r^«, )i ^^^ss^j^ssmmsdmsffi'' % h'- V. .' Q-i~ JOHNA.SEAVERNS FilA.NK FOKESTEH'S HORSE AND HORSEMANSHIP UNITED STATES BRITISH PROYINCES OF NORTH AMERICA. BY HENRY WILLIAM HERBERT, ACTHOB OF "frank forester's field sports," "fish and fishing," "the complete manual for young sportsmen," etc. , etc. , etc. REVISED, CORRECTED, ENLARGED, AND CONTINUED TO 1871, BY S. D. & B. G. BRUCE. WITH THTRTT ORIGINAL PORTRAITS OF CELEBRATED HORSES. IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. II. NE^V YORK: GEO. E. WOODWARD, PUBLISHER, 191 B E, O A. ID -^^7" A. -a' . 1871. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1857, by STRINGEK & TOWNSEND, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District ©r New Yorlj. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1871, by GEO. E. WOODWARD, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. ILLUSTRATIONS TO VOL. II. ENGRAVINGS ON STEEL. ViGKETTE Title, designed by F. 0. C. Daeley, engraved by J. Smtllie. ETHAN ALLEN, LADY SUFFOLK, POCAHONTAS, FLORA TEMPLE, BLACK HAWK, DOUBLE TEAM MATCH, DEXTER, . LADY THORNE, HAMBLETONIAN, . EDWARD EVERETT, THORNEDALE, . ERICSSON, . MORRILL (YOUNG) . BASHAW, . LADY PALMER AND ) FLATBUSH MAID, ) Painted by W. F. ATTWOOD, R. C. CLARKE, . L. MAURER, L. MATJRER, W. F. ATTWOOD, L. MAURER, PROM PHOTOGRAPH, MAR!-DEN, FROM PHOTOGRAPH, E. TROTE, J. MACAUIilFFE, E. TROTE, MARSDEN, FROM PHOTOGRAPH, MAESDEN, Engraved by Page J. DUTHIE, ... 48 CAPEWEIiL & KTMMEIiL, 80 R HINSHELWOOD, . 112 CAPE WELL & KIMMELL, 144 CAPEWELL & KIMMELL, 17G R. HINSHELWOOD, . 208 T. PHILLLBROWN, . . 240 R. HINSIZELWOOD, . 272 T. PHILLLBROWN, . . 304 E. ROGERS, . . . 336 G. R. HALL, . . . 368 R. DUDENSIXG, . . 416 W. G. JACKSON, . . 448 C. RUST, . . . 480 W. G. JACKSON, . . 528 LIST OF ILLUSTEATIONS. ENGRAVINGS ON WOOD. EXECUTED BY N. ORR. The Vermont Draught Horse, The Conestoga Horse, The Canadian Horse St. Lawrence, Cleveland Bay Stallion Emperor, Colt's Bridle, Position op the Hands in Riding, A Neat Seat on Horseback, . Baucher's System. Figiire 1, . 2. . Ventilator, Rack, Page 49 65 65 289 348 359 361 392 392 394 394 396 397 417 418 Manger, 419 Am Pipe, 420 Saddle Bench, 421 City Stable Ground Plan, 423 Interior Section, 424 Elevation, 425 Small Country Stable Side Elevation, 427 Ground Plan and Interior Section, 428 End Elevation, 429 Large Country Stable Ground Plan, 431 End Elevation, 482 Elevation, 434 Shoeing — The Foot, 488 " Fullering Iron, . . . 489 " Cold Chisel 490 LIOT OF ILLUSTRATIONS. 5 Page Shoeing— Shoe. Figure 2, 490 "3, 491 "4, 491 Tool For Turning the Toes, 494 Construction of the Leg, 496 Shoe. Figure 7, 498 "8, 499 Horse-Shoe Nails, 500 Foot. Figure 10, 501 Figure 11, . . 503 " Ready for Shoeing, . . . " 12, . . 503 " Shod with Leather, . . . " 13, . . 504 Near Hind Shoe, " 14, . . 505 Near Hind Shoe with Nail-holes, . " 15, . . 506 OOlSTTEIvrTS OF YOL. II. The Horse, his American Varieties and Breeds, 9 The Vermont Draught Horse, 49 The Conestoga Horse, 57 The Canadian Horse, 63 The Indian Pony, 65 The Narragansett Pacer, 67 The Horse Stock of Ohio and the West, 76 The Horse Stock of Southern Ohio, 83 The Horse Stock of Michigan, 88 The Horse Stock of Iowa, 100 The Morgan Horse, 104 Memoir and Description of the Justin Morgan, 110 The Trotting Horse, 123 Account of the Celebrated Horse Topgallant, 143 Memoir of Lady Suffolk, and Summary of her Performances, . . .208 Memoir of Flora Temple, Pedigree, Performances, etc., .... 229 Performances of Flora Temple, 235 Lady Thome, Pedigree, Performances, &c., 240 'Goldsmith Maid, « " 248 Dexter, " " 253 Rysdyk's Hambletonian, Pedigree, Performances, etc., .... 260 Young Morrill, " " 268 Major Winfield (now Edward Everett), Pedigree, Performances, etc. . . 266 Ericsson, Pedigree, Performances, etc., 269 Bashaw, Jimior, " " 272 Thomdale, " " 274 Ethan Allen, Performances, 2/8 Best Time on Record, Mile Heats, 283 O COISTTENTS. Best Time on Record, Two-mile Heats, 383 " " Three-mile Heats, 383 " " Four Miles, 384 " " Pacing, .385 Miscellaneous Examples of Extraordinary Performance by American Trotters, 386 Principles of Breeding, . 389 Principles and Practice of Breeding for the Turf, etc., .... 392 Theory of Generation, ... 392 In-and-in Breeding, 395 Out-Crossing, 303 The Best Mode of Breeding for Racing-Purposes, 307 Selection of Brood Mare, 310 Choice of Stallions, 315 Best Age to Breed from, 318 Best Time for Breeding, 319 Thoughts on General Breeding, 320 The Stud Farm, 333 Management of the Mare, 339 Management of the Foal, 341 Breaking, 343 Practical Horsemanship, 344 Breaking and Teaching, Baucher's System, 374 Of the Forces of the Horse, 383 The Flexings of the Horse, 387 Stabling and Stable Architecture, . . 410 City Stable and Coach House, . . . 423 Small Country Stable, . 427 Large Country Stable, 431 Stable Management, 436 The Horse's Food, 464 General Management of Horses, 469 Condition, 470 Management of Farm Horses, 473 Summering in the Stable, . 478 Riding, Driving, and Road Management, 476 Treatise on Horse-Shoeing, by Mr. Miles, 485 Diseases of the Horse, 510 Formulas for Medicine, 586 Rules of Racing and Trotting Courses, 539 Index, . . . , 589 THE HORSE; HIS AMERIOAK VARIETIES AND BREEDS. The thoroughbred horse of America having been treated 2n extenso in the whole of the first volume, which is devoted solely to that branch of the subject, it is my purpose, in this, to deal with the various races and types of the animal in general use, of breeding, conditioning, stabling, breaking, and managing in general. The thoroughbred horse of America is the only family of the horse, on this continent, of pure and unmixed blood. IS'or can even this pretension be made out to satisfaction, in all cases, even where the American thoroughbred can trace directly in both lines, to imported English tlioroughbred dam and sire. For, as it has been shown in the preceding volume, many of the most distinguished English race-horses, distinguished as sires no less than runners, cannot establish an unquestionable descent on both sides, from oriental sire and oriental dam ; which is, of course, requisite to constitute a perfect thoroughbred. Under this category, falls Eclipse himself, who traces, in the female line, to Brimmer, a son of the D'Arcy Yellow Turk, and a Royal mare,* out of a dam, concerning whom no record has been received — Blank, son of the Byerly Turk, and an unknown dam — ^Whynot, who in the female line runs also to the Byerly Turk and an unknown dam — Grey Hautboy, by Hautboy, son * See Note 1, p. 56. 10 THE HORSE. of tlie White Turk and a Royal mare, and Grey Grantham son of the Brownlow Turk, who were both sons of unknown and uncelebrated mares — Eockwood, of whom nothing is recorded, but that he was out of the Lonsdale Tregonwell mare, and many other horses and mares of established character in the history of the turf. This does not show, nor, in my opinion, does it even give rise for a just suspicion, that these unknown ancestors were of ignoble blood ; it is only, as I regard it, a necessary consequence of the remote period, the incorrect and careless habitudes of the times, and the want of regularly authenticated documents, on a subject, which, although now of the most general interest, was at the origin of racing and the turf, a mere individual concern. In the same manner, many American horses, whose blood is undoubtedly pure, cannot be traced, for the reasons above given, to the fountain-head of imported ancestors of pure blood, on both sides. It must be understood, that to prove a horse to he of coarse and cold-blooded descent, is one thing certain and conclusive ; while not to prove a horse of pure blood establishes nothing be- yond a doubt. And, while on this point, I will observe that recent writers in America on the English Turf, are falling into a general error, as to what, in England, is held to constitute a thoroughbred. I have often seen it stated, of late, that eight crosses of pure blood, constitute a thorougbred horse, even if the ninth cross be unknown, or, what is worse, actually /bwZ. I beg to explain, and to assert that no such opinion prevails, either among breeders, or among the sporting world in general, in England. No horse, now in the year 1856, can possibly trace to any of the old unknown mares or sires, of which I have been speaking, in eight generations — scarcely in twice the number.* For the last century, at the least, every mare of thorough- blood is entered by name in the stud-books, and all her foals recorded, the oldest and most remote of these mares, tracing back their eight, nine, or more generations to the worthies in question, whose dams are unknown. No horse or mare is counted, or would be held, thoroughbred in England, the dam and sire of which is not in the stud-book. * See Note 2, p. 56. WHAT 18 A THOROUGHBRED? H "No breeder would dream of owning a mare, from which to raise thoroughbreds, she not being found in the Stud-Book. Nor, owning a thorouglibred mare, would any person stint her to a horse professing to be thoroughbred, which should not be named in the pages of that record. Any horse or mare, warranted to be thoroughbred, and purchased on such guaran- tee, would be returnable, and its price would be recoverable at law, if its name were not in the Stud-Book, or in default there- of, if it could not be proved beyond dispute, to be entitled to place therein. No horse or mare in the Stud-Book, as foaled since 1850, could possibly have so little as eight crosses, before the family should become unknown ; because it would, in that case, he known, foul ; and would, therefore, not have place in the book at all. For instance, Lexington, son of Boston, sou of Timoleon, son of Sir Archy, son of Diomed, is already the offspring in his own person, at that stage of his pedigree, of four pure crosses ; but Diomed, through his dam, sister to Juno, has twelve pure crosses, before he comes to the thirteenth, the Byerly Turk, by whom his twelfth progenitrix was begotten upon an^ unknown mare. Lexington therefore has, holding Timoleon's American fe- male ancestry to be pure, seventeen pure crosses of blood ; and his foals, of the present season, have eighteen crosses before they reach the oriental blood. This is not a very long, but an aver- age, pedigree. It is therefore idle to speak of stud-book horses, or, in other words, English thoroughbreds, being held to be such, on proof of eight generations, since cold-blood.* The way in which this misapprehension has occurred, is easy to explain. For regular races, for prizes to be run for by thor- oughbred horses, the age of the animal entered is all that the owner is asked to prove. It is presumed, as a matter of course, that all the horses entered will be thoroughbreds ; but if not, no objection would be made. For, since a thoroughbred horse is believed to be the most complete and finished animal of his kind, any other starting against him does so to his own proper loss and disadvantage, not to that of the field or of the racing community ; and this alike, whether it be an imported Barb, or Arab, a foreign-bred racer, or an animal of inferior blood. K any person should think proper to start a hunter, a car- * See Note 3, p. 56. 12 THE HORSE. riage horse, or for that matter, a dray horse, for the Derby or St. Leger, he would be laughed at for his pains, but there would be no obstacle to his doing so. In England, however, there is another class of races, con- fined, for the most part, to inferior race-courses in the provinces, and to hunt-meetings, at which prizes are given to be run for by hunters not thoroughbred, and by other horses of inferior blood, known in common parlance, as Cocktail Stakes. These prizes had their origin, for the most part, in the desire to elevate the style, character, action and blood, in various sec- tions of the country, among animals not thoroughbred ; and it is a frequent condition attached to these, that the horses entered must have been hunted so many times in the season, with such or such a pack of hounds. As these races became popular, as the sweepstakes increased in value, and as the reputation gained by the winners began to add sensibly to their value, it became an object to introduce horses quite thoroughbred, or as nearly thoroughbred as possible, under the guise of hunters, to compete with the half and three- quarter bred nags, over which they had an incalculable advan- tage ; the rather that these hunters' stakes are for the most part heat races, and that coming-again is especially the point in which blood tells the most. To this end, dangerous, headstrong, runaway, thoroughbred weeds would be sent out the requisite number of times in the sea- son with a light stable-boy on their backs, to see the hounds throw off, canter across a few fields, pull up and return to their stables. The hunting season at an end, they would receive the huntsman's certificate in due form, that they had been hunted so many times, as might be necessary to qualify ; would be put into training, and would, of course, win the stakes at their ease, against great weight-carrying half-breds. This state of things it was necessary to prevent, as it was entirely frustrating the end for which these races were instituted ; and in order to do this, it was judged advisable to determine a certain standard of purity of blood, beyond which a horse should not be allowed to start in a cocktail race ; or, in other words, beyond which he should be deemed thoroughhred, in so far as contests with horses of avowedly inferior strain are concerned. PURE GENERATIONS OF LEXINGTON. 13 After consideration, it was resolved that the proof adduced against any horse, that lie had eight crosses of thorough blood, should disqualify hira from running as not thoroughbred ; and, in that way, it has come to be a general mode of speech to say that a horse having eight pure crosses on both sides, is thor- oughbred.* In some cocktail stakes, five pure crosses, on both sides, is a disqualification ; and in many farmers' stakes, three crosses on the two sides, disqualify a horse from starting for such stakes, as not thoroughbred. Any of these, however, are far from proving him to he thoroughbred. It was a general impression in Yorkshire, in my time, among the horse-breeding, hard-riding, fox-hunting farmers, that a colt got by a thoroughbred horse, out of a dam and grand dam, similarly begotten, was thoroughbred : and I believe that the same o^^inion largely obtains among the breeders and owners of trotting horses in the United States. At least, I know, that I have heard many animals, positively, declared to be thorough- bred, when the person asserting such to be the case, did not pretend to trace the descent above two or three generations, and that, for the most part, on the sire's side only. The only thing which constitutes a horse truly thoroughbred is, that he, either, proves back directly on both sides to oriental sire and oriental dam, or proves back so far, into the mist of an- tiquity, that the memory of man goeth not to the contrary. It is one thing to trace Sir Archy to Bustler, who was the son of the Helmsley Turk, in the reign of Charles I., and a mare whose name and origin is unknown. But it would be quite another thing to trace him to the son of the Helmsley Turk, and a mare who should be perfectly well- known to be a Flemish dray mare. Even should that be the case, however, so many generations have elapsed since Bustler was begotten — not less than fifteen or sixteen, at the least, to the present day — that the effect would be only to show that, as has been already stated, there is unde- niably, at the remotest point to which we can go, an infinitesi- mal drop of some blood other than pure Arab, Barb or Turk, in the veins of the English and American race-horse. * See Note 4, p. 56. 14 THE H0K8E. It has been sliown above, at page 99 of vol. i, that in the tenth cross, a horse has but one one-thousand-and-twenty-fourth part of the blood of either of his progenitors. In the sixteenth gener- ation, therefore, he could have but one sixty-six-tliousand-nine- hundred-and-seventj-sixth part of the blood of either ; in other words, that is to say — supposing Bustler to be the son of a cart- mare, which is incredible, not to say impossible — of coarse, cold blood. So also, in the pedigi-ee of Eclipse, fifteen full generations are accomplished in the foals of the present year, since the un- known mare, who was the most remote progenitrix of Spiletta, the mother of Eclipse, was stinted to Brimmer. JSTow, on the other hand, supposing the dam or sire, in the eighth degree of remoteness, of any animal, to be of Flemish, or Cleveland Bay, or Suffolk Punch, unimproved blood, the animal in question would have one two-hundred-and-fifty-sixth-part of that base blood ; and in every successive generation, nearer to the strain, the proportion of base blood will be doubled ; until where the sire is thoroughbred, and the dam wholly coarse- blooded, the mixture will be half and half. To those, who have not made this subject of the crossing of bloods their especial study, it will appear incredible that the two-hundred-and-fifty-sixth part in the blood of an animal should tell to his detriment ; to those who have done so, it is a certain fact ; and one might fully as well argue with such persons against the efficiency of blood at all, as question the deterioration con- sequent on such a strain. One more observation, and I pass to the consideration to which these remarks are preliminary, as to the other distinct bloods or breeds, among horses, which are to be found, improved or unimproved in America. That observation is — that the probable reason for the adop- tion of the eighth generation, as that which should debar an animal from running as not thoroughbred, is the idea that after such lapse of time no difference was discoverable in the perfoi'mances of animals tracing directly to Barb or Arab horse, and Barb or Arab mare, and of animals whose parentage was,, on one side or the otlier, dark. And this reason would have SPANISH BLOOD. 15 been a good one, but for two objections — either of them the fatal. Firstly — it should have been shown that the stock had been improving constantly, by each successive cross of pure blood, since the unknown admixture, but that cannot be shown. Nor is there the slightest reason to suspect that Marske was a better horse than Squirt, or Squirt than Bartlett's Childers, or tlian Snake, his maternal grandfather, who was only one generation removed from blood which cannot be authenticated ; the daugh- ter of Hautboy, Snake's dam, not being traceable on the side of her dam. Secondly — it should be established, that in the case of these remotest ancestors and ancestresses of unknown blood, that blood was base ; whereas, so far from that being the case, the reverse of that proposition is almost certain. Thei'e are a dozen mares on the old Turf records, not as un- known, but known, under their names, as for instance, the old Montagu Mare, the old Yintner Mare, the mare above quoted, daughter to Hautboy, Bright's Roau, the Lonsdale Tregon- well mare, and others, of whom either nothing can be authenti- cated on either side, or, if any thing, on the side of their sires only. Many of these mares were the best runners of their own day, as their progeny have been in all after days ; and we have sujQicient evidence at this period, from the Marquis of J^ew- castle's work and others, that racing was fully established, that a distinct breed of running horses existed, and that the science of breeding for the turf was already partially, if not — as I should say, from a careful examination of his writings — pretty thor- oughly understood. These horses were, it seems, nearly, if not entirely, of pure Spanish blood, previous to the admixture of directly imported Barb blood, which Il^I'ewcastle distinctly prefers to Arabian. How far the imported Spanish mares and horses were, at that date, of pure Barb blood, it is now impossible to decide. We know the Andalusian horse was a very high-caste animal, of Barb descent, and I think it probable if the archives of Spain could be consulted, that the royal studs and Haras of Cordova would be proved to have contained pure Barbs, and nothing 16 THE HOKSE. beside ; and that tne Eoyal Spanish horses, from which the ear- liest EngHsh importations were made, were as purely and dis- tinctly of oriental blood, although bred on Spanish soil, as is the English and American race-horse of the present day. In that case, and I am myself nearly convinced that so it was, the unknown progenitrixes to which so much speculation has attached, would have been as noble as the noblest stallions to which they bore the champions of the early English Turf, and the parents of our greatest modern winners. One thing is in- disputably certain, that our ancestors in the reign of Charles the First and Charles the Second, were far too well acquainted with the theory and principle of breeding — as is evinced by the writings of ]^ewcastle, and the satires of Bishop Hall, so long before as in the reign of Queen Elizabeth — to put a Flanders or Lincolnshire coach mare to a horse of high blood, at a compara- tively high price, in the hoj^e of her progeny turning out a racer. It is idle, therefore, I say, in the last degree, to believe that the unknown progenitrixes of Snake, of Bustler, of Grey Haut- boy, of Grey Grantham, and of Whynot, were, because unknown, ignoble. I may almost say, we know that they were not so. First, because the breeders of those capital horses could not, in any ordinary human likelihood, have been so ignorantly stupid as to breed such mares to the best Turks and Arabs ; and, second, because, by all that the turf-experience of two centuries has taught us, we may be sure that, if they had done so. Snake, and Bustler, and "Whynot, and Grey Hautboy, and Grey Grantham, would not have been the result of the ridiculous experiment, but some carriage horses, or, at the best, troopers, of which not a word would have descended to posterity. The laws of nature are, save in exceptional cases, immu- table ; and one of the most paramount of these seems to be that which insists, as a consequence, that like must beget like. So long ago as in the reign of Augustus CaBsar, the first Latin Lyric Poet wrote, not as a fanciful hypothesis, but as an estab- lished principle. Fortes creantur fortibus et bonis. Eat in juvencis, est in equis, patrum Virtus, nee imbelleni ferocoa Progenerant aquilae columbam. WHAT IS BLOOD? 17 Which one may render — freely, but to the point — The brave begotten are by the brave and good. There is in steers', there is in horses' blood, The virtue of their sires. No timid dove Springs from the coupled eagles' furious love. And to this day the stanza is tlie breeder's rule. So much so, that when a real turfman is informed that Timoleon, the son of Sir Archy, had for his great great grandsire a common cart- stallion, named Fallow,* he merely shrugs up his shoulders, well satisfied that there must be an absurd error somewhere, although he may not be able to account for the way in which it has arisen. It is enough, that no owner of a full-blooded mare by Driver, dam by V^ampire, &c., would have dreamed of putting her to a cart-horse ; and much more, that, if he had been so abject an ass, Timoleon, a three-parts-bred, could never himself have stayed the distance, much less have got generation after generation of the best and stanchest horses in tJie world. The result and end of all this inquiry and disquisition brings us to the inevitable conclusion that, although, in some cases, even in the best families, all the links may not be distinctly traceable, the English horse known as thoroughbred is virtually of pure Barb, Arab, and Turkish descent, in nine hundred and ninety-nine parts out of a thousand of his blood, his physical conformation, and his hereditary moral qualities, if I may use such a term, of courage, sj^irit, endurance, and determined will ; and that the American thoroughbred is directly descended in the same, or more than the same, proportions from the English thoroughbred. In England, although, when mention is made oi pure blood, thorough blood of the Oriental strain, as opposed to what is generally known as cold blood, is intended, it is universally conceded that there are many other bloods — meaning, by bloods, distinct families or races capable of transmitting their own type and qualities, undeteriorated, by a continual process of in-breed- ing— which have been preserved up to this day, and still exist, as pure — if by tlie word pure we imply unmixed with any other blood — as that of the highest form of racer. Of these distinct families, the most remarkable is the gigantic dray-horse, used * This should be imported Fellow, a son of Cade. — Ed. Vol. II,— 3 IS THE HORSE. principally, if not only, by the London brewers and distillers, vast, ponderons, slow animals, of enormous powers of draught, but incapable of travelling beyond a foot's pace. These huge quadrupeds, four of which being once presented by the East India Company to some native prince, were not inappropriately named by him English elephants, vary from sixteen to nineteen hands in height, and are distinguished by their broad chests, short backs, round barrels, their immense volume of mane, resembling that of a lion, their heavy tails, great liairj' fetlocks, and immense, well-formed feet. The lighter of these horses, before tlie days of railroads, were used for teaming, and for carriers' wagon-horses ; and the very lightest in the reign of Queen Anne, for carriage-horses, and even for mounting the heavy cavalry with which Marlborough and Prince Eugene rode over the splendid squadrons of Maison Roi at Oudenarde and Malplaquet. Now, they are restricted entirely to the use whence they derive their name, and are employed only in the metropolis, and there, perhaps, rather as a matter of pomp and class-pride, than of real utility, by the wealthy brewers and distillers, who keep stables full of these great costly beasts, as fat and sleek as brew- ers' grains, hot stabling, and careful grooming will render them, and parade them a few times in every year, glittering in splen- did brass-j)lated harness, and driven by human bipeds almost as bulky, as useless, and as slow as the animals they conduct. These horses are, it is supposed, originally of Flanders descent ; but they have been bred for many centuries in the fens of Lincolnshire, where they reach their highest perfection as to size, and still exist entirely unmixed. The cause of the preservation of this singular race of animals, in a perfectly pure state, seems to be its unfitness, even when crossed with lighter breeds, for any thing but the slowest work, which has long led** to its disuse even for farm-work and the heaviest teaming on roads ; carriers' wagons themselves having, long since, passed into abeyance as complete as the pack-horses which they super- seded. It is needless to say, that for carriage horses, much less for tlie mounts of dragoon regiments, no cross, however remote, of these huge, slow-stalking, hairy-hoofed masses of fat and exuberant CLEVELAND BAYS. 19 mnscle, would in these flying days bo tolerated, when nothing will suit the purpose but animals, wdiich can go the pace and keep it up, under the saddle, or before a draught, in a style which can be done by nothing but a large admixture of the best thorough blood. The second great English family which may, perhaps, be regarded as the true type of the English horse of the Midland Counties, from the remotest times, is that of the far-famed Cleveland Bays. Cleveland, a district of the East-riding of Yorkshire, and the Yale of Pickering, in the same county, has been from a very distant period the principal breeding region for carriage horses, hunters, troop horses, and hackneys, of the high- est grade ; and it still preserves its character in that particular; although the character of the animals themselves, used for all these jjurposes, is now entirely altered ; and although, in con- sequence of the alteration of the demand, the original breed is rapidly passing away, and a pure Cleveland Bay, of unmixed, or unimproved blood, is now rarely to be met with, even in its own native district. The Cleveland Bay, in its natural and unmixed form, is a tall, powerfully-built, bony animal, averaging, I should say, fifteen hands three inches in height, rarely falling short of fif- teen and a half, or exceeding sixteen and a half hands. Tlie crest and withers are almost invariably good, the head bony, lean, and well set on. Ewe necks are, probably, rarer in this family than in any other, unless it be the dray-horse, in which it is never seen. The faults of shape, to which the Cleveland Bay is most liable, are narrowness of chest, nndue length of body, and flat- ness of the cannon and shank bones. Their color is universally bay, rather on the yellow bay than on the blood bay color, with black manes, tails, and legs. They are sound, hardy, active, powerful horses, with excel- lent capabilities for draught, and good endurance, so long as they are not pushed beyond their speed, which may be estimated at from six to eight miles an hour, on a trot, or from ten to twelve — ■ the latter quite the maximum — on a gallop, under almost any weight. The larger and more showy of these animals, of the tallest 20 THE H0E8E. and heaviest ty^^e, were tlie favorite coach horses of their day ; the more spiry and lightly-bnilt, of equal height, were the hunt- ers, in the days when the fox was hunted by his drag, unken- nelled, and run half a dozen hours, or more, before he was either earthed, or worn out and worried to death. Then the short- er, lower, and more closely ribbed up were the road hackneys ; a style of horse unhappily now almost extinct, and having, un- equally, substituted in its place, a wretched, weedy, half-bred or three-quarter-bred beast, fit neither to go the pace with a weight on its back, nor to last the time. From these Cleveland Bays, however, though in their pure state nearly extinct, a very superior animal has descended, which, after several steps and gradations, has settled down into a family, common throughout all Yorkshire, and more or less all the Mid- land counties, as the farm-horse, and riding or driving horse of the farmers, having about two crosses, more or less, of blood on the original Cleveland stock. The first gradation, when pace became a desideratum with hounds, was the stinting of the best Cleveland Bay mares to good thoroughbred horses, with a view to the progeny turning out hunters, troop-horses, or, in the last resort, stage-coach horses, or, as they were termed, machiners. The most promis- ing of these half-bred colts were kept as stallions ; and mares, of the same type with tlieir dams, stinted to them, produced tlie improved English carriage horse of fifty years ago. The next step was the putting the half-bred fillies, by tho- rouglibreds out of Cleveland Bay mares, a second time, to tho- roughbred stallions ; their progeny to become the hunters, while themselves and tlieir brothers were lowered into the car- riage horses ; and the half-bred stallions, wliich had been t]ie getters of carriage horses, were degraded into the sires of the new, improved cart-horse. From this, one step more brings us to the ordinary hunter of the present day, of provincial hunting countries, for light weights, and persons not willing, or able, to pay the pi*ice of thoroughbreds. These are the produce of the third and fourth crosses of thorough blood on the improved mares, descended in the third or fourth degree from the Cleveland Bay stock; and are in every way superior, able and beautiful animals, possess- THE MODERN HUNTER. 21 1112^ speed and eiidnrfinco sufficient to live with the best lionnds in any countries, except the very fastest, such as tlie Melton Mowbray, the Northamptonshire, and, perhaps, the Yale of Belvoir, where the fields are so large, the land all in grass, and the scent so fine, that fox-hunting in them is in fact steeple- chasing; so that no fox can live before the hounds on a fine scenting day above half an hour, nor any horse, except a tho- roughbred, live even that time with the hounds, having fourteen stone or upward on his back. The three or four parts bred horses, of which I have been speaking, are in general better leapers than pure-blooded horses ; are perfectly up even to sixteen or eighteen stone with hounds, across any of the plough countries in which the scent does not lie so hotly as on the grass lands ; and, indeed, across any coun- try, whether grass or plough, in w^hich the fields are small, the enclosures frequent, and the dividing fences large and difficult. For it must be borne in mind, first, that fences impede hounds, which have to scramble over them, more than they do horses, which take them in their stroke ; secondly, that it is necessary, nine times out of ten, to take a horse by the head, when going at his leaps, and to give him a slight pull on alight- ing, which in some degree allows him to catch his wind ; and, thirdly, that in narrow fields of six or eight acres, which is per- haps the average size in the arable countries, a horse cannot extend himself in a racing stroke, as he can over the great forty and 'sixty acre pastures of Leicestershire and Rutlandshire, but must be kept going within himself, at a three-quarters gallop, and always under a pull. Severe fencing, although it takes something out of a horse, on the whole, undoubtedly tavors'the lower bred hunter; because it always in a degree diminishes the pace, and, as every sportsman knows, it is the pace that kills ; and also, because the part-bred horse is, for the most part, both the bolder and the hardier jumper — the thoroughbred, from the thinness of his skin and the fineness of his coat, disliking to face stiff thorny hedges, and having, in many cases, an insurmount- able objection to cross bright water. These three or four part bred hunters are, I think, as a gen- eral rule, the most beautiful horses I have ever seen ; far supe- rior in form to the average of thoroughbreds. They have a good 22 THE HOKSE. deal of tlie Arab form m their lean, bony beads ; have almost invariably fine, lofty, arcbed crests, and bigb, tbin witbers, and sbow tbeir blood in tbe softness and fineness of tlieir coats, and in tbe flat sbape and solid construction of tbeir cannon bonef. and sbanks. They have, in a great degree, lost tbeir distinctive bay color, from tbe numerous blood crosses of other shades ; and are often found chestnuts, iron greys, blue and red roans, and dark browns with cinnamon muzzles ; which last is a favorite color, being supposed to indicate hardiness. Blacks are not so common, and are held to indicate an inferior cross, often of tbe black Lincoln- shire cart-horse, unless where the line is distinctly traceable to the thoroughbred sire. Many of the most distinguished race-horses have been tbe most favorite and most successful hunter-getters, and have acquired as much celebrity for tbe transmission of their qualities to their half-bred stock, as they have for their racing descendants ; just in the same manner as Messenger has gained celebrity, in this country, for his roadsters. In some districts, particular colors are very prevalent ; indi- cating tbe preference felt foi* some particular stallion, which has stood in that neighborhood ; as greys in the West riding of York- shire, where Grey Orville,* a St. Leger winner himself, and the sire of Ebor, Emilius, Mnley, and many other racers in a very high form, was a most favorite hunter-getter, and the sire of many of the veiy best part-bred horses that ever crossed a coun- try— browns, with white locks in the tail, in tbe East riding, where Woodpecker, of whom that is the distinctive mark to the four\h and fifth generation, stood for several seasons — blacks in tbe vicinity of Doncaster, tbe descendants of Smolensko — chest- nuts, wherever that beautiful horse, Comus, covered country mares ; and, in yet later days, dark browns in the North riding of Yorkshire, where that undeniable racer and progenitor of racers, hunters, and steeple-chasers, Lottery, formerly Tinker, by Tramp out of Mandane, has deservedly been the favorite of all favorites. It is no wonder, that the offspring of such liorses as those named above, out of dams begotten l)y such sires as Uamble- tonian. Sir Peter Teazle, Doctor Syntax, and Filbo da Puta, from * See Note 5, p. 56. BREEDING. 23 mares tliemselves half-bred out of Cleveland Bays Ly thorough- bred stallions, should be hunters and steeple-chasers, in the highest possible form, and little, if at all, inferior, for any pur- pose, except that of actual racing, to full-blooded horses. The price which the breeders pay for the service of these stallions is very considerable, although it is usual for horses which stand for thoroughbred mares at twenty and twenty-five guineas the leap, to serve country mares for sums varying, according to the popularity of the horse, and the quality of the mares likely to be sent to him, from live to seven and ten guineas. But the farmers willingly pay the charges, and are amply rewarded for doing so. The colts and fillies are usually broken at two years old, to the lightest sort of farm harness work, such as brusli-harrowing, in order to render them tract- able and hardy ; and, when three years old and rising four, are broken to the saddle, and taken out with the hounds, by their owners ; who are generally hard and determined riders, though they have rarely good hands, and are yet more rarely capable of making or turning out a made and perfect hunter. If such young animals are of good j^romise, gallop well, fence boldly and clevei'ly, and are of good forn;i, they will real- ize to the breeder from eighty to a hundred and twenty guineas, at four years old ; and, if, in the dealers' hands, into which they generally fall secondly, they realize their promise, they become worth from a hundred and fifty to three hundred guineas, ac- cordingly as they are weight-carriers, and have a greater or less turn of speed. If they prove, on the other hand, as colts, too leggy, cumbersome and slow for hunters, with high-stepping action and fine show, they will bring the breeder nearly as much for first-class carriage-horses, as they would have done, had they proved suitable for hunters. If they should fall short of size and show for these, but be sound, active, and clever horses, up to fifteen two inches high, they are sure to realize thirtj^-five guineas, the regulation price, for light dragoon and huzzar chargers ; and if yet smaller, say from fourteen three to fifteen one, with beauty, style, and action, they will be worth from fifty guineas, upward, for roadsters, cover hacks, or boys' hunters. At the very worst, if they go wrong in the wind, short of being decidedly broken-winded, throw out bad 24 THE HOKSE. curbs, or even incipient spavins or ringbones, tliey are certain of fetching at least twenty-five ponnds for leaders of tlie fast coaclies ; and probably are now Avorth as rancli for liorsing the rural omnibuses and railroad tenders. No sort of breeding in England is so profitable as this. The breeder is comparatively secured against any thing like ulti- mate loss, while he has a fair chance of drawing a capital prize, in the shape of a first-rate hunter, or a carriage horse of su]3e- rior quality ; and it is to the breeding of such class of animals that the attention of the farmers, in horse-breeding counties, is wholly directed at this date. Eor this reason, one has no more pure Cleveland Bays, the use of the stallion of that breed being entirely discontinued ; large, bony, slow thoroughbreds of good form, and great power, which have not succeeded on the turf, having been substituted for them, even for the getting of cart and farming-team horses ; and the farmers finding it decidedly to their advantage to work large, roomy, bony, half or two-third bred mares, out of which, when they grow old, or if by chance they meet an accident, they ma}^ raise hunters, coach horses, or, at the worst chargers, or machiners, rather than to plough with garrons and weeds, the stock of which would be valueless and worthless, except for the merest drudgery. It is of these horses, that I am perfectly convinced, trotters might be made of the highest quality, if those most fitted to the purpose were selected for that end by men properly quali- fied to judge of them, and were then trained and trotted, ac- cording to American rules, by such men as Spicer, Woodruff, or "Wheelan — and tliat such could be furnished, even in greater numbers, than they are here, in America, from hunting stables, and farm-studs devoted to the rearing of such animals, I have no sort of doubt. I liave seen several American trotters, Avhich, from their ap- pearance, would have passed as English hunters — especially those of Messenger's get — and which, I doubt not, if trained for that purpose, would have shone as much across country as they did on the trotting turf. I would particularly specify that very ex- cellent and game animal, of the olden day, who accomplished the then — I speak of twenty years ago and upward — rare i'eat PAUL PRY. 25 of trotting above eighteen miles in the hour, Mr. Wm. McLeod's Paul Prj. This liorse lived to a good old age, and was last owned by Mr. WiUiam Niblo. As he grew old, he became gaunt and raw-boned, but, in his better days he presented to my eyes very nearly the cut of an English, or, perhaps, I should say, rather an Irish hunter — for he had something of a goose rump — of the highest form. I have repeatedly ridden him, as he stood for many months in my stable, and he was a fine steady galloper, and could take a four-foot fence in his stroke and think nothing of it. I have often wondered that, among the many importations of stock by our spirited and enterprising breeders, who are doing 60 much for the improvement of horses and cattle in America, no one has thought of im]3orting some fine, roomy, sixteen hands, half or two-third parts bred mares, by highly reputed sires* lam satisfied, that such mares, judiciously bred to the strongest and most powerful of om* American or imported stal- lions, such horses as Consternation is reported to be, or as Bos- ton was, in all but the fatal defect of his blindness, would do more to improve the stock of the United States in size and sub- stance, without loss of speed or blood, than any other plan of breeduig can eifect — since I am satisfied that all attempts at giving strength, bone, and substance to the ofispring of light, under-sized, weedy, highbred mares by stinting them to Mor- gan, or Black Hawk, part-bred trotting stallions, or to im- ported JSTormr.u horses, are moves in the wrong direction, and must lead not to the improvement, but to the deterioration of the stock ; which will probably not gain much in size or power, and will certainly lose in blood, and consequently in the ability to stay a distance. In order to improve a race, it appears to be indisputable, that the superior blood must be on the sire's side, the size, form and beauty, on that of the dam. This is, however, a portion of my subject which will be considered more at length in another part of this volume, under the head of breeding, where all the considerations of that in- teresting topic will be reviewed at some length. I shall now proceed, shortly, to the other more remarkable * Boston was uot blind when lie died. 26 THE H0K8E. Englisli families of tlie liorse ; treating tliein, however, far more succinctly than I liave done the Cleveland Bays, as they have been less often imported into this country, and have contributed little, if at all, to the formation of any part of the stock of the United States, having left scarcely any perceptible trace of their blood in any existing breed. This is not true of the Cleveland Bays, whose mark is clearly discernible in the work- ing horses of several of the Eastern States, Massachusetts, and Yermont, more especially, into the former of which several mares and one stallion were imported by the late Admiral Sir Isaac Coffin, beside others, I believe, at a more remote period. The second distinct, old English breed is the Suffolk Punch, which is said to be originally descended from the Norman stal- lion and old Suffolk cart-mare. It is now, like the Cleveland, nearly extinct; but has been replaced by an animal possessing many of the characteristic peculiarities and excellences of its ancestors, with higher blood and more perfect finish. " The true Suffolk," says Mi*. Youatt, " stood from fifteen to sixteen hands high, of a sorrel color ; was large-headed ; low-shouldered, and thick on the top ; deep and round-chested ; long-backed ; high in the croup ; large and strong in the quarters ; full in the flanks ; round in the legs, and short in the pasterns. It was the very horse to throw his whole weight into the collar, with sufficient activity to do it effectually, and hardihood to stand a long day's work." I should here observe, that what is in England called soi'rel is a very different color from that which we understand by the same name ; which is, in truth, chestnut, in all its various tints, from something nearly approaching to real sorrel, up to copper- colored brown, with golden reflections. The real Suffolk sorrel trenches very closely on the dun, with a kind of bluish or nmd-colored under-tint running through it. Their manes and tails are heavy, inclined to curl or wave, and are invarial)ly of a far lighter shade than the bodies ; they are often cream-colored, and sometimes even pure white, though without the silvery gloss and sparkle peculiar to the mane of a gray or white horse; and the legs, which are also invariably light, from the knee downward, have a dull, dingy, wliitey -brown hue, which is the reverse of pleasing or beautiful THE SUFFOLK PUNCH. 