messenger; and he has kept up that line of trotters. Shepherd F. Knapp is one of his colts. While Maine had the Bush Messenger, Vermont got the blvod of the old imported horse through Hambletonian, who was really a grandson of his. This horse got as good trotters as the Bush Messenger. He was the sire of True John, Green-Mountain Maid, Gray Vermont, and Sonteg, — all first-rate horses. So it is clear, that besides the lines through Mambrino and Abdal- lah, and through Mambrino, Mambrino Paymaster, and Mambrino Chief, which diffused the blood of Messenger over Long Island, through New-York State at large, and in the blue-grass regions of Kentucky, there are to be taken into account those of the Bush Messenger and Ham- bletonian, who carried the strain into the Eastern States. It is curious to estimate the influence of one horse, especially if he lives to a great age, gets stallions that become noted, and stock distinguished for fine constitution THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. 87 and longevity. Messenger covered some twenty seasons in this country; and as he had plenty of mares, and was a sure foal-getter, he must have been the sire of about a thousand horses. Then comes the fact that his sons were as long-lived and as thoroughly employed in the work of increase as himself, and that his grandsons continued to possess the fine qualities and peculiar gifts which he owned and conferred. In this way, and taking into account the singular faculty these horses have had of stamping the living image of their line upon their produce, and of infus- ing into their sons and daughters the less tangible but not less real attributes of pluck, resolution, and endurance, we shall be enabled to make some estimate of the incalculable influence Messenger has had upon the trotting-stock of this country. It has been found that the blood of this famous horse “hits” with almost any other strain; perhaps it would be more correct to say, that the constitution of the Messen- gers is so good, and their individuality so strongly marked, that, in the produce of their crosses with other families, their blood always predominates. With the Stars it is of the greatest value. The noted horse Brown Dick, whose trot- ting education was received during the three or four years he was in the hands of Dan Pfifer, was the first of this cross that attracted my notice. His history is this: A maz named Dubois, who lived up in Orange or Duchess County, had a colt by Star, that was wicked, and not thought much of. Dubois, being in New York, bought an old gray mare of the Messenger blood, out of a cart, aud, taking her home, had her covered by the Star colt before he was made a gelding. The produce was Browu Dick. His dam was a pacer; but the colt soon became a fast and reliable trotter under Pfifer’s manage- ment. He first trotted at six years old. His best race was against Patchen; and he won it in 2.28, 2.254, 2.28, He and Pat-hen and Miller’s Dameel trotted ai other 88 THE TROTTING-HORSE OF AMERICA. famous race on the Union Course. There were five heats; and the time was 2.26}, 2.264, 2.29, 2.283, 2.29. Five heats all inside of 2.30 was no common performance. ‘The stallion finally won it, which wag a proof of his staying pwers. To conclude with the different ways trotting-horses have of beginning, it will be as well to mention, that I have known some who hobbled off at first as if they were lame. I could name some who would have been pronounced Jame, when led out with a halter or driven at a slow jog, by almost any horseman, but were, nevertheless, perfectly sound, and only required to be suffered to go along at a good gait to establish the fact. I have known one or two very famous trotters that went as if they were lame all round when jogging slow. I have heard of running-horses of whom the same was said. The Queen of Trumps, a famous English mare by Velocipede out of Princess Royal, had this peculiarity. I am told, that, when she was saddled for the Oaks, any man who did not know of it would have made oath that she was Jame on all-fours. But she won the race with ease, and afterwards carried off the St. Leger “in a walk,” as our friends over the water say. A. J. Minor, the able and clever gentleman who trained for Mr. Ten Broeck in England, and now has charge of Kentucky and Mr. Hunter’s horses, tells a good story about that saying.