27 In fact, the characteristics of the Suffolk are all those of utility as opposed to show. He is peculiar to the Saxon coun- ties of old England, and is prettj nearly to the horse what the Saxon man is to the human race at large — a shortish, thick-set, square-built, stumpy, sturdy individual, with a good many ster- ling, solid qualities, and a plentiful lack of graces and amenities ; he is stout of body, but slow to move, and when moved, yet slower to desist from motion ; persevering, of indomitable will, iron resolution and determined obstinacy, not far removed from stubbornness ; but of little spirit, and less fire. Ho was a useful cart-horse and excellent for teaming; but, in proportion as rail- roads and locomotives have superseded vans and wagons for the transportation of heavy merchandise and slow passengers, ex- cept in cities, the Sufiblk Punch has made way for quicker travelling and lighter, if not more honest, or intrinsically valua- ble animals. " The present breed," Mr. Youatt continues, " possesses many of the peculiarities and good qualities of its ancestors. It is more or less inclined to a sorrel color; it is a taller horse; higher and finer in the shoulders ; and is a cross of the York- shire half or three-quarters bred horse. " The excellence and a rare one of the old SufiTolk — and the new breed has not quite lost it — consisted in nimbleness of ac- tion, and the honesty and continuance with which he would exert himself at a dead pulL Many a good draught horse knows well what he can effect ; and after he has attempted and failed, no torture of the whij) will induce him to strain his powers beyond their natural extent. The Suffolk, however, would tug at a dead pull until he dropped. It was beautiful to see a team of true Suffolks, at a signal from the driver, and without the whip, down on their knees in a moment and drag everj^ thing before them. Brutal wagers were frequently laid as to their power in this respect, and many a good team was injured and ruined. The immense power of the Suffolk is ac- counted for by the low position of his shoulder, which enables him to throw so much weight into the collar. " Although the Punch is not what he was, and the Sufiblk and Norfolk farmer can no longer boast of ploughing more 28 THE HOKSE. land in a day than any one else, this is iindonljtedly a valuable breed, " The Duke of Richmond obtained many excellent carriage horses, with strength, activity, and figure, by crossing the Suf- folk with one of his best hunters. "The Suffolk breed is in great request in the neighboring counties of ISTorfolk and Essex, Mr. Wakefield of Barnham, in Essex, had a stallion for which he was offered four hundred guineas," Few of this useful breed of working horses have, I believe, been brought to the United States ; and I find no record of any mares, whatever, being imported, A Suffolk cart stallion was, however, sent into Massachusetts, in the year 1821, by Mr, John Coffin of 'New Brunswick ; and, although I do not know in what part of the State he stood, or what mares he served, I have sometimes fancied that I could detect something of the character of the Punches in the short-built, active horses used in the cartmen's drays of Boston, in that State ; a widely dif_ ferent animal from that used in the ISTew York trucks, many of which show a considerable degree of blood. There are two other w^ ell-known families of working horses in Great Britain ; the first of which is the improved Clydesdale cart-horse, which is said to owe its origin to the Duke of Hamil- ton, who crossed some of the best Lanark mares, with stallions he had brought over from Flanders. " The Clydesdale is longer than the Suffolk, and has a better head, a larger neck, a lighter carcass, and deeper legs," " It is strong," says Mr. Youatt, " hardy," pulling true, and rarely restive. The southern j^arts of Scotland are princij^ally supplied from this district ; and many Clydesdales, not only for agricultural purposes, but for the coach and the saddle, find their way to the central and even the southern parts of England." I am not aware that any of these horses have been brought to America ; nor do I know that any ])articular advantage is to be looked for from their introduction, although they arc good and faithful horses, excellent for fiirm purposes, and would make, without any improvement of blood, extremely useful stage-horses, especially for hilly and heavy roads, where more power than speed is desired. THE GALLOWAY. 2& The Heavy Black Ilorse of Lincolnshire is another distinct variety, bred in all the midland counties from Lincoln to Staf- fordshire. They are, in fact, only a smaller and lighter style of dray-horse, improved by admixture of Flanders, and, per- haps, of a small percentage of thorough-blood. They are still immense animals, standing seventeen hands high, with better forehands, finer withers, and flatter and deeper legs than the dray-horse. The improvement in their blood has increased their pace from two and a half to about four miles an hour, on a walk, which is their only pace, since they are incapable of raising a trot. They are used for wagon-horses, and for draw- ing heavy teams from the wharves through the streets of Lon- don, and occupy much the same position in England, as is held, here, by the Conestoga horse, which I believe to be in great part, if not entirely, of this blood. There was an excellent breed of little horses, varying from thirteen to fourteen hands high, existing in the district of Gal- loway, on the shore of the Solway Frith, in the south of Scot- land, which had their name from the district in which they had their origin. But it is now nearly extinct. "There is a tradition," according to Mr. Youatt, "that the breed is of Spanish extraction, some horses having escaped from one of the vessels of the Grand Armada, which was wrecked on the neighboring coast. This district, however, so early as the time of Edward L, suj^plied that monarch with a great number of horses." It is much to be lamented, that this admirable race of ani- mals is almost lost, and where it exists is sorely deteriorated, owing to the non-perception and non-appreciation of its peculiar excellences as a roadster and hackney, either to drive or ride ; and to its unsuitability to ordinary farm work from want of power and size. To increase these, and obtain a race more suitable to the purposes of agriculture, the farmers of its native region have crossed it with larger and coarser farm-stallions, which has had the very eifect, that may always be looked for, under such cir- cumstances ; the peculiar excellences of the race are lost, and those, which it is desired to ingraft upon it, are not attained. It is to be regretted that the truly admirable qualities of the 30 THB HOESE. Galloway were never brought into notice, until it was too late ; the employment of it, while the race was in its best form, being confined, for the most part, to the better class of farmers, small rnral proprietors and little country gentry, who were not, in the last century, persons of extended views, or liberal education. I am disposed to dwell on this animal a little more fully than I should otherwise do, not that it exists in these States, or has ever — so far as we know or suspect — been imported to them ; but because it is closely analogous to a kindred animal, of, I believe, the same stock, participating in a high degree of the same virtues, which has in the same manner become extinct, to the deep regret of all true lovers of the horse. It must be remembered, that in Great Britain, in conse- quence of the existence of this peculiar pure race of small-sized animals, in the district of Galloway, whence they obtained their name, all very small horses came to be called Galloways ; and that in tlie North of England, particularly, the word Galloway is now synonymous with pony, conveying no pretence that the animal, so called, has any distinctive blood. I will here add that the word pony, in England, is used to imply a horse under tliirteen liands in height, whicli is not subject to taxation — not, as it is used in America, an animal of a short stocky formation, such as, or even larger than, one which would, across the water, be called a Cob. I well remember my surprise at being shown a pair of clever, close-ribbed, round-barrelled horses, of full fifteen hands, and perhaps something over, under the appellation of ponies, on my first arrival here. I proceed, however, to Mr. Youatt's description of the true Galloway, to which I shall ap- pend a few observations of my own, on the original breed, its failure, and the attempts which have been made to replace it. " The pure Galloway," says he, " was said to be nearly four- teen hands high, and sometimes more, of a bright bay or brown, with black legs, and small head and neck, and peculiarly deep clean legs. Its qualities were speed, stoutness, and surefooted- ness, over a very rugged and mountainous country. " Dr. Anderson thus describes the Galloway. ' There was once a breed of small elegant horses in Scotland, similar to those of Iceland and Sweden, which were known by the name of Gal- loways, the best of which sometimes reached the height of four PERFOEMAJfCE OF GALLOWAYS. 31 teen and a half hands. One of this description I possessed, it liaving been bought for my nse when I was a boy. In point of elegance of shape, it was a perfect picture ; and in disposition it was gentle and compliant. It moved almost to a wish, and never tired. I rode this little creature for twenty-five years, and twice in that time I rode a hundred and fifty miles at a stretch, without stopping, except to bait, and that not for above an hour at a time. It came in at the last stage with as much ease and alacrity as it travelled the first. I could have under- taken to liave performed on this beast, when it was in its prime, sixty a miles a day for a twelvemonth running, without any extraordinary exertion.' "A Galloway in point of size — whether of Scotch origin or not we are uncertain — pez-formed, about the year 1814, a greater feat than Dr. Anderson's favorite. It started from London with the Exeter mail, and notwithstanding the numerous changes of horses, and the rapid driving of that vehicle, it arrived at Exe- ter— one hundred and seventy-two miles, a quarter of an hour before the mail. " In 175-1, Mr. Corker's Galloway went one hundred miles a day for three successive days, over the Newmarket Course, and without the slightest distress. " A Galloway belonging to Mr. Sinclair, of Kirby Lons- dale, performed, at Carlisle, the extraordinary feat of a thousand miles in a thousand hours. " Many of the Galloways now in use are procured either from Wales or the New Forest ; but they have materially dimin- ished in number ; they are scarcely sufficient to supj^ly even the neighboring districts, and they are still more materially de- teriorated in form and value. Both the Welsh and Hampshire Galloways and ponies claim, however, some noble blood." In my own youth, I recollect to have seen two Galloways of the true Scottish blood, as distinct from those, of which I shall presently speak, created by especial breeding, in the vain hope of filling the vacancy. They were both, as nearly as possible, of the size indicated, fourteen hands to fourteen hands and a half in height ; but, un- like what is stated above of their color, they were of a deep, rich, glossy cliestnut, almost copper-colored in the shadow, with 32 THE HOKSE. legs not black, but decidedly darker, instead of being ligliter than the bodies, I have myself no objection whatever to white legs and feet, of any nnmber, or to any extent — I do not believe that white hoofs are, in the least degree, softer or more brittle than black hoofs ; and I believe that the old ideas current, in reference to the number of white legs or feet indicating excellence or the re- verse, are the merest and stupidest of all old wife's superstitions ; but I do plead guilty to the strongest prejudice against self-col- ored legs of a ligliter shade than the rest of the limbs, growing paler and more dingy as it descends. A bay horse, with pale, dingy, dull-yellow legs, approaching to dirty sorrel, is, according to my notion, to whatever pedigree he may lay claim, certain to be largely tainted with coarse cold blood ; and a chestnut with sorrel legs, or a sorrel with whitey- brown-paper legs, I think worse yet ; and I would own such an one, on no consideration. On the other hand, I consider the gradual darkening of the legs downward to the hoof, or if the animal have white feet or white stockings, downward to the up- ward margin of the white, as a corroborative indication of good blood ; if the legs be also clean, flat-boned, and free from hair about the fetlocks. All these points were conspicuous in the Galloways of which I speak, and, moreover, they had long, thin manes ; rather spare than shaggy tails ; small, lean, bony heads ; one of tliem with the broad brow and basin face of the Arab; tliin necks, particularly fine toward the throat, and setting on of the head ; soft silky coats ; large eyes, and all the particuhir indica- tions of thorougli blood. Their paces were generally the walk or the canter ; and nei- tlier of the two was a particularly handsome or fast trotter, going along at a good rate, indeed, but in a shufliing style, neither clearly a trot nor a canter. One of them, which I often rode, amhled., as it was called then and there, so fast as to keep up with tlie liand gallop of a thoroughbred lady's mare, in company with which it was constantly ridden. This Galloway, so far as I can remember it, was in fact nei- ther more nor less than a natural pacer, and I am convinced PACING GALLOWAYS. 33 tliat the other might with ease liave been trained to the same ])ace, and to a good rate of going. Whether this was or was not a characteristic of tlie race, I am unable to say ; but I know that tlie animals seemed to me, then, perfect heaux ideals of Andalusian jennets, and were regard- ed as such, by persons more competent to pronounce than my- self. Taken in consideration with reference to the tradition, as to their origin, and comparing this with the like story in regard to the ISTari-aganset pacers, I am of opinion that these two now nearly extinct races, were nearly, if not altogether identical, both in characteristics and descent ; and that it is equally lamentable, that both breeds have passed away, owing to a want of comprehension of their merits, and a failure of well-directed efforts to preserve them. In relation to the Scottish Gallow^ay, attempts have been made, by breeding, to produce a creature analogous to it, and possessing the same qualities ; it has, however, but partially succeeded. iSTeither its remarkable beauty, nor its singular en- durance as a roadster, which was its most marked, as well as its most important, characteristic, having been in any degree re- produced by the experiments at artificial breeding. This, by the way, is in nothing remarkable, although the converse proposition would have been very much so ; if, as is insisted, tlie Scottish Galloway was, in itself, an animal of pure original descent. Since it is well established, that, however nearly, by the admixture of different races of animals, we may in the end produce an external imitation of some particular fam- ily or breed, we must never look to create physical or moral qualities, much less to establish, by a succession of mixtures, a blood which shall transmit itself immixed and identical, from generation to generation. This appears to be an immutable, as it is a most wise and providential law of nature. Monsters and mongrels cannot reproduce their qualities, or even their external form. Were it not so, this fair earth would, long ere this, have become a chaos — a mere laboratory of mon- strosities ; and. the excellent forms, graceful movements, and ar- tistically attributed hues of the tvpes of the animated world, Vol. II.— 3 34: THE HOESE. would be lost in a mixed congeries of grotesque and daily-de- generating hybrids and monsters. And tliis is a fact which never ought to be forgotten by the breeder of animals. He may raise a superior animal by the crossing of an inferior with a superior blood ; but he can never establish that cross — never keep it stationary — never render it capable of reproduction, preserving its improved attributes un- altered. Thus from a Cleveland Bay mare, one may, by the service of a thoroughbred sire, readily produce a most valuable half-bred animal, for many purposes of the field, the road, or the farm. Naturally, one would suppose, that by taking two such half- breds of opposite sexes, the offspring of parents entirely uncon- nected by birth, but both pair holding the same relation of blood, that is to say, both the sires thoroughbred and both the dams Clevelands, and breeding them together, he would obtain an offspring similar to the immediate parents ; of wliich it ne- cessarily possesses the identical blood, in the identical propor- tions— viz. one half thorough, one half Cleveland Bay, blood ; though in four, instead of- two crosses. 'No such thing, however, is the case ; as is well known to every breeder in the north of England, if not elsewhere. No man, putting his half-bred mare to a half-bred, or even two-thirds-bred, stallion, would expect to have a colt equal to either of the parents ; or even, in case of the sire having two or more crosses of pure blood, equal to the progeny of a com- mon mare with a thoroughbred horse. Nor would any man dream of buying an animal so bred, with a view to hunting him ; knowing right well, that before he had gone fifteen minutes at the best pace of hounds, his tail would be shaking ; and that, before half an hour, he would stand still. Yet the same man would not hesitate to ride a half-bred, by a thoroughbred. Wliy these things should be, we do not know. It is one of the mysteries of nature, which we cannot fathom, and of wliich we must rest content to know, that they are, and will continue to be, in despite of all man's weak attempts, wliether intentional or casual, to interrupt the course of nature. Even in our own race, it is an assured fact, that the off- HYBRIDS. 35 8pring of the wliite and the negro cannot continue, above a gen- eration or two, or at most three, to intermarry, like to like, and reproduce itself, without recurring to one of the original stocks, from which to derive vitality and vigor. By continual interconnection with the white, it rises nearer and nearer to the higher type ; by recurrence to the black, it relapses into that, from which it was temporarily lifted by the Urst hybridization. So it is with horses, to the letter. If the half-bred filly be united to a thoroughbred, and her female progeny be so con- nected ad infinitum^ after a few generations, although the drop of base blood must still be there, until the end of time, the progeny w^ill be but a little removed in quality, and entirely undistinguishable in outward appearance, from the pure- blooded animal. If, on the contrary, the half-bred filly be bred back to the Cleveland Bay, or cart-horse, even more rapidly than in the other case, will the process of assimilation, or, in this instance, of re-assimilation advance. Before the third or, at farthest, the fourth cross, the outward characteristics of the pure blood will have wholly disappeared ; and, although, as in the other in- stance, the drop of noble blood must continue there ad infini- tum^ its efiPects will be to all intents and purposes lost, and the animal will be, in spirit and endurance, as in show, little su- perior, if at all, to the baser of its original progenitors. That the same process should occur, where half-breds are inter-bred with half-breds, generation after generation, is inex- plicable; but it is certain. Why the pure blood, w^hich, where it exists unmixed, seems to be indestructible, should be incapa- ble of a prolonged existence when mixed, and must, slowly, but certainly, die out, no man can say, or conjecture. But that it is so, is shown, beyond a peradventure, by the experience of centuries in the system of breeding, and is confirmed by the opinion of all distinguished physiologists. Like democratic conquests, it can only be preserved by far- ther conquests. Acquisition must be added to acquisition, or the first gain must become a loss. To this consideration I shall have occasion ere long to re- vert, when dealing with the pretensions of what assumes to be a 36 THE HORSE. peculiar and distinct family of the American horse, and again when treating of the theory and system of breeding in general. l^ow, briefly, to revert to the subject matter whence I have recently been led devious, I would remark that the attempt to reproduce the Scottish Galloway, of which I have spoken as a failure, was simply the stinting clever, active, pony-mares of twelve and a half or thirteen hands in height, purj)osely select- ed for their shape, legs, feet, general soundness and hardihood, and easy action, to thoroughbred stallions of the best blood, chosen with as much care as the dams, low in stature, but bony and close-ribbed up, with the flue heads and necks, the sloping shoulders and thin withers of the oriental type, From this union was produced a stock of extremely neat, highly bred and finely formed animals, with pretty action and a fair turn of speed. These are the animals which are used as boys' hunters, up to the time when the aspiring Etonian or Harrowite is supposed to be arrived at the supreme height of liis ambition, the capacity to manage a horse. I have myself ridden, in my younger days, two and three- part bred Galloways, from an original pony stock, which, with a boy's seven or eiglit stone upon their backs, were quite able to hold their own and live, not perhaps quite in the first flight, but in a very fair place, among hard-riding and well-mounted men, through a racing run with fox-hounds, and win a brush for their rider at the end. On these same Galloways the young ladies of the family learn to ride, while the masculines of the rising generation are construing Homer, cricketing, or sculling wherries on the Thames ; and ultimately, as the boys, promoted into men, as- cend the backs of veritable horses, the girls obtain possession of the little favorites, transmitting them each to the next younger, as they, too, mount up to the thoroughbred park-hack, with its darling bangtail, and become, ex officio, young ladies. The larger and heavier of these become covert hacks and roadsters for non-hunting, elderly gentlemen, clergymen and country doctors; they are usually sure-footed — a quality which they inherit from the pony mother, probably of Scottish or Cam- brian mountain descent, — have good, round action, and a reason- able turn of speed. WELL-BRED PONIES. 37 If they increase to full fourteen and from thence np to fif- teen hands, powerfully built, with short backs, round barrels, deep, clean legs, coupled with lofty crest and carriage, fine heads, the ability to carry fourteen stone, or upward, at their ease, to trot fourteen, or gallop eighteen, miles in the hour, having two, or more, authenticated crosses of pure blood, they are called cobs of the first class, command immense prices, often above a hundred guineas, and are intrinsically, apart from the consideration of money price, extremely valuable quadrupeds, and much sought after, by men \\\\o ride heavy, and who ride much, on the road. Still, they are not Scottish Galloways, nor any thing resem- bling them — if only in the one point that the Scottish Galloway could and did, and that the artificial Galloway cannot and does not, transmit either its form or its qualities by hereditary de- scent. Of the other English or British breeds, it is needless to speak at large ; as most of them are known and imported, though rare- ly, if ever, bred in this countr}^ ; and the others, which are not known, have no interest attaching to them, as having no espe- cial utility or adaptation for any purposes here. The former are the little Shetlander ; rarely exceeding twelve hands in height, and often much smaller ; which, for such an atom of horseflesh, has greater weight-carrying power, greater comparative speed, and greater endurance than any ani- mal in the known world ; and the larger and less finely formed Highland pony, which, while acknowledged inferior to the genuine Sheltie, still possesses many of its qualities, especially its hardihood, sure-footedness, power to carry weight, and gal- lant endurance. In neatness of form and limb, it is inferior, as much as it is superior in size, to the Shetlander ; yet the smaller of the Highland ponies are frequently passed off on those, who are not first-rate judges, as their tiny northern cousins. Their great good-temper, docility, and sureness of foot, ren- der them the best of all animals on which to put young chil- dren, and they are commonly used for that purpose in Amer- ica ; the ass, which is decidedly better than the pony for giving a firm seat and controlling hand, inasmuch as it is far more dif- ficult to sit, and as it requires both a will and a way to 38 THE HORSE. compel it against its own will, being liardlj known at all, and never used for sucli purposes in the United States. In England, it is invariably the first step, and it is curious to see what power it gives to the young rider, who, having learned his rudiments on the obstinate but long-enduring grizzel, finds himself impregnably seated on a high-spirited pony, which an inexperienced spectator would imagine infinitely the more difficult to ride, and able to defy all its cabrioles or soubresaults to unseat him. A boy who can sit an ass, so that he cannot be kicked over its head, can sit any thing, and is in a fair way to make a first- rate horseman. Hence its extreme fitness for teaching chil- dren ; its form rendering it very difficult to sit, its temper very difficult to control, while, at the same time, its stolid and lazy habits avert all danger of its doing more than depositing its young rider gently in the dirt, and then falling to graze on the nearest dock leaf or Canada thistle. It never shies, never plunges, and, above all, never runs away. It is, perhaps, at once the least dangerous and most diflBcult animal to ride in the whole range of the quadruped creation. I well remember the fun of a scene, which occurred at some rural merry-makings in the park of a gentleman in whose neigh- borhood I was brought up ; when donkey races being a part of the programme, half a dozen young men, all of them first-rate performers across country, and able to handle the wildest thor- oughbred, relying on the fact, that they had all once been donkey-riders themselves, undertook to act as jocks on the occa- sion, to the racing neddies. It was all very well at first, but when the tug arrived, and the spur was exhibited at the run-in, up went the heels and down went the heads of all the neddies simultaneously, and away went the gallant jocks, yards over the long ears of their 9non- turcs, who at once betook themselves to munching the green- sward, much to the amusement of the lady spectators, and to the delight of the ten and twelve year-old urchins — legitimate owners of the neddies, and younger brothers, or cousins, of the discomfited Meltonian jocks — who shortly after, legitinuitely perched on the croups of the animals, delivered a sweepstakes, which came off' with great eclat, among universal cudgelling THE IRISH HUNTER. 39 and spiirnng, none of the riders caring an iota more for the nod- dy's kicking up, than neddy cared for his rider's spurring, or losing so much as a stirrup in the race. Befoi'e passing to tlie next branch of my subject, I suppose I should say a word as to the Irish hunter, as he is, in some sort, a distinct animal ; not as producing himself from original pa- rents, but as originating from a cross of the thoroughbred with the native Irish horse, and as possessing a peculiar way of going, which, at first, I presume, acquired in conformity with the re- quirements of the country he is called upon to cross, has be- come characteristic, and now appears to be native to the breed, as it seems to be " to the manner born." Tlie Irish hunter is in general a less highly-bred horse than his English competitor ; not often, I should say, having more than two crosses of pure blood, and is not unfrequently some- what ragged in his shajDes. He has, almost always, a good forehand and crest, not a particularly ilood-shaped head, but bony and well set on. He is so often goose-rumped as to render that point, in some degree, one of his characteristic marks ; and, in the old day, if he had Deen long in his own country, he was too often nicked, so as to make him carry his dock curled over his rumj), greatly to tlie detriment of his appearance, and tending to make him look even less blood-like than he really is. His legs and feet are almost invariably good ; he is apt, I think, to be a little short and straight on his pasterns, but is sound and sure-footed. He is quick, rather than fast ; nimble, rather than swift ; a clever jumper, rather than a slashing fencer. He goes, owing to the nature of his country, wherein there is little, comparatively speaking, of good galloping ground, the soil being for the most part either deep and soft, or broken, rugged and stony, far more within himself and upon his haunches, and far less extended, than an English hunter. For wall-leap- ing, where there are no ditches, he is unrivalled, though very uneasy and difficult to sit ; taking nothing in his fly, but stop- ping short with his forefeet almost in contact with the obstacle, and then bucking over it with all his legs together, and alight- ing not unusually on his hind feet — a practice, which, however 40 THE HOKSE. Tinj)leasant to sit, and difficult to unaccustomed riders, unques- tionably spares the back sinews of the forelegs many a severe jar. He is particularly adapted to the broken, rudely tilled, and rugged country, in which he is used ; where stone walls are the most ordinary fences, and next to them double ditches, with a turf bank or dyke between them. These latter he has a partic- ularly clever trick of spurning with his liind hoofs, as he tops them, so as to gain a purchase whence to make a second spring, thereby clearing the second drain — the whole fence being usu- ally too wide to be cleared at a stride, while the turf dyke is too rotten and insecure to admit of its being leaped, on and off, like the somewdiat similar banks of Hertfordshire and Essex. In England he is not a favorite, his mode of leaping causing him to lose time at his fences, when the hounds are flying as they do in the grass countries, and also rendering him liable to jump short, in case of there being a large ditch, as there usually is, to the stake and bound fences. He is, moreover, not gene- rally a good water-jumper, which is a fatal defect in countries abounding, as the best English hunting counties do, in large brooks and yawning drains. For American hunting, where hunting on horseback exists, he is, of all others, the very horse required ; his immense jiow- ers, as a jumper of height, enabling him to hop over the stiffest six-bar Virginia rail-fences, as if they were nothing ; while the woodland and otherwise encumbered character of the country would render his want of speed of comparatively small account. I know not how, or why, it should be so ; for I have no know- ledge that Irish horses have ever been imported into this coun- try in sufficient numbers to have any effect on the character of the American horse ; but the resemblance of the two families struck me, on my first arrival in the United States, nor can I yet divest myself of the idea. Tlie American Stud Book, from the earliest times, records but tliree or four importations of Irish race-horses ; I myself re- member but one, Harkforward,""-' the brother of Harkaway, by Economist, out of Fanny Dawson, by Nabocklish, imported by the late Judge Porter into Louisiana; and he died, almost im- mediately after his arrival, of tlie bite of a rattlesnake. * See Note C, p. 56. THE COVER-SroE. 41 Head there, liowever, been many thoroiiglibred stallions cov- ering here, it could not account for the similarity ; since the pe- culiar points of the Irish hunter, in which the similarity resides, are not those of his thorouglibred sire, but of his Irish dam. It does not seem likely that Irish hunting mares should, at any period, or in any part of the United States, ever have been largely imported, as there has not, at any time, been a demand for such animals ; and it is next to a certainty, that common Irish farm horses never have been brought hither, as they are — those of the native and indigenous type, I mean, unimproved by mixture with the Cleveland bays, the Punches, or the Lincoln- shire blacks — as wretched a race of raw-boned, straight-shoul- dered, ewe-necked garrons, as a man had need to behold. Still, the resemblance is so striking, that I am certain the first impression of an American horseman, on seeing the gather- ing at an Irish coverside, would be that two-thirds of the field were mounted on American trotting horses ; while, at a similar scene in England, he would be half inclined to set down the highly-blooded and highly-groomed two and three parts bred cock-tails, as gigantic thoroughbreds, until corrected by a fuller estimate of their bone and weight. And I could instance scores of trotting horses here, such as old Top-Gallant, Columbus, Paul Pry, and in later days, Tacony, Lancet, and others, M'liich have precisely the cut, to the life, of an Irish hunter in a very high form, and which, I have no doubt whatever, if thoy had been trained to leap and gallop, instead of to trot, would have won their laurels as decidedly on that field, as on this which they now occupy with so much distinction. I now come to the American application of the facts collected above, in regard to the different races, or families, of English horses, which do, or did recently, exist in that country, entirely pure and unmixed ; although it is not usual to apply the word " pure " to any stock or breed except that of the thoroughbred race-horse. It will, of course, have been observed and understood, by any one who has read, attentively what has gone before, that the efieet of the improvements, brought to pass in horses of every caste, intended for every purpose, in England, has been to destroy and abolish distinct races, other than that of the 42 THE HOESE. thoroughbred ; and that there is, probably, now in England no breed or family whatever, entirely without mixture, in some greater or less degree — some, of course, infinitesimally small — of thorough blood, unless it be the dray-horse and the Scottish pony. There is constantly going on a prodigious quantity of that, which Mr. Carlisle is pleased to designate as inai^ticulate howling, over the decline of the good old English hunter, the excellent old English roadster, and, in a word, of every thing that is old in the way of horse-flesh. All this is, in my opinion, the merest of stupidity — precisely on a par with the regret, expressed by some wiseacres, for the decline of the good old English squires, of the days of the first Georges — the riders of these identical excellent old English roadsters and hunters, concerning whose loss illce lachrywce. These good old English squires, be it observed, en passant, were generally ignorant, stolid, besotted, and brutal, to a degree com- parable to nothing which exists in any class, however abject, o± the present day, that is not positively vicious. Rising at four o'clock in the morning, in the saddle and trail- ing the fox to his kennel before six, they plodded along through mud and fallow, on great hairy-fetlocked brutes, as coarse, and slow, and uneducated as themselves, for eight or ten mortal hours ; they adjourned from the saddle to the dining-room ; whence, gorged with half-raw beef and venison, besotted with October and punch, roaring out stupid or obscene songs, through an atmosphere reeking with tobacco-smoke, they were carried off, by nine at the latest, by their clownish servants, only less drunk than their masters, to their beds, there to snore off the evening's debauch ; and thence, on the next morning, by a repe- tition of the past day's exercise, to earn an appetite for the next evening's revel. And this no casual occurrence, no picture of an accidental or occasional lapse of a minority, but the daily habitude, during seven or eight months of tlie year, of nine-tenths of the resident rural i)r()prietors of this good old England, from the times of Queen Anne nearly to the commencement of the present cen tury. During those dark and corrupt ages, the basest and most dis- OLD ENGLISH IIOKSES. 43 creditable, to my mind, of any in the whole history of England, all that there was of education, of grace, or of refinement, was crowded into the metropolis, mixed even there with inconceiv- able coarseness, inconceivable corruption ; while the whole gentry, and, with a few rare exceptions, even the clergy of the rural districts, were steeped in ignorance, imbrued with brutal debauchery, and marked by a coarseness of manner and lan- guage— even in the presence of their women — that has no parallel at the present day, in the wildest frontier taverns of the farthest South-west, in the rudest camp of California or Aus- tralia, in short, any where among civilized men, unless it be at a wake or a pattern in Galway or Tipperary, if the performer at those celebrations can be called civilized. In one word, I believe that there is exactly the same degree of comparison between the English or American country gentle- men of the present day, and the English squire of those dark ages, that there is between the English and American hunter, roadster, trotter, carriage-horse, and cart-horse, of the latter half of the nineteenth century, and the corresponding animal of the first half of the eighteenth ; and that there is just as mucli sense in howling over the decline of the horses of that age, or pretend- ing to desire their reproduction, as there would be in affecting to desire to introduce the Squire Westerns, the Bumper Squire Joneses, and the parson Trullibers of 1757, in place of the edu- cated and accomplished gentlemen of 1857, on both sides of the Atlantic. Furthermore, I believe, that very much of the absurdly exaggerated estimate which tradition has set on the mythical performances of the horses of the olden time, on the racing turf, such as Childers, Eclipse, and many others of the same period — • an estimate which still miraculously befogs the judgment even of men capable of judgment, long after it has been proved to be founded on nothing — has its origin, in a great measure, from the incalculable superiority of thoroughbred horses, even of ordinary excellence, to the coarse-bred road-hacks and scarcely superior hunters of that day. To men, accustomed to ride Cleveland Bays, with no cross of thorough blood, in their unmixed state, as the best style of hunters, and to trot along the road on animals which no 44 THE HORSE. teamster would now put into his cart-shafts, the pace of even a very slow race-horse would naturally seem so enormous, that one easily ceases to wonder at the spectators believing that Flvinff Childers ran his mile in a minute — the rather, that there were no means then in existence by which speed of that kind could be tested ; and that a mile in a minute was a purely ideal rate, which could be compared to nothing, and reduced to no standard ; since there existed nothing on earth capable of being tried, or, known to men, which had ever gone, or was capable of going at that speed, unless it were a bird in the air, or a fish in the sea. How any sane man can persist in inquiring whether this or that horse ever ran a mile in a minute — as we see by the queries in sporting newspapers, that fifty, at the least, are inquiring every year — when he has surely seen a railroad engine going at something far under that rate, yet far above the powers of any horse to rival it, one would find ditficulty in comprehending ; if it were not evident that the credence which men give to things, nowadays, is in the inverse ratio to their intrinsic credibility ; and that, in a word, if any thing be disbelieved, at present, it is not because it is absurdly incredible, but because it is not sufficiently absurd or incredible to command credence. Be this as it may, there is no evidence, or shadow of evi- dence, that the early English race-horse was superior, in any point of speed, endurance, or capacity of labor,, to the American or English horse of to-day. If there are, now, more rarely wonders that outdo all coii- temporaries, it is that the general standard of excellence is so much higher, that to surpass it extraordinarily is infinitely more difiicult. In every other class of horse, except the thoroughbred — the hunter, the roadster, the trotter, the carriage-horse, the trooper, even the team-horse — the improvement is not smaller, in the last century, than that in machinery, and scientific applications, during the same lapse of time. i^or is it altogether true, that any class or type of animal has wholly disappeared or become extinct in England ; or, for that matter, in America, either, so far as it ever had any exist- ence on that continent, unless it be the very coarsest type of GENERAL IMPKOVEMENT. 45 cart-horse, or some fancy family of no general application or utility, such as the Naragansctt pacer, or the Scottisli Galloway. What has occurred is this — all the types of animals, even with all the improvements which have been made in them, have fallen down three or four stages ; and if the much bemoaned good old English squires could arise from their lowly beds " At breezy call of incense-breathing morn," and resuscitate with them Towler and Jowler, and all their deep- mouthed, crook-kneed packs, with which to badger a fox to death in a run of eight mortal hours, they would find infinitely superior hunters to any they had ever backed during their lives, going indeed not as hunters, but drawing the slow^est second- class gentlemen's carriages in the coiintry, and the very best beasts of their own precise class, in the better style of vans and omnibuses, in the towns and cities. There are hundreds of horses to-day in Xew Yoi-k carmen's trucks, superior in blood, form, and powers of every kind, to the best hunter that went in England in the reign of the first or second George ; and the best road-hackneys of the same date were not comparable to the smaller and lighter cart-horses of the present day, such as go in the baker's or the butcher's wag- on. So much for the croaking of the praisers of the age that has just departed ! In all branches of equestrianism, speed has been for years the end aimed at, in connection with the ability to carry weight and to endure continued exertion. Mere weight and the ability of dragging enormous loads at a foot's pace, have ceased to be qualities desired or desirable, in the horse ; while quickness is, and ever will continue, so long as time shall have its value, the valuable consideration. Whether the present modes of racing, either in this country or in England, are the best devised to preserve the breed of race-horses at their utmost perfection, is another question, and is open to much doubt — doubt fully as great on this, as on the other side of the water — the absurdly light weights adopted in America, being in my opinion fully as detrimental, in encouraging the maintenance of a wrong type of thoroughbred, as are the short distances now run in England. 4:6 THE HOESE. For my part, I could wish to see four-mile races introduced in England, though without the reintroduction of heats, which I cannot regard but as an unnecessary and over severe strain on the faculties of the animals, and the return to nine and ten stone weights, or 126 lbs. and 140 lbs., on the back of five and six-year-old horses. Whatever may be the effect of the present system in Eng- land, as to throwing the weight-carrying thoroughbreds, capa- ble of running four-mile heats, out of the turf and into the hunting stables, I am not prepared to say; but certain I am, that the system has not been in effect absolutely to abolish the type of horse capable of that work ; far more certain than I am that the system of breeding to carry extremely light weights, boy's weight in fact, in the United States, has not been to pre- vent the creation of a type or race of thoroughbreds, capable of carrying heavy men in the field or in the road, with as mucli distinction as they have won by their speed and undeniable powei- of staying a distance on the turf. On the trotting course, as on the racing turf, tlie tendency of the age has been, and still continues to be, toward speed — but in our trotting, as in English fox-hunting, neither the power to carry weight nor tlie endurance to continue at Avork, is neglect- ed. ]^or is there the slightest appearance of growing degeneracy in either quality. On the contrary, with the increase of blood and of speed, the power of endurance has advanced, both in the hunter and the trotter; nor in either has the ability to carry weiglit dimin- ished. Of course the union of tlie three qualities in the latter animals commands the largest price ; whereas in the racer, so far as he is viewed as a racer only, and not as a progenitor, speed and endurance for a distance alone are regarded. Even in these, however, and even under the present system, the ability to carry weight must needs enhance, and does enhance, their value for the stud, as increasing the probability of their j^roving the sires of the most serviceable and costly half-breds. In every other department and style of horse-breeding, I am convinced that the introduction of pure blood into all the old strains has done incalculable good, and that every stamp of animal through the country, has advanced upon the similar THE NOKMAN HORSE. 47 animals of the last centuiy, almost as far as pure science or mechanism has advanced. And I should as soon think of regretting the progress of mechanism, of naval architecture, of gunnery, of the arts, or of pure science, as I should of deploring the dying out of the obsolete races of cart-horses, of old English roadsters, and of those equine elephants who wore as many bushels of hair at their heels as they could move tons of coal or pig-iron at a dead pull, and were, at the same time, incapable of going three miles in an hour, with a feather on their backs or behind them, to save their own or their owners' lives. In the United States and British America, again, we shall find that this process of absorption or abolition of all the old special breeds, and of the amalgamation of all into one general race, which may fairly be termed specially " American," pos- sessing a very large admixture of thoroughblood, has gone on far more rapidly than in England — the rather that, with the one solitary exception of the Norman horse in Canada, no special breeds have ever taken root as such, or been bred, or even attempted to be bred, in their purity, in any part of America. In Canada East, the Norman horse, imported by the early settlers, was bred for many generations entirely unmixed ; and, as the general agricultural horse of that province, exists so yet, stunted somewhat in size, by the cold climate and the rough usage to which he has been subjected for centuries, but in no- wise degenerated, for he possesses all the honesty, courage, en- durance, hardihood, soundness of constitution, and characteristic excellence of feet and legs of his progenitor. Throughout both the provinces he may be regarded as the basis of the general horse, improved as a working animal by crosses of English half-bred sires ; and as a roadster, carriage- horse, or higher class riding or driving horse, by an infusion of English thorough blood. All these latter types are admirable animals, and it is from the latter admixture that have sprung many of the most cele- brated trotting horses, which, originally of Canadian descent, have found their way into the New England States and New York, and there won their laurels as American trotters. Still it is not to be denied that there are, in different sections 48 THE IIOKSE. of the United States, different local breeds of horses, apparently peculiar, and now become nearly indigenous to those localities, and that those breeds differ not a little, as well in qualities as in form and general appearance. A good judge of horse flesh, for instance, will find little difiiculty in selecting the draught-horse of Boston, that is to say, of Massachusetts and Yermont, from those of ISTew York and New Jersey, or any of the three from the large Pennsylvania team- horses, or from the general stock of the Western States. The Yermont draught-horse and the great Pennsylvania horse, known as the Conestoga horse, appear to me in some con- siderable degree to merit the title of distinct families, inasmuch as they seem to reproduce themselves continually, and to have done so from a remote period, comparatively speaking, within certain regions of country, which have for many years been furnishing them in considerable numbers to those markets, for which their qualities render them the most desirable. I had hoped, on commencing this work, to be able to obtain authentic and satisfactory accounts of these various families, and to liave approximately at least, fixed their origin and derivation. With a view to this end, I' addressed circulars to the ofiicers of the agricultural societies of all the principal breeding States of the Union, to whom I take this opportunity of recording my obligations for the aid which they have rendered me in my im- dertaking; but I regret to say, that the result has generally been disappointment; for, with scarcely an exception, these most useful societies being but of recent origin, and having turned their attention rather to improving the present and providing for the future, than to preserving records of the past, have in their possession no documentary evidence whatever, as to the sources whence their peculiar stocks have derived their origin and excellences. All, therefore, that can now be done, is to describe the characteristic points of the breeds in question, and by comparison with existing foreign races, and by the collation of such scanty notices of importations as can be gleaned from periodicals, to approach, conjecturally, the blood from which they are derived, and also the manner in which they have been orig'nated, where they are now found. me j:^£j^.':^^f:^.:g:aE&t^:: /■..'A:.'.erierlOel. HISTORY OF THE VERMONT D R A U G H T- H 0 R S E . In the first place, of the Yermont draught-horse, I have been able, from his own locality, to obtain no information whatever ; all the horse interest and ambition of that State, and indeed of the Eastern States generally, appearing somewhat strangely and injudiciously, I must say, it seems to me, to centre in what they are pleased to call the l>lLoYgixn family. The above cut is a portrait from life of a fine gray draught horse, in the possession of Adams's Express Co. ; height, 16 hands ; weight, 1160 lbs. Incomparably, however, the best light team-horse, or ex- tremely heavy carriage-horse, and another yet lighter horse of somewhat the same type, are raised in Vermont, and in Yermont alone, in perfection. Vol. II.— 4. 50 THE H0K8E. 1^0 persons familiar with the streets of New York can fail to have noticed the magnificent animals, for the most j^art dark bays, with black legs, manes and tails, but a few browns, and now and then, but rarelj, a deep rich glossy chestnnt, which draw the heavy wagons of the express companies ; and I would more especially designate those of Adams & Company. They are the very model of what draught-horses should be ; combining immense power with great quickness, a very respect- able turn of speed, fine show and good action. These animals have almost invariably lofty crests, thin withers, and well set on heads ; and although they are em- phatically draught-horses, they have none of that shagginess of mane, tail and fetlocks, which indicates a descent from the black horse of Lincolnshire, and none of that peculiar curliness or waviness which marks the existence of Canadian or Norman blood for many generations, and which is discoverable in the manes and tails of very many of the horses, which claim to be picre Morgans. The peculiar characteristic, however, of these horses, is the shortness of their backs, the roundness of their barrels, and the closeness of their ribbing up. One would say that they are ponies until he comes to stand beside them, when he is astonish ed to find that they are oftener over, than under, sixteen hands in height. These horses are, nine out of ten, from Yermont, and not only are they the finest animals in all the United States, in my opin- ion, for the quick draught of heavy loads — for which opinion of mine I have a reason to produce in justification — but the mares of this stock are incomparably the likeliest, from which, by a well chosen thoroughbred sire, to raise the most magnificent carriage-horses in the world. In proof of what I assert, I will relate two circumstances connected with this breed of horses, which have come under my own immediate observation, and which cannot fail to have weight with candid judges. During the Canadian rebellion of 1837, the English force being largely augmented in the provinces, two cavalry regi- ments, with a considerable park of artillery, were among the number of the reinforcements. The cavalry consisted of the EASTERN STAGE COACHING. 51 First Dragoon Guards and of the Seventh Hussars ; the latter of which, a light regiment, brought its horses with it from Eng- land. The Dragoon Guards, which is as heavy a cavalry regi- ment as any in the world, except the Lifeguards and the Royal Horseguards, which are cuirassiers^ came dismounted, and were all horsed from Vermont, with scarcely an exception, the Cana- dian horses not having either the size or power necessary to carry such weight. I saw this magnificent regiment several times under arms, after the horses had been broken and managed, and certainly never saw a heavy regiment more splendidly mounted in my life. The whole of the artillery was horsed from the same region, and with precisely the stamp of horse which I now see daily before the New York Express Yans ; and I myself heard a very distinguished ofiicer of rank, who has won still higher distinction in the Crimea say, that the artillery had never, in his knowledge of the service, been better, if so well horsed, as it was while in Canada. It may be worth while to add, that the hussars, when ordered home, as is usual, in order to save the expense of transporta- tion, sold their horses ; but the dragoon guards and artillery, unless I have been most wrongly informed, took the greater part of theirs, and especially the mares, home with them, owing to their superior quality. Of the existence of this breed, therefore, there can be no doubt, nor of its excellence. In the old days, while staging was in its perfection in New England, before the railroads had su- perseded coaching, it was the lighter animals of this same breed and stamp, which drew the post-coaches, in a style that I have never seen approached, out of New England, in Amei'ica ; nor do I believe that it ever has been approached elsewhere. For several years it was my fortune, some twelve or thirteen years since, when Salem was the extreme eastern limit of railroad travel, to journey a good deal between Boston and Bangor, in Maine ; and, as I always preferred the box, with the double object of observing the country, and seeing the horses work, having, also, a tolerable knack of getting on with the coach- men, who, by the way, were coachmen, on those roads, in those days, not stable-helpers — each one coaching his own team along, 62 THE H0E8E. as well or as badly as he could, according to the fashion of all the other States in which I have journeyed — I contrived to pick up some information, concerning the quick-working, active, powerful, well-conditioned, and sound animals, which excited both my wonder and my admiration. My wonder! for that, in my stage-coach experiences in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Upper Canada, from the year 1831 to 1836, of which I had enjoyed considerable oppor- tunity— having once voyaged in what was called, by a cruel irony, the Telegraph Line, from Albany to Buffalo, through, in three days and two nights — I had formed any thing but a favor- able estimate of American stage-coaching. My admiration! for that over roads, though very well kept for the state of the country, which would have made an English whip open his eyes, and probably his mouth also, in impreca- tions both loud and deep, and through a very rough line of country, so far as hills and long stages were concerned, I never saw any horses, in my life, do their work more honestly, more regularly, or more quickly. The rate of going was nine miles, including stoppages ; to do which it was necessary to make between ten and eleven over the road ; the time was punctually kept — as punctually as on the best English mail routes, at that time, when the English mail was the wonder of the world ; and I have no hesitation in saying that ten and a half to eleven miles an hour, over those roads, is fully equal to thirteen or fourteen over the English turnpikes, as they were at the time concerning which I am writing. And I speak, on this subject, with the conviction that I speak knowingly ; for, between the years 1825 and 1831, there were not a great many fast coaches on the flying roads of the day, on the boxes of which I have not sat, nor a few of the fast- est, on which I have not handled the ribbons. All these horses were evidently of the very breed and stamp which I describe ; and I learned, on inquiry, that it is from the region I have named, the northern part of Massaclmsetts, namely, Yermont, and perhaps some portion of New Hampshire, that most of the horses came, and that from those quarters, moreover, is the origin of the horse of Maine, almost without admixture. Whence this admirable stock of horses came, or how it has THE DRAUGHT HORSE OF VERMONT. 63 been created, there is, >/^i LADY SUFFOLK S RACES. 209 In tlic following Summary of Lady Suffolk's Performances, tlie amount of the purse is given wlien she was the winner, and left blank when she lost, — HAKNESS OR SADDLE. Feb. June July Oct. Nov. April July Nov. Babylon, L. I. Beacon Course, N. J. Philadelphia, Pa. Beacon Course, N. J. Philadelphia, Pa. Beacon Course, N. J. Centreville, L. I. Beacon Course. N. J. Boston, Mass. May 6 Philadelphia, Pa. '• 8 i 14 I Centreville, L. I. June ;-!;( l '• " Sept. 21 Beacon Course, N. J. Centreville, L. I. Beacon Course, N. J. Centreville, L. I. Philadelphia, Pa. . Centreville, L. I. Beacon Course, N. J. Centreville, L. I. Beacon Course, N. J. Centreville, L. I. Philadelphia, Pa. Trenton, N. J. Beacon Course, N. J. Boston, Mass. Beacon Course, N. J. Baltimore, Md. Nov. 30 May 4 " 10 " 15 " IS Jun ■ 15 July 6 " 22 " 27 Oct. 21 Nov. 1 May 1 " 10 " 31 June 2 " 10 Aug. 1 Nov. IT July 4 " 12 " 25 Aug. 14 Sept. 4 " IH Oct. 5 " 30 Nov. 2 C May 15 21 June 6 27 Aug. 28 Sept 6 9 Oct. 7 Centreville, L. I Beacon Course, N. J. Centreville, L. I Beacon Course, N. J. Albany, N. Y Beacon Course, N. J. Saddle, Harness, Saddle, Harness, Saddle, Harness, Saddle, Harness, Saddle, Harness Saddle, Harness, Saddle, Harness, Saddle, Harness, Saddle, Harness, Saddle, Wason, Saddle, Harness, Wasron, Harness, Saddle, Harness, Saddle, Harness, Saddle, Harness Saddle, 8.01 5.42, 5.42. 5.15,6.17 5.29, 5.17, 5.40. 5.17, 5.1 3*. 5.28, 5.2H. 5.42i, 5.38J, 5.39 5.18,5.26 8.11, 8.17. 5.38, 5.52. 2.49. 5.21 5.16, 5.09. 5 39 5!28, 5.3i,' 5.32V5.42. 5.88, 5.35, 5.40 2.52, 2.50. 5.28,5.28,5.26 5.20, 5.28. 5.14,5.24 11.22,11.34 2.45i, 2.45, 2.47. 2.52, 2.53, 2.49, 2.47, 2.50. 5.05, 5.06. 7.51, 7.51. 5.26,5.33,5.32 11.15,11.58 Received forfeit 5.22,5.21,5.31 4.59,5.034 Received forfeit 5.1.3^,5.14 .'.".".'!."".!!! 5.2U, 5.19i, 5.21 7.40i, 7.56 5.16i, 5.16i,5.16, 5.18, 6.25, S.02i, 8.03, S.0S, 8.16. 2.35, 2.37 5.26^,6.23, 5.24 5.05 13.58, 13.58*. 7.50, 8.04. 5.10i, 5.12*. 5.10, 5.15 5.07, 5.15, 5.17. 5.19, dotible harness 5.16, 6.22. 8.00, 7.56*. 5.37,5.49 2.28*, 2.28, 2.28, 2.29,2.32.. 2.26*, 2.27, 2.27 2.30i, 2.42*, 2.28 7.44, 7.52 2.29,2.80,2.28* 2.38, 2.39, 2.41 5.19, 5.20, 6.22, 5.19. 7.4S. 5.38,5.35 7.59, 8.16, 8.01. 5.20, 5.24 5.17,6.19, 5.1s 7.51, 8.02 7.52*, 8.01. 2.40,2.34*, 2.88* 2.44 2.26* 2.38. 2.33*,' 2.34.' 2.37 ...... 2.29, 2.31, 2.28, 2.29, 2.30. . . 11 100 100 100 200 400 150 800 200 200 1000 2000 750 200 50{» 500 750 200 2000 1250 200 1000 800 200 200 100 200 100 300 300 300 500 500 400 250 250 250 200 Vol. II.— 14 210 THE HOKSE. 1845 1846 1847 1S4S 1849 April 28 May 5 19 June 3 Oct. 8 " 13 16 " 29 Sept. 28 Oct. 8 15 22 Nov. 18 June 7 9 July 14 28 Aug. 5 14 Sept. 13 Oct. 1 " 15 28 Dec. 28 May 19 7 4 17 " 22 Aug. 19 May 21 June 5 6 7 14 25 July 2 9 10 3 1S50 June Jiily Aug. Nov. Dec. IM.ay Sept. 28 Oct. 8 " 17 24 7 12 22 29 12 7 13 21 June 12 " 13 " 19 July 1 Oct. Nov. Union Course, L. I. . Centreville, L. I. Union Course, L. I. . Philadelphia, Pa. Beacon Course, N. J. Philadelphia, Pa. Union Course, L. I. Centreville, L. I. Union Course, L. I. Saratoga, N. T. . Centreville, L. I. Union Course, L. I. Centreville, L. I. Saratoga, N. Y. Union Course, L. I. Providence, K. I. Boston, Mass. Union Course, L. I. Centreville, L. I. Union Course, L. I. Centreville, L. I. Union Course, L. I. Centreville, L. I. Boston, Mass. Centreville, L. I. Philadelphia, Pa. Baltimore, Md. Philadelphia, Pa. Boston, Mass. Rochester, N. T. Buffalo, N. Y. Cincinnati, Ohio Harness Saddle Wagon Saddle, Harness, Saddle, Harness, Wagon, Saddle, Harness, Saddle, Harness, Saddle, Harness, Saddle, Harness, Wagon, Harness, Saddle, Harness, Wagon, Harness, 5.20,5.29 5.09, 5,16, 5.12 8.00, 8.05*. 8.02, 8,071, 8.17 2.37, 2.35f, 2.35}, 2.89. 2.34, 2.29^ 2.30, 2.34, 2.86... . 2.33i, 2.31i, 2.40, 2.85. 8.05. 7.59. 2.37^,2.37,2.35 5.13,"5.11. 2.34, 2.34i, 2.34J, 2.35, 2.3SV.. 7.46, 7.46*. 5.0S*, 5.16. 7.56, 8.06i 5.16*, 5.24 5.03 8, 2.86. 2.37*, 2.43', 2.39* 2.42*, 2,88*, 2.36 2.52,2.54, 2.44 7.44, 7.53. 5.13,5.12V 5.04*, 5.09. 5.10, 5.12 5,18*, 5.25* 2.83, 2.33, 2.35, 2.37, 2. 5.21,5.13,5.17,5.22 5.12,5.14 2.31, 2.32, 2.82 5.22,5.16,5.17,5.16 2.32.* 2.84, 2.30, 2.34, 2.34. 2.29*, 2.32, 2.81. 2.35,1, 2.34,2.38* 5.20: 2.31, 2.26,t 2.27, 2.29. 2.29i,2.33* 2.32, 2.32*, 2.28, 2.29*, 2.34* 2.28, 2.30,231,2.80. 5.09, 5.18.+ 2.29*. 2.31, 2.80, 2.81. V, 2.32, 2.81, 2 38 2,32^, 2.m, 2.34, 2.36 .5.16,5.17.5.20. 7.45*, 7,52, 7.57 2.45, 2.40. 2.43 8.13,8.15 5.08*, 5.12. 5.19 5.57,5.34* 2.37, 2.40, 2.88. 5.88,5.86 2 3.3 5.{o, 5^09*. 7.44}, 7.52*. 2..31 2.31,2.33,2.39,2.83 7.58*, 7.55 , 5.20, 5.11,516 2.31 5.18, 5.10. 5.15, 5.08, 5.0S*. 2,37*, 2.38, 2.40 2.41, 2.45, 2.47 2.47*, 2.39, 2.43, 2.40 5.18, .5.17. 2.35,2.34.2.34 5.141, 5.12*. 2.45,2.41,2.39 250 250 400 250 250 250 800 500 800 250 250 250 800 500 1,000 300 800 250 200 200 8oe 250 250 800 250 800 250 800 250 500 500 250 2.50 2.50 350 800 800 500 500 500 500 600 * Lady Suffolk fell lame, in this heat, ■which she won, but was stopped in the second. + Lady Suffolk won the second heat. i The mare was so much amiss, that she was withdrawn after the first heat. TABLE OF TERFORMANCES. 211 YEAR. DATE. 1851 Feb. 19 ALir. 11 April 22 " 80 May 28 June 18 " 23 Aug. 8 Sept. IS " 19 Oct. 15 23 " 2S Nov. 17 1852 May 6 13 " 20 81 June 24 July 5 " 14 20 Sept. 20 " 24 Oct 5 11 1853 14 27 New Oi'leans, La. Mobile, Ala. New Orleans, La. St. Louis, Mo. Rochester, N. T. Union Course, L. I. Boston, Mass. . Union Course. L. I. Harness, Saddle, Harness, Wagon, Harness, Saddle, Harness, Wagon. Harness, Wagon, Harness, 2..871, 2.35, 241. 2.38, 2.35, 2.33i, 2.84. 2.49. 2.47, 2.48. 2.47 2.44i, 2.46, 2.41 i, 2.54. 2.39, 2.80, 2.83, 2.80, 2.85 5.28, 5.23. 2.35,2.84 2.35, 2.37,'2..36, 2.36 2.82i, 2.3U, 2.33i. 5.08, 5.13 2.84, 2..87i, 2.88, 2.-87, 2.40^ 5.09, .5.10^ 2.39, 2.36, 2.86, 2.-34. 2.84, 2.88, 2.364-. 2.37 2.32 J, 2.-38, 3.-36,2.-861. 2.88, 2.35, 2.38}, 2.86. 2,-84. 5.14*, 5.16. 8.00. 8.07. .5.10, 5.10i, .5.1,3*. 2.40, 2.8.5*. 2.87, 2.39 2.89, 2.43*, 2.48*, 2.46. 2.-34, 2.34*, 2.30. 2.31*, 2.-34, 2.83. 2.34, 2.40, 2.36*. 2.85, 2.87, 2;39, 2.41. 5.07f, 5.08}. 2.31*, 2..30, 2.32. 2.40}, 2.86*, 2.88*, 2.40. 2.-39*, 2.36*, 2.39*, 2.44*. 300 800 800 800 400 600 1,000 230 It will be seen from the above tliat Lady Suffolk was upon the turf nearly sixteen years, during which time she trotted in One Hundred and Sixty-One Races, winning Eighty-eight — and $35,011 — and losing Seventy -Three. I believe, Mr. P., your own dear self and "Acorn" were the first to discover the extraordinary powers of Lady Suffolk, while driving her to Comae, Long Island, in 1837 ; and I have been told that it was by your advice that her owner entered her for a purse on the Beacon Course in June of tlie followinic year, when she gave such .promise of speed and endurance as to obtain the admiration of all present who were capable of judging. The summary designates clearly the course of her travels, from Babylon through ten States of the Union ; but it is deemed an act of justice to the Lady to state that her trainer, driver, and intimate friend^ Mr. David Bryan, on their arrival at jSTew Orleans in 1851, was unable to attend to her on account of sickness ; and although Mr. C. S. Ellis, an accomplished trainer, had her in charge, she seemed to lose her accustomed spirit, and to droop wath her old master, who died there, leaving his mare in charge of Mr. Ellis. 212 THE HORSE. At the sale of the eifects of the late David Bryan, Ladj Suftblk, I l)elieve, was purchased by Messrs. Shaw and White, then lessees of the Union Course. In the latter part of 1853, she was purchased by D. Edgar Hill, of Bridport, when she was put in the stud and bred to Black Hawk, and prematurely dropped a foal to him in 1854. In February last, a most excellent likeness of the Lady — so represented by a correspondent of the " Spirit " — was taken on canvas, which her owner intended to have lithographed, and on the ttii of March, as if this noble old mare considered that her mission had ended with the taking of her portrait, she died in the stable of one who knew how to value her past services. But I cannot do better than copy " Peter Basswood's " letter from the " Spirit" of the 17th of March, and close ; — LADY SUFFOLK IS DEAD! " Death, cold usurer, hath seized his bonded debtor." She died at Edgar Hill's, Bridport, Yt., on the Itli of March, in what Mr. Hill supposed to be a fit, as she was in apparent health but a short time before she died ; Mr. H, was in the stable when she fell to stand no more. Thus passed from the turf to a resting place beneath it, an old familiar. We shall see " The Gray Mare " no m.ore, but her deeds are recorded in the archives of the " Spirit," and will live long after the epi- taph of your humble scribbler shall be written ; and when our hair shall have grown as white as hers that were once gray, we shall look back through the distance to the deeds that she per- formed on the Beacon, the Centre ville, the Union, the Hunting Park, and Cambridge Courses, for "There's a feeling within us that loves to revert To the merry old times that are gone." P. S. — Since the above was written, I have been informed that Mr. White, of Saratoga, was tlie owner of Lady Suffolk from the time she left " the Island " till her death, and that he merely sent her to Mr. Hill to be bred to Black Hawk, From the New York {pld) Sjnrit of [t/ie Timet, FLORA TEMPLE. 213 But now, having clone our duty to the honored dead, let us resume the thread of that year's proceedings, which was doubly sigualized by her departure from the turf, the first great victo- ries of the one and the first appearance of the otlier of her most brilliant successors — Tacony and Flora Temple. And first, of Tacony, whose earliest efforts I recorded in the summary of the last year. He came out in this, like a giant refreshed by slumber, and burst at once into celebrity. Tacony won in 1852, no less than twelve times, beating all the best horses of the day ; Lady Suffolk thrice ; Lady Brooks four times ; Zachary Taylor four times ; Pelham, Lady Jane, Lady Moscow, Jack Rossiter and John Tonnelly. He did his single mile as low as 2.26, the best time as yet made ; 2.27^, and 2,28 on several occasions — his two miles under the saddle in 5.02 — 5.05, — and in harness in 5.07f — 5.08f. He was beaten twice only ; by Lady Jane, who continued to run on, a stout, honest mare, two-mile heats in wagons, the horse taking the first heat ; and by Zachary Taylor, the best three in five, in wagons, the wagon and driver to weigh 400 lbs. Tacony won the second and fourth, Zachary the first, third, and fifth heats. This was justly considered excellent work for the second campaign of a green horse, whatever his promise. Zachary Taylor and Lady Jane did the next best, and a num- ber of otlier horses of old note held their places with credit, as Chatauque Chief, St. Lawrence, Bhode Island, and others. In this, and the two last years, had been trotting that remark- ably beautiful and very highly-bred stallion, Kemble Jackson, who afterwards showed vast speed, and who is said to have been, in Hiram "VYoodi'uff' s opinion, the fastest young horse he ever drove. This fine stallion unfortunately died in his ninth year, before he had attained his prime ; for, as it is well known, trotting horses continually train on^ in their speed, for reasons to be given liereafter, as they advance in years, until their frames have ac- tually begun to decline. I am induced to give the true pedigree of this horse, in this place, so far as it is ascertained, in consequence of there having 214 THE HORSE. recently appeared in " Porter's Spirit of the Times," where it might be taken as authoritative, a mass of stupid forgery ; which, as it must be immediately detected, would tend to injure his repute. This pedigree states that " Fanny Kerable, the dam of Kemble Jackson, was own sister to Miller's Damsel, the dam of American Eclipse, and got by Duroo, sire of American Eclipse." According to this farrago of nonsense, American Eclipse was the son of his own half-sister. Did any man ever hear the like ? Miller's Damsel was by imp. Messenger, out of the Pot-8-o's mare, dam by Gimcrack, out of Snap Dragon, by Snap — con- cerning whom there existed so long a doubt recently solved. So far was Fanny Kemble from being the daughter of the Pot-8-o's mare, that the Pot-8-o's mare was dead nearly twenty years be- fore the distinguished lady, from whom the dam of Kemble Jackson took her name, was born — much more before her name was known on this side of the Atlantic. The truth i.s as follows, — Kemble Jackson was got by Andrew Jackson — dam Fanny Kemble, sister to Charles Kemble, by Sir Archy ; gd. Maria, by Gallatin ; g. gd. by Symms's Wildair ; g. g. gd. by Traveller, out of an imported mare. Fanny Kemble was, therefore, perfectly thoroughbred, al- though she had no more relationship to Miller's Damsel than she had to Queen Pomare. Andrew Jackson, the most celebrated trotting stallion of his day, was got by Young Bashaw, out of a grand-daughter of Messenger. Young Bashaw was by the imported Tripolitan Barb, Grand Bashaw, his dam Pearl by First Consul, gd. Fancy by imported Messenger. This blood is good enough, one would think, to content any one ; as Andrew Jackson himself had at least three-fourths of thoroughblood, and Kemble Jackson, the son of a thoroughbred mare, consequently had, at the most, but one-eighth of common blood in his veins. But to proceed ; in this same year appeared Ethan Allen BAKBAR0U8 MATCH. 215 also a very fine and fast-trotting stallion, the pride of what is called the " Morgan breed," and a horse of undeniable merit. He was got by tlie Morgan Black Hawk, dam a medium size white mare, said to be of the Messenger breed. Black Hawk was got by Slierman Morgan, his dam a fast black mare, said to be an English half-bred. Sherman was son of the original or Justin Morgan, out of a mare varionsly said to be of a " Sj^anish breed," and an im- ported English saddle mare. Ethan Allen trotted this year, mile-heats, in harness, for a purse of $15 for 3 years old, against Chazy, a filly, and a chest- nut gelding, at the Clinton Co. Fair, IST. Y., and won the purse in 3.20 — 3.21. This is noticed, not on account of the time, but in view of the celebrity of the animal, who is now claimed to be the fastest trotting stallion in the world.* This year, also, appeared Flora Temple, who, so far as present appearances can be held to justify predictions, seems destined to succeed to the place lately vacated by Lady Sufiblk. In this place I shall say nothing of her pretended pedigree, f(ir that will come in due course with a memoir, to which her distinction entitles her, and which will follow this branch of my subject. Flora won, this year, her first on the regular turf, although she had won a private match on the Red House track, at Harlem, and one, likewise, on the Union Course, three times, winning every time she started, although she was once drawn, in a purse and sweepstakes won by Lady Brooks ; Pet, "War Eagle, George West, and Flora Temple entered, the first two only starting for the stakes. Pier first trot was mile-heats, best three in five, for a purse and sweepstakes, in harness. In this she beat Brown Jim three straight heats, in 2.43 — 2.41 — 2.43. She also beat Young Dutchman a match of mile-heats, three in five, in 2.40 — 2.39 — 2.36 — and, in December of the same season, Centreville, the same match, in 250 lbs. wagons — all these races she won with out losing so much as a single heat. But the time was not par- ticularly good, and she had, as yet, excited but little attention. Another barbarous time-match — the most barbarous yet ! — disgraces the annals of this year. "The spotted mare Anna * See Etliau Allen's performances, p. 278. 216 THE HOKSE. Bishop," it is tlius ciirtlj related in the Spirit, " -was hacked to do one liundred miles in nine honrs ; she started, and, after doing forty-nine miles in four hours and eleven minutes, broke down ! " The register does not give the name of the jDerpetrator of this savage atrocit}^, or I should rejoice to pillory it ; nor is it stated what became of the unfortunate animal, which must have been a good one to do so much before she broke down, lamed for life probably, if not killed outright. In 1853, the interest of the season centres wholly in Flora andTacony, the latter, however, playing, very decidedly, th«> secondary part. The little bay mare was seventeen times victorious over all the best horses of the season; beating Tacony seven times, at one and two-mile heats ; Black Douglass twice ; Rhode Island three times; Highland Maid twice; Mountain Maid twice; Katy Darling twice ; Lady Yernon, Lady Brooks, and Young Dutchman to make up the tale, hardly losing a heat in the whole performances. Her best time was 2.27 and 2.28 at mile- heats, both on several occasions, and at two-mile heats 5.01| — 4.59 — the best on record.- She had at once started up into a prodigy. She lost four races only, one to Black Douglas, one to Green Mountain Maid, and two to Tacony, who battled it out with her with courage, if not with success, equal to her own. Tacony, though no longer the champion, maintained his credit more than gallantly, beating Flora twice, as has been stated ; and Mac, who reappeared very strongly this season, ibur times, one in the best time on record, under the saddle. He was beaten six times by Flora, and thrice by Mac. His best winning time, 2.25|-, at one mile, repeated in two consecutive heats, was half a minute better than Lady Suffolk's best, 2.26 ; and he put Flora up to 4.59 — 5.01-i-, to beat him in harness at two miles. To show how much horses had gained on time, recently, 2.27, only one second less than the best yet, 2.2G, was made seven times ; by Dolly Spanker thrice, Flora twice, and Tacony once ; and Lady Suftolk's best time, 2.2G, and beaten a half- second by Tacony against Mac. There was much excellent trotting this year, and horses of CONQUEROR. 317 merit deserving mention, too many to be recorded in a mere summary of events such as this. I must not, however, omit — in order to record my disappro- bation of them — to mention two ten-mile matches in harness, between tlie same horses. First, the ch. g. Prince, by "Wood- jiecker, a trotter, and the gr. g. Hero, pedigree unknown, a pacer. The fastest mile was done in 2.38^, the slowest in 3.12|, the whole time in 28.08^. ITo injury occurred to either horse ; but that is no justification of these long matches, — which, having the probability before my eyes of being set down as an old fogy and anti-progressive, I regard as both useless and cruel. Second, the same horses, with the same result, except that Hero was distanced — what is the distance in ten miles nooi con- stat. Fastest mile, 2.33^ ; slowest, 6.19 ; whole time, 35.18. On November 12th came off the crowning cruelty of the American trotting course. An old, good, honest, well-known roadster, bred in Orange County, and having a good deal of blood, was driven to death for the sum of four thousand dollars, Mhich his backers, I re- gret to say, realized by their merciless barbarity. He was backed to do 100 miles in 9 hours, and did it. The total time announced by the judges was 8.55,53. I now quote from the Turf Register of the year. " At the conclusion of this immense performance, the horse did not seem u!iusnally distressed. He was warmly clothed — and hied, as wc hear — carefully nursed, and every possible at- tention paid to him; though he " came about" a little the fol- lowing day, we regret to learn that he gradually sunk, and on Monday breathed his last. No attempt, we trust, will be made to rival this performance. 'A merciful man is merciful to his beast. ' " This passage deserves some remark. Tlie feeling is all that could be wished, although the condemnation is not sufficiently strong; for, be it observed, that a word of rebuke in a journal devoted to sporting, is of more weight with sporting characters, as they call themselves, than a column from other sources, which they either do not see,or regard as old fogy and straitlaced, Next, as to the race and its results ; first, I would ask, was 218 THE HOESE. ever any liorse distressed, according to the report of his perform- ance. Secondly, what is the meaning of the word usually^ in reference to an event never accomplished before. Lastly, I would say, that if this unhappy horse were bled, as it is stated he was, the bleeding was in all probability the im- mediate cause of his death. In such cases, nine times out of ten, exhaustion, not plethory, is the result of such eftbrts as this ; and in this case, every thing indicates that the animal was so totally overdone and outworn, that the whole system collapsed, and that nature failed in recuperative power. In such a case, to take one drop of blood would be as surely fatal as to blow out the creature's brains. A drench of hot, sj)iced ale, followed by mashes, and a cordial ball of camphor, condiments, &c., &c., would have been far more rational treatment. Nothing, how- ever, could probably have done any good ; the rather as he was an old horse ; nor, probably, had he recovered, would it have done him any good, as in all human likelihood his savage pro- prietors would have backed him, the next week, to trot 100 miles in eight hours and a half, and so driven him to death any how. It is to be wished that- sporting periodicals, instead of herald- ing these things " as wonderful performances," which leads un- thinking persons to regard them as something very tine and worthy of imitation, would either record them fis unsportsman- like acts of cruelty, worthy only of costermongers and the low fancy, or let them go wholly unrecorded. I omitted above to mention, in its proper place, the extraor- dinary trot of Kemble Jackson, the ch. stallion, whose pedigree was given in the history of the events of 1852. It is as follows ; Wednesday, June 1. — Purse and stake, $4,000 — three-mile heats— to 2501b. wagons. II. Woodruff's ch. h. Kemble Jackson, W. S. Abraham's b. g. O'Blenis, J. Nelson's br. m. Boston Girl, 11. Jones's b. g. Pet, C. Brooks's b. m. lola, G. Spicer's b. g. Honest John, . 1 1 2 2 5 8 8 4 4 5 C 6 FIRST IIKAT. Time — first mile, .... . 2.41 " second " ... 2.39i " third " . . . . . 2.421 Total time, . 8.03 8KCOND HEAT. Time — first mile, 2.4t 2.39 second third ' Total time. 2.44J 8.04i MAO. 219 This is, thus far, the best time on record at three-mile heats, as was Flora's, recorded above, the best of two-mile heats. Credit enough for the year '53. During the spring of 1854, Flora did not appear after Jan- nary 31, when she met Green Mountain Maid at New Orleans, being sold into private hands ; consequently she appeared in all but four times during the year, not being in training until October. Of her four races she won three, being beaten once by Green Mountain Maid, which she paid off a few days after by laying her out in two straight heats. She also beat Mac, who had forced Tacony to his terrible time, the best three in five, in three straight heats, also Jack Walters. In fact, to her this year is all but lost. Tacony did himself no credit this year ; receiving forfeit once from Lantern, and getting himself beaten twice by Grey Eddy and once by Mac. Mac beat Tacony once, and Know-Nothing twice, of whom more anon. He was himself beaten by hady Flora and Grey Eddy, who trotted, a wonderfully good horse, in this, his first year, winning five trots, without getting beaten once, against such horses as True John ; Tacony twice ; Mac ; and Highland Maid twice. There was a great deal of good trotting this season, by many horses, who, in a few years, would have been considered first-rate animals and wonders ; but the speed of trotters had come to be so wonderfully increased since 1818, when it was odds against any horse being found in America to do his mile on a trot within three minutes, that now one hardly looked at a 2.30 horse, or cared to record time slower than 2.27 or 28 for a mile, or 5.00 for two miles ; such was the progress of horseflesh in so few years. There appeared, however, on the course, two or three new horses, two of them of sufficient note to deserve more than a passing notice. One of these, it is believed, had trotted a year or two ear- lier, but it is impossible to ascertain, owing to the stupid and dishonest practice of changing names — a practice which I am persuaded arose from a tricky system of starting tried horses,in new places, as untried horses, and in getting bets out of flats. The horse in question, one of the best to-day on the turf. 220 THE HORSE. the slaj^ping black gelding, who has made such splendid con- tests with Flora Temple, trots now under a diiferent name from that which he claimed in 1853 ; before that he is known to have had one or two aliases. He was at the first called Black Dan — which one would suppose was a good enough name for any- horse, man, or snob — but one of the last was found, who, I sup- j^ose. incapable of discerning the man through the fogs of filthy- politics, not content with the title of the greatest statesman and man of his dav, changed it to the two-penny bye-word Know- Kothing. Leaving his name out of the question, however, which is no business of mine — and to which I have only alluded in order to explain my inability to fix this year as the first, second, third, fourth, or any other given number, of his performance, he is a right good horse. His name was last year Lancet, perhaps next year it will be Gouge, or Cliisel, there's no saying ! Know-Nothing, then, in 1854 trotted seven or eigld times ; for I have some doubts whether the same horse has not trotted and won under yet other names on other courses. All his other trots were made at Boston, and in them he beat the Black Hawk maid four times, and Blue Morgan once. These were well-tried, good horses, but slow as the times go, of the Morgan stock, rarely getting below the 40s., or the top of the 30s. His best time in any of these matches was 2.36 ; 2.36 ; 2.37 ; which is nothing to brag of. He was beaten twice by Mac, and put him up to 2.35 ; 2.32, and 2.38 ; 2.34, to win ; so that he rather gained than lost by his defeats. Black Dan, Know-Nothing, or Lancet, as he is to be hence- forth called, was got by the Bridport, or Hill's Black Hawk, commonly known as Yermont Black Hawk, in order to distin- guished him from Long Island Black Hawk, the son of Bashaw. Hill's Black Hawk was by Sherman, son of the Justin Morgan, out of an English mare, reported to be half-bred. Lancet's dam is " Old Squaw " — a mare said to have some English blood, and supposed to be got by an imported horse called Lee Boo, in Canada. The other great event of this year, however, was the debut of the magnificent pacing mare Pocahontas, one of the most superb, and, to use a word well applied by a eulogist to that POCAHONTAS. 221 noble liorse Grey Eagle — most sumptuous animal, as well as the fastest of the day. Pocahontas is a rich clicstnnt mare, nearly sixteen hands in height, with a superb crest, and tlie liighcst and thinnest withers I have seen in America. She was foaled in 184G, and was con- sequently eight years old at the time of her matches, which came off at New Orleans. She is, as her appearance shows, very highly bred. She was got by a thoroughbred horse, well known in Ohio, and fa- mous as a getter of fine and fast road stock, under the name of Iron's Cadmus, by Cadmus — a chestnut horse by American Eclipse, dam Dii Vernon by Ball's Florizel, g. d. by Ogle's Oscar, gd. by Hero, &c. Ball's Florizel was by imported Diomed, by the famous Florizel, out of sister to Juno by Spectator, gd. by Blank, g. gd. by Childers' g. g. gd. Miss Belvoir, by Grey Grantham, &c. &c. Medley, gd. Penelope by Yorick, gd. by old Eanter, g. ga. by Gift, &c. Hero was by old Yorick, d. by Careless, &c. It is useless to pursue this pedigree farther, as it is one of the clearest and best in America, all the horses named being of undoubted blood. Cadmus, it is said, was sixteen hands high and well proportioned. The mother of Pocahontas was a bay mare fifteen and a half hands high, well put up, with powerful muscles, and a natural trotter. She was got by imp. Shakspere ; he by Smolensko, out of Charming Molly, by Rubens, &c. The grand-dam of Pocahontas was a good road mare, her pedigree unknown. I am indebted for these particulars to my friend Dr. J. S. Unzicker, of Cincinnati, Ohio, who procured them from the gentleman who first purchased her out of a team, struck by her show and style. She is, it will be perceived, certainly three parts of pure blood, and of such blood as is in but few race-horses' veins, Ame- rican Eclipse, Sir Arcliy, Herod, Smolensko, Sorcerer, the Godol- phiu. I am happy to present my readers with a fine portrait of 223 THE HOKSE. this noble animal during her great match with Hero, from the pencil of Maurer, and the burin of Ilinshelwood. She went three times, a match and two purses, in 1854 ; all of which she won, at New Orleans, against the roan gelding Silvertail twice ; Tecumseh and Dolly Spanker, the last in 2.20 ; 2.25 ; 2.20 ; admirable time, which she was, however, herself to outdo thereafter. There were two twenty, and one ten-mile matches in har- ness, but with no notable result, no great time made, and no horses, I believe, butchered. In 1855, Flora Temple went eight times, and received forfeit once. She beat Know-Nothing, Sontag, Lady Franklin, Chi- cago Jack, and Mac, and Hero the jjacer, once each. Frank Forester twice. She was beaten once by Sontag, in three straight heats, in 2.31; 2.33; 2.35. Sufficient proof, say her friends, that she Avas amiss. That does not, however, follow, for, without being amiss, horses, and mares, yet more often, will go better one time than another. There is no doubt, however, that she was the better mare, though not on that day, and that she could make better time. She soon afterward beat Sontag easily enough. Know-Nothing did not shine this year. He w^on three times ; against the mare of 2.22, myth, Tib Hinman, who came very short, on this occasion, of doing that or any other decent time, not being able to j)ut Know-Nothing to a better pace than 2.41 ; 2.43i ; 2.42^ ; 2.49 ; against Sag Niclit, half a mile ; and against Tacony, who only got him up to 2.38. He was beaten twice by Chicago Jack, of whom more anon ; on.ce by Flora Temple ; once by Paddy Gill, and once by Tib Hinman. Tacony was out five times, won twice of Mac, and Belle of Saratoga, recieved forfeit from Sontag, and was beaten by Belle of Saratoga, and Frank Forester — best time 2.30.V. Chicago Jack did capital work for a new beginner, in his second year only ; he w^on five times, beating Know-Nothing twice, the second in 2.27^ ; 2.29; 2.27^; 2.30; also Murdoch, Belle of Saratoga, and Lady Litchfield. He was beaten four times by Belle of Saratoga, a good mare. Flora Temple, in company with Mac, over whom he came in second ; and twice TIB hinman's time. 223 by Lady Franklin, a very excellent, honest mare, and a winner, this season, of six ])urses. A great many other horses did excellent AVDrk this year, althongh not quite iirst-rate, although a few years ago it would have been considered not onl}^ iirst-rate, but prodigious. The mare Tib Ilinman must not be forgotten. She is set down in the Register as twice a winner. The first time beating the Belle of Ogdensburgh, and three others, 2.22 ; 2.27; 2.27 ; to which tlie Register very properly appends a (?) query. It might have added admiration stops ad libitum, and no one would have objected. The trot was on the ice for $500, the best three in five, won by Tib Hinman, in three heats. In the heat done at 2.22 no one of the five horses was distanced ! This, of course, alone, settles the question. Tlie second heat, 2.27, three were dis- tanced; and the third, in 2.25, no horse distanced. It is amazing that no note should be appended to this mon- strous myth, in the Register, although the utter fallacy of the statement was exposed in the Spirit of the Times. Like a sub- sequent allegation of wonderful ice-speed, in this present season, at Chicago, it rested on mere guesswork. The track was straight, and the timing M'as done by signal and calculation. The following real time, which Tib made afterward, shows pretty conclusively what sort of timing was used on the ice. Cambridge Park, May 22, mile heats, best three in five, to wagons. Know-Nothing beat Tib ninman, 2.41; 2.48^; 2.42^; 2.49. Chicago, III., Aug. 21, mile heats, best three in five, in harness. Chatauque Chief, . . . . . .22111 Ileindeer, . . . . . . . 11232 Tib Hinman, . . . . . . .33323 Black Ealph, . . . . . . 4 4 4 4 4 Time, 2.41 ; 2.48* ; 2.43 ; 2.44 ; 2,45. Same course, August 25, she was again beat by Chatauque Chief, and Fanny Wood, two-mile heats in harness, in 5.29 ; 5.27. None of which certainly looks very like 2.22 ; 2.27 ; 2.25. But such nonsense requires no confutation. There were a number of the abominable long races and time matches this year. 224 THE HOESE. First, the cli. g. Trustee Senior and Spangle trotted twenty miles ; the winner in Ih. 5m. 59s. ; the loser in Ih. 6m. |s. Then the same horse, Spangle, was backed to do iiftj miles in four hours, wagon and driver to weigh 400 lbs. which he won, doing tlie distance in 3li. 59m. 14s. One month after this, the same horses. Trustee Senior, and Spangle, went ten miles, as before, to wagons, which was done a little over the half hour, in 30m. 29^s. On the 24th of May, with a fatuity inconceivable, if only in a pecuniary view, with so valuable an animal at stake. Flora Temple was started to do twenty miles within the hour. What follows I quote from the Turf Register of the year ; — " In the eighth round she cast a shoe, and cut herself rather severely, and from this out her speed began to decrease, until the close of the twelfth mile, when her backers, seeing she had not a chance, withdrew her and gave up the match ! " This needs no comment. The agony of the wounded animal, whose speed began to decrease from the moment of the mutila- tion, had no effect on the flinty hearts of the backers, until they saw that she had not a chance. If she had had a chance, on she must have gone. If she could have won, she would have been made to win — lame or sound — live or die ! Though one would have thought that Flora Temple's life, if insured against such wanton risks as this, was worth more than five thousand dollars. A few days after this, July 12th, Lady Fulton was backed to perform the same match, and won it, doing the twenty miles in 59m. 553.* This mare and Trustee, the son of thoroughbred Trustee and Fanny Pullen — who must not be confounded with the Trustee Senior, mentioned above, also, I believe, by the same sire — are the only two animals who have accomplished this prodigious effort. It ought never, again, to be attempted. It is a mere matter of physical endurance. A mere trial of what a horse can do without dying. There arc hundreds of liorses who can do the pace for a distance, and who will stay the distance as long as they can, and that their owners know. The only question is what distance can they stay, without death ensuing. It is enough * See Note 1, p. 228. DOUBLE-TEAM MATCH. 225 to say that for every one horse who does it and lives, twenty will die in doing it, and as many more, after it is done. Such trials can answer no purpose whatever, and ought to be discountenanced by all true sportsmen and lovers of the liorse, and — in my opinion — to be declared a high misdemeanor at law. There was also this year a fine double-team match, between Lantern and Whalebone, bay and chestnut geldings ; and Alice Gray and Stella, gray and black mares ; mile heats, over the Union Course, June 5tli. The horses were driven by George Spicer, the mares by Hi- ram Woodruff— time, 2.46^.-2.42. An exceedingly spii'ited engraving by Mr. E.. Hinshelwood, from the design of Mr. L. Maurer, representing the start, will be found in this volume. The great feat, however, of this season, which I have saved to the last, in order that, like the autumn forest of America, it may die in a blaze of glory, is the pacing match of Pocahontas, the mare described above, and Hero, whom she distanced in the first heat, to wagons, wagon and driver to weigh 265 lbs., in the unparalleled time of 2,17.* The year 1856 was distinguished on the trotting turf, chiefly by the contests of Flora and Lancet, on whom was concentrated, especially, the interest of the season, although there was much excellent trotting, and an increase, both in the number of horses and of places devoted to this popular amusement, fully equal to that of the preceding year. To show how great that increase has been, it will be enough to mention, that, whereas in 1845 the Turf Register con- tains fourteen pages of trotting records, in large type, averaging about eight trots to the page, this, for 1856, contains 36 pages, averaging twelve trots — these of course only regular contests for purses or matches on well-known public courses ; that, whereas in 1845 the whole number of trotting horses which started, named and unnamed, in the United States and Canada, were but 137, of whom 55 were winners ; in 1856 there started 610 horses, named and unnamed, of whom 259 won prizes of some sort — and, lastly, that whereas, in 1845, there were sixteen places of sport in all the United States and Canada, there were sixty-four * See Note 2, p. 228. Vol. II.— 15 226 THE HORSE. in 1856, thus distributed ; — in New York, twentj-one ; Canada, six ; Wisconsin, six ; California, four ; Ohio, four ; Massachu- setts, three ; Kentucky, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Ver- mont and Virginia, each two ; and Alabama, Connecticut, Illi- nois, Iowa, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, Khode Island, and Tennessee, each one. There is, I believe, also a trot- ting course at Bangor, in Maine, although no report of it has found its way into the Register. The above summary will serve also to show in what portions of the United States trotting is taking the greatest hold on the popular taste ; in the far West, mainly, and California, next to New York, and in Canada scarcely less than in the States, where it is most popular. Beside the regular courses, it has also become a feature in most of the Agricultural Societies to have a trotting track in connection with their exhibitions, and on several of them purses have been given to the fastest, as well as to the finest ani- mals. Flora Temple started this year eleven times. She won nine purses and nine matches, beating Lancet four times in harness, her best time against him— 2.30^ — 2.30 — 2.29 ; — Tacony three times in harness, against his saddle, distancing him the last match in the unequalled time of 2.24rJ. Chicago Jack, in harness against his saddle ; and Ethan Allen, who was be- lieved to be the fastest bit of horse-flesh going, and able to take down any thing — at least by his owners and by Eastern sportsmen generally, with the greatest possible ease, at the Agri- cultural Fair at Boston, in 2.32| — 2.36^. On the other hand, she was twice beaten by Lancet, he going under the saddle, she in harness, in 2.28 — 2,28 — 2.25^ ; and the second time in 2.29—2.29—2.30. This last was considered by many persons to be the mare's greatest performance, as the course was very deep in mud, and the match was done in the teeth of a gale of wind and torrents of rain, to face which was in itself deemed an achievement. Lancet started ten times ; six times as Lancet, five as Know- Nothing ; — a shuffling absurdity this change of names, which cannot be too strongly reprobated ! TACONT. 237 As Lancet he 'won twice of Flora Temple, and was defeated by her four times, as above. Under the name of Know-Noth- ing he won twice, beating Chicago Jack and Nelly, and two others, and was beaten twice by Chicago Jack. He is a fine slashing black gelding, though in past years he has been reported as a brown, and is well bred. Good sport is expected of him the coming summer, as it is believed that, like Tacony, he will make an effort to retrieve his laurels of the mare. Tacony started six times, but with little success, winning twice only, against Chicago and Zachary Taylor, and losing four times, to Flora thrice, and once to Lady Moscow ; still he can- not be said to have lost caste or to have shown himself other than a good horse, since he was beaten only by animals of the highest character. Chicago Jack, Lantern and Lady Moscow, the latter a most stanch and honest mare on the turf, now in her tenth season on the trotting course, all distinguished themselves, and did good work. Tib Hinman, the mare, concerning whom the prodigious story was circulated in 1855, about the trot on the ice at Og- densburgh, in 2.22, trotted creditably this year, winning five times out of seven trots for which she started, but against no first-rate horses, except Lady Moscow, and in no time which gives the smallest reason for believing that she ever went with- in eight or ten seconds of that rate, her best race this season being 2.32—2.31—2.32—2.34^2.36 against Miller's Damsel. There were three ten-mile matches this season, by Cincinnati against McComb's double team in 41.50. Duchess against Boston Girl and Racker in 29.17, and Gipsey Queen against Olive Rose, in 31.05. One match to go six miles and one hundred and fifty-two rods — eight hundred and thirty-six yards — with two men weighing three hundred and sixty pounds, in a sleigh, in twenty-five minutes — was won by ]^el]y Bly in 23.08 ; and two five-mile matches were won by Jessie Fremont against James Buchanan — a curious collocation of names ! — in 16.15 — and by a bay mare of D. Pifer's against Hiram Wood- ruff's black horse, in 18.30. As I do not propose to attempt any notice of the early trots 328 THE H0E8E. of this present season, since it will not be possible to do more than commence the subject, I shall close this brief and necessarily incomplete sketch of the origin, rise, and present condition of the Trotting Turf of America, with a memoir up to the present date of Flora Temple, with so much of her pedigree as is attain- able, her performances, and a description of her appearance, to- gether with the pedigrees of one or two trotting horses which are distinctly ascertained. EDITOKIAL NOTES. ' (P. 224.) Capt. McGowan trotted, to harness, Oct. 18th, 1865, on a half-mile, at Boston, twenty miles in 58.25. John Stewart trotted to wagon, twenty miles, on Fashion Course, Sept. 22d, 1868, in 59.23. « (P. 225.) Billy Boyce, under saddle, at Buffalo, August 1, 1868, paced in 2.3li— 3.15i— 2.14i— 2.20i. RoUo Goldust, a trotter, won the first heat. MEMOIR OF FLORA TEMPLE. HER PEDIGREE, CH AR A0TERI8TI0S, AND PERFORMANCES. It was not until this remarkable mare had obtained celebrity, from her extraordinary speed and steadiness, that any efforts were made to ascertain her pedigree or descent. On demand, however, being made for information concern- ing her descent, by the editors of "Porter's Spirit of the Times," there was sent to, and published in that paper, probably the most impudent, and at the same time stupidest forgery, sworn to by six individuals, whose name it is not worth the while to publish, which runs as follows ; — Madame Temple, the dam of Flora, was foaled the property of Elisha Peck, Esq., of "Waterville, Oneida Co., N. Y., in the spring of 1840. Her dam was a small but fleet mare. Madame Temple was sired " — got — " hy a spotted Arabian stallion, brought from Dutchess county, and owned by Horace Terry, Esq."* So far, probably, this is all true, except as regards the spot- ted Arabian stallion' and this is, probably, a blunder of ignorant stupidity, not an attempt to deceive ; since we are told a few lines later, that this spotted Arabian stallion, who is described as a " strong, restless, fast-trotting horse," is said to have been got by a full-blood Arabian stallion, on Long Island — without stating what stallion, or out of what mare. This shows that the * See Note 1, p. 239. 230 THE H0K8E. swearers to this notable pedigree had not a conception what an Arabian stallion is. Tlierefore, thej stand acquitted here of fraud. All that appears tangibly thus far, on the side of Flora's dam, is this — that she was got by a spotted trotting stallion, about whom nothing is known, but who is said by common rumor to be the son of some Arabian or other, out of a Long Island com- mon mare. Flora's grandam is not pretended to be other than a common country mare. When we come, however, to the father's side, we find a pedigree cooked up alternately out of the American and Eng- lish stud-books, displaying a mixture of ignorance and cunning riirely to be paralleled, and, with scarcely a step right from beginning to end, either in the American or English portions. Ignorance alone could not have done this, for by no natural blundering could such a mass of heterogeneous blunders have been brought about. So strange is the labyrinth, that even the practised eye of that admirable sporting writer " Observer," misled, perhaps, by a couple of false prints in the columns of the Spirit, although he saw at a glance that the pedigree is false and worthless, failed to detect the forgery or find the clue. It runs thus, — Flora's sire was " One-eyed Kentucky Hunter," his dam, a chestnut Sir Henry mare, was brought from Kentucky to East Hartford, Oneida County, I^. Y., where Kentucky Hunter was foaled." He was the son of " Old Kentucky Hunter." " Old Kentucky Hunter was got by Old Highlander, out of Col. Tall- madge's full-bred mare, Nancy Dawson," no sire given — " grand dam Dido, who was got by the full-bred horse King Fergus., from a full-bred mare of Sir Peter Teazle." Note here, that out of seven Nancy Dawsons in the Ame- rican Stud-book — Edgar's — not one is out of Dido — that out ot five Didos in the American Stud-books, not one is by King Fergus, or out of a Sir Peter Teazle mare. Note, also, that the only American horse, King Fergus, by Hyazim, out of Virgin, was not foaled until 1833, and therefore could not by any earthly means have been the g. g. g. grand sire of a mare foaled as Flora was, in 1845. FLORA temple's PEDIGREE. 231 But to proceed — " Old Iliglilander, the sire of Kentucky Hunter, was got by Paymaster, son of Blake " — misprint for Blank. " His dam by Herod, his g. dam by Eclipse, his g. gd. by Ancestor " — another misprint for Ancaster — " son of Bolton Starling, his g. g. gd. by Wildair ! ! " The only American horse, Highlander, is by Old Sharke, out of Young Selima — foaled 1Y96. There are no such American horses, nor ever were, as Pay- master, Blank, Ancaster Starling, or Bolton Starling. Wildair, who was in America, is foisted into this tissue of folly and for- gery, to give it an air of verisimilitude. There was an English horse, Paymaster, by Blank. But his dam was not by Herod, nor his gd. by Eclipse, nor his g. gd. by Ancaster Starling, nor his g. g. gd. by Wildair, who, by the way, was not foaled until the Ancaster Starling was fifteen years old, which makes it slightly improbable that the Ancaster Starling should have got foals out of his, "Wildair's, daughters. Paymaster, by Blank, was out of Snapdragon, by Snap, gd. by Eegulus g. gd. by Bartlett's Childers, g. gd. by Honeywood's Ai"abian, g. g. gd. dam of the two True Blues. It is hardly necessary to add that Paymaster never came to America, nor got any colt named Highlander out of IsTancy Dawson or any other mare. The points which ren.der the intention to deceive in this false pedigree unmistakable, is the mixing up of the names of horses known to be connected with American blood, as King Herod, the grandsire of Sir Archy — or to have been in America, as Wildair — mixing them up also out of sequence, and in defi- ance of date and order. It may appear that this is breaking a butterfly upon the wheel — but no pain or labor are ever wasted in nailing to the counter so base a coin as a forged pedigree, or in exposing the rascality by which one is concocted. It is so dangerous and so rapidly growing an evil, that, if stringent legislative means be not taken to prevent it, there will Boon be no safety in breeding to any horse relying on any testi- monial. I may add that there was a fine gray English horse, High- 232 THE HOKSE. lander, by Boiirdeaux, dam Tetotum, by Matchem, g. g. dam Lady Bolingbroke, by Squirrel, &c., imported, as it is stated in a MS. note to Mr. C. H. Hall's stud-book, by an English gentle- man, Mr. Harriot, who lived at Newark, N. J., and kept him there, where he got good stock. This horse could not, however, easily have had to do with Kentucky Hunter. All, therefore, that we arrive at is this, that a horse called Kentucky Hunter was brought from that State to Oneida Co., N.Y., with an absurd, forged pedigree — ^foritis not to be supposed that the witnesses, who have stupidly mixed themselves up in the matter, are either parties in, or guilty of the forgery — that nothing whatever being even conjecturable concerning his pedigree, he got One-eyed Kentucky Hunter out of a mare, said to be by Sir Henry, her dam not described. This One-eyed Kentucky Hunter got Flora Temple in 1845, out of a clever, well-formed, fast-trotting mare, Madame Temple, who, in her turn, was got by a horse concerning whom nothing at all is known, except that he was not what he is called, an Arabian, out of a country mare. Divested of all mystery and falsification, nothing is known whatever about the mare's — Flora Temple — pedigree, beyond her sire and her dam. It is most probable that the sire had some blood — what blood no one can conjecture — both from the region whence he came, Kentucky, long noted as a race-horse region, and from the character of his stock, which certainly show blood. It is possible that Madame Temple may have had blood also, but that is far more doubtful ; and the fact of tlie horse called an Arabian being spotted is against it. Spotting, unless it be red on a white ground, or black on a deep gray, is not an Arabian mark. "White spotting on a bay ground is a Hano- verian or Holstein mark ; and twenty years, or a little longer ago, the country was full of bay horses, white-spotted across the loins and quarters, of a very indifferent sort. The truth is, that the question matters not, whichever way it is settled. As " Observer " has well observed. Flora Temple's " merit rises above blood." With trotters it is not as it is with thoroughbreds, in whom it is a blot ineradicable to have a drop of false blood — and a blot, flora's first match. 233 too, which is sure to cr'op out, as the geologists say of strata, somewhere, at some time or other, to the detriment of the per- formance and pluck of the progeny. It is admitted that the excellence of trotters is .nd generis, and depends on no strain of blood ; and the search for their pedigrees is more a matter of curiosity than of practical use. The above, then, is all that can be ascertained now, probably that ever will be ascertained, concerned Flora's pedigree. She was got by One-eyed Kentucky Hunter — who almost certainly had some good Kentucky thorough blood in his veins, but for regarding whom as a thoroughbred there are no grounds whatever — out of a mare, Madame Temple, who might or might not — the chances rather inclining to the not — have had some good blood. Flora was foaled in 1845, the property of a Mr. Loomis, of Sangerfield, Oneida county, I^ew York. She passed, while quite young, through several hands, and was at length sold to Messrs. Kichardson & Kellogg, of Eaton, Madison co., IST. York, who worked her at livery. In the month of June, 1850, one of her owners taking a drove of cattle to l^ew Y^ork, carried Flora with him, and on his way disposed of her for the sum of $175, to Mr. Yelie, of "Washington county, New York, who shortly afterward trans- ferred her for double that sum to Mr. Geo. E. Perrin, of the city of IN^ew York, by whom she was constantly driven on the roads in the neighborhood of the city, and tried against the fast horses which are continuall}^ taking the air on the avenues, un- til he became well satisfied that he was the owner of something a little above the common. Her first trial on a course was a match made between her and a fine horse known as Yanderburgh's gray stallion, for $500 a side, mile heats, the stallion to go to a 250 pounds wagon, the mare in harness. It came oflP on Union Course, L. I., and was won easily in three heats by the mare, in very handsome style. This match was not registered, and I record it on the autho- rity of a very clever and agreeably-written series of papers en- titled " Flora Temple ; written in one of our office arm-chairs," published in Porter's Spirit of the Times, and understood to be from the pen of Mr. Geo. Wilkes. 334 THE H0K8E, Flora Temple is a blood-bay mare, with black legs, mane, and tail, and no white marks. She stands only fom*teen hands two inches high, but has enormous power, combined with great lightness. She has a good, bloodlike head, broad between the eyes, with a little of the Arab basin-face formation. A pecu- liarly long, sloping shoulder, and a set of legs and feet which are as near as may be to perfection. One of her points, and a great one it is in any horse, and in her, doubtless, one of the great causes of her immense speed, so unusual to so small an animal, is this ; that while she is very short in the saddle-place, she is very long below, which gives her the immense, low, long-reaching stride, for which she is as famous as for her quick gather. It is stated in the memoir I have above named, that the stroke of this wonderful little animal has, by actual measurement, been found to equal that of a sixteen hand horse. The beautiful engraving of Flora Temple, which will be found in this volume, from the burin of Messrs. Capewell and Kimmel, designed by Mr. L. Maurer, is a faithful portrait of the " little treasure "' in action, and well preserves her charac- teristics. It may be as well to say here, in order to save misconstruc- tion, that although her best time, 2.24|, is noted under the plate, that time was not made by her going, as she is here rep- resented, in a skeleton wagon, but in a sulky, against Tacony, under saddle, whom she distanced. I now proceed to furnish a regular table of her perform- ances to the end of the year 1856, beyond which I do not pre- tend to carry this work. Where she won, the values of the purses are stated ; where she lost, they are left blank.* * We bring the record up to finish ofl" her tiuf career. — Ed. FLOBA TEMPLE. 235 PERFORMANCES OF FLORA TEMPLE. 1850 1851 1852 1853 1854 1855 Sept.* May Oct. 13 Nov. 10 Dec. 10 April May 21 3 4 May June IT 15 " 28 u 30 July 14 19 " 26 Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Oct. May 1856 July Sept. Oct. June July An?. Sept. Oct. June 26 Nov. 20 Union Course, L. I. Was not in train- ing:, owing to an accident. Union Course, L. L Centreville, L. I. . . Union Course, L. L Centreville, L. I. . . Hunting- Park, Pa. . Union Course, L. I. Centreville, L. I. . . Hunting Parle, Pa. . Centreville, L. I. . . Union Course, L. L Saratoga, N. Y. . . . Rochester, N. Y. . . Utica, N. Y Saratoga, N. Y. . . . Hunting Park, Pa. Cincinnati, Ohio . . Oakland Course, Ky. New Orleans, La. . . Union Course, L. L Centreville, L. I. . . Union Course, L. I. Centreville, L. I. . . Cambridge Park, Mass. Union Course, L. I. Centreville, L. I. . . Union Course, L. I. Centreville, L. L . . Union Course, L. I. Fashion Course, L.I. Boston, Mass. ... harness wagons, 250 lbs. harness . wagons harness wagons harness harness waa;ons, .300 lbs. wagon . harness . wagons ]. harnes . wagons &, drivers. 2T5 lbs. wagons . harness . wagon . harness 2.52. 2.55, 2.52, 2.49. 2.88}, 2.85, 2..36i, 2.43, 2.41, 2.4.3, 2.40, 2.89. 2.86. 2.42, 2.46, 2.44, 2.851, 2 m, 2.35. received forfeit, 2.3H, 2.82, 2.38i, 2.32i, 2.35. 2.31i 2.29, 2 27, 2.32, 2.28, 2.32, 2.32, 2.33. 2.311, 2.35. 2.32. 2.-32. 2 86, 2.28. 2.27. 2.29, 4.59, 5.011, 2.30, 2,31, 2..32, 5.04, 5.101, 2.85, 2 81}, 2.301. 2 801, 2.311, 2.861, 2.351 2 381, 2 27, 2 281 2.29, 2.84, 2.34, 2.34, 2.82, 2,36, 2.23, 2 881, 2 84, 2.43, 2.40, 2.41, 2.451, 2 42, 2.40, 2.40, 2.89. 2.851, 2.86, 2 36, 5.07, 5.07, 2.31*, 2.32, 2..33. 2.33, 2.89, 2.37, 2.31, 2 38, 2.86, Pulled up lame, 12th mile, 2.37, 24.8, 5.07, 5.27. 5.121, 5.111, 2.291, 2.31i, 2.34 5.151, 5.171, AGAINST WHAT HOUSES. Received forfeit, 4.59, 4.57, 5.21i 2.301, 2.30, 2.80, Received forfeit 2.801, 2 30, 2.29, 2.31}, 2.281, 2.29}, Received forfeit 2.241, best time on record. 2.381, 2.34, 2.31, 2.361, 2,401, 2.43, 2.321, 2.361, Whitehall and three others. Lady Brooks & Pet, Brown Jem. . . Young Dutch- man, Centreville . . . Black Douglass, Dutchman. . . . Lady Brooks . . Black Douglass Highland Maid Black Douglass Tacony Tacony Lady Vernon, MountainMaid, Rhode Island, Ivhode Island . Mount.iinMaid, Green Mountain Maid, Mac Jack Waters . Sontag Time Know-Nothing, alias Lancet. Sontag Lady Franklin Chicago Jack, and Mac. Frank Forester, Chicaso Jack, Miller's Damsel. Frank Forester Hero — pacer — ■ in a wagon, Chicago Jack, — saddle. Lancet Tacony — saddle Lancet Ethan Allen . , Winning in six years thirty-nine races, losing eight. Netting 46,S5.' ' This, her first trot, was made and recorded under the name of " Flora " alone. 50 150 250 1,000 1,000 2,000 2,000 2,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1.000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 250 250 900 2,000 2,000 8,000 2,000 2,000 500 2,000 2,000 1,000 2,000 honor. 1,000 1^000 1,000 1,000 1,000 236 THE HOKSE. PERFOEMANCES OF FLORA TEMPLE. HAKNE83, m YEAB. DATE. COUKSE. SADDLE, or WAGON. s TIME. AGAINST WHAT HOBSES. P< 1857 July 8 Centreville, L. I. .. wagon... 1 2.30J, 2.39, 2.37f. Rose Wash'gton, h. Ditto— saddle July 80 " " " harness.. 1 2.31. $1,000 Sept. 2 Elmira, N. T 1 2.28, 2.27. Lancet to sad., Red Bird and Miller's Damsel to har. . 300 5 " " " 1 2.26.1, 2.27, 2.25. Same horses 2,000 " 12 Albany, " " 1 2.3;3,;, 2.30.^, 2.30. Brown Dick 400 Oct. 3 Springfield, Mass. . Hartford, Conn. . . . " 1 2.391, 2.32," 2.32. Lancet to saddle. . . 1,000 " 10 " 1 2.34i, 2.29, 2.25, 2.28. Lancet " 1858 June 16 " 22 Chestnut Hill, Pa. . PhU.,Pa >i 1 1 2.29, 2.31, 2.35. 2.31, 2.37^, 2.29|. Lancet 1,000 1,000 July 1 Baltimore, Md '> 1 2.30, 2.29, 2.33. " 1,200 " 6 " " " 1 2.35J, 2.31i, 2.33i. " 1,200 Oct. 2 Detroit, Mich " 1 2.31i, 2.34. Prince 300 " 13 " 15 " 27 Chicago, 111 Kalamazoo, Mich. . Sandusky, Ohio. . . . ;; 1 1 1 2.30^, 2..S8, 2.42. 2.33, 2.29. 2.41, 2.37.A, 2.35. Ike Cook 1,300 600 Prince 600 Nov. 4 Adrian, Mich " 1 2.30, 2.28," 2.28. Reindeer 1,000 " 25 St. Louis, Mo " 1 2.34,2.35. Won first heat; dis. for foul. 27 u n n " 2 5.1U, 5.17^. " 1,000 Dec. 2 " " 1 2.31i, 2.31i, 2.30f, 2.32i, 2.36-i. " 1,000 1859 May 31 PashionCoursejL.l wagon... 1 2.25, 2.27i, 2.27i. Ethan Allen 2,000 June 17 Eclipse " 1'^ 3 7.54, 7.59i. Princess— match. . . 5,000 " 23 harness.. 2 5.02,5.05. Princess won. Aug. 9 " 16 (I tt a " 1 2 2.23.5, 2.22, 2.231. 4.50i, 5.05. Princess 1,000 1,000 " 23 Boston, Mass " 1 2.33, 2.26^, 2.34. " 1,000 27 Saratoga, N. Y " 1 2.30i, 2.88, 2.34. " 1,500 Sept. 1 Portland, Me " 1 2.32, 2.26i^, 2.29. t> 1,000 " 8 Suffolk Park, Phila. " 1 2.41,S 2.31, 2.28. " 1,500 " 10 Baltimore, Md " 1 2.29, 2.31, 2.22. " 1,000 •♦ 16 Chicago, 111 " 1 2..31, 2.31, 2.26i. " 1,000 " 23 Muscatine, Iowa . . . " 1 Won— no time. Ike Cook. Oct. 7 Cincinnati, Ohio. . . " 1 2.27J, 2.27, 2.21i. " 1,000 " 15 Kalamazoo, Mich. . " 1 2..32i,2.22i,2.19^ Princess&HonestAnce 2,000 " 22 " 26 " 28 Cleveland, Ohio CuyahogaFall,Ohio ;'; 1 1 1 240, 2.30i, 2.29. 2.40, 2.30i, 2.29. 2.38, 2.00, 2.^1, 2.33. Princess 1,000 Ike Cook 1,000 1,000 Nov. 2 Buffalo, N.Y " 1 2.28, 2.31, 2.28i. " 1,000 5 " " " 3 1.46, 1.47, 1.47. Ike Cook and Belle " 9 StKatherine, C.W. Union Course, L. I. n 1 2.35, 2.29, 2.27. Saratoga 600 Ike Cook 1,000 " 21 " 1 2.28, 2.23, 2.24. G.M.Patcheu(sad.),r.oflf. " 24 " " " " 1 2.27,2.27^,2.26,2.29. Ethan Allen 1,000 Dec. 1 " " " " 1 •2.27i, 2.20*^, 2.15}. 2 28i.2.28i2.28},2.28i " 1,000 1860 Aug. 28 Franklin Park " 1 Geo. M. Patchen... 1,500 Sept. 15 Kalamazoo, Mich . . " 1 2.30',, 2.25i, 2.23. Ethan Allen 2,000 '' 24 Centreville, L. I... " 2 4.55i, 5.00. G.M.Patcheu,match 500 4,1 1 1 Match for $500, 3 miles, agst. Dutchman. 1st trial, 7.33?; 2d tr . resicncd at end of Time, 7.32.';; mare to ha\ e 3 trials. Lost. 1st m.— trotted in 2.42 ; 3d tr, 7.43}.'^ Oct. 3 Elmira, N.Y harness. . 1 2.30, 2.3H, 2.30. Geo. M. Patchen. . . 2,000 " 13 Syracuse, N. Y 1 2.2(Ji, 2.25i, 2.26. " " 1,000 " 27 Geneva, " 1 2.32, 2.28, 2.29.t " " " 23 Rochester, " 1 2.29, 2.29, 2.28, 2.30. " 11 1,000 " 17 Watertown," 1 2.28, 2.26, 2.26, 2.25. 11 ii 1,000 31 Corning, " 1 2.33?, 2..31V, 2.31.t " " 1,000 Nov. 15 Danhury, Conn 1 2.39, 2.37, 2.33. Widow Machree . . . 1,000 June 6 Union Course, L. I. 1 2.21, 2.24, 2.2H. G.M.Patchen, match 1,000 " 12 " " " 2 4.531, 4.57i. " " " July 4 Philadelphia, Pa. . . 1 2.22i, 2.21:;,2.37i. " " " 8,000 " 10 " " 2 4.5U, 5.014. " " " 1,000 Aug. 2 Union Course, L. I. 1 2.23.i,2.22i, 2.23,225 J. " " " 2,500 1861 May 21 Fashion Coursc.L.I. wagon... 1 2.32i, 2..34;,', 2.84;;. Princess., 500 June 13 Centreville, L. I.... harness.. 1 2.24a, Q2(\, 2.28i. Jn. Morgan, match 2,500 11 " " " l; 2 4.5.5*, 4.,52}. u " ' U 2,000 " 25 " " " 3 7.47, 7.48. " " 1,000 July 15 Union Course, L. I. 1 2.22i,2.22,2.23^ Ethan Allen &rnn'g mate. 2.2U, 2.20}. Ethan Allen & mate to wag. " 25 Fashion " " 1 1,000 Aug. 8 Union " " 1 2.21;, 2.22, 2.22i. Sept. 5 , Fashion " " 1 2.2;j, 2.19J, 221. Winning in eleven years ninety-three races, losing eighteen— one declared off. Netting $113,000 * The track was eierhteen feet over a mile, and it was claimed she had beaten the time, but the judges thought differently. + Track heavy. flora's great match. 237 In regard to the vast sums of money won by Flora, it must be remarked that most of her trots were for matches at high prizes ; and that the value of trotting purses has been greatly advanced of late years. The following account of the match against Tacony, in which her prodigious time, 2.24|, was made, is from the columns of the New York Herald ; and with it as a creditable Ji)iale, I close this brief sketch of the trotting turf of America, from its first inception to the present day. There seems every probability that the next season will be rich in events ; but before the cream of them shall have been gathered, this work will, Deo volenie, be in the hands of my readers, so that I judge it best to close the record with the close of the bygone year. " Union Course, L. I. "The Best Time on Record, 2.24| in Harness. — Another contest between those celebrated nags. Flora Temple and Tacony, came off for a stake of $1,000. The distance was mile heats ; Flora Temple in harness and Tacony under the saddle. The race was won by Flora Temple in one heat, which she performed in the unprecedented time of 2.24|, distancing Tacony. This time is one second less than ever before made, either under the saddle or in harness. " Tacony, down the back stretch and to the half-mile pole, went at a prodigious rate, evidently faster than the mare was going — the gait must have been somewhere in the neighbor- hood of 2.24 or less. If this had been continued without a break up, it would have been difficult for the mare to have beaten him in 2.24^ — the time in which the heat was performed. At the rate at which Tacony went just previous to breaking, his rider had not power to retain the horse on his centre of gravity. This occurred in both instances, and both breaks were bad. It is this power of preserving the equilibrium in the horse that con- stitutes the skill of the rider and driver, and for which Hiram Woodruff is so deservedly celebrated. " The attendance was rather slim, when we consider the ce- lebrity of the horses, owing, no doubt, to the absence of sporting men from the city and the approaching Presidential election. 238 THE HORSE. The weather, however, was every thing that could be asked, and the drive out to the course was truly delightful. The trotting track, however, was not all that could have been desired, being rather dry and dusty to our mind, and did not conipare favorably with its condition on some other occasioMs. Some persons, how- ever, thought it just the thing, and they may have been right. Time is the proper test. " Tacony, ridden by Warren Peabody, was the first to appear on the track, and as he jogged around, previous to the match, he looked uncommonly well, we thought, and capable of making as good time as on any former occasion. He is a fine specimen of the American trotting horse, very muscular, open gaited, and, in fact, possesses every requisite of the trotter. His rider, as he jogged along, seemed much at ease, and very confident of success, notwithstanding the extraordinary creature against whom he had to contend. " Flora shortly afterwards made her appearance in harness, driven by her favorite driver, Hiram Woodruff", who declared after the race that she could beat a locomotive. She looked, as she appeared throughout the summer, extremely well, and jogged around the track as gayly as a cricket. Her friends were much pleased with her, and were ready to back her to any extent, 100 to 30 being current just before the start. She is a universal favorite, and since the days of Lady Suffolk no nag has stood higher in the estimation of sporting men than Flora Temple. They believe her invincible, and her race yesterday seems to justify that belief. " THE EACE. " Flora Temple won the inside position, and, at the second attempt, went off with the lead. She opened a gap of three or four lengths on the upper turn, and went to the quarter pole in thirty-seven seconds, with all that advantage. On the back stretch Tacony gained on her, and was closing very rapidly on her as they reached the half-mile pole— time 1.13. The mare now increased her speed, and carried Tacony to a break, from which he did not recover readily. Hiram perceiving the distance Tacony was behind, now tried to shut him out entirely, FLORA TEMPLE. 239 and make surety doubly sure. Tlie pace of Flora then became truly astonishing, and she reached home from the half-mile pole in one minute and eleisen and a half seconds^ making the entire heat in 2.24| ! After Tacony recovered from his first break, he made a gallant attempt to catch the mare, which resulted in another bad break, on the home stretch, from which he could not recover in time to save his distance. And so ended this long remembered trot of Flora Temple and Tacony. The following is a summary i-^- | Tuesday, Sept. 3. Trotting match, $1,000, mile heats. H. Woodrnflf named b. m. Flora Temple, ..... 1 W. Peabody named r. g. Tacony, ...... dist. ^Time, 2.a4J. Flora Temple is the property of A. Welch, Chestnut Hill Stud Farm, near Philadelphia, Pa. She has been placed in th« stud. FLOKA. temple's PRODUCE. 1868— Bay Ally by Rysdyk, a son of Rysdyk, Hambletonian, dam by Lexington. 1869— Bay colt by Wm. Welch, a son of Rysdyk's Hambletonian, dam by imported Trustee. 1870— Massed to . Now in foal to imported Leamington. EDITORIAL NOTE. ' (P. 239.) R. A. Alexander, Esq., of Woodburn Stud Farm, Spring Station, Ky., purchased Madame Temple early in the year 1854. After she came into Mr. Alexander's possession she had the following produce: — 1855 — ^b. G-. Forest Temple by Edwin Forrest. 1856 — b. c. Hunter Temple by Edwin Forrest. 1857— b. c. Norman Temple by Norman. 185S— 1859— b. c. Pilot Temple by Pilot, Jr. 1800— b. f. Mary Temple by Pilot, Jr. 1861— b. f. Bland Temple by Lexington. 1862- 1863— 1864— b. f. by Alexander's Abdallah. We suppose she missed in 1858, '63 and '63, as no returns are made of the produce. If she has had a foal since 1864 we have no returns of the fact, and suppose that she must be barren from her age. 240 THE HORSE. LADY THOEISTE. Of all the horses that have won distinction on the trotting turf, none stand higher than the big bay mare, Lady Thome. Like the majority of horses known to fame, her career has been an eventful one. Good blood flows in her veins ; and it is this blood which gives to her the power of endurance. She was bred in Kentucky ; was foaled on the farm of Levi T. Rodes, near Lexington, Kentucky, May 9th, 1856. Her sire was Mambrino Chief, and her dam was by Gano, a son of the celebrated racer, American Eclipse ; second dam by a son of Sir William of Trans- port. Mambrino Chief was by Mambrino Paymaster, a son of Mambrino, and he by imp. Messenger. The dam of Mambrino Chief was a mare of Messenger descent. The sire of Lady Thome was a sire of trotters. Among others he got Brignoli (Mambrino Prince), Kentucky Chief, Whalebone, Idol,Ericsson, Clark Chief, Mambrino Patchem, Ashland, and Mambrunello, and from the sire his sons and daughters inherited the power of transmitting qualities of speed, for they are producing trotters in great numbers. Gano, the sire of the dam of Lady Thome, could boast of an illustrious pedigree. Got by American Eclipse, and dam Betsy Richards, by Sir Archy, there was no reason why he should not have been successful on the turf ; and he was successful, being a good race-horse in that great test of quality, four mile heats. Lady Thorne has a double cross of im- ported Messenger in her veins, which must make her all the more valuable to those who are Messenger crazy. One of those crosses comes from her sire, Mambrino Chief, and the otlier from American Eclipse, whose dam was by imp. Messenger. Her Ladyship has two crosses of imp. Diomed blood, one through Sir Archy, and the other through the son of Sir William of Transport. Closely scan the pedigree, and then tell us if the trotting turf can boast of a better bred animal, known on the ^ N o n!: LADY TUOUNE. 241 green ]i ills of fame, than Lady Tliorne? AVhen this now dis- tin<^'uisliod daughter of Mainhrliio Chief was foaled, JAi: Rodes, her breeder, christened lier Anna Leconite. Late in tlie fall or early in the summer of 1S5S, ]\[r. Rodes sold tlie bay filly to Mr. II. C. Dunlop, formerly of Fayette County, Ky., the price paid being $300, and two boxes of Havana cigars, valued at $12, thrown in to bind the bargain. A sliort time after the filly passed into Dr. Herr's hands, of I^xington, who changed her name to Maid of Ashland, In her three-year-old form the Doctor purchased a one-half interest in her, which was all the interest he ever acquired in the mare. In consequence of an in- jury received from kicking in harness. Maid of Ashland was not trained until the summer she was three years old. In the fall of 1859 she started in mile races. Her first appearance was in a three-year-old stakes, at Lexington, in which she met Ken- tucky Chief, Mexican Chief, and one other colt. The stake was won by Kentucky Chief, the fastest heat being 2,52. Her second race was in a three-year-old stake at Louisville, and here she w\as again defeated by Kentucky Chief, the bit breaking in Maid of Ashland's mouth at the start, and causing her to be distanced. Iler third race the same fall was a match against a Snow-Storm horse, over the Lexington track. In this she was successful ; she won in three straight heats, the time of each being slow. In her four-year-old form she did no good. She acted badly the entire season, and those who knew her then never dreamed that she would astonish the world with marvel- ous flights of speed. At live years old she was trained with great patience, and did well. She trotted a trial over the Lex- ington track in 2.27, and now her star began to rise. In the fall, while at work on the Louisville track, she accomplished a half mile in 1.09. She did not show in public at all this year. As a six-year-old very little was done with her, having been run out of the State in consequence of the war. In her seven-year- old form she trotted two races over the Louisville Course. The first was mile-heats, three in five, which she won in three straight heats. The day after this race she trotted two miles and repeat against Indiana Belle, Mountain Jack, and Belle Chaplin, winning in two heats. In the summer of 1SG3 she was sold to Mr. Ilelf, a gentleman living near Philadelphia, mIio Vol. IL— 1G 2-i2 THE HOKSE. brouglit lier east in August. Tlie bay mare was now known as Lady Tliorue. This, in brief, is the early history of this wonder- ful mare. Her record appended will tell the world how great she really is. Mr. Rodes, the breeder of the mare, writes : "The dam of Lady Thorne evinced most remai'kable speed at a time when trot- ting horses were not much the fashion in Kentucky, so much so that she was well known to the few who paid any attention to the subject, although she was never trained. Her daughter, Lady Thorne, is a duplicate in her disposition, way of going and form, with the exception that she is a larger animal, partaking of her sire, Mambrino Chief, in this particular. The dam of Lady Thorne was the mother of several colts which were, with- out exception, very fine roadsters, and would doubtless have made their reputation had they been trained." In Mr. Relf 's hands Lady Thorne rapidly improved in speed, and entered upon the high road to distinction. Trained and driven by Dan Pfifer, she met with success the fleetest horses of the day. Dexter alone was able to vanquish the big bay mare. September 17, 1868, Mr. Relf sold Lady Thorne to Messrs. Welch and McMann. Pfifer continued to drive her, and the mare continued to improve in speed. When Dexter retired from the Course into Mr. Bonner's stable, she became the acknowledged Queen of the trotting turf. The 12th of May, 1870, her Ladyship again changed owners, Messrs. Welch and McMann disposing of her to Dan Mace, who was the represen- tative of wealthy unknown parties. The price paid for her was $30,000. It was the intention of Mace to make an effort to eclipse Dexter's time of 2.17;| over the Buffalo Course ; he designed making the effort during the fall meeting of 1870, but unfortunately a few days before the week appointed for the Fair, the mare met with a severe accident at Kochester. While in tlie act of being placed on board a car provided for her, the bridge gave way and the great trotter met with a heavy fjill, whicli brought her racing campaign to a sudden close. The mare, however, was not permanently disabled. To learn how brilliant has been her performances on the turf, the reader nmst consult the summary annexed : — LADY TIIOKNE. 243 PEDIGREE OF LADY THORNE. Lady Thome, bay lilly, foaled May Otli, 185G ; bred by Levi T. Rodes, Esq., near Lexington, Ky., by Mambrino Cliief. 1st dam by Gano. 2d dam by a son of Sir William of Transport. Gano was by American Eclipse, dam Uetsey Richards by Sir Archy. Sir William of Transport was by Sir Archy, dam Transport by Virginia. In giving the pedigree of Lady Thorne some persons state that the mare by a son of Sir William of Transport was out of a Potomac mare, which her breeder, Mr. Rodes, whose letter we attach, does not claim. Lexington, Ky., Oct. 3d, 1870. Messes. S. D. & B. G. Bkuce, N"ew York City : Gentlemen : — In reply to your letter of Aug. 31st, making inquiry in regard to the date of the foaling, pedigree, &c., of Lady Thorne, I would state (from reference to my " Record Book *') that she was foaled, my property, May 9th, 185G. She Vv'as named by me Anna Lecomte. Sometime either late in the summer or early in the fall of 1858, I sold the above named animal to Mr, H, C. Dunlap, formerly of this county, for the sum of $300 and two boxes of imported Havana cigars, valued at $12. After she passed into Mr. D.'s hands, he changed her name to Maid of Ashland. Subsequently Mr. D. sold her to Dr. L. Herr, of this city, as I learned, for the sum of SoOO. I do not know her age at the time of the purchase by Dr. Herr. Subsequently Dr. H. sold her to Mr. Relf, a gentleman living near Philadelphia, as I learned, for the sum of $5,000. I do not remember her age at the time of the last sale. Lady Thorne was sired b^^ Mambrino Chief, and out of a mare sired by Gano ; the grandam of Lady Thorne was by a son of Sir AVilliam. Further than this I am unable to trace her pedigree. The dam of Lady Thorne evinced a most remarkable speed, at a time when trotting horses were not much the fashion in Kentucky ; so much so that she was well known to the few who paid any 244: THE HOESE. attention to the subject ; altliongli never trained. Her daughter Lady Thonie was a duplicate in her disposition, way of going, color and form of her mother, with the exception that she was a larger animal, partaking of her sire Mambrino Chief in that particular. I may here add that the dam of Lady Thorne was the mother of several colts which Avere, without exception, very fine roadsters, and would doubtless have made their reputation had they been trained. The above statements are all facts and not guesses, and com- prise all that I know of the celebrated trotting mare. Trusting that they may be of service to you, I remain Truly your friend, Levi T. Rodes. DESCRIPTION OF LADY THORNE. Lady Thorne is a solid bay mare, without white, standing sixteen and a half hands high. She has a good head and neck, fine shoulders, well laid and inclined ; great length, immense quarters and stifles, w^ith very prominent hips ; good broad flat legs and sound feet. She has lost an eye accidentally, and has an enlarged ankle behind, from her kicking propensities when breaking. She has a long sweeping stride, goes low to the ground, and is very reliable. Few horses can live with her when right. She generally cuts them down after going a half or three-quarters of a mile. ^E^^I'■oKMA^■cES of lady tiiokne. 245 PERFORMANCES OF LADY THORNE. »: '!5 m W O DATE. COURSE. W iJ o S 0 X'E8 OF LADY TIIOKNE. PERFORMANCES OF LADY THORyTE- Continued. 247 (/J W O K DATE. COURSE. « eJ tS X 0 < DISTANCE. TIME. AGAINST WHAT » ■0 K P b UOIiSE. e ^4 Oct. 15 Narraganset Park, Providence. Har. 1, best 3 in 5 2.25, 2.24i, 2.25. Lucy. 1st heat, 2.22i; 2d heat, 2.22i; George Wilkes, Rhode $1,C50 Island, & Geo. Palmer. " 29 Waverly Drivin;' Park. N. J. I* ti Mountain Poy, 2..30, 2.2?}, 2.27. Nov. 9 FashionCourfie,L.L " " 2.27, 2.25, 2 25. Luc3'. 2,000 1868 Nov.23 Union Course, L. I. 2.28i,2.27i,2.30J. Geor;,'e Wilkes, match declared a drawn race ; 2.98.1.2.271.2.301 1869 May 4 FashionCourse,L.I. " 2.26, 2.29}, 2.29}. American Girl, 5th heat, 2..301. 2,000 " 10 >' «i Wag. " 2.30, 2.27, 2.29. American Girl. 2,000 Jrmell Eishland Park, Newburg, N. Y. Han " Mountain Boy, 2.2S}.2..33J,2.28. " 20 Narrasranget Park, Providence, R. I. " American Girl, 2.2C^.2.]9.2.20j, GoldsmithMaid, George Palmer, Lucy. 2d money, 700 July 13 ' FashionCourse,L.I. " " 3d heat, 2.27|. American Girl, 2.28i.2.24,\2.2.!i. " 23 Union Course, L. I. *' *' 2.21f,2.20i,2.21}. Goldsmith Maid. 2,000 Aug.So Saratoga. It H Mountain Boy, 2.27,2.24}.2.25i. " 28 Prospect Fair Grounds, L. I. " " 3.20],2.20i,2.20J-. Goldsmith Maid, American Girl. 2,000 Sept. 3 11 u " " 2.331, 2.21, 2.22i. Mountain Bov. 2.000 " 9 , Point Breeze, Phil- " " 2.21|,2.19i,2.2.3i. Goldsmith Maid. 1,500 I adelphia. American Girl. " 18 , Prospect Park, L.L 2.22i, 2.23, 2.22. George Palmer, Rhode Island, Mountain Boy. 2,100 Oct. 1 ; Mystic Park, Med- >' " 2.20}, 2.20i, 2.20.1 George Palmer, 2.000 i'ord, Jlass. Goldsmith Maid. " 8 Narraganset Parlt, Providence, R. I. 2.191,2.181,2.21. Goldsmith Maid, Geo. Palmer, .3d heat.21fi}.Amer- ican Girt Rhode Island. 3,500 1870 July 4 FashiouCoursc,L.I. 2.23i, 2.23, 2.241-. George Palmer, GeorgeWilkes, Lucy. Ameri- can Girl, Gold- smith Maid. 2,500 " 23 Prospect Park, L. I. " 2.19.\,2.20J,2.19,K Goldsmith Maid. 5,000 Total 1 61,125 l"""i 1 1 1 She has been on the turf eleven years ; trotted 63 races ; won 51, lost 15 ; received $00,175 first money and $950 second money. 248 THE HOESE. GOLDSMITH MAID. (fokmerly goldsmith make.) The history of tliis celebrated trotting mare is fertile in eventful incidents, the more remarkable, perhaps, from the tact that it was not until she was eight years old that she began to develop those wonderful qualities of speed and endurance which has since marked her career upon the turf. Goldsmith Maid is a blood bay ; she stands 15^ hands high, and was foaled in the spring of 1857. She was bred by John B. Decker, of Orange County, !br. Y., and kept upon that gentlemen's farm without grain or handling until the winter of 18G5. In February of that year, Mr. Decker sold her to his son, Mr. John B. Decker, jun,, for the nominal sum of $250, who, on his way home with her to another part of the county, was induced to dispose of her to Mr. William Tompkins, of Hampton, Orange County, for $3G0. Wliile in this gentleman's possession she was put in harness and driven occasionally, though not with the view of fitting her for the turf. Her exceeding ambition made her restive under restraint, and in her eagerness to cover the ground quickly it was difficult to steady her into a regular gait. This difficulty to settle her down to her work, doubtless led lier owner to a mis- apprehension of her real worth, for we find that on the 2Gtli of March of the same year, Mr. Tompkins parted with her, Mr. Alden Goldsmith becoming the purchaser for the sum of Si?G50. The latter gentleman had previously observed tlie nuire, and entertained the idea that with proper training and a ditferent course of treatment slie could be made a good and fast trotter, and to him belongs the credit of first discerning and of ultimately developing those qualities for which she is now so eminently noted. Mr. Goldsmith immediately took her in liand and commenced GOLDSMITH MAID, 249 Lreaking and training her for the trotting turf. Finding her of a naturally amiable disposition, all traditional rules were dis- carded and a new method originated, tlie main feature of wliicli was kind treatment. Iler high-strung nature would not brook the lash, and her sensitive ear heeded not the boisterous denumd ; a c:entle word kindly spoken was the talisman, the utterance of wliich subdued her hitiicrto ungovernable temper and ever after won her obedience. Always high mettled and ambitious, this treatment soon made her tractable and manageable, and she be- gan rapidly to improve in speed and in her style of going, until her best points were finally developed. It may not be amiss in this connection to venture the sug- gestion that if Mr. Goldsmith's regime with Goldsmith Maid was more generally observed in breaking and training high- spirited horses for the turf, the result to their owners would be much more satisfactory. The blooded horse, though usually high- strung, possesses a certain degree of intelligence, pne of the characteristics of which is that he will appreciate and repay a kindness as readily as he will fret under and resent bad treat- ment. In the latter part of April, 1865, Goldsmith Maid was attacked with a severe throat distemper, and in consequence was not again harnessed until about the first of June. It was not, however, until August of the same year that she made her first appearance in public ; this was at the Orange County Horse Association Fair, when she won the premium for which she contended, at Goshen, over all competitors, in three straight heats, in 2:39 — 2:37—2:36. During the season of 1SG6 she trotted several times, and won all the purses she started for in public but one, w^hen she was beaten at Copake, N. Y., by General Butler, in 2:23|, this time being the fastest ever made by that horse in harness. These and her subsequent performances will be found below. In November, 1868, she was sold by Mr. Goldsmith to her present o^raers, Messrs. B. Jackman and Budd Doble, for the princely sum of $20,000. 250 THE HOKSE. DESCRIPTION OF GOLDSMITH MAID. As previously remarked, Goldsmith Maid was foaled in the spring of 1857; she is a blood hnj, 15| hands high, and is uni- versally conceded to be the best living representative of the Ab- dallah strain. This is a remarkable fact when it is considered that although both sire and dam were of Abdallah stock, in form, size, and general characteristics, she bears little or no resemblance to the illustrious family from whence she has sprung. In procreation nature is sometimes arbitrary in her laws ; in the case of Goldsmith Maid this mysterious departure from hereditary marks is most striking. Though her lower limbs are clean and well formed, her shoulders are sloping ; though her neck and throttle are arrowy, resembling Flora Temple's, her head small and finely cut, and her eyes sparkle with resolution and courage, yet there is an absence of symmetry in her general contour, and to one unused to horses of her pecu- liar build, her receding withers and drooping hams, though per- haps indicating strength, are not at all suggestive of the speed and endurance for which she is so notably famous. As an evi- dence of what thorough training can accomplish, she still pre- serves her good health, and at very short notice can be put in condition for a trotting contest. After all her labors on the turf she is now capable of as much fatigue as she ever was, and doubtless will yet eclipse her past performances. Up to the 10th of October, 1870, she has won for her owners the large sum of $58,600, and if she lives, with proper care, she may double the amount. PEDIGREE OP GOLDSMITH MAID. Goldsmith Maid, bay filly, foaled in 1857, bred by John B. Decker, of Orange County, 'New York, by Edsall's Ilanible- tonian (afterwards called Alexander's Abdallali). 1st dam by Old Abdallali. Alexander's Abdallah, formerly Edsall's Ilambletonian, pedi- gree will be found under the head of " Thorndale," in this work. Old Abdallah, the sire of Goldsmith Maid's dam, will be found under the head of " Rysdyk's Ilambletonian." PERFORMANCES OF GOLDSMITH MAID. 251 PERFORMAKCES OF GOLDSMITH MAID. 1-' •>' S w o • 1 2 hJ o AGAINST WUAT u M H DATK. COCKSE. «9^ -^ S K DISTANCE. TIJEE. UOKSE8. 18CJ Sept. 7 Goshen Course, Orange Co., N. Y. Har. 1, best 3 in 5 2.39, 2.30, 2.09. Uncle Sam.Moun- $100 taiu Boy, and Wild Irit-hmau. Oct. 15 Doty Park, Pough- keepsie, N. Y. " " 2..32, 2.41, 2.31. SorrcU Bill. Beat by General 500 Nov. 2 Copake Park, Co- lumbia Co., N. Y. IL ii Butler, 2.2:Ji, 2.2,").',, 2.27. 18GT May 16 Middlctown N. J. 11 ii Beat by Dexter, 2..32.'.,2.,3:3, 2.32. June 6 Hiiihland Trotting P'lt.Newburg,N.Y. " " 2.30i, 2.29, 2.24}. Torment. 500 " 29 Watertou Kivcr Park Asso., N. Y. 2d heat, 2.29i; 3d (dist.) Crazv Jane, 2.20, 2.27 ; Captain Tallraan (dist.) Sept. 12 Goshen Fair, Or- ange Co., N. Y. *' " 2.35, 2.31, 2.31i. N e w b u r g h Breese. 200 Oct. 23 Narraganset Park, Providence. 2..31},2.29},2.30}. May Queen, .3d heat, 2.31; Con- fidence, Col. Maynard, Crazy Jane, Bruno, Old Put. 750 1868 June 4 Ponghkeepsie,N.Y. " " 2.28, 2.32i, 2.315. Am. Girl, 1st h., 2.27^;; 2d h., 2.28. 1,000 July 1 Waverly Fair Grounds, N. J. " 2.37J, 2.34, 2.32^J. General Butler. 1,000 " 4 Union Course, L. I. 4th heat, 2.261; 5th heat, 2.28. Am. Girl, 1st h., 2.25; 2dh.,2.2G'; 3d h., 2.28. u 1-y I.aland Park Course. '' 2d. Lucy won in 2.28, 2.29, 2.241. 500 " 30 Buffalo Driving Park. 2.241,2.241, 2.26^ Rhode Ii-land, 3d h.,2.2:3; 4th h., 2.23; Silas Rich, Am. Girl. Clara, and Panic. 2,000 Aug. 6 Seneca Falls " " Best time, 2.29i Mountain Maid 700 Course, N. Y. and Clara. " 21 Pittsfleld, Mass. " '^ 2.38, 2.36, 2.26i. Dan Mace's Rhode Itland. Sept. 1 Suffolk Park, Phila- dvlohia. " " 2.26J,2.24i,2.26J. George Wilkes & American Girl. 1,300 » n Highland Park, Newburg, N. Y. 2.28, 2.26J. George Palmer won in 2.27|, 2.25i, 2.28'r ; Fearnaught (dist.) 2d money. 200 Oct. 2 Island Park, Al- bany, N. Y. 2.26, 2.27i, 2.25. Geo. Wilkes, 2d money; George Palmer, 3d mon. 1,250 " 7 Mystic Park, Bos- ton, Mass. 2.23, 2.24i, 2.27. Geo. Palmer, 1st 2.211; G.Wilkes, Draco Prince. 1,500 " 30 Point Breeze, Phil. " " 2.221, 2.27, 2.25. George Wilkes. 1,000 1860 May 29 Prospect Park, Brooklyn, L. I. " " Am. ^Girl, 2.2-?*, 2.2,3}, 2.21; Lucy, Bashaw. Jr., Rhode Island. & George Wilkes. June 2 Union Course, L. I. " " Sd. Am.GirI.2.22i.2.2-3. 2.25 ; Lucv, 2d. 350 " 9 Riverside Park, Boston, Mass. 2d. Am. Girl, 1st (no time named) ; Bashaw, 3d. " 18 Mystic Park, Med- ford, Mass. 2.22— 2d. Am. Girl, Ist- 2.22i, 2.^4, 2.24 ; Georsre Palmer, 3d ; Encv, 4th. 1,500 " 25 Narrasransct Park, Providence, R. I. li 3d. Am. Giri. Isr— 2.221. 2.19. 2.2tU: LadyThorne.2tl; George Palmer, 4th ; Xucy, 5th. 300 252 THE HOKSE. PERFORMANCES OF GOLDSMITH MAID— Continued. S H O DATE. COUKSE. H «-! O K 0 fe DISTANCE. TiaiE. AGAINST -WHAT HOKSES. Ml <2.21i,2.21i. Lucy. $2,000 " " " " " 2.234S 2.24, 2.24i. George Palmer. 1,000 " 21 Suftblk Park, Phil. " " 2.22,2.23,2.30." American Girl. 200 " 28 Union Course, L. I. " 2d. LadvThorne,2.21i% 2.20, 2.21-J. Aug. 11 Bnfliilo Driving " u 2.193 .2.191,2.19^. American Girl. 5,000 Park, L. 1. " 28 Prospect Park. 2d. LadyThorne,lst; American Girl, 3d. £d money, 1,000 Sept. 1 " 9 Lancaster, Penn. " " 2.311,2.261,2.302. American Girl. Point Breeze, Phil. " " 3d. Lady Thome, 1st pr.—2.21f, 2.192, 2.23 'j ; Ajb. Girl, 2d money. 3d money, 2E0 " 17 Binghamton. " " 2.262, 2.25, 2.27}. American Girl. " 22 Scranton, Penn. " " 3.32}, 2.311, 2.32. American Girl,2d. Oct. 1 Mystic Park, Bos- ton. " '' 2d. Lady Thorne, 2.20i 2.20}, 2.20; Geo. Palmer, 3d; 1,000 Am. Girl, 4th. " 8 Narraganset Park, Providence. u 3d. Lady Thorne, let pr.— 3.19j,2.18}, 2.21; G. Palmer, 2d ; American Girl, 4tli; Lucy, 5th. Sd money. 500 " 21 Herdic Park, Wil- liamsport, Penn. " " 2.26},2.28},2.30}, 2.29. American Girl. 5,000 Nov.ll Baltimore, Md. No time re- corded. Beat Geo. Wilkes, 2d; Doble's Hot- spur 3d. 1870 June 1 Prospect Park, L. I. " " 2.231, 2.22, 2.241. Am. Girl, 2d; Geo. Wilkes, 3d. 3,000 " 15 Beacon Park, Bos- ton. " " 2.251, 3.24^ 2.24, Geo. Palmer, 2d; Am. Girl, 3d. 3,400 " 20 Mystic Park, Mass. " " 2.22, 2.20.}, 2.25. Geo. Palmer, 2d ; Am. Girl, 3d. 1,600 " 24 Narraganset Park, Providence, E. I. 11 3.25, 2.281, 2.28i. Am.Girl,2d; Geo. Palmer, 3d. 3,500 July 9 Fleetwood Park, " " 2.212,2.222,3.312. Geo. Palmer, 1st 3,000 Morrisania. heat, 2.22i ; Am. Girl, 3d. " 22 Prospect Park, L. 1. " " LadyThoi-ne,2.19}, 2.20^, 2.1 9i. Aug. 16 Buffalo Park, Buf- " " 2.231, 2.21, 2.20. George Palmer. 4,000 falo, N. Y. " 31 Narraganset Park, Providence, R. I. " " 2.23J, 2.24, 2.25. Lucy, 2d ; George Wilkes, 3d. 3,500 Sept 10 Point Breeze Park, Phila., Penn. '^ " 3.25. 2.24, 2.26. Lucy, 2d; George Wilkes 3d. Beat by Honest 2,000 " 15 Prospect Park Fair Ground, L. I. a (I Allen ami run- ning mate — 2.18^,2.17', ,2.;;^. " 23 Beacon Park Fall Meeting, Brigh- ton, Mass. 3.20}, 2.24, 2.201. Am. Girl, 2(1 pr., $700; Mountain Boy ,3d pr., $500. 1,500 Oct. 10 Narraganset Park, Providence, R. I. 11. 3.23, 2.235, 2.21. Lucy, 2d money, $1,000; Moun- tain Boy, 3d money, ,^500. George Wilkes. 2,500 " 21 Prospect Park, L. I. Wag. " 3.2^1J,2.25J,2.25.1. 1,000 T'l-jfnl v/lTTniTKT'R 159,600 X Ului VVlUiiliJfg''' • • Winning in five years. Since Sept. 1805 to Oct. 10, 1870, ehe has trotted 61 races: won 83, lost 17 ; received second and third money in 10. DEXTEK. 253 DEXTEE. 'No brighter name adorns tlie annals of eqnine history, or en- joys a more deserved celebrity, than that of the subject of this sketch. In viewing this noble animal as he is brought from his lordly quarters to sniff the morning air in his accustomed exer- cise, the first impression is that of admiration, coupled with that sort of distinction which one is wont to j)ay to a superior. His symmetrical form, fine muscular development, sinewy limbs, large flashing eye, glowing with intelligence and courage, finely cat head, glossy, rich brown coat, and proud port, all unite in one harmonious ensemhle, and tell of his princely origin. These combined qualities, added to his arrow-like speed upon the turf, tell also of the science of the breeder, and the triumph of mind over matter. As an illustration of this fact we have only to refer to two examples, \\z. : West Australian, as the representa- tive type of the English racer, and Dexter as that of the Amer- ican trotter. In the proportion that the former occupies as the lineal descendant of the Godolphin Arabian, does Dexter bear to the celebrated Messenger ; both of these royal progenitors being improved types of the original Arabian and Barb. Dexter, to-day, contrasted with his archetype in his native wilds, exhibits a degree of perfection that excites our wonder, — we arc amazed that human knowledge in its onward march, aided by the lights of science, can so have improved upon nature's handi- work in a race universally recognized as the noblest of the animal creation. Yet in the American trotting horse, with Dexter as the representative type, we cannot fail to see a con- summation of the fact. Dexter was bred by Mr. Jonas Hawkins, Orange County, N". Y. He was foaled in 1858, is fifteen hands one inch and a half high, color a rich, silky brown ; distinguishing marks four 254 THE HOESE. white stockings and a blazed face. His liead, tlioiigli somewliat large, is clean and bony ; lower jaw w^ell open at the base, leav- ing ample room for the wind-pipe ; ears tapering and lively ; eyes bright and prominent ; head well set on to a rather liglit neck, which is well fitted to fine sloping shoulders ; withers high, with great depth of brisket, and a good barrel ; back slightly arched, with broad loin and hips, and a drooping ]-ump ; mi- commonly long from point of the hip to the hock ; short cannon bone. Though wide across the hips, he is still wider measured across the stifles, where his power is most apparent ; fine arm and thigh; his limbs are clean and sinewy and without blemish, with long pasterns fitting into well-shaped hoofs ; mane and tail sufiiciently long and full, and his general appearance that of a thoroughbred. Dexter never made his appearance on the turf until he was six years old, when he was purchased by Mr. George Alley, for $4:00, who subsequently sold a half-interest in him to a Mr. Teakle of California. He made his dehit on the turf at the Fashion Course, L. I., May 4th, 1864, for a purse of $100, mile- heats, best three in five, when he defeated Stonewall Jackson, Lady Collins, and Gen. Grant, in three straight heats ; time, 2.34— 2.36— 2.34|. His first assay to wagon was on May 13th, same year, at Union Course, L. I., when he beat Doty's bay mare for purse and stake of $175, mile-heats, best three in five; time, 2.36^— 2.39; mare drawn after second heat. His next notable per- formance was at Fashion Course, June 2d, 1865, when he beat Gen. Butler in three straight heats, for purse and stake of $2,000, mile-heats, three in five, with ease; time, 2.26| — 2.26|— 2.24^. In his first exploit under saddle, at Fashion Course, L. I., June 26th, 1865, match trot for $5,000, three mile heats. Dexter beat Stonewall Jackson in three heats, Stonewall win- ning the first ; time, 8.02|— 8.05— 8.00|. The race was trotted in the rain, over a very muddy track, Stonewall being the favor- ite at two to one. It was not, however, until October 10th, 1865, that Dexter astonished the world with his wonderful speed. On that date, at Fashion Course, L. I., he was matched to trot a mile in 2.19, $1,000 vs. $5,000, which he won, making DEXTER. 255 the first quarter in 0.34, half mile in 1.00^, and the mile in 2.18J. October 27, 18G5, he defeated Gen. Butler iu a match for $2,000, two mile heats, in harness; time 5.00^ — 4.50|. Tliis was his last performance in 18G5. On Monday, May Ttli, 18GG, Dexter was sold at public auction at the Fashion Course, to close the partnership be- tween Mr. Alley and Mr. Teakle ; this being considered the fairest way to make a division of interests. lie was purchased by Mr. Alley for $14,000. After winning several trots during the first part of the season of ISGG, we find him again defeating Gen. Butlor, under saddle at Buffalo, August ISth, same year, in mile heats, three in five ; time 2.21|— 2.2G— 2.18. Another fine performance of Dexter was his defeat of the celebrated pacer Magoozler, winning first purse, $1,500, at Pittsburgh, Pa., in October, 1866, best time 2.21|. On Nov. 2-1, 18G6, he also defeated the famous pacer Polly Ann, at Washington, D. C. ; best time, 2.211 Dexter's first triumph over Lady Thorne, the recognized Cjueen of the trotting turf, was at Fashion Course, L. 1., May 28th, 1867, in a match for $2,000, mile heats, three in five, in harness, when he defeated the mare in two heats, distancing her in the second ; time, 2.21 — 2.22. The second of the series of matches of $2,000 each, between these two favorites, came off" over the same course, on June 7th, same year, mile heats, three in five, to wagon, and resulted in another victory for Dexter, he making the best time to w^agon on record; time, 2.32 — 2.24 — 2.28. One of Dexter's principal defeats resulted in his greatest triumph ; this w^as on June 21st, 1867, when, for a match of $250, going single mile in harness, against Ethan Allen and rimning mate, he w^as beaten in three heats, on the fastest time ever made in the w^orld, viz., 2.15 — 2.16 — 2.19. Many who timed him on this occasion assert that he trotted a mile in 2.16. This time, unfortunately, cannot be placed to his record, being beaten in the match. Those who are familiar with trotting events can readily understand the immense disadvantage any single horse suffers in competing with another fast trotting horse and running mate; yet, notwithstanding his defeat, his owner 256 THE HOESE. matcliecl him for $3,000, on the 16th of July, same year, at the Island Park Course, Albany, K. Y., against Brown George and running mate, and won an easy victory in three straight heats ; time, 2.221—2.20^—2.201. On Jnly 30th, same year, at Riverside Park, Boston, Mass., he again defeated them in three straight heats, making still better time, viz., 2.21 1 — 2.19 — 2.21|;. This performance was, np to this time, the fastest har- ness time on record ; beating Flora Temple's best time by three- • quarters of a second, which fact was the more remarkable be- cause of the Piverside being a half mile track. Dexter's greatest time, however, had not yet been fairly tested. As many were of opinion that he had arrived at the zenith of his power as the undisputed king of the trotting turf, he was challenged to beat his own fastest recorded time of 2.19. The match was made for $1,Y00, and the time beaten at Buffalo, IT. Y., when he astonished the world by trotting the mile in 2.17^. It was then announced that Robert Bon- ner, Esq., of the New York Ledger, had bought tliis wonder- ful gelding, the price paid for him being $33,000, and that im- mediately after his imiinished engagements at Chicago, he would be withdrawn from the turf. In August of the same year, Dexter made his last appear- ance but one in public, at Dexter Park, Chicago, 111., when, for a purse of $2,800, going to wagon, he beat easily Silas Rich, Bashaw, Jr., Tackey, and General Butler, all of them in harness, the latter being distanced in the third heat. Dexter's last public performance on the regular turf was at Chicago, September 7th, 1865, when he had the honor of again defeating his old competitors. Brown George and run- ning mate, in three straight heats; time, 2.21 — 2.22 — 2.25. Thus ended his turf career, after engaging in fortj^-nine con- tests, losing nine, winning forty, and realizing to liis owners the princely sum of $67,100, exclusive of gate money. The following is the PEDIGREE OF DEXTER. Dexter, brown colt, foaled in 1858, l)red l)y Mr. elonas Hawkins, Orange County, N. Y., by Rysdyk's llambletonian. DEXTEr's rEKI'OKMANCES. Ja« 1st dam a maro l)y American Star. For j)edigree of Kjsdyk's llambletonian, see memoir. American Star was a chestnut horse, foaled 1837, bred by Henry II. Berry, of Pompton Phiins, Morris Co., 'N. Y., by American Star, son of Duroc. 1st dam Sally Sloucli, by Henry. 2d dam a mare, said to be a full blood Messenger. DEXTEE'S PERFORMANCES. i a DATE. COUESE. El tJ O ^ 9 -^ DISTANCE. TIHE. AGAINST WHAT HORSES. tH W<"« (^ 1361 May 4 Fas!iionCour8e,L.I. ? 1, best 3 in 5 2.33, 2.36, 2.34J. Stonewall Jack- son. Lady Col- lins&Gen. Grant eioo " 6 Union Course. L. I. Har. " 2.34, 2,36i, 2.37i. Lady Collins. 173 " 13 11 11 Wag. " 2 SO^ 2 39 Doty's bay mare. 175 " 18 FashionCour8e,L.I. Har? " 2!33,' 2^321-,' 2.30. Ladv Shannon & Shark. Shark and Ham- 250 June 3 u u Wag. " Dexter drawn after 1st heat. bletonian, Shark winning; in 2. .36, 2..39^2.42. Prize $500. 1865 June 2 " " ? " 2.26f,2.2ol-,2.24i. General Butler. 2,000 " 12 Union Course, L. I. ? 2.2T. LadyThorne won in 2.24, 2.2ul, 2.26!-. Prize, $2,000. " 23 FashionCourse,L.I. Sad. " 8.02.K 8.03, 8.09i. Stonewall Jack- 5,000 Sept. 7 "^ 21 u u " 2.26'r,2.2ti,2 22i. son, General Butler. 2,C00 " " Har. " 2.25i, 2.23, 2.25. Gen. Ijutler and 1,000 George Wilkes. Oct. 10 ? 1st quarter 0..34, half mile 1.06. mile 2,lSi. Against time. 5,000 " 19 " " Wag. " 2.27+, 2.31, 2.29. General Butler. 2,000 " 27 " " Har. 2, best 3 in 5 5.00 ,s 4.56}. General Butler. 2,000 1866 Junel5 11 n " 1, bests in 5 2.29i,2 28,i,2.27i. Geo. M. Patchen. 1,000 July 2 2.23, 2.27. 2.2~i, 2 '>U 2 24'- Gen. Butler and Com'dore Yan- derbilt. 1,200 " 9 Suffolli P'k Course, Piiiladelphia, Pa. ^' " 3.201, 2.25, 2.23i. Geo. M. Patchen. 2,000 " 19- FasliiouCoursc,L.I. Sad. " 2.24i, 2.19, 2.22. Gen. Butler and Toronto Chief. 1,000 " 29 Syracuse, N. Y. Har. 2 97A,2..30':. General Butler. \ng. 6 Avon Park, N. Y. ? " 2.3U, 2.2i: Geo. M. Patchen. 1.000 " 16 Buffalo, N. Y. Har. *^ 3.27i, 2.29, 2.25. Geo.M.Patchon & Rolla Golddust. 4,000 " 18 Fair Grounds, Buf- falo, N. Y. Sad. " 2.21 J. 2.20, 2.18. General Butler. " 33 Cleveland, Ohio. Har. " 2.321, 2.323,2.32^. Geo. M. Patchen and Gen. Butler. 2,000 " 29 Hamtranck Course, Detroit, Jlich. " " 2.245,2.26'r,2.23*. George M. Patch- en, Jr. 2,000 Sept. 3 Chicaa;o Drivin: (dr.) For Hartford, Couu. gate money. " 23 Riverside Park, Boston, Mass. 2.33, 2.31, 2.33. Bl. m. Blakiston Belle, 1st heat 2..34. Sorrel Dan. 1,000 July 4 Hartford P'rk, Conn " » 2..351, 2.3.5, 2..3.3. Purse 1st half of 1st heat, 1.13J. " 13 Saratoga, N. Y. 2.325, 2.35, 2.33a. Harry Clav, 1st heat 2.;iJi : An- dy Johnson, dr.; Man's Mt. Vernon, dr. ; Ethan AUen.dr. 1,250 Aug. 4 Riverside Park, Boston, Mass. 2.-33, 2.33}, 2.40. Blackstone Belle, 1st heat 2.30, 4th heat 2.43; Sorrel Dan. 1,000 " 24 Hampden Park, Springfleld,Mase. Total winnintjs. . . Paid forfeit. Harry Clay, re- ceived forfeit. 4,450 266 THE nOESE. MAJOE WII^FIELD, (now EDWAKD EVERETT.) This celebrated stallion was bred by Major Adam Lilbum, foaled May 10th, 1855, on the farm of James W. Morrison, 'New Windsor Bay, Orange county, JS". Y. Major Winfield is a rich golden bay, 15| hands high. Although the annexed engraving presents a faithful portraiture of this noble animal in repose, it would be difficult for any artist to properly delineate the lofty carriage, general expression, and blood-like appearance he displays while in action. The pedigree of Major "Winfield, as far as it is traced, is undoubted. (See pedigree below.) His dam may be incidentally mentioned in this connection as the daugliter of imported Margrave. She was a beautiful chestnut sorrel, brought to New York by a Mr. Smith, and sold to Mr. Columbus Balf ; subsequently purchased by Major Lilburn, who bred her to Rysdyk's Hambletonian, by the advice of his friend, Hon. C. H. Winfield, from whom his name is derived. He was a prom- ising colt from his birth, and soon evinced unmistakable indications of his future. When he was one year old he was taken to Rockland county, N^. Y., where he remained until he was three years old, when he was again sent to Orange county and placed in the liands of Francis Dickerson, of Crawford, wliere he made a season in the stud, turning out a few very promising colts, one of which developed considerable speed. He was exhibited the same fall at the Orange County Fair, and received first premium. He remained a second season at Craw- ford with Mr. Dickerson, during which time he sired several fine colts, c)f which Mountain Boy, Sutton Green colt, Dunderberg, Booth mare, and the Eddy mare, are of the number. Later in MAJOR vVINFIELD. 267 the fall of the same year he was exhibited at Goshen, Orange County, N, Y,, wiierc he was speeded and received hrrit premium, at which time he received an injury which unfitted him for the stud or for training purposes for two years. In 18G3 he served a few mares, and got the Bogart colt (now Joe Elliott), purchased by Eobert Bonner, Esq., for $10,000. In 186J: he w^as taken back to Orange County, where he was allowed to cover a few mares, and where he got the Bull colt, sold subsequently to Mr. Humphrey for $20,000, and the Barker colt ; the former one of the fastest 5-year-old colts in America; also a fine colt of A. B. Conger, Esq., and held by that gentle- man at a very high figure. In 18G5 he served a limited number of mares, and got the Ferguson mare, very fast ; also the Hill colt, Schafier colt, and Dickson colt. In 1866, '7, '8, and '9, he is the sire of colts which are promising in appearance, but have to be matured. On the 8th of November, 1869, he was sold to Mr. John B. Ayres and Mr. David Bonner (for Eobert Bonner, Esq., of the New York Ledger) for the sum of $20,000, the object of the purchaser being to use him as a stock horse, and not for the turf. As a stock horse, Major Winfield is second to no horse in the United States, and though exhibiting a decided turn for speed, has never been placed npon the turf. He is a well- developed horse for his inches, powerfully built, and possesses great endurance; hence his particular qualifications for the stud. His dam was a racer, as well as a trotter, no distance appearing to be too great for her ; she was also a very sagacious animal, remarkably intelligent, and, before her death, became the theme of many interesting anecdotes. Her son, Major Winfield, in many respects bears a great resemblance to her. Though appropriated entirely to the stud, Major Winfield possesses in an eminent degree those peculiar qualifications which invariably fit a horse for the trotting turf. The only difliculty with his owners has been, whether to train him for, and place him exclusively on the turf, or confine his ser\-ices to the harem. Tlie choice determined upon has been a wise one ; his worth as a sire of trotters is too valuable to withdraw him 268 THE HOKSE. from the stud, hence the turf is deprived of so distinguished a representative. PEDIGREE OF MAJOR WINFIELD. Major Winfield (afterwards Edward Everett) is by Kysdj'k's Hamhletonian. 1st dam Fanny by imp. Margrave ; 2d dam by Trumpator ; 3d dam by Lindsay's Arabian ; 4th dam by imp. Oscar ; 5th dam by imp. Vampire ; 6th dam CoL Braxton's Kitty Fisher by Cade ; Yth dam by CuUen's Arabian ; 8th dam the famous mare Bald Charlotte. The above pedigree is given upon the certificate of CoL Philo. C. Bush. ERICSSON. 2G9 EEICSSOK Eeicsson, a bay colt, bred by Mr. Enoch E. Lewis, of Clark county, Kentucky, and foaled the spring of 185G. lie was by Mambrino Chief; 1st dam Mrs. Caudle. For pedigree of Mambrino Chief, see Thornesdale's pedigree. Mrs. Caudle was a Kew York bred mare, celebrated as a road- ster and ftimous breeder, said to be sired by a horse of Messen- ger blood who stood in Dutchess county, ^. Y. DESCRIPTION OF EEICSSOX. Ericsson is a dark mahogany bay, standing 10} hands high. lie has rather a heavy coarse head, with full bright eyes. His head is well set on a good stout neck running into fine shoul- ders, excellent barrel, great length and powerful hips and quarters. His limbs are large and well set under him, and his style is lofty and grand. Ericsson's performances. Ericsson made his debut to the trotting world at four years old, beating Kentucky Chief and Albion over the Lexington Course, Kentucky, at mile heats, on the 27th of May, 1860, with only seven days' training, in 2.42^. Lexington, Ky., Saturday. OctoTjer 13th, 1860— Match for §200, mile heats, best three in five. Enoch Lewis' b. c. Morgan Chief (now Ericsson) by Mambrino Chief, clam Mrs. Caudle, 4 years old, to wagon Ill E. M. Todhuutcr's b. c. Idol, by Mambrino Chief, to harness 3 2 3 Time, 2.49—2.41—2.38;. In a private trial, made a few days before this race, Ericsson trotted in 2.26 to a wagon. Louisville, Ky., October 28, 1860— Purse !?200, for four-year-olds and under, milo heats, best three in five, in harness. Enoch Lewis' b. c Morgan Cliicf (now Evicssou) by Mambrino Chief, dam Mrs. Candle. 4 years old 2 111 A. H. Brand's br. c. Kentucky Chief, 4 years old, hy Mambrino Chief, dam by Woodford 12 2 2 Time, 2.30i-2.34i-2..30i -2.-32. 270 THE HOKSE. We extract from the old " Spirit of the Times" tlie follow- ing description of the race : For this race there were two entries, both stallions' colts, the get of Mambriuo Chief, viz., Morgan Chief and Kentucky Chief. The former was the favorite at 3 and 4 to 1, before the start. The latter had numerous friends, although he was complaining in one or both of his fore legs. Time was marked as low as 2.35. Morgan Chief was four years old last spring, while Ken- tucky Chief will not be four until the 25tli day of next month (I^ovember). He and Brignoli are by the same horse out of full sisters. But to the race. After three efforts they got off for the First Heat. — Went well together around the turn, when Morgan broke, and Kentucky took the lead and passed the quarter in 39 seconds, the half mile 1.16, and won the heat without a struggle in 2.39|. But for a bad break he made at the half mile, he would have passed Morgan, who made two bad breaks in the back-stretch — they both being bad breakers, but Kentucky the worse of the two. Second Heat. — Kentucky w^ent off very slow, while Peabody, with Morgan, came to the score " boiling," took the track before they got to the turn, and led past the quarter in 37i, two lengths in front of Kentucky Chief; here the latter put on steam, and trotted splendidly up the back-stretch in 3G| seconds, caught the " big one" in a break, but could not get by ; they passed the half mile in I.IT ; on the upper turn Kentucky broke, and lost three or four lengths ; went to work again and caught the " big one" one hundred yards from home, and looked every inch a winner at the gate, wdien he broke ; just then Morgan Chief broke, but caught first, and won the heat in 2.3-i|. After the heat both looked well. TJiird Heat. — They went off well together, and very fast. Morgan went in front on the first turn (when Kentucky broke) ; went to the quarter in 38 seconds, the half in I.IT-^, and won the heat by two lengths, in 2.30^. As before Kentucky Chief broke at the distance when catching Morgan. Fourth Heat. — They got off at the tap of the drum ; IVforgan led to the quarter in 39 seconds, passed rlie half mile two ERICSSON. 271 lengths in front in 1.16^. After passing the half mile Morgan broke, and Kentucky caught him, but did not get the track ; Morgan led into the home-stretch a length, down the stretch they both trotted splendidly; Kentucky closed the gap, but broke inside the distance as before, Morgan winning the heat and race by less than a length, in 2.32. Thus closed the best four-year- old race on record. This closed Morgan Chief's trotting career, and he was sold by Mr. Enoch R. Lewis to the Hon. K. C. Barker, of Detroit, Michigan, for $6,000. After his removal to Michigan he had an attack of pneumonia, which left him with injured wind. He has been standing in Michigan until the past two seasons, Avhen he returned to Kentucky, where he is so highly thought of that he has covered his full limit of mares each season. He covered some mares before his removal from Kentucky, and the few that have been trained promise extremely high. In 18G8 a live-old mare by him trotted in Kentucky in 2.36, and his son Lumber, the property of J. Ward Macey, they claim can show thirty. We should have stated that Mr. Barker changed his name from Morgan Chief to Ericsson after he purchased him. Clark Chief, the sire of IS^icotine, Mr. Thome's fine four-year- old colt that won the Hiram Woodruff stakes at Fleetwood Park, Sept. 13th, 1870, beating three others in 2.40^-2.36f, is nearly a full brother in blood to Ericsson, both by Mambrino Cliief, Clark Chief being out of a daughter of Mrs. Caudle the dam of Ericsson. His colts have fine size and temper, and good trotting action, and we have no doubt but they wiU place their sire's claims amongst the first class as a getter of trotting stock. 272 THE HORSE. BASHAW, JU]S"IOE. This famous trotting stallion, one of the best, if not the best, representative of the Bashaw strain, is a dark chestnut, 15| hands liigh, and weighs 1050 lbs. His form is symmetrical, neck and crest large, head well cut, fine throttle, and an eye sparkling with courage and ambition. His performances up to the present time have been the best of any horse west of the Alleghany moun- tains at one and two miles, and there are but few horses in any locality that have beaten his best time. He trotted at Detroit, Michigan, in 2.24|; at Clinton, Iowa, in 2.21 ; at Rock Island, Illinois, on a half-mile track, three heats, in 2.27 ; he defeated Silas Rich over a very slow track at Chicago, in 5.011, gnd has also made several broken heats in the Eastern States low down in the twenties.* There is little doubt that when in training and in good con- dition he would now be a fit competitor for the fleetest trotters in the countr3^ As a stallion he is in every respect unexception- able, having sired a number of winning horses, and several colts that promise in time to rank with the flyers. A slight accident received some time since, while training, has temporarily unfitted him for the labors of the turf. This he has, however, entirely recovered from, and his owner is anxious to match him against any stallion in the country at one or two miles. So great is Mr. A. F. Fawsett's pride in this animal, that he pronounces hiiu " the best trotting stallion in the United States." The following is his full pedigree : Bashaw Jimior was foaled in 1860 ; he was got by Green's Bashaw ; dam by Young Green, Mountain Morgan, son of Ilale's Green Mountain ; gd. a brown Morgan mare taken West by * Sinco writincT the a1)ovc, Bashaw, Jr., was entcrc;! in a trot at the Maryland State Fair, Pemlico Fair Groundp, on Sept. 2Tth, 18T0, when he beat Patchai), Jr., and White Mountaiti easily in three straight heats, in 2.40-2.23—2.341. ;llr. BASHAW, JUNIOR, Silas Hale in 1853, along with Young Green Mountain, and sold to Jos. A, Green, of Muscatine, Iowa ; bred by S. L. Fobs of Muscatine; owned by Messrs. Piatt and Starr, Tipton, Iowa. Green's Bashaw, bl. h., foaled in 1855, was got by Yernol's Black Hawk (formerly Drake's Black Hawk), dam Belle, by Webber's Tom Thumb. Vernol's Black Hawk, foaled in 18I-, was got by Long Island Black Hawk, dam by Kentucky Whip. Long Island Black Hawk, foaled in 1837, was got by Andrew Jackson, son of Young Bashaw ; dam Sally Miller, by Mambrino. Young Bashaw, foaled in 182-, was got by Grand Bashaw (Arabian) ; dam Pearl, by First Consul. Grand Bashaw (Arabian), foaled in 1816, and imported from Tripoli, in 1820, by Joseph 0. Morgan. He stood near Phila- delphia, and many of our fastest trotters have descended fi'om him. Died at Kewtown, Pa., 1845. Vol. II.~18 274 THE HOESE. THOEI^EDALE. Thoenedale, bay colt, foaled in May, 18G5, bred by Dr. J. E. Adams, near Georgetown, Ky., purchased by Col. S. D. Bruce for Mr. Edwin Thorne, of Thornedale, Dutchess County, IST. Y., in 1868, by Alexander's Abdallah (formerly Edsall's Hamble- tonian, 1st dam by Mambrino Chief; 2d dam by a son of Potomac ; 3d dam by Saxe Weimar. Thornedale's dam is a bay mare, foaled in 1860. She was never trained, and we add her produce as far as known. HEK PEODUCE. 1865— b. c. Thornedale hy Alexander's Abdallah. 1866- 1867— 1868— ch. c. by a eon of Bald Chief, a son of Mambrino Chief. 1869— 1870— br. f. by Abnont. Alexander's Abdallah (better known in JSTew York as Ed- sall's Hambletonian) was a bay horse, foaled 1853, by Eysdyk's Hambletonian. 1st dam by Bay Roman, he by imp. Eoman, out of the Pinckney mare by Old Hickory. 2d dam by Mambrino, he by Old Mambrino, and he by imp. Messenger. Alexander's Abdallah was taken to Kentucky by a Mr. Love, and he- made a season or two near Cynthiana, Ky., as Love's Abdallah, when he was purchased by the late R. Aitchison Alexander, Spring Station, Ky, Abdallah sired many good horses in Kentucky, such as Thornedale, Belmont, Almont, St. Elmo, and many others. The Abdallah cross is held in the highest esteem in Kentucky, but the most noted and far-famed of his get is the celebrated trotter Goldsmith Maid. Abdallah TIIOENEDALE. 275 died from the effects of injuries received in a f^nerilla raid niiulc upon AVoodbiirn Stud Farm in the summer of 1S()4, a y Mr. Kives into Virginia, whose figure stands at the head of tin's paper, and who nniy be set down as a j;er- fect type of the highest class of improved Cleveland Bay — ^Ijeen put to well-selected mares, of the right breed and of the right formation, he would not have been accused of deteriorating the breed of horses, but would have undoubtedly given size, but not size without substance, height without bone, much less length without proportion. In some portions of the country, and particularly in those portions, where there is evidence, in the character of the now existing horse-stock, that there has been an original strain of Cleveland Bay blood, subsequently crossed with other bloods, such as the Canadian and the thoroughbred — the latter remote- ly— as I think is the case in the State of Vermont, where I con- ceive the short, compact stocky Morgans to be the result of such an intermixture, I do not doubt that the services of such a Cleveland Bay stallion as Emperor, put to long, roomy, well quart&red and well-proportioned mares of the Morgan breed, would be of incalculable benefit. I have no doubt that in the first generation such a horse would produce admirable light team horses of great show and substance, suitable for express wagons and the like, and that the mares bred to thoroughbred horses of the right kind — selected for bone, compactness, and substance — would give in the first cross carriage-horses, and in the second trotters, parade horses, or cavalry horses, of the highest possible caste and form. I doubt, that without some such cross, giving increased size, bone, and room to the Morgan, or light Vermont, road mares, extensively crossing with thorough- breds would not succeed in the first instance, unless from the very cream of the largest mares, and from a horse of singu- larly well-selected points and characteristics of bone, form, and last not least, blood of some strain, such as those of Orville, Comus, Woodpecker, Lottery, Humphrey Clinker, or our own Messenger, famous for success in producing hunters or road- sters. Such a horse as Priam, whatever may be said of his racer- getting qualities, would be fatal to a line of roadsters, hunters, or chargers, from the fatal tying in of his knees. 324 THE HORSE. Thus, if it be turned to the proper use, I consider tiiat tlio importation of Emperor, the Cleveland Bay, above spoken of and represented, is a move in the right direction, and onu likely to have the most generally beneficial consequences. If, however, it be intended to set him covering run-out, narrow, weedy thoroughbreds, or half or three-fourths part bred mares, in the hope of giving them bone, bulk, and stamina by the new strain, it needs no prophet to foresee and foretell the very opposite results. The animals will have less than the blood — which is the only one good point left to them — of their dams, and none of the characteristics of their sire. Since the mares have neither the uterine capacity to contain the foetus proportioned to such a horse, with natural reference to its growth and development previous to its birth, nor the blood and stamina for its nourish- ment while within their bodies. There is another class of importations, that of the Percheron Norman stallions, to which I look with the greatest interest — although with no idea whatever that the stock got directly by them out of any class of mares, whatever, will be of iise for any other purpose than , draught. It is as the progenitors of mares, which will cast the finest foals for general work, to thoroughbred horses, deriving show, size, round action, and bone from the dams, speed, endurance, courage, and blood from the sires, that I consider they will be invaluable, and even su- perior to the Cleveland Bays — in that they, in themselves, possess a share of Barb blood, and that they have by nature, with some size, the very form, and the shape, and quality of bone which we desire. I have no doubt that even well-chosen, pure Canadian mares would produce wonderfully improved stock to horses of this, their own, original strain — but that the larger-sized mares of Canada, the result of a cross between Canadians and well-bred English crosses — that is to say, the produce of one or two out- crossings after a long continuance of in-breeding — put once more to pure Norman stallions, would produce wonderful stock, can, in fact, hardly be questioned, by any one at all conversant with the theory of breeding, or its practice. And that the off- spring of the mares of that new strain, by properly selected PERCHERON NORMANS. 326 tliorouglibrcds, would be chargers on which a king might be willino- to do battle for his crown, or which a queen might be proud to see harnessed to her chariot, on her coronation, I, for one, would stake my reputation as a horseman. This, in a word, is what I think is most needed, and most desirable to be done — to raise by judicious selection of parents, by large and liberal nourishment of the mares, while in foal, and by careful feeding, tending, and fostering the young ani- mals— not forgetting to protect them from severe weather, and sudden changes of temperature — the standard bone and muscle of our common country mares, and then to breed them to the best, and nothing but the best, blood-horses. And here I will proceed to extract from the American edi- tion of Youatt on the Horse, a letter to the American editor of that work, from Edward Harris, Esq., of Mooreetown, New Jersey, descriptive of his pure imported Norman stock, and giving his views in reference to the characteristics, which the stock bred from his Norman stallions are likely to possess, and to the most judicious mode of introducing this blood. With most of Mr. Harris's views I most cordially agree, especially in his positively expressed opinion, that, with sufficient niargin of time and money combined, with the possession of a large landed estate, he, or any judicious breeder would produce the very hest of horses for all purposes^ that is to say the very best horse of all worTcy by breeding from the thoroughbred English racer. The only point in which I entirely differ from him is, as to the likelihood that the produce of " Diligence " — that is to say, of a pure Norman stallion, " and a large-sized thoroughbred mare would be the desired result," that result being " a carriage horse sufficiently fashionable for the city market." " Should this fail," he adds, " I feel confident that another cross from these colts " — that is to say, from stallions, the pro- duce of a Norman horse and a thoroughbred mare — " will give you the Morgan horse on a larger scale." In all this I utterly disagree with Mr. Harris, and am cer- tain that he is in error — he admits that his horse Diligence has not had thoroughbred mares stinted to him, but that " the mares 326 THE HORSE. with which he breeds the best, are the mares which you would choose to breed a good carriage-horse from, with a good length of neck, and tail coming out on a line with the back, to correct the two prominent faults in the form of the breed, the short neck and the steep rump." Tliis is doubtless true, and from the mares produced by this cross, bred once to a fine thoroughbred, I have no fear that he would obtain the stamp of carriage-horse, which he desires, and from a second cross of the mares so got to thoroughbred, again, that the result would be an improved type of the Morgan horse. I would not hesitate, moreover, a moment to stint Morgan mares to either these pure Norman stallions, or good Canadians, with a view to obtaining improved bone and size without loss of spirit, by a recurrence to what I do not doubt to be one of the original sources of the Morgan stock, and then to breeding the mares, so improved in stature, to the best formed and most compact hunter-getting thoroughbred stallions I could find. Morgan stallions, with all deference, I would not use at all — at all events only for covering large, roomy, cold-blooded mares, for which purpose they would be identical, as to the object, though far inferior in degree, with the thoroughbred horse. Mr. Harris's well-written and intelligent letter speaks for itself, and with it I shall close this portion of my work. I had intended to add some account of the cavalry horse of the United States, but, on reference to headquarters, I find that there is no such distinctive animal — that there is no regular standard of blood, size, or form required, and no organized regulations, either for purchasing or examining the animals — the whole sys- tem of the cavalry service — that arm having been confined al- most entirely to the frontiers — being in embryo, and, as I am given to understand, at this moment in progress of reconstruc- tion and organization de novo, after the best experiences, under' a competent board of officers. "Moorestown, April 6, 1850. " My dear Sir — Your kind favor of the last of March, has been duly received. I regret that, in consequence' of the de- cease of a near relative, it has been out of my power to prepare my answer as soon as you desired. PEKCIIERON NORMANS. 337 " I tlunik you, my dear sir, for the order you liave suggested to be observed in my communication. You will soon perceive that I am by no means a practised writer, therefore your sug- gestions are the more acceptable in aiding me to draw up my ' plain, unvarnished tale.' " Tliese horses first came under my observation on a journey through France in the year 1831. I was struck with the im- mense power displayed by them in drawing the heavy dili- gences of that country, at a pace which, although not as rapid as the stage-coach travelling of England, yet at such a pace, say from five to nine miles per hour, the lowest rate of which I do not hesitate to say, would, in a short time, kill the English horse if placed before the same load. In confirmation of this opinion I will give you an extract from an article on the Norman horse in the British Quarterly Journal of Agriculture, which I quoted in my communication to the Farmer's Cabinet of Philadelphia, in 1812, as follows ; " ' The writer, in giving an account of the origin of the horse, which agrees in tracing it to the Spanish horse- ■^f Arabian ancestry — with the account which I have given above, which I procured from French sources, says, " The horses of ISTormandy are a capital race for haTd^ work and scanty fare. [ have never seen such horses at the collar, under the diligence, the post-carriage, the cumbrous and heavy voiture or cabriolet for one or two horses, or the farm-cart. They are enduring and energetic heyond description / with their necks cut to the bone, they flinch not ; they put forth all their efforts at the voice of the brutal driver, or at the dreaded sound of his never-ceasing whip ; they keep their condition when other horses would die of neglect and hard treatment. A better cross for some of our horses can not be imagined than those of ISTormandy, provided they have not the ordinary failing, of too much length from the hock downwards, and a heavy head." I think that all who have paid attention to this particular breed of N^orman horses — the Percheron, which stands A No. 1 — will bear me out in the assertion that the latter part of this quotation will not apply to them, and that, on the contrary, they are short from the hock downwards; that their heads are short, with the true Arabian face, and not thicker than fhey should be to correspond with 328 TETE HORSE. the stoutness of their bodies At all events you can witness that Diligence has not these failings, which, when absent, an Englishman — evidently, from his article a good horseman — ■ thinks, constitutes the Korman horse the best imaginable horse for a cross upon the English horse of a certain description. Again he says, " They are very gentle and docile ; a kicking or vicious horse is almost unknown there ; any person may pass in security at a fair at the heels of hundreds.' " " My own impressions being fortified by such authority from such a source — where we look for little praise of any thing French — and numerous others, verbal and written, I made up my mind to return to France at an early day, and select a stal- lion at least, as an experiment in crossing upon the light mares of ]!Srew Jersey. My intention was unavoidably delayed until the year 1839, when I went seriously to work to purchase two stallions and two mares with the aid of a veterinary surgeon of Havre, Monsieur St. Marc, to whose knowledge of the various distinct breeds which exist in France, and his untiring zeal in aidmg my enterprise, I take great pleasure in making acknowl- edgments. The animals in due time were procured, but the last which was brought for my decision, although a fine stallion^ showed such evident signs of a cross of the English blood — af- terwards acknowledged by the owner — that I rejected him, and the packet being about to sail, and preparations being made for the shipment, I was obliged to put the stallion and two mares on board, no time being left to look up another stallion. Here another difficulty arose — I could find no competent groom in Havre to take charge of them on the voyage, and deliver them in ISTew York. I was obliged to make an arrangement with one of the steerage passengers, a German, who had never been to sea before, to attend to them to'the best of his ability. As you may suppose, I did not feel very well satisfied with this arrange- ment. I therefore wrote to M. Meurice of Paris, to take charge of my baggage which I had left at his hotel, and the next morn- ing I was on my way to New York in the packet ship Iowa, Captain Peck, where I lived in the round-house on deck, with himself and ofiicers. It was the Iowa's first voyage, and her cabin had not been finished, so great was the fear of the owners, at that time, that their ' occupation was gone ' of carrying cabin DILIGENCE. 329 passengers, in consequence of the recent success of the English sea-steamers. We had three hundred steerage, and I was the only Gohin passenger. The horses were also on deck. The first night, so great was the change in the temperature, on the occur- rence of a slight storm, that all the horses took violent colds, and, unfortunately, with the best use 1 could make of M. St, Marc's medicine-chest, and his very judicious directions for the treatment of the horses under this anticipated state of affairs, I could not prevent the death of the stallion from inflammation of the lungs, before reaching Kew York. Tlie mares were landed safely, but too much stiffened by the voyage and their sickness, to make the journey at once across the Jerseys on foot. I procured a trusty man to accompany them, and sent them by railroad for Burlington. The next morning I had the mortifica- tion to see my man returned with the sad news that the finest mare had broken through the bottom of the car, and fractured one of her hind legs. Thus left Avith one horse out of four se- lected, the only alternative was to give up, or go back for more. I did not hesitate about the latter, and in three weeks I was steaming it on board the Great Western. My next purchase was " Diligence," another stallion, and two mares. This time I was more fortunate, and procured an excellent groom to ac- company them, who succeeded in getting them safely to ITew York and to Moorestown, carefully shunning the railroad. I have, since that time, lost one of the mares, and the other stal- lion went blind after making one season. Not wishing to run the risk of perpetuating a race of horses with weak eyes, I have not since permitted him to cover mares; though I must say for him that his colts have all good eyes, and stand high in public ftivor. " Those who are acquainted with the thoroughbred Canadian horse, will see in him a perfect model, on a small scale, of the Percheron horse. This is the peculiar breed of ISTormandy, which are used so extensively throughout the northern half of France for diligence and post-horses, and from the best French authorities I could command — I cannot now quote the precise authorities — I learned that they were produced by the cross of the Andalusian horse upon the old heavy Norman horse, whose portrait may still be seen as a war-horse on the painted windows 330 THE HOESE. of the Cathedral of Rouen, several centuries old. At the time of the occupation of the ISTetherlands by the Spaniards, the Andalusiau was the favorite stallion of the north of Europe, and thus a stamp of the true Barb was implanted, which remains to the present day. K you will allow me to digress a moment, I will give you a short description of the old Norman draught- horse on which the cross was made. They average full sixteen hands in height, with head short, thick, wide and hollow be- tween the eyes ; jaws lieavy ; ears short and pointed well for- wards ; neck very short and thick ; mane heavy ; shoulder well inclined backwards ; back extremely short ; rump steep ; cpar- ters very broad ; chest deep and wide ; tendons large ; muscles excessively developed; legs very short, particularly from the knee and hock to the fetlock, and thence to the coronet, which is covered with long hair, hiding half the hoof; much hair on the legs, " The bone and muscle, and much of the form of the Perche- ron is derived from this horse, and he gets his spirit and action from the Andalusian. Docility comes from both sides. On the expulsion of the Spaniards from the north, the supply of Andalusian stallions was cut off, and since that time in the Perche district in Normandy, their progeny has doubtless been bred in- and-in ; hence the remarkable uniformity of the breed, and the disposition to impart their form to their progeny beyond any breed of domestic animals within my knowledge. Another cir- cumstance which I think has tended to perpetuate the good qualities of these horses, is the fact of all their males being kept entire ; a gelding is, I believe, unknown among the rural horses of France. You may be startled at this notion of mine, but if you reflect a moment, you must perceive that in such a state of things — so contrary to our practice and that of the English — the farmer will always breed from the best horse, and he will have an opportunity of judging, because the horse has been broken to harness and his qualities known before he could command business as a stallion. Hence, too, their indifference to pedigree. " If the success of Diligence as a stallion is any evidence of the value of the breed, I can state, that he has averaged eighty mares per season for the ten seasons he has made in this couu- COLTS OF DILIGENCE. 331 try, and as lie is a very sure foal-getter, he must liave produced at least four hundred colts ; and as I have never yet heard of a colt of his that would not readily bring one hundred dollars, and many of them much higher prices, you can judge of the benefit which has accrued from his services. I have yet to learn that he has produced one worthless colt, nor have I heard of one that is spavined, curbed, ringboned, or has any of those de- fects which render utterly useless so large a number of the fine- bred colts of the present day. The opinion of good judges here is, that we have never had, in this part of the country at least, so valuable a stock of horses for farming purposes ; and further, that no horse that ever stood in this section of the country has produced the same number of colts whose aggregate value has been equal to that of the colts of Diligence ; for the reason that, although there may have been individuals among them which would command a mucli higher price than any of those of Diligence, yet the number of blemished and indiiferent colts has been so great, as quite to turn the scale in his favor. " In reply to your queries, I would say to the first, that Diligence has not been crossed at all with thoroughbred mares —such a thing is almost unknown here at the present day ; but those mares the nearest approaching to it have produced the cleanest, neatest, and handsomest colts, though hardly large enough to command the best prices. Those I know of that cross are excellent performers. " 2. The style of mares with which Diligence breeds best, ap- pears to me to be the mare which you would choose to breeu carriage-horses from, with a good length of neck, and tail com- ing out on a line with the back, to correct the two prominent faults in form of the breed, the short neck and steep rump. " 3. What is the result of the cross with different styles — as regards size and shape ? — This may be answered in a general way by stating, the size will depend somewhat upon the size of the mare, with due allowance for casting after back stock, which will be well understood by breeders. As regards shape, you may depend upon the predominance of the form of the horse in nine cases out of ten ; indeed, I have only seen one of his colts that I could not instantly recognize from the form. The reason will occur to you from what I have said of the extreme 332 THE HORSE. purity of the breed ; such as they are they have been for cen- turies ; and could you find another race of horses of entirely different form in the same category as regards their pedigree, my belief is, that when you should see the first colt from them, you would see the model of all that were to follow. " 4c. Can you breed carriage-horses sufiiciently fashionable for the city markets ? I do not hesitate to say that it cannot be done with the first cross. Tliere is too much coarseness about them, which must be worn down by judicious crossing ; and I think a stallion got by Diligence upon a large-sized throughbred mare, would go very far towards jDroducing the desired result. Should this fail, I feel very confident that another cross from these colts on the thoroughbred mare, will give you the Jfor- gan horse on a larger scale. I still hold to the opinion I ex- pressed to you years ago, that the action of our common horses would be improved by this cross. His colts have higher action than their dams, and generally keej) their feet better under them ; in other words, they pick them up quicker, not suffering them to rest so long upon the ground. " Your fifth and sixth questions wull be answered by what I have further to say in regard to the progeny of Diligence. " I may safely say they are universally docile and kind, at the same time spirited and lively. They break in without any difficulty. As regards their speed, I do not know of any that can be called fast horses, though many smart ones among ordi- nary road horses. Diligence, as I have said elsewhere, was chosen — for obvious reasons — as a full-sized specimen of the breed. As for speed in trotting, we cannot doubt its being in the breed, when we look at the instances among the thorough- bred Canadian ponies. Could I have made my selection from the stallions which I rode behind in the diligences, I could have satisfied the most fastidious on this point ; but, unfortunately, these horses all belonged to the government, and are never sold until past sei'vice. My main object was to produce a valnable farm-horse. The chance of fast colts is not very great ; because those persons having fast mares to breed from, naturally look for a fast stallion, and failing to find him, take one of the best English blood they can find ; and should they occur, they will be mares, or, ten to one, horses, gelded before their good quali- THE STUD FAKM, 333 ties are discovered. Perhaps some part of what I say above will be more clear to you if I say, that I hold to the opinion that the Percheron blood still exists in Canada in all its purity. " You will think, perhaps, that I have said quite enoiifi^h about my humble hobby, and you will have found out too, that I have no idea, contrary to your good-natured warning, of mak- ing ' swans of my geese.' What I should like to see would be further importations of these horses, thereby multiplying the chances for a happy hit in crossing, and to draw public atten- tion to tbem, which would do more for them than wi'iting till doomsday. So far from considering these horses as capal:)le by any crossing of producing the very best of horses for all pur- poses, that is to say, the best horse-of-all-w^ork, I believe that if I had my time to liv^e over again, had a very large landed estate, an unlimited supply of ' the dust^ I could produce that horse by breeding from the thoroughbred English racer. It would not be difficult now to select, to start from, stallions and mares possessing all the requisites of size, form, temper, &c. ; but each of these individuals is such a compound of all kinds of ances- tors, good, bad, and indifferent, that you would be obliged from their progeny to select and reject so often, for faults of size and form, and for blemishes and vices, that your allotted days would be near a close before you produced any thing like uniformity in the breed. Still, we see what has been done by Bakewell and others in breeding stock ; therefore I contend, a la Sam Patch, that what has been done may be done again. " I therefore am decidedly of opinion, that we cannot do better, if we wish to produce in any reasonable time a most in- valuable race of horses for the farm and the road, than to breed from the full-sized Norman or Percheron horse. " I remain, yours very sincerely, " Edward Hakeis." THE STUD FAKM. The necessity for a farm, with all the buildings suitable to a breeding stud of race-horses, is self-evident, inasmuch as the mares and colts of that valuable nature, and also of such in- tractable dispositions, that ordinary accommodation would be 334 THE HOKSE. insufficient. But even more do tliey require lierbage of a pecu- liar kind, full of fine clover, yet free from the coarse grasses, and the land well drained, and of a sandy or chalky subsoil. The presence of these characteristics has made Yorkshire so pro- minent as a breeding locality, and its thoroughbreds, as well as its horses of inferior blood, have always stood high in the scale. On the other hand, low, marshy situations are unfavorable to the development of the horse, and cause him to be coarse, un- wieldy, and generally unsound. In selecting a breeding farm, therefore, the first and the most absolutely essential point, is the soil, and by consequence the herbage. The surface should be undulating, but not very hilly, giving just sufficient alteration to teach the young stock the difference between up-hill and down, and enabling them to acquire the power of mastering themselves over both variations of surface. The size of the enclosures may easily be altered, if too large or too small ; but it would be well, and would save much subsequent trouble and expense, if a farm could be found divided into small enclosures by banks and strong thorn hedges, and without deep ditches, which are always a source of danger to both colt and dam. Walls are very good divisions, if they are high enough, and the earth is raised against their foundations ; but they are not equal to good banks, with thorn hedges upon them. A certain number of hovels proportioned to the mares must be put up, if they are not already in existence, and they may most economically be built by placing four together where four paddocks meet ; or, if those are very large, by building in the middle of one, and dividing off the field into the four separate runs, for the mares and foals. But though this plan is very com- monly adopted from economical motives, it is not a good one, because the aspect of two of the hovels must be northerly or easterly, both of which are cold and prejudicial to young stock, besides being too shady during the early spring. It should, moreover, be remembered, that in the spring time, when mares require the most grass they exhaust it the soonest, and therefore it will not be advisable to allot them too small a run, but rather to give each hovel a double one, in order that as soon as the mare has cropped one half close she may have a change into the other. The annexed plan of a pair of hovels, with yards and HOVELS FOK STOCK. 335 paddocks, will afford a good idea of the very highest accommo- dation which can be desired. They may be built of brick, stone, or timber, according to the taste and purse of the proprietor. In all cases the size should be about 15 feet by 12 feet for both hovels and yards, and the aspect should be invariably to the south, either facing that quarter or a point or two to the east or west of it. The door should never open in any other direction, because it often happens in early spi'ing that the weather is too cold and wet to turn the mare and foal out, and yet the sun may be admitted by opening the upper lialf of the door with great advantage to the young animal, which requires sun as much as its mother's milk. When materials are very expensive, and money is limited, a hovel of 12 feet square may perhaps suffice ; but the extra length will be well bestowed, and it should always be calculated on as desirable, if not absolutely needful. With regard to height, I should say that eight feet is a good and sufficient amount of head-room, for as these boxes are never air- tight, it is not important that they should be very lofty, and if made too high they become very cold in the long winter nights, whereas if kept down to eight feet, the warmth of the mare's body raises the temperature sufficiently to protect the foal from an excessive reduction during a frost. In all cases the roof should be thatched, which material is cool in summer and warm in winter ; and as these hovels are always at a distance from the main dwelling, it is not here objectionable on account of its ten- dency to bm-n. 'Next to thatch, tiles offer the most equal tem- perature ; but they are not in this respect to be compared to it, though far superior to slates. Tlie walls may be of brick or stone, which are the best and most desirable materials, and equally good in every respect, the choice being given to that which is the cheapest in the locality. Boarding is a bad mate- rial, as it can scarcely be made warm and air-tight, and is liable to give cold by allowing small currents or draughts of air to play upon both mare and foal, which is worse than leaving them ex- posed to the open air. In every case the doors should be wide and high, viz., seven feet six by four feet six, and all angles rounded off ; to which precaution a roller on the door-post is a very useful addition, as a prevention from accidents. Tlie yard should be w\qlled in, or divided off by a wooden partition, or a 336 THE HOESE. gorse fence, either of which should be seven feet high. The door to the hovel should be of elm or oak, and made in two portions, BO as to allow the lower half to be shut without the upper one, in order that air may be admitted at times when the weather will not allow of the mare and foal leaving the hovel ; a small window should be inserted in the wall, and the mangers made in the following manner; — In one corner a manger of good height should be placed for the mare, with a ring above, to which she may be tied ; and in the other, a lower one for the foal, by which arrangement the mare is unable, when tied up, to deprive her foal of his corn. The hay-rack is better made on the outside of the wall, so that the groom may be able to re- plenish it without entering the hovel ; and this is easily effected by placing it as an excrescence on the outside, with a lid to turn the wet off, and with bars on the inside. This plan prevents all chance of accident from the gambols of the foal, which often lead it into mischief, if the arrangements are such as to give it any possible opportunity. In the third corner, unoccupied by the door, should be a water-tank, which may be of iron, and should always be replenished with fresh soft water from a river, pond, or rain-water tank. The floor should be paved with flints, stones, or hard bricks, and' a well-trapped drain placed in the centre. The yard also should be paved in the same way, though this is not so essential; and it is sometimes kept replenished with burnt clay, which thus serves the double purpose of ab- sorbing all the urine, &c., and keeping it free from putrefaction, which the clay has the power of doing. It is changed as often as it is saturated, and is then removed to a situation remote from the mares and foals. The partition between the two yards should be partially open, so as to allow the foals to become ac- quainted with each other before they are turned out together, which they generally are at weaning time ; and if then strange to one another, they pine for their dams much more than they do when they have had the pleasure of a previous introduction. "When the gorse is used it is applied as follows ; — The door-posts and uprights are first fixed, and should be either of oak — which is best — or of good sound Memel fir ; they should be about six inches by four, and should be fixed six feet apart with three feet sunk in the ground. After thus fixing the fi-amework, and H m^Wi G0K8E WALLS. 337 putting on the wall-plate and rafters, the whole internal surface is made good by nailing split poles of larch, or other timber, closely together across the uprights, taking especial care to round off the ends when they appear at the door-posts. Tlius the whole of the interior is tolerably smooth, and no accident can happen from the foal getting his leg into any crevice be- tween the poles, if care is taken to nail them securely, and to leave no space between them. When this internal framework is finished, the gorse is applied outside as follows ; It is first cut into small branches, leaving a foot-stalk to each, about twelve or fifteen inches in length ; these branches are arranged in layers between the uprights, the stalks pointing upwards and inwards, and the prickly ends downwards and outwards. When, by a succession of layers of these brushy stalks, a height of eighteen inches has been raised, a stout and tough pole, about the size of an ordinary broomstick, and six feet long, is laid upon the middle of the gorse, and so as to confine it against the split poles and between the uprights. The workmen kneel upon this pole, and by its means compress the gorse into the smallest possible compass ; and while thus pressed down, and against the internal framework, it is confined to the latter by five or six loops of strong copper-wire. When this is properly done, the gorse is so firmly confined, and withal so closely packed, that neither wind nor rain can penetrate, nor can all the mischief-loving powers of the foal withdraw a single stalk. After fixing the first layer, a second is built up in the same way, and when neatly done, the extei-ior is as level as a brick-wall ; but if there are any very prominent branches, they may be sheared off with the common shears, or taken off with the ordinar^^ hedging bill-hook. When it is desired to make the exterior look very smooth, a hay-trusser's knife is used ; but the natural ends, though not so level, are a much better defence, and last longer than the cut gorse. In the interior the stalks sometimes project, and if so they must be smoothly trimmed off. The fastenings to the door should be free from projections, and nothing answers better than the common slide-bolt, which no foal can open. All the wood-work should be painted with coarse paint, or dressed with tar, which is the best for the pur- pose, as it effectually prevents the young stock from licking Vol. II.— 22 338 THE HORSE. and biting the projections, a trick which often ends in confirmed crib-biting, or wind-sucking. The yards should have two gates, one opening into each separate paddock, so that the one maj be shut up, and the other left for them to use when turned out, and thus the grass allowed to make head, and a change permitted in the pasture. In the plan, a 1 and a 2 are the two hovels, h 1 and h 2 the two yards, c 1 and g 2 the two upper paddocks, and dl and d2 those which are used as a change. By closing either of the two gates to the yards, the other will admit the mare and foal to the paddock into which it opens. In all open- timber partitions plenty of hemlock tips should be inserted to make them good, in order to ]3revent the foal from slipping in his gallops, and getting hurt, or even cast under the bars. This accident has ruined many a foal, and the only certain preven- tion is to make up all timber fences by the above materials, one or other of which may always be readily procured. A certain portion of arable should always be held with the grass land, in order to produce Lucerne, rye, carrots, &c., foi early spring feed. It must be recollected, that the thorough- MANAGEMENT OF MARES. 339 bred mare is required to foal as early as possible in the year, because the produce takes age from the 1st of January, and with two-year-olds a month or two is of great importance. In few situations is there much grass fit for the mare before the Ist of May, and tlierefore cut stuff of some kind, with carrots or turnips, must be given. These can only be produced economi- cally on the stud-farm itself, and provision should always be made for an early supply. Italian rye-grass is generally the earliest crop, and if the soil suits it should always be planted, turnips do pretty well, but not so well as the Italian rye. Car- rots also are useful ; but in all cases both the carrots and turnips should be cut very small, for fear of choking the foal, or even the mare, an accident which has haj^pened to both on many oc- casions. Lucerne comes in soon after the rye-grass, and is an admirable food for suckling mares. Vetches are both too late and too heating, and are not nearly so good as Lucerne. MANAGEMENT OF THE MAHE. In this place, in the usual order of things, it might be ex- pected that I should allude to the selection of the brood-mare, and the best cross for her ; but, for the sake of simplicity, it will be better to describe the general management of the breeding- stud, and the breaking and training of young stock ; and finally, to consider the most desirable strains for breeding race-horses after all the various elements of success on the turf have been thoroughly investigated, as well as the steeplechase, hurdle- race, &c. This is, to some extent, putting the cart before the horse, but as it will make this mysterious subject more intelli- gible, I jDrefer adopting the plan, to the apparently more simple one which I have rejected. The duration of pregnancy in the mare is eleven months, and, consequently, she should never be put to the horse earlier than the end of the first week in February ; indeed there is great hazard in sending her before the middle or end of the month, as so many mares drop their foals a fortnight earlier than the full time. Should this occur with a mare stinted on. the 8tli or 9th of February, the foal is dropped in the last week of December, by which its age is increased one year, and it is 340 THE HORSE. mined for all weight for age races, and in fact for all pnrposes. Tlie mare should be allowed to be at large in the fields during the day time, as exercise is of the greatest consequence to her health ; and she should be carefully kept from the sight of any object which can terrify or distress her, such as pig-killing, or the sight or smell of blood in any way. Sometimes an epidemic causes a series of miscarriages or premature slippings of the foals, and almost every mare on the farm is affected in the same way, and there seems to be no mode of preventing this untoward result. When the mare is near her time, she shows her state by the filling of the udder, and by the falling in of the muscles on each side of the croup, which the farriers call the " sinking of the bones." When these signs appear the mare should be con- stantly watched, in order that assistance may be given her if there is any difficulty in the presentation. The usual mode for the foal to come into the world is with both fore-legs first, and if after they appear the nose shortly shows itself, all may be considered straightforward, and no fears need be entertained. Sometimes with a large foal and a comparatively small pelvis, a little assistance may carefully be given by gently drawing upon the legs after the head is well down ; but these cases are un- usual, and with this natural presentation it is seldom required. If, however, there is any other kind of birth, and the head pre- sents without the legs, or the hind legs first, or if the head is doubled back upon the body, assistance must generally be ob- tained, unless the man in attendance is more than ordinarily skilful. Turning is generally the expedient which is had re- course to by the regular practitioner, but it requires great care and skill to accomplish the oj)eration without danger to tlie foal. As soon as this is born the mai-e should be allowed to clean it, and the secundines are removed by the attendant ; after which the mare should have a little warm gruel, and, if very much exhausted, about a pint of strong ale- -more or less according to circumstances — may be given with it. It often happens with the first foal that the mare will not take to it, and not onl}^ refuses to clean it, but actually denies it the proper nourishment from her teats. When this is the case, the man should milk the mare and soothe her, and, after her udder is somewhat empty, and she is relieved, she will generally allow the foal to suck. They MANAOEMKNT OF FOALS. 341 slioukl never be left alone till this has taken place, as it is dan- gerous to do so for fear of the mare doing a fatal injury to her offspring. Before the coat of the foal is dry, tlie mane should be combed all on one side ; by which precaution that ragged unsightly look is avoided which it has if part hangs on one side and part on the other. For the first twenty-four hours nothing besides warm gruel and a very little hay should be given to the mare ; but when the secretion of milk is fully established she requires oats, bran mashes with malt, carrots, turnips, clover, or green food in some shape, according to the season of the year. MANAGEMENT OF THE FOAL. Handling the foal should be commenced as soon as he is born, because it is at that time that he is most easily rendered tractable, and regardless of the presence of his attendant, who should make a practice of rubbing his head, picking up his feet, &c., long before he actually wants to do any thing with those parts. But if these acts are postponed, till they are really wanted to be done, the colt is wild and unmanageable, and neither physic nor anything else can be administered without a degree of violence very dangerous to its welfare. The foal is very liable to diarrhoea, and it should at once be checked by a drench of rice-water, with one or two drachms of laudanum, which will almost always stop it, if repeated after every loose motion. The sun should in all cases be admitted to the box, whether in winter or summer, and without it no young animal will long be in health. If the weather is very severe, with wet as well as cold, the upper half only of the door should be opened while the sun is out; but if the weather is dry, the mare and foal may be allowed to run into the yard ; or if not very cold and frosty, into the paddock for a short time. By the end of the month the foal will begin to eat cnished oats, which may be given in its own low manger, and with the mare tied up to hers. As many of them as the foal will eat will do good ; and it never happens, that I have heard, that a young foal will eat more than enough of this food, which is the main stay of the young racer. Much of the success of this kind of stock depends upon their early forcing by means of oats ; and as far as he is concerned, the mare as 343 THE HOKSE. well as himself can hardly have too much, consistently with a continuance of health ; but caution must be used in forcing the mare until she is decidedly stinted. When the mare is tied up, the halter should not be longer than necessary, nor should it be fastened to a low ring ; as it has often happened that the foal has become entangled in it when low, and has been ruined by his own struggles, or those of his mother. At six months old the foal is usually weaned, previously to which he should wear a light and well-fitting head collar, by which he may be led about with a length of webbing attached to it by a buckle. This is more easily done before weaning than after, as the mare may always be made an inducement to the foal, and it will therefore be half coaxed and half led by a little manoeuvring ; whereas, if entirely alone, tlie foal will struggle in order to escajDe, and will not so easily be controlled. Two quarterns of oats may now be given to the foal during the day, which, with the grass of sum- mer, will keep him in high flesh, and by this time he ought to have grown into a very good-sized animal. By this treatment the foals are made strong and hardy against the advent of the winter season, during which time their progress is not nearly so fast as in the summer ; and in spite of every precaution, there are constantly drawbacks 'in the shape of colds, dysentery, &c Feeding in this mode is the great secret to rearing racing stock and though cow's milk, steamed turnips, &c., will make the yearling look fat and fleshy, you will never see that appearance of high breeding and condition which is given by oats, nor, when put into training, do they pass througli that ordeal in the way which corn-fed colts and Allies may be expected to do. At this age, when fed in this way, foals are as mischievous as monkeys, and great care should be taken that they have nothing in their way which can possibly injure them. Brooms, shovels, pikes, and buckets must all be kept away from their reach, and all gates and fences must be carefully put in order. Indeed, with every precaution, they will strain themselves in their play ; but if all these points are not attended to, the consequence is almost sure to be fatal to life or limb. During the winter young racing stock should all be carefully housed at night ; and their oats may be increased to three quarterns a day as soon as the grass fails, with plenty of good sound old hay, and occasionally a few care- FOOD OF TITF FOAL. 343 fully sliced carrots or turnips. During all this time they should still be constantly liandled and led about ; and when removed from one pasture to anotliei", they sliould always be caught and led by the length of webbing. Tlie absence of tin's precaution is a fertile source of accidents, while its adoption is only an instance of that constant handling which must be attended to even were no removal necessary. These remarks will carry on the treatment of the yearling to the time when he is broken in and put into training. At this time — that is, in the second sum- mer, and as soon as there is plenty of grass, the yearling should begin to assume the appearance of the horse, with arras and thighs well developed, and with a fair allowance of fat, which, though not necessary for racing purposes, is always an indica- tion of high health, and will make its appearance on the ribs of a stout and healthy colt in spite of all the exercise in the shape of frolics and gallops which his high spirits induce him to take. During the early spring months this cannot always be expected, from the nature of the food ; but after May, the flesh ought always to be rather full and round than wiry and free from fat, which latter condition indicates a delicacy of constitution un- favorable to the purposes of the race-horse. Physicking the yearling or the foal is sometimes necessary, when he is getting off his feet, or is bound in his bowels, or his eyes become inflamed, or otherwise indicate that he is over-fed with oats. This is a very common state of things, and the remedy is a dose of the common aloetic ball, for which see the Diseases of the Horse, for the dose and mode of administration. About one-quarter of an ordinary ball is the smallest dose likely to be beneficial to the young foal. BREAKING. THE STABLES NECESSARY FOR YOUNG RACING STOCK. The stabling which is sufiicient for ordinary racing purposes, will not answer for the first housing of colts and fillies, which require more air and room than older horses, as they are a con Biderable time in becoming accustomed to the warmer and B44 THE H0B8E. darker stables suited to horses doing strong work. But not only is a large roomy box required for eacli colt, but there must also be a yard, or small paddock, in which they may be suffered to take that exercise which they cannot yet receive artificially in an amount which will maintain their health. The breaking is generally commenced in warm summer weather ; and there is no danger in allowing the colt to be at liberty during the day, at such hours as are not required to be occupied by the breaker's instructions. It is necessary, therefore, to have a series of airy boxes, separated from one another in the same way as those in ordinary stables, but of a larger size, being at least 18 feet by 12 feet, and with a very free circulation of air. These are much better made open to the roof, as they are never used in cold weather for horses, and will then serve for any other kind ol stock if required ; but at all events they should now be as airy as it is possible to make them. Many people object to the use of litter at this period, as being different to the cool grass to which the colt has been accustomed, and recommend tan as a much better kind of material for the floor of the box. I am inclined to think that there is great reason in this objection, and that the latter article is less likely to produce that contraction of the feet which so commonly occurs in the horse in training. A shady paddock, with as soft a turf as possible, should be pro- vided ; and here the colt may be turned out the first thing in the morning for an hour or two, and again at night for the same time, leaving the middle of the day for the breaker's manipula- tions. This plan also provides for the gradual alteration of diet, as the colt will always pick a little grass when turned out, and will only eat his hay during the long night ; while his oats he has long been accustomed to, and will still continue to relish. LEADING TACKLE. Leading with the cavesson on is the first thing to be prac- tised, and it should be continued for two or three weeks without any farther attempt at breaking, if there be plenty of time, and full justice is to be done to the colt. A roller is put upon the colt, and a crupper, with long hip-straps,' by the presence of which he becomes accustomed to a loose sheet, or any other de- SHOEING. 345 rangemcnt of clothing in his subsequent work. "With this tackle on, and long boots on his fore-legs to guard against his striking them, the colt is led about the country, either by the breaker on foot or mounted on a steady hack ; and for a week he may generally be confined to soft turf, which will not require his being shod. Even on such ground as this he will be gradually accustomed to carts, wagons, droves of sheep, oxen, e^c, and will daily acquire more confidence in himself and in his leader. JSTo bit should be put in his mouth as yet, for its too early use while he is still shy and inclined to struggle, only makes him more timid, and by far less manageable than with the cavesson alone. SHOEING. Shoeing must be commenced as soon as the colt is in a state to be taken on the roads, because it will often happen that he will be inclined to jump and plunge on the meeting of unac- customed objects ; and if his feet are unshod he will break the crust, and do that amount of injury, which it will take many weeks to restore. It is better, therefore, to put some short shoes on his fore-feet ; but his hind-feet may still perhaps be left in their natural state for some time longer. I do not myself see the advantage of this delay, but it is very commonly practised with young racing stock ; and with wild or badly-handled colts, it is often necessary, from the greater resistance which they make to the blacksmith behind than before. The shoes or tips should be nailed on very carefully, and they should be very neat and light in their make ; the feet also should afterwards be regu- larly examined, and the shoes removed every three weeks. It is a very common practice for the blacksmith to cut out the heels of these colts, but I am satisfied, that by the use of tips only the heels may left in a state of nature, and will require little or no clearing out until the horse is full-shod, and the frog and heel protected from the friction of the ground. TYING-UP IN THE STABLE. The next process is the tying-up in the stall, which the colts may now be accustomed to, inasmuch as they have fully proved the power of the halter or leading-rein in their struggles to avoid 346 THE HORSE. passing objects ; and they will not, therefore, fight much when tied up in the stable. The head-stall should fit very closely, and the throat-lash be sufficiently tight to prevent the colt from pulling it off in his efforts to get free ; for if the young animal finds he can effect his object once, he is a long time before he ceases to try it again. The colt is often very fidgety ; if so, he must be at once compelled to stand still, by the use of wooden balls attached to the fetlocks by leather straps, which soon ac- custom him to a steady position, from the blows which they in- flict upon him when he struggles or moves rapidly from side to side. A breast-girth may also be put on as a fore-runner of the breast-cloth ; and it will also serve to prevent the roller, which is constantly worn, from getting back under the flank, and there- by irritating the wearer. All the ordinary stable practices may now gradually be taught, such as washing out the feet, dressing, hand-rubbing the legs, &c. ; and the colt should be made to turn from side to side of his stall at the wish of his attendant groom, who may easily conduct the whole process without the aid of any regular breaker, unless the temper of the colt is such as to demand extraordinary skill and address ; and even here the groom accustomed to thoroughbred colts is often a better hand than the colt-breaker, who is engaged in breaking all sorts of animals, and will not bestow suflacient time upon the valua- ble racing colts and fillies. I^^Tow, without full time, it is impossi- ble to bring these young things into subjection, and the conse- quence is that their tempers are ruined, and they are rendered unfit for the purpose for which they are otherwise well qualified. Their feeding is so high that they are full of spirit, and will fight to the death if they are made to resist by ill-treatment or liasty breaking ; it is therefore more by coaxing and gradual leading on step by step, from one point gained to another which is to be overcome, that this animal is vanquished, and made at last to yield his powers to the guidance of a young lad of perhaps twelve years of age, or even less. BREAKING. Lunging may now be commenced, Mdiich will require the aid of a second hand, in order to compel the colt to progress in the circle by threatening him with the whip behind him. The BREAKING. 347 cavesson, boots, roller, crupper, &c., are all put on, and a long leading-rein of webbing is attached to the ring in the nose of the cavesson, just as if the colt was going to be led out as usual. But instead of merely leading, the colt is made to walk round a circle on some piece of soft turf; and then when he has learnt to do this kindly he is made to canter slowly round, tlie assist- ant walking behind him until he will progress by himself, which he soon learns to do. As soon as he has gone round the circle in one direction a dozen times or so, he may be turned round and made to reverse it, which jjrevents giddiness, and also any un- due strain upon either leg. This process is repeated at various times throughout the breaking, and is the best mode of keeping the colt quiet by giving him any amount of work on the canter or gallop. It is not, however, used for the same purpose as in the ordinary breaking of hacks and harness horses, where it is made a means of getting them upon their haunches ; an alter- ation from a state of nature which it is not desirable to effect in the race-horse. On the contrary, it is often necessary to make him extend himself still more than he otherwise would, and the less he is upon his haunches the better. The bit, therefore, is never used in his mouth as a means of putting him back upon his hind legs ; whilst it is, on the other hand, used more to make the horse extend himself by playing with it, and slightly resist- ing its tendency to confine his mouth. The mouthing-bit may now be put on, and its construction and form are of the utmost importance to the future delicacy of mouth which is so essential to the action of the race-horse. In no kind of horse is the snaffle-bridle so desirable as in the race- horse, in which a curb is always a means of making him gal- lop in too round a style ; and yet when he pulls very strongly, this is a less evil than to let him get away with his rider, and either bolt out of the course or destroy his chance by over-run- ning himself early in the race. Hence it is doubly ncessary to guard against making the angles of the mouth sore, for if once they get into that state they are almost sure to become more or less callous and insensible. But if during breaking, a snaffle of any kind, large or small, is used, this result is almost sure to occur, either in the horse's early fighting with his bit, or when '•put upon it" in the stable. Instead of a snaffle, a bit without 348 THE HORSE. a joint is the simple remedy for all this, made in the form of a segment of a circle, and with keys as usual hanging- from its centre. This segmental form is better than the straight bit, upon which the colt is apt to pull on one side, and to get an uneven mouth, whereas when standing in the stable, and the reins are buckled to his roller, crossed over his withers, he can never do otherwise than get an even pull upon all parts of his mouth, whether he puts his lips close to one side of the bit or the other. This is a very impor- tant point in breaking all colts, and in racing stock it is doubly so, because of the necessity of preserving that delicacy of sensation without which they can never be taken round corners, &c., except by lying out of their ground, and thence losing a considerable distance. But with this bit the mouth is gradually made aijd without producing soreness in any part, which afterwards takes the hit / and this is the great feature in its use, for as the tongue and gums take its pressure chiefly, so the angles of the mouth only touch it at the will of the colt, and it is when playing with it that they do touch at all, and then only to such an extent as to avoid pain to them- selves. This bit, then, may be used on all occasions without fear until the colt is fit to take his gallops, when a strong snaffle may be substituted, and gradually supplanted by that small and fine kind called the racing snaffle, but which need not be nearly so small for the horse broken to tlie segmental bit as for one " mouthed " to the ordinary breaker's snaffle. After the bit has been put in the mouth, no attempt at first should be made to in- duce the colt to play with it ; but it may be suffered to remain in the mouth while he is led about by the cavesson, and with- out any side-reins being attached. When this has been done for a day or two, the side-reins are buckled on, and are attached BREAKING, 349 also to the bucldes in the roller, crossing them over the withers. At firpt they may be drawn up very slightly, so as just to pre- vent the colt from putting his head into his usual position, and in that form he may be left in his box for an hour a-day, be- sides the usual amount of walking out of doors with the bridle on. They may now be gradually tightened a hole or two per day, and also more so in the box than when led out, when the tightening should be very gradual indeed. Some colts very soon begin to champ the bit, and play with it, whilst others are often sulky for a day or two, and hang upon it steadily, with the intention of freeing themselves. All, however, at last begin to champ, and when this is freely done, the breaker may teach the colt the intention of the bit, by making him stop and back when out of doors, by its means. The rings on each side should be taken hold of evenly by both hands, and the colt made to stand 3r back by steady pressure, but without alarming him. Kind- ness and gentle usage, with occasional encouragement, soon ac- custom him to its use, and he only wants ten days or a fortnight in order to obtain the desired result of its presence in the mouth, which is called " getting a mouth," and which is merely the giving to the sense of touch in the lips an extra degree of deli- cacy. When this stage is completed, and the mouth is quite under command, so that the colt will either come forward or backward by drawing his head in those directions, with the bit held in both liands, the colt is ready for backing. During the whole progress of breaking, daily slow lunging and plenty of walking exercise should have been practised, so that the colt is not above himself, but is more or less tired each day. Before actual backing is attempted the saddle should be put on, and it should always be a roomy one at first, well stuffed and fitting accurately, so as to avoid all painful pressure. Tlie withers, especially, should be closely watched, and if high and thin the saddle should be proportionally high at the pommel. The roller has been hitherto the only kind of pressure round the chest, but it has gradually been tightened from time to time, so as to prepare the colt for the subsequent use of the girths which are required to retain the saddle in its place. This should be put on at first with the girths quite loose, and with a crupper in addi- tion, because having already worn one, the tail has become ac- 350 THE HOKSE. customed to its use, and it often prevents the saddle from press- ing with undue force upon the withers, which are very sensi- tive and easily made sore. The colt should be walked out and lunged for a day or two with the saddle on before he is mounted so as to accustom the parts to its presence ; and it is even de- sirable to increase the weight of the saddle, by j)lacing upon it some moderately heavy substance of two or three stones' weight, such as trusses of shot, or the like, gradually making them heavier, but never putting more than the above dead weight upon the saddle. "When the colt has thus been thoroughly sea- soned, he may be taken out and well lunged till he is tired, still having his saddle on ; and during this exercise the breaker will occasionally bear considerable weight upon each stirrup, and flap them against the saddle, with the object of making a noise, to which the colt should be accustomed. It is a very good plan to have a leather surcingle made to go over the saddle, and to at- tach the buckles for the side-reins to this, instead of having them sewn on to the saddle itself. When all is ready, and the colt is tired by his lunging, &c., he may be taken into the rubbing- house, as being close to the exercise ground, and there the breaker himself, or one of the lads, may be put upon the saddle, psing him, as in all cases in young horses, with great gentleness, and giving him constant encouragement by the hand and voice. Mounting is much better accomplished in the stable than out, and causes much less alarm, because the colt has been always accustom- ed to be more handled there, and is less inclined, therefore, to re- sist. The lad, or breaker, should get up and down again seve- ral times, and if the colt is good-tempered he will generally allow all this to be done without the slightest resistance. In mounting there should be very little spring made, but the lad may hang about the horse, as if fondling him, and bear his w^eight upon the saddle; then place one foot in, and hang on steadily, when, if this is borne, the weight may be taken off for a minute or two, and then the lad may very gently and insensibly almost raise him- self up to the command of the saddle, after which he may stead- ily turn his leg over, and is then seated. When the lud has sat quietly upon his back for a few minutes, the side-reins having already been buckled to the leather surcingle, two additional reins may be attached for his use, though the chief dependence BACKING THE COLT, 351 at first must be placed upon tlie breaker himself, who leads the colt, as before, with the cavesson and webbing. With this the mounted colt is now led out, and walked about for an hour or more ; after which he should be returned to the stable, and then the lad should dismount; and on no account should this be attempted at first out of doors, for it has happened that on get- ting ofi" there has been a fight to get on again, which has re- sulted in victory to the horse ; whereas in the stable it can always be managed, and with the thoroughbred colt it is seldom wanted elsewhere, until he is quite used to it. If there is no stable at hand with a door high and wide enough for this pur- pose, the colt may be mounted in the paddock, the breaker being very careful to engage his attention, and a third party being on the off-side to assist in keeping the colt straight and the saddle from giving way while the weight is being laid ujDon the stirrup. Most colts give way at first to this one-sided pressure, but they soon learn to bear up against it, and finally they do not show any annoyance at all. It will be found that any colt may be more readily managed by two people in a roomy stable than by three out of doors, where he is on the look-out for ob- jects of alarm, and is always more ready to show fight ; the only difficulty is the getting clear of the door, which should be wide and high ; and if it is the contrary, it offers an obstacle to the plan, which must prevent its adoption. The mounted lad should at first sit steadily and patiently still, and should not attempt to use the reins, which might indeed well be dispensed with, but that few riders could balance themselves without holding some- thing. I have found it a good plan to buckle them to the cav- esson rather than to the bit, in those cases where the hands of the rider were not very light. The colt on leaving the stable often sets his back up, and perhaps plunges or attempts to kick, which he seldom does in the stable, and less frequently in leaving it, than when he is suddenly mounted in the field. If he does this the breaker should speak severely to him, and either keep down his head, or the reverse, according to whether he is attempting to rear or kick. It is for the latter vice only that the rider re- quires the rein to the bit, as it serves to keep the colt quiet if the bit is suddenly checked, when he gets his head down before kicking. But in rearing, the lad is likely to do mischief with 352 THE H0K8E. it, and on tlie whole it is better, I think, to avoid all chance of using it improperly, unless the rider is very cautious, and ac- customed to the business of colt-breaking. When the colt is quite quiet and submissive, after several days' leading about, the lad may be trusted with the command of the bit, and may have the reins intrusted to him, the breaker still keeping the long webbing attached to the cavesson, and being always pre- pared to assist the lad, who, however, should now begin to try to turn the colt and stop him at pleasure, taking a rein in each hand, and using them wide apart, with the aid of his voice and heel. As soon as it appears likely that the lad can control his charge the cavesson may be taken off, and the colt placed in a string of horses, which are so steady as not to give occasion, by their example, for the colt's beginning to plunge. During the course of breaking it is always safer to keep the colt rather un- der-fed with oats, and until he is able to begin his cantering ex- ercise he will scarcely bear an increase ; but much will depend upon his temper ; and if he is inclined to fret he will often lose flesh, and will demand more, rather than less, oats than usual. Bad-tempered horses, however, will always require light feeding during breaking, and extra time, as well as care, must be bestowed upon them. This subject is better understood now than it used to be, and fewer horses are spoiled than was for- merly the case ; still, however, there is often room for improve- ment, and the number of horses which are mismanaged at this time is by no means small. Thoroughbred horses will not bear bad treatment, in general, though some are certainly of such savage tempers by nature as to require to be cowed ; still these are the exceptions, and the vast majoity will, by early handling, and cautious tackling and mounting, be broken almost without a single fight or difficulty of any kind. If they find themselves hurt by bit or saddle, or by the crupper occasioning a sore, they show their dislike to the pain by resisting, setting up their backs, and refusing to progress quietly ; but, unless there be something wrong, they will submit to being backed and ridden much more readily than the colts of the common breeds, which have seldom had a head-stall on their heads, till a few days before they are backed. I have more than once ridden thoroughbred colts in tolerable comfort, within a week or ten days of their being first TRAINING. 353 bitted; but it is a bad plan, and the longer time their mouths are allowed to become accustomed to the bit, the better they ulti- mately turn out. It will be many months before they are to be depended on under any circumstances ; and when they get an in- crease of oats they are almost sure to attempt some kind of horse- play ; but the boys easily contend against this, which is very different from the determined efforts of a colt to dislodge his rider. When all these points are thoroughly accomplished in the breaking, it may be said to be terminated, and the training of the two-year-old commences; the only things yet to be learned are the use of the spur and whip, which should never be em- ployed except as a punishment for faults committed ; that is to say, they should never be used as an e very-day practice ; for, though every colt should be accustomed to them, it is very sel- dom that the opportunity is wanting of administering them for some fault or other. EDITORIAL NOTES. ' (P. 295.) Once in and twice out has been the rule with the most successful American breeders, in which we fully concur. - (P. 295.) This is not agreeable with our experience and observation. The late Dr. E. Warfield bred many of his thorough mares to a Jack, they were sub- sequently bred to thoroughbreds and produced winners. * (P. 395.) The most successful racers have been in-bred, but not incestuously bred. As we remarked on a former page, all our thoroughbreds are in-bred. The English, for convenience, have their strains in England, the Byerly Turk, the Darley Arabian, and the Godolphin Arabian. The Herod blood represents the Byerly Turk branch, English Eclipse the Darley Arabian, and Matchem the Godolphin Arabian. Now if any one will investigate the pedigree of any of our stallions they will find them in-bred to all three of these great strains, Herod, Eclipse, and Matchem. * (P. 310.) It seems that the best trotters we have had and now have, those capable of compassing a distance of ground, have a cross of thoroughbred blood. Imp. Messenger and his descendants are the most popular cross, and Messenger was a race horse and not noted particularly for trotting action. We firmly believe that the thoroughbred sire crossed upon trotting mares Avill pro- duce a higher type of trotters than the trotting stallion crossed on the thorough- bred or trotting mare. Vol. II.— 23 354 THE H0E8B. BREAKING THE HOESE. LEARNING TO RIDE, PRACTICAL HORSEMANSHIP. 1 NOW come to a very important part of my subject, to one very different from any on which I have yet touched, but at the same time, one on which I hold most definite opinions, and one, touch- ing which it appears to me that there is vast room for improve- ment, in the United States generally ; I mean the breaking of horses, and the riding of men. In the first place, I must say it, whether it give pleasure to my readers or the reverse, one rarely if ever sees a properly and thoroughly-broke horse, in America, and still more rarely a thorough horseman. In the United States, generally, a horse is called thoroughly- broke, when he will allow himself to be mounted and ridden, or put in harness and driven, without rearing, plunging, kicking, throwing his rider over his head, or smashing the vehicle to pieces with his heels — when he will neither run away, nor stand still, in spite of his owner's will ; when, in a word, he is sub- dued, gentle, and free from vice, and when he has acquired a certain facility of going along, at the regular paces of walk, trot, canter or gallop, with some indistinct sort of reference to the wishes of the person who directs him — but without the silghtest reference to his mode of carrying himself, whether with his nose in the air, or thrust obstinately out before him, in a straiglit line with his body, like a run-away pig ; or, naturally and gracefully in its place, with the neck curved, the line of the face perpen- dicular to the surface of the earth, the chin in toward the chest. A WELL-BROB^S HOKSE. 355 the mouth phiying gently with the bits, and yiehling to every touch of the bridle — without the slightest reference to his mode of going, whether with his fore-quarters boring and weigh- ing on the hand, and with his hind-quarters, lobbing along just as it may happen, all abroad, under no control of the rider, and in no concert or connection with the action or movements of the forehand and fore legs ; or with his whole frame in perfect eqiii- librium and concert, whether going united or disunited, his fore- hand all grace, lightness and ease, as if on springs, his hind- quarters well under him, and the centre of the whole animal's and rider's gravity, exactly where it ought to be, in the centre of the horse's body, and under the centre of the horseman's seat — ■ which if true and truly kept, in all possible circumstances and con- ditions of position and motion on the part of the animal, whether going at a regular pace, rearing, plunging, kicking, leaping or even falling, should be such that the man's trunk shall always be perpendicular to the natural or true plane of the horizon — without, lastly, the slightest reference to the manner of his entering upon, changing or regulating his paces, whether at his own will or at the pleasure of the rider ; whether merely from slower to faster, because urged to increased speed, or at a given and recognized signal, at once from the walk to the trot, or to the canter, as the horseman directs by hand and heel ; whether stopping at once, and again proceeding, at a touch of the bridle, or merely hauled down by main force from a gallop to a trot, and from a trot to a walk, Now, a horse is, in reality, just as far from being broke, when he will go along peaceably in his own natural way, and at his own natural paces, under the guidance of his own untaught will, either carrying his head just as his own obstinate humor or physi- cal malformation predisposes him to do, or having it dragged into its place, and kept there, by that disgrace to horsemanship — a martingale — as a rider is far from being a horseman, when he can just contrive to stick upon a horse, by the aid of hanging on by means of his hands and of his bridle by a dead pull on the beast's mouth, which, in order to steady himself in his seat, he renders as hard, as insensible, and as unyielding to the bit, as if it were a piece of sole-leather or a stone wall. A horse may be an admirable match-trotter, or a first-rate 356 THE H0K8E. race-horce, and still be utterly unbroken and subject to every one of the defects I have named above — ^because a match trotter, or a race-horse, is only required to be able to accomplish one thing ; that is to go the greatest pace and win, without any regard to the style, appearance, manner or form of doing it ; and, in fact, to put him into trained paces might probably detract from his speed, in- stead of increasing it — but what is the consequence — that, because match-trotters and race-horses are allowed to batter away, in any awkward, ungainly, pulley-hauley, nose-out, head-down, boring way of going, they may naturally adopt, they are, ninety-nine times out of a hundred, the most disagreeable, bone-setting, shoulder-dislocating, indocile, unmanageable brutes to ride, that can be imagined. Where one is not so — as was the case with the race-mare Fashion, and as is always the case with a few thorough- breds, and still fewer trotters — it is because the animal is naturally perfectly well made, well balanced and harmonious in all its parts ; and necessarily, as a consequence of that physical perfection of form, perfect, also, in all its motions. When to this, a perfect temper is added, you have — if it fall into the right hands, of a person who will not by his own ignorance, inflexibility of hand, or unsteadiness of seat, teach it bad habits — one of tliose phe- nomena, a perfect, natural horse, which requires no breaking. Just in the same way, a man may be an admirable jockey, and perfection as a match-trotter, and yet may be, especially in the case of the latter, no horseman in the large sense of the word — for, though each can ride one sort of hoi-se to perfection, on any other kind of horse he will be nowhere ; and, in the case of the match-trotter, the very qualities which give him success, to wit, his method of keeping a dead pull through the rings of a martingale, in one steady direction and at nearly one force, upon a mouth which has been instructed to require such an un- relaxed pull, to pull against it, and to lean upon it, and his ne- cessarily acquired habit of steadying his seat, thrown lar back in his saddle, by the arm's-length pull at the mouth, and by the firm, bearing pressure on his stirrups, will unfit him for any other seat, or any other mode of riding. Put the best jockey rider, used to make the best of hard-pull- ing, boring race-horses, leaning on the hand and tearing away at the top of their speed, on the back of a perfectly-made hunter, HORSEMANSHIP. 357 with a mouth like velvet, vised to moderate and measure his stride by the slightest impression of his rider's hand, used to take off, when leaping, at a given place, or a given signal of bit and heel, and tell him to ride across a stiff line of counti-y, with Large fences and ugly water ditches, alongside of a pack of fox-hounds — and see where he will be. Take Hiram Woodruff, and set him on the back of such a managed horse as Franconi's "Bayard," with no snaffle and martingale, by which to steady himself in his seat, but a bit and bridoon, the least touch of which will set the horse on end, piv- oting on his fore or hind feet, and leaping six feet into the air on all four legs, ■svitli diversifications of sobresaults, croupades, balotades, and caprioles, executed with three or four motions of the hind legs while in the air, and require of him, in addition, to go through the lance or broad-sword exercise, with his right arm, and see how loug it will be before he be himself out of his saddle, and, in all likelihood, before he have the horse on his back at top of him. The breaking of the horse and the riding of the man de- pend each on the other. The thoroughly broken horse must have no will, know no pleasure, but that of his rider, communicated to him by hand and heel, by the influence of the bit on his mouth, and the pressure of the limb on his flank ; not as compulsory forces, which enforce obedience by sheer strength, but as intimations of a wish which he must obey, for fear of consequences, which are found to follow disobedience. His mouth must be obedient to every touch, regulating the position of the head, the flexure of the neck, the elevation or depression of the forehand, the consecutive movement of the hind quarters — directing the choice, the change, and the rate, or speed, of all his paces, and causing him to advance, retrograde, move sideways, halt sud- denly, or gradually, measure his strides, lengthening or short- ening them as required, wheel round, rise at his leap, and, above all, carry his nose gracefully and easily, and get his quar- ters well under him, according to the impressions conveyed to hnn by the hands, the limbs, and the will of his rider. The thoroughly broken horse, if he be also ordinarily well made, requires only the simplest trappings ; a plain, well-fitting saddle, with two girths, neither breast plate nor crupper, a simple 358 THE HOKSE. bridle, either a plain bit and bridoon, or snaffle and curb, tlie latter not severe or cruel in form — or if he be uncommonly light-mouthed, a pelham bit, as it is called, consisting of a snaf- fle-jointed mouth-piece, without a port, but with branches and a curb chain — in some cases, a simple snaffle. In no possible case, for a roadster, hunter, hackney, or driv- ing horse, is a martingale allowable. It either indicates that the horse is not half, or half a quarter, broken — or that, in con- sequence of some radical and incurable fault of conformation or defect of temper, he is utterly unfit to be either ridden or driven at all. Of all inventions ever made, except for a racer or a match-trotter, or, in some extremely exceptional cases, a hunter, for instance, whose other extraordinary qualities may compen- sate for and overbalance his want of mouth and malformation of head and neck — as speed and endurance do, in the racer and trotter — none is so certain, as the running martingale, to destroy the mouth of the horse and the hand of the rider, rendering both, alike and equally, hard, heavy, inflexible, unyielding, and void of sensation. No horse, which cannot be ridden or driven without the aid of a running martingale, is fit to be ridden or driven, at all, as a matter of pleasure or safety. 'No man, boy, or woman, who has learned to ride by aid of a martingale and snaffle, can ever, by any possibility, have either a hand or a seat. He or she will sit and keep their place by the hand and stirrup, instead of by the unassisted forces of the body, and, depending on the hand, as on a main stay by which to secure the position in the saddle, will lose all use of it in guiding or controlling the animal. The first thing, therefore, that a rider must learn, is to sit a horse perfectly, without the aid of either stirrup or rein ; to be able to move arms, legs, hands, head, trunk, and thighs, all separately, and without moving the other parts, or atiecting their position. Tlien, his hand, being utterly unaffected and undisturbed by any necessary movements or changes of position of his own limbs or body, or by any irregular, violent, or awkward pertur- bations and efi'orts of the horse, will be perfectly free to in- struct, guide, control, assist, relieve, support, and, in case of ne- cessity, compel the animal. A LIGHT HAND. 35'J The great beauty of a liand is perfect liglitness of touch, to be constantly feeling and playing with the sensitive mouth of the animal — which will soon come to delight in the influence of such a hand, and will manifest its pleasure by tossing, rolling over and over, and champing the bits — to be continually guiding and directing every motion, and regulating every step, by the slightest possible exertion of force, which will accomplish its end ; to be for ever giving and taking; never continuing to use force a moment after resistance has ceased, or obedience been yielded ; never submitting to be overpowered, for a moment. It is not easy for any one, it is not possible for every one, to obtain quite a perfect hand — for some men are deficient in sensibility of touch, in tact, and in temper, all of which are needed to produce absolute perfection ; but every one is capa- ble of obtaining a steady seat and a passable hand, sufficient for all ordinary purposes ; though not, perhaps, such as would enable him to go across a country, like Squire Osbaldeston, or to make a managed horse dance to music, like Sir Sidney Meadows or Franconi. The annexed cuts, one and two, show the first and general position of the hand, and the method of holding the bridle rein ; the first, when riding with a single snaffle bit, the reins then being held between the middle and the fourth, and outside of the little fingers, the ends being brought out, and secured from slipping between the forefinger and the ball of the thumb. The second, when a bit and bridoon are used, with two reins ; in which case the snaf- fle reins are held, as here shown, between the middle and fourth, and the fourth and little fingers ; the curb reins between the fore and middle fingers, and outside of the lit- tle finger ; the ends to be held and secured as before. 360 THE HORSE- This method of holding the reins, when riding with one hand, is invariable ; though the position of the hands must ne- cessarily be varied, at times, and the nails may be held perpen- dicularly and inward, with the forefinger and thumb upward, instead of horizontally or downward. In galloping hard, or riding across country, especially with a hard-pulling horse, or one that throws his head from side to side, it is often well to separate the reins, between the two hands ; which may be held nearer or farther apart, as the cir- cumstances of the case may require. In such cases, one snaffle and one curb rein is held in each hand ; the former between the middle and fourth fingers, the latter outside the little fingers, the ends brought out upward and held securely, as before, between the thumb and forefinger. This gives the greatest attainable power of control, and allows the exercise of the greatest force on the horse, by an upward and backward pull, assisted by thrusting the weight of the body into the stirrups, by straightening the knee and keeping the heel well down. In teaching a horse, it is often well to divide the reins otherwise ; holding the snaffle reins in the left hand, as directed above, and the curb rein's in the right, the former to regulate pace and control the animal, the latter to give the proper posi- tion and flexures to the head and neck, and to direct the mo- tions of the limbs. The methods of doing this will be given hereafter. The fol- lowing admirable directions, as to the mode of acquiring dif- ferent styles of seats and the uses and modifications of such, are from an excellent English horse-writer, known by tlie nom de plutne of " Harry Hieover." I have slightly modified them, in some places, where they contain local allusions, which are not readily understood or appreciated by the American reader ; and, that done, I fully endorse and recommend them to ni}' friends, as the most practical and comprehensive in the world. It will be seen, that they relate, in some considerable degree, to English across-country riding ; but this is no disadvantage to the American reader, or pupil, even if he never intend to leap a fence, or ride to a hound, as long as he live. Since the hunting seat is undeniably the best, tlie strongest THE HUNTING SEAT. 361 and the firmest, for all gonercil })urposes ; and, when once adopted, can easily be modified by lowering the heel, lengthen- ing the stirrup-leather a trifle, and riding with the ball of the foot instead of the hollow of the instep, on the bar, into the park, parade, or half military seat. The hunting hand is necessarily the best of all hands ; be- cause the safety both of horse and rider depends on it, in every position ; and on it — more even than on the seat — except in so far us the seat aftects or does not affect the hand — does the ex- cellence and success of the rider consist. Lastly, because a man, who can ride a horse right well across- country, must necessarily bo able to sit and to handle any horse, any where— because he must be absolutely master of himself and of his horse, in all conceivable cases and positions ; and be- cause he will readily be able to adopt any other style of riding, and adapt himself to it, whenever it may be required ; because he must, to be a good across-country rider, have fully estab- lished a perfect seat on his horse's back independent of his hand, and a perfect hand on his horse's mouth, inde23endent of his seat. The accompanying sketch shows, as nearly as possi- ble, a perfect seat for across-country riding, or for general road- riding of a trotting horse, when the horse and rider are both at rest. For parade or showM-iding the stirrup should be a little longer, the ball of the foot, at the insertion of the great toe, should rest 363 THE HOKSE. on the inner side of the bar of the stirrup iron, and the ball of the little toe on the outer side of it. The toe should be perpen- dicularly under the point of the knee ; the heel two inches be- low the toe ; the heel a little out, and the whole leg, from the shank bone to the crotch, as tight to the saddle, as if glued to it ; the buttocks well opened out and down upon the saddle ; the small of the back well in ; the chest expanded, the head erect, the shoulders squared at right angles to the line of the horse's backbone ; the elbows close to the sides, the hands well down, and within an inch or two of the saddlebow. It is a good plan, to learn to mount a horse from the front, standing abreast with his fore legs, and with your back to the direction in which he is looking, as a vicious horse cannot kick you in this position. You divide your reins properly in your left hand, grasping with it a lock of hair on the withers, put your left foot into the stirrup exactly as it hangs, square to the saddle, throw your right hand to the cantle of the saddle, and, with a slight spring and rotatory motion of the right leg, you are in the saddle in an instant. I will here add, that tlie measure of the stirrup leather for a well-made man, for an ordinary seat, is the length of his arm, with the fingers extended. 'If these be set against the bar in the saddle, to which the stirrup leather is secured, the bar of the stirrup iron itself, when the leather is drawn to full stretch, should come well up to the armpit, and touch the body. For riding across country, or on hard trotting horses, an inch or two shorter will be advisable. A good test for the length, in such cases, is to be able to place the width of your hand, held edgeways, between your fork and the pommel of your saddle, when standing uj) in the stirrups. The best general rules for riding are these ; keep your head and toes up ; your hands and heels down ; your knees and el- bows in ; your thighs and buttocks close to the saddle. I now proceed to give from Harry Hieover's practical horsemanship, the modes by which a man may become a horse- man. "There are three modes, by any of which a man may become a horseman. The one is, by putting him on an ass, pony, gallo- TEACHING TO KIDE, 363 way, and liorse, each in succession, as a boy, and allowing liim to tumble about till he learns to stick on, in which case practice will teach him, certainly, a firm seat and probably good hands ; but, farther than this, by being accustomed, first to suffer from, and afterward to be quite aware of, the various tricks and habits of horses, he will learn to be aware of the symptoms preluding their being brought into practice, and eventually become com- petent to counteract them. The next mode is, supposing a person to have arrived at manhood without crossing a horse, to place him under a proper instructor, who will certainly save him many a fall, by putting him on a docile animal, and, step by step, leading the pupil on to horsemanship. It may be objected, that the last mode would only teach the riding of a trained and quiet horse, and I allow the full force of this objection; and if the pupil expressed a wish of simply being taught to ride well enough to navigate his steed up and down a park ride, as some friend probably learns to manage a boat on a canal, the one will probably never be able to encoun- ter a severe day's work on the back of a difiicult horse, or the other a chopping sea in any part of the Bay of Biscay. But if the learner of equestrianism says — " Make me a horseman," seat and hands can certainly be learned in a riding-school quite as well as in any situation I know of — no bad foundation — if obtained — to becoming a horseman ; and there are means and appliances in a riding-school to teach something more than the mere walking, trotting, and cantering a kind of automaton horse round its enclosure. As a boy, I believe I may say, I could ride any thing, and cared little for pace, fence, or country, or whether I could hold my horse or not ; but when I was put on the back of a very highly-dressed manege horse, and was directed what to do with rein and heel, and when the voice and whip of the professor in- duced the horse to rear, put his two fore feet on the wall, and in that position using hind and fore feet perpetrate a kind of side- long canter half way down the school, I was not a little aston- ished, and found sitting leaps over hurdles, gates, and fences much more easy than balancing my body in this rampant crab- like pace, if pace it could be called. 364 THE HOKSE. I further found, to my unbounded surprise, that this horse would vault on the plane surface of the school, when tele- graphed to do so, as high as a hunter at a gate, and this several times in succession. Although as obedient to my riding-school tutor as a con- ceited young cub, who had rode fox-hunting, could be expected to be, there was one point at issue between us ; he advocated the lengthened stirrup leather, straight knee, and erect military seat. I pertinaciously adhered to the reverse, fully impressed with the conviction that, having shown the way at fences to some men in the hunting-field, and exhibited with success on a race-course, 1 must know what riding was, better than all the school tutors in existence. This would, no doubt, have been fatal to my progress, had I been learning military horseman- ship ; but as I was only placed there to learn hands, I conde- scended to be instructed in this particular ; and both in that im- portant qualification, and, indeed, in firmness of seat, I profited much by my school practice. We now come to the third, and by far the best and most certain mode of making a horseman. This is by putting a boy on horseback very early in life, and also putting him under the care of a good horseman; as his instructor. Practice will cer- tainly, in a general way, teach a man of ordinary ability a good and ready mode of doing that, which he has constant occasion to do ; but it does not always follow, that by practice he learns the very best mode of doing it ; he does it sufficiently w^ell per- haps to answer his purpose ; but if there is a better and quicker mode of eftecting his object, he loses time by not adopting it, and does not effect his object nearly so well. If a boy or man has sense and temper enough to be taught, ho will save an in- finity of time, expense, and probably danger or hurt by learn- ing ; if not, in the case of riding, let him get a severe fall or two, or some equal inconvenience ; he will then learn that there are others, who know a little more than himself, and he will possibly afterward be willing to take instruction from any com- petent hand. Tlie result of these three different modes of learning horse- manship would probably be this — ^The one who learns to ride by sheer practice, will become very probably a good bold prao- THE NATURAL EIDER. 3G5 tical rider, but not a scientific one. Tlie one taught chiefly by precept may, nay will, become more or less scientific ; but will never get the perfectly easy and natural seat or look of him, who begun riding at an early age. He will never look as if a seat on horseback and on a chair was equally natural to him ; he will always appear artificial. I do not iriean to say he may not be made to ride well, possibly boldly; and, if well mounted, may in two or three seasons get to ride across country, as well as many, perhaps most, out. Still he will never shake off the certain artistical manner of doing things, inseparable from being first taught, and then practising, instead of the learning and practising having gone hand in hand from boyhood or child- hood. I have, perhaps, used the term artistically, so as to imply that doing a thing thus, that is, like an artist, is synonymous to describing it as being done well. I grant it is so ; but the dif- ferent modes of doing it is great; for instance, bi'illiant jockeys and race-riders take hold of their reins artistically; so do good hunting-riders and steeplechasers; that is, they do so like men accustomed to do it ; but they do not do so like a dragoon. He is taught but one way of taking up his bridle rein and one way of mounting his horse ; the others take their reins up in a seem- ingly careless way, but still in a proper one. The ti'oop horse is trained to stand still till mounted, and has a hint to move on ; so the sanie precise way of mounting can always be practised. But the race or steeplechase horses, and hunters, are not thus obedient ; some from vice will bite or kick, if they get a chance, or perhaps plunge before or after mounting, or sometimes both ; others from excitement fidget about and away from the rider, before he gets his foot in the stirrup ; others, the moment he has done so ; therefore such men are obliged to get on their horses as circumstances permit, — that is, as they can. Still they do so like artists. It would not quite have done for a man to stand twisting his fingers in a high-spirited, half-vicious thorough- bred's mane, and then get on, or attempt to get on him in ac- cordance with prescribed riding-school practice ; he would have been half eaten before he got into his saddle. The school-taught pupil gets up, we will say, quite properly, and rides the same ; that is, if all the horses he has to mount 366 THE HORSE. or ride are in habit and temper about on a par with the one on which he took lessons. But suppose they are quite different ; what beccnes of the one prescribed rule he has learnt? Put him out ot this and he would be quite astray ; lie would want the resources under different circumstances, that varied practice only can teach ; and in all he does there is ever a mannerism, or, to use an expression for the occasion, a one-wayism, that detects the man taught late in life ; for, to take a liberty with a line of Goldsmith's, — Let school-taught pride dissemble all it can, It leaves its habits stamp'd upon the man. Let us cast an eye on a squadron or regiment of cavalry, whether standing, walking, or trotting their liorses ; every man's hand is in the sam.e position, and in the same place. This looks extremely soldier-like and well, for uniformity sake ; but let it be remembered, that to enable this to be done, every horse is schooled till they all carry their heads alike, or at least enough so to enable each man to have a proper command of his horse's mouth while holding his rein hand or arm precisely the same as his right and left comrades. Thus, with four hundred horses all taught the same habits, carriage, and evolutions, one general rule suffices for four hundred men to make them do all that is required of them ; and the whole machinery of man and horse, from day to day, and year to year, performs the same thing in the same way ; and such mode of instruction would suffice for the private person also, if, like the soldier, he always rode the same horse, or one with the same habits ; always rode him un- der the same circumstances, and wanted him to j^erform merely the same routine of duty. The soldier requires good hands, and, in a greater or less de- gree, they are all brought to have such ; but he only wants hands, or rather a hand, to make a particular horse do a partic- ular thing. His business is somewhat like that of the driver of a locomotive engine ; there is a particular handle to increase or diminish its speed, or stop it ; each engine made on the same construction is managed in the same way, with a little variation as to the facility, with which the machinery is propelled, re- tarded, 01- stopped. It is thus with troop horses ; the same sig- THE CAVALRY EIDEE, 367 nals of heel and hand, lightly or forcibly used, as the disposition of the horse may require, make them all do the same thing. But the case is far different with the jockey, steeplechase rider, hunting man, or even with him who only rides on the road, if he rides a variety of horses, for he will find that he will want, not only good hands for a horse, but hands that are good for all sorts of horses, A man may say tliat he merely wislies to ride for amuse- ment, the show of the thing, air, or exercise, or the whole com- bined, and that he will only ride horses broken to suit his hand and seat, or, at all events, that go so as to suit them. Well and good ; and, if circumstances and his pursuits enable him to do this, he is quite right in doing it ; but he must not flatter him- self that he is a horseman ; a neat and pretty rider he may be ; and if so, and he only intends riding in the park, taking a canter to make a morning call along a fine level road, or escort- ing ladies at a watering-place, he is — on a well-broken easy- going horse — horseman enough for such purposes ; but if he means " to ride among horsemen, or in the field," he will find that, in old coaching phrase, " he wants another hand " — mean- ing that two — such as he owns — are not enough to be of much use to him in such circumstances and situations. I have stated that most cavalry soldiers have more or less good hands ; but I must unequivocally assert, and this without reservation, that nil good horsemen have. By such I do not mean mere bold, hard-riding, straight-going men across country ; many such have hands only fit to wield a sledge hammer, and the consequence is they cannot ride a delicate-mouthed, gentle- manly-going horse, and those they do ride soon get mouths as dead as the anvil the sledge strikes upon ; such men are only " bruising riders," but not good horsemen. What sort of a jockey would a man be with such hands? He could only ride a boring brute like Eclipse ; or, if he merely possessed the hand of the dragoon, he could only ride a horse whose mouth was amenable to even the signal the bit gives. How would he manage if, in the first race, he had to ride a resolute horse that gets his head nearly down to his knees, with no more mouth tlian a towed barge, about as easy to bring up, pulling a man's arms from their sockets ? He must not be let loose, or he would 368 THE H0K8E. run himself to a stand. If held too forcibly, he shakes his head, and thrusts it out ; and the reins being knotted, he would pull a rider out of his saddle unless he " gave and took with him." He is then put on a harum-scarum colt, that wildly throws up his head, staring at the sky, and, but for the martingale, making toothpicks of his ears — an accommodation the jockey avoids by a close seat, the head and bod}^ a little held back, and the hands steadying his horse's head as best he can. He is then put on a nervous, meek, timid two-years' old filly, with a mouth of silk ; a rude touch of her mouth would throw her all abroad, a sudden shifting of the seat would alarm her, and seeing or feeling a hand raised would frighten her to death. How during such a day would the one-way schooling succeed ? what, in such three cases, becomes of the thumbs turned up, the hands so many inches above the pommel, and the elbow fixed to a given point of the side ? In either of such cases all school rule as to riding a well-broken horse, would avail but very little indeed ; in either case the best of hands would be requisite ; but in each they must be brought into effect in a different manner. The steeplechase rider requires hands nearly as good as those of the jockey. I say nearly^ for these reasons ; he does not ride such young, half-broken animals as the former does. Steeplechase horses are not usually colts; they are practised before they are engaged in stakes ; consequently, more or less, know their business. They know what the bit means ; and if disposed to resist its influence, it does not arise from sheer igno- rance, so, by force or humoring, they are to be made amenable to it, without getting alarmed ; and, farther, it is not calculated upon, in a general way, that a steeplechase will come to so nice a point at the finish as a flat race ; so if a horse is allowed to, or will, take a little liberty with himself in the run, it is not so fatal as where it is presumed, or perhaps known, that, bar- ring unforeseen contingencies, there will not be more than a length difference between horses at tlie winning-post. Most determined, headstrong, and sometimes desperate horses the steeplechase rider has to contend with ; but it is not the wild, riotous conduct of the colt, as often proceeding from fright as from vice. We may sometimes bully an experienced horse out of his tricks, or display of stubbornness ; but it would not do with »ltl: ^ iO Bitty a point iiridiiw p»das ierii(je&. inctked lories, 'id if r.r'Jili mm nbar- than a i-jbt ^^ tie 'Ai Is WITHOUT STIRRUPS. 3G9 a colt prior to starting for alicavy stake ; lie must be controlled, but, in a general way, soothed, even if we know he deserves a sound thrashing. Many steeplechase horses, as well as old race-horses, are extremely nervous before starting and even when going, but it arises from a different cause to that which makes a two-year- old so ; the former are nervous because they know not wliat they are going about. Caressing and speaking kindly and encourag- ingly to such will usually reassure and pacify them ; they will not be alarmed by a man moving his hand, or judiciously shift- ing his seat, because they have found a rider do so without its producing inconvenience to them. But a timid two-year-old is alarmed at every thing ; a crowd alarms her, so does seeing a dozen horses by her side and around her. She has no definite cause of nervousness, like the old race-horse ; but she appre- hends danger, and feels excitement from any thing new to her. If she only feared the jockey, his caresses would probably soon pacify her ; but she would be equally alarmed if a crow flew nearer to her than usual. No school education as to horseman- ship would, therefore, put a man on his guard against such va- garies ; and riding a well-trained horse goes a very little way towards making a man a good general horseman in difficult sit- uations, or with difficult horses to manage. Of boys it would be useless to say much, and still more so to say much to them, for even in riding they would never vol- untarily take instruction if they were permitted to ride without it ; so, in cases where it is determined to make them horsemen, they must first be told, then obliged to do that which will en- able them to become such, and be left to find out the effect of what they are made to do, by after experience. There are, however, two modes of teaching boys to sit finn on their horse ; and as each has a different effect, I will men- tion them ; the one teaches the boy to trust to his hold on his saddle by his knees and thighs ; this is learnt by his riding for some time without stirrups. In personal illustration of this, I rode the whole of one season and the first half of another with fox-hounds without stirrups, and that, part of my second season, on full-sized horses. Tlie advantage of this mode of instruction is, that it teaches, or in fact obliges, a boy to balance his body, Vol. II.— 24 370 THE H0K8E. and sit still and firm in his seat, without any other aid than na- ture has supplied him with ; and it obliges him to keep his legs motionless ; for should he hold so loosely by his knees and thighs as to allow his legs to move or swing backward and for- ward on his saddle skirts, they would allow him to roll over the one or other side of his horse, and thus " the hope of the family " might be turned topsy-turvy. The next advantage derived from this plan is, it finally, in riding terms, gives a lad hands ; for so soon as he has learned a firm seat, and got in full confidence in this respect, his hands are as free and as much at liberty as if standing on the ground. For however fii'm he may want to hold his horse by the head, to assist, support, or check him, he wants no hold by his own hands, as a support or stay to his own body. In fact, by thus learning to ride in the first in- stance, a seat at once neat and firm is most easily to be acquired without the vile habit of " holding on by the bridle ; " which, if once contracted, it would be diflicult, if not impossible, to break a man of; and until that was done, he never could be half a horseman. If during the last page or two, or for the next, I write or quote personally, I do so to show that I write from personal practice, and not from mere observation or theory. I in no shape mean to infer that continuing to ride without stirrups would be advantageous ; on the contrary, I am clear it would have quite an opposite effect. It is very well, and I hold it as very advantageous, as a groundwork for beginners ; but the artist will require other aids to perfect his work. One of these is the stirrup. Had I gone on riding two or three more seasons without them, the consequence would probably have been, that from practice I should have become so accustomed to ride with- out them, that I should have been unable to avail myself of their assistance ; and though, on any thing that is not as slip- pery as a saddle, a man might sit an unruly horse quite as firm- ly without stirrups as with, still without their aid he could not ride for ordinary purposes to the best advantage, or make the most of his horse without their use. An Arab ma,y ride bare-backed, sit firmly, and do something like twenty miles within the hour, on the desert. But he does it in a wild way; and his horse, ridden by an English jockey, RACING BOYS. 3/1 would, I am quite certain, do it to greater advantage, that is, with less fatigue. His doing it, ridden as lie is, is nothing to the purpose ; it is whether he could not, by being more scien- tiiicall}' managed and ridden, do it either in shorter time, or in the same time with more ease. Racing, or rather exercise riding, hoys learn to ride in the directly opposite way. They are never allowed to ride even walking exercise without a saddle and stirrups ; they therefore learn to depend on them ; in short, with their comparatively lit- tle strength, they could not ride the horses they do if they did not. For in very free-going horses and hard pullers, by keep- ing their feet forward, the stirrup acts with thein as the toe- board does to a coachman with four hoi'ses in hand ; and if we were to select from the best riding boys in all the stables at Newmarket, we should not find one who could, like the dealer's lad, jump on a horse and ride him bare-backed; at all events, he could not ride him well ; and indeed I should say the chances are he would tumble off. So much for learning in one way only. Now the dealer's lad could not ride a race-horse as well as the other, but he could ride him ; and when merely following a head lad, probably he would ride him tolerably well, for he is accustomed to ride both with and without stirrups, and is indif- ferent as to which ; and in point of lightness of hand, and mak- ing the most of a good or bad mouth, the dealer's lad beats the Newmarket one hollow. This arises from his being taught and expected to make every horse he gets on go as well, and carry himself as handsomely, as he can be made to do ; and as he rides a dozen or more different horses every day, he acquires a hand for every horse. The Newmarket boy rides the same horse for months together, and probably not more than half a dozen different ones in as many years. Tliis is therefore by no means the best place to learn hands, though a very good one to teach him to hold strong pullers, which he can do better than the dealer's lad, though he may be physically far stronger. The remark might very naturally be made, that if, as I have said, a jockey requires good hands for all sorts of horses, and that riding exercise is not the best school to give such, it must be a bad one to select a jockey from, which I have stated is mostly done. 373 THE HOKSE. I will endeavor to reconcile this seeming incongruity. Ex- ercise boys have not, generally speaking, fine hands ; therefore, to a certain degree, it is objectionable as a school for a jockey. But to set against this, in the first place, there is no other in which the other requisites in a jockey can be taught, or of course learnt ; for training stables are the only places where a boy can become acquainted with the habits, temper, style of going, and powers of speed of the race-horse ; and, what is of quite as much consequence as all these put together, it is the best school to enable him to become a good judge of pace Without these acquirements no man can ever be a jockey. Having thus far answered the supposed remark, I hope it will be borne in mind, that, although I said jockeys have most- ly been exercise boys, I in no way even inferred that exercise boys mostly become jockeys ; for the fact is, there is not one in a dozen of these boys that has either head or hands for the pur- pose ; and it is because a boy is found to possess these in greater perfection than other boys in the same stables that gets him first put upon a race-horse as a jockey. I have now laid before my readers what I conceive to be the difierent effects of learning to ride without and with stir- rups, and of learning to ride with them only j and, whether man or boy, I should most strongly recommend the beginner to adopt the former course, satisfied as I am that for general riding it will give both the best seat and best hands. There are three descriptions of persons among men grown, who, if they mean to make riding a pursuit, would benefit by some advice on the subject ; the one is the man who has never ridden at all; the other one who has ridden a little, and, find- ing himself in difficulty, is satisfied he knows nothing about it ; the third is one who has ridden a good deal, and that very bad- ly. The first would be altogether the readiest pupil, and very likely would, in the shortest time, become a horseman. He will do as he is advised, because he has no inducement to do, nor does he know how to do, otherwise ; and, beginning right, the right way will become his most natural habit, and of course the one the easiest to him ; and having in commencing no habits at all, he will have no bad ones to correct. The next would give a little more trouble ; for as he has UNLEARNING ACQUIRED UABIT8. 373 ridden, Avhetlier it may have been twenty times or two hnndred, he nmst havG ridden somehow ; and though a horseman might very properly consider this as riding nohow, it will depend upon the turn of the rider's mind how far it mayor may not be found difficult to convince him it was so. But, as I have said, he must have ridden somehow, and that with him has become a liabit ; therefore, supposing he is diffident enough to be convinced his habits have been bad ones, he has to forget, or at least to fore- go, those while he learns proper ones, the former probably being by far the most difficult task. With the third, who has ridden a great deal, but ridden bad- ly, I wish to have nothing to do ; as it is probable, if not cer- tain, that he will be as opinionated as ignorant, and as unable as unwilling to appreciate or to profit by instruction. At all events, no credit is to be gained by such a pupil, and it is all but hopeless to attempt to make him into a horseman." — Harry Jlieover^s Pract. Horsemanship. In addition to this, I have only to state, that nothing which I have said above, in regard to the use of the martingale, is to be held as applying either to the riding of race horses, or to the riding or driving of fast-trotting horses. To both these ends the use of the martingale is indispensa- ble ; as, above all things, the heads of the animals must be kept steady and perfectly inflexible at a hard unyielding pull. The absence of a good mouth, or of a pleasant and handsome style of going is necessary to neither animal, and, in the trotter, the former would be a vice rather than a virtue, as the possession of a fine, delicate, light hand would be a disqualification, rather than an advantage, to the rider or driver of such animals. For race-riders, or riders and drivers of match-trotters, I give no directions — the professionals are better able to instruct me, than I to teach them; and amateurs in the former art can hardly ever expect to succeed ; while, in the latter branch of equestrian- ism, they can only acquire proficiency by practice and study on the course and on the road, and then, only at the disadvantage and penalty of unfitting themselves for any other sort of riding or driving, of acquiring a bad and ungainly seat, and of losing, if they ever possessed it, the lightness, sensibility, and delicacy of touch, which constitute what is known to horsemen as a good hand. 374 THE HOKSE. Tlie modes of breaking tlie young horse, as usually practised^ and as detailed, in some small degree, above, under the head of breeding, consist of letting him stand on the colts' or breaking bits ; lunging him, in a circle, by means of a long leading rein, with the aid of a four-horse whip ; by which he is taught his paces, and also how to turn and traverse — and, lastly, by put- ting him into the hand of a rough rider, who, according as he did or did not possess — what very few such men do possess — fine seat, fine hands, great judgment, great tact, unruffled temper, unwearied patience, indomitable perseverance, and perfect skill — in other words, talent approaching to genius, — turned out the horse perfectly well broke, which is the rare exception — half finished, which is the rule — or a vicious, immanageable brute, which is but too often the consequence of the breaker being, what he too often is, a sot, an ass, and a brute. The following are Stonehenge's additional rules for breaking a hunter. They are admirable, and easy to be understood and followed. For every saddle horse they are, moreover, well worth folloMdng; since not only is every saddle horse much better and more valuable for being a clever and easy leaper, but even, if his rider never desire to leap him, he ac- quires a more perfect use of his limbs, and a greater degree of docility, by having been put through the forms of these in- structions. BREAEING AND TEACHING. " Breaking is of course required for those colts, which are specially intended for hunters, but except in teaching to jump, it does not differ from the plan adopted in ordinary colt-breaking. Tlie same mouthing-bit which I have recommended above will also suit this kind of horse, but its reins should be buckled considerably tighter, and the horse " put upon it " for an hour a day until he bends himself well. He may also have what is called a " dumb jockey " buckled on his roller, with springs con- tained within its arms, by which the bit is allowed to give and take with the horse's action ; but still always having a tendency to bend the neck, and bring the horse back on his haunches. Unless this is effectually done, and the colt is made to use liis hind legs by bringing them well under liim, thus carrying a HORSE BREAKING. :375 good part of liis wciglit, he is never safe across ridge-and-furrow, nor in awkward places, where he is obliged to creep u]) close to the take-off, and gather all his legs together before making the spring. When the horse is being lunged he may be made to jump a bar, but not too often over a movable one, or he finds out its tendency to fall, and becomes careless, A fixed bar should be used as soon as the horse understands this part of his business, and he will not hurt himself if he falls over it a few times ; because there is nothing to hold his legs, and, conse- quently, he either falls forward or backward without injury. The bar should have side guides, so that in lunging, the horse must go over, or come back and face the whip of the groom following him ; and when they are properly managed, the leading-rein slides over them without catching, and the bar may be taken by the horse in each round of the lunge. Some horses seem to en- joy the fun w^hen they are clever and good-tempered, but not more than six or eight jumps should be given in any one lesson, for fear of disgusting the pulpil. When he is perfect over the bar with the lunging-rein, and after he is hrolien to all his paces, he may be ridden over it, or any small fences, in cool blood ; but he never ought to be put at this kind of work till he is per- fect at all his other lessons. For if he does not know what the spur, or the pull of the rein means, it is useless to confuse him by trying to make him do what he does not understand. No large jumps should ever be tried without hounds, and when the colt is willing to go when he is wanted over small j)laces, it is better to defer the conclusion of his jumping education until he can be taken out with hounds, as I have explained under the section treating of the teaching of the steeiilechaser. With hounds the colt is inclined to follow the field of horses, and will soon attempt any place his breaker puts him at ; though often making mistakes, and sometimes carrying the fence before him into the next field. Good hands, a firm seat, and an unruffled temper soon make him know his powers ; and in a few times he learns to avoid mishaps, and keeps his legs without difficulty. The break- ing-bit already described is the best to ride young hoi-ses with, as it is large, and allows of considerable pressure without iujmy ; 60 that if the breaker is obliged to keep the head straight with some force, the colt is not thereby dragged into the +ence, as would be 376 THE HORSE. the case with a small and sharp snaffle or with a curb. The same caution must now be exercised as before with regard to a too long continuance of the early lessons. The young hunter, as well as the steeplechaser, should be gradually accustomed to his practice, consequently should never have too much at first ; as there is some danger of disgusting him by needless repetition. And here, a few months since, I should have closed my ob- servations on riding and breaking, for the maiiege is neither at- tainable in this country, except by the aid of circus companies, nor necessary to a rider ; though, if superadded to the other qualifications of a good field and road horseman, it is a grace to an equestrian, and a vast excellence to every horse, except a race- horse, a hunter, and a trotter, for two of which manege rules would be utterly useless, if not positively detrimental, and for the third — the hunter — only in a very preliminary and moderate degree desirable, so far, I mean, as teaching him how to get his hind legs under him. Lately, however, I have come across Mr. Baucher's system of horsemanship, both as teaching men how to ride themselves, and how to break horses, by an invariable, uniform and infalli- ble method. I have no hesitation, although I took it up with considerable doubt and distrust, in adopting it as all that it pre- tends to be ; and in most urgently recommending all my read- ers, who desire to become perfect riders themselves, and to have their horses perfectly broken, to adopt all his preliminary steps, both of learning to ride and of breaking, as the best ever intro- duced, and as infallibly certain, if practised with patience and temper, to produce the result desired. So satisfied am I of the excellence of this method, and of the advantage of introducing it, that not being, by any means, satis- fied with the rendering of the original in the only American edition, I have prepared a version of such parts of the work as I judge essential to the learning how to make accomplished riders, and thoroughly-broken horses for general purposes — not carry- ing the system to its extreme length, which would make all horses perfect manege^ or circus, or cavalry horses, and all riders, riding-masters, circus-masters, or dragoons — which is neither necessary nor desirable — and this I now submit to my readers. I farther advise any one, who desires to have a per- BAUOHER 8 SYSTEM. 377 feet riding liorse, to devote a few hours daily to training his animal, which will soon be in itself a source of pleasure and amusement, apart from the ultimate advantage to be obtained — and farther, whether he be a mere tyro and learner, or an old horseman, to go through a series of Baucher's lessons for the acquisition of flexibility of the person and of a perfect seat on horseback, being well assured that, in the former case, it will afford the speediest and easiest means of becoming a rider, and that, in the latter, it will give such increased facility, and mas- tery of the animal, as well as of the horseman's own powers, as will largely and amply remunerate him for the pains and the time devoted to the experiment. " By following my new instructions," says Mr. Baucher on his forty-first page, " relating to the seat of a man on horseback, we shall soon arrive at certain results ; they are as easy to un- derstand as to demonstrate. Two sentences are sufficient to ex- plain all to the rider, and enable him to obtain a good seat by the simple advice of the instructor. The rider must expand his chest as much as possible, so that every part of his frame rests upon that next below it, for the purpose of increasing the adhesion of his buttocks to the saddle. The arms should fall easily by the sides. The thighs and legs should, by their own strength, find as many points of contact as possible with the saddle and the horse's sides ; the feet will naturally follow the motion of the legs. By these few lines it is shown how simple a thing it is to acquire a seat. The means which I recommend for readily obtaining a good seat remove all the difficulties which the plan pursued by our predecessors presented. The pupil of old understood nothing of the long catechism, recited in a loud voice by the instructor, from the first word to the last ; consequently he could not exe- cute it. Here one word replaces all those sentences ; but we previously go through a course of practisings for the rendering of his frame flexible and supple. This course will make the rider expert, and consequently intelligent. One month will not elapse before the most stupid and awkward recruit will find himself able to sit a hoi*se properly, without the aid of words of command. The horse is to be led upon the ground, saddled and bri- 378 THE H0E8E. died. The instructor must take two pupils ; of whom one shall hold the horse bj the bridle, and observe what the other does, in order that he may be able to perform in his turn. The pupil shall ajDproach the horse's shoulder and prepare to mount ; for this purpose he is to lay hold of, and separate with the right hand, a handful of mane, and pass it into the left hand, taking hold as near the roots as possible, without twisting them ; he must then grasp the pommel of the saddle with the right hand, the four fingers inside, and the thumb outside ; when springing lightly, he will raise himself upon his wrists. As soon as his middle reaches the height of the horse's withers, he must pass the right leg over the croup, without touching it, and place himself lightly in the saddle. This vaulting will tend to render the man active ; and he should be made to repeat it eight or ten times, before letting him finally seat himself. The repetition of this exercise will soon teach him the use of his arms and loins. For the stationary exercise on horseback, an old, quiet horse should be chosen in preference ; the reins to be knotted, and to hang on his neck. The pupil being on horseback, the instructor will examine his natural position, in order to exercise more frequently those parts wdiich have a tendency either to weakness or rigidity. The lesson will commence with the chest. He must expand the chest, and hold himself in this position for some time, without regard to the stiffness which it will occasion at first. It is by the exertion of force that the pupil will obtain suppleness and flexibility, and not by tlie relaxation of his natu- ral powers so much and so uselessly recommended. Motions at first produced only by great effort, will not require so much ex- ertion after a while, for the pupil will then have gained skill, and skill, in this case, is but the result of exertions properly combined and employed. Wliat is first done bj^ the exertion of a force equal to twenty pounds is afterward effected by an effort gradually diminishing. "Wlien it is re(hiced to the last, we may say that skill is attained. If we commence by a smaller effort, we cannot attain this result. The flexions of the loins must be repeated, allowing tlie pupil often to let himself down into his natural relaxed position, in order to accustom him to throw his chest quickly into a good position. The body being FLEXURES OF THE LIMBS. 379 well placed, the instructor will proceed — first, to the lesson of the arm, which consists in moving it in every direction, first bent, and afterward extended ; secondly, that of the head ; which must be turned right and left without allowing its motion to affect the position of the shoulders. When the lessons of the chest, arms, and head, have pro- duced a satisfactory result, which they ought to do at the end of four days — eight lessons — we pass to the pupil's legs. He must remove one of his thighs as far as possible from the flaps of the saddle ; and afterward replace it with a rotatory movement from without inward, in order to make it adhere to the saddle at as many points of contact as possible. The in- structor should watch that the thigh does not fall back heavily; it should resume its position by a slowly progressive motion, and without a jerk. He ought, moreover, during the first lesson, to take hold of the pupil's leg, and direct it, to make him under- stand the proper way of performing this displacement. He will thus save him fatigue, and obtain the result sooner. This kind of exercise, very fatiguing at first, requires fre- quent rests ; it would be wrong to prolong the exercise beyond the powers of the pnpil. The motions of bringing back the thigh which place it in contact with the saddle, and that of protruding it, which separates it from the saddle, becoming more easy, the thighs will acquire a suppleness admitting of their adhesion to the saddle in a good position. Then come the practices for flex- ing the legs. The instructor should watch that the knees always preserve their perfect adherence to the saddle. The legs are to be swung backward and forward like the pendulum of a clock ; that is to say, the pnpil will raise them so as to touch the cantle of the saddle with his heels. The repetition of these flexions will soon render the legs supple, pliable, and independent of the thighs. The flexions of the le^s and thio^hs are to be continued for four days — eight lessons. To make each of these movements more correct and easy, eiglit days — or sixteen lessons — will be devoted to them. The fifteen daj's — thirty lessons — which remain to complete the month, will continue to be occupied by the exercise of stationary supplings ; but, in order that the pupil may learn to combine strength of the arms with that of the loins, he must 380 THE H0E8E. be made to hold at arm's-lengtli, progressively, weights increas iijg from ten to forty pounds. This exercise should commence with the least fatiguing position, the arm being bent, and the hand near the shoulder, and this flexion should be continued to the full extent of the arm. The position of the chest and trunk must not be affected by this exercise, but must be kept steady in its attitude. The strength of pressure of the knees may be judged of, and even produced, by the following method. This, which at first sight will perhaps appear of slight importance, will, never- theless, bring about great results. The instructor should take a narrow piece of leather about twenty inches long, and place one end of it between the pupil's knee and the flap of the saddle. The pupil will exert the force of his knees on the saddle to pre- vent its slipping, while the instructor will draw it toward him slowly and progressively. This process will serve as a dyna- mometer to judge of the increase of power. The strictest watch must be kept that each force acting separately shall not put other forces in action. That is to say, that the movement of the arms shall not affect the shoulders, or put them in motion. It should be the same with the thighs, in respect to the body ; with the legs, in respect to the thighs, and so with the rest. The power of displacing and flexing, at will, each several limb, having been thus separately obtained, the chest and seat are to be temporarily displaced, in order to teach the rider to recover his proper position without assistance. This is to be done as follows. The instructor, being placed on one side, must push the pupil's hip, so that his seat will be moved out of the seat of the saddle. The instructor will then allow him to get back into the saddle, being careful to watch that, in regain- ing his seat, he makes use of his hips and knees only, in order to make him use only those parts nearest to his seat. In fact, the aid of the shoulders would soon affect the hand, and this the horse ; the assistance of the legs would have still worse results. In a word, in all the displacements, the pupil must be taught not to have recourse, in order to direct the horse, to the means which keep him in his seat, and vice versa, not to employ, in order to keep his seat, those means wliich direct the horse. Here but a month has elapsed, and these equestrian gym- BREAKING THE HOUSE. 381 nasties will Lave made a rider of a person who may at first have appeared incapable of becoming such. Having mastered the preliminary trials, he will impatiently await the first movements of the horse, in order to give himself up to them with the ease of an experienced rider. Fifteen days — thirty lessons — will be devoted to the walk, the trot, and the gallop. Here the pupil should solely en- deavor to follow the movements of the horse ; therefore, the in- structor will oblige him to attend to his seat only, and not to at- tempt to guide the horse. He will only require the pupil at first, to ride straight before him ; and secondly, to ride in every direction, with one rein of the snaflGle in each hand. At the end of four days — eight lessons — he may be directed to take the curb rein in his left hand. Tlie right hand, which is now free, must be held alongside of the left, that he may early get the habit of sitting square — with his shoulders abreast and equal. The horse should be made to trot as much to the right as to the left. When the seat is firmly settled at all the different paces, the instructor will explain simply, the connection between the wrists and the legs, as well as their separate effects. Here the rider will commence the horse's education, by following the progression I shall proceed to explain. Tlie pupil will be made to understand the reasons for each practice, and will be so led to perceive how intimately the education of the man is connected with that of the horse. 1. Flexions of the loins for producing expansion of the chest, four days, eight lessons. 2. Displacements and replacements of the thighs, and flex- ions of the legs, four days, eight lessons. 3. General exercises of all the parts in succession, eight days, sixteen lessons. 4. Displacements of the trunk, exercises of the knees and arms with weights in the hands, fifteen days, thirty lessons. 5. Position of the rider, the horse being at a walk, a trot, and a gallop, in order to fashion and confirm the seat at these different paces, fifteen days, thirty lessons. 6. Education of the horse by the rider, seventy-five days, and one hundred and fifty lessons. 382 THE HORSE. The whole being accomplished in a hundred and twenty- one days, two hundred and forty-two lessons. OF THE FORCES OF THE HORSE. The horse, like all organized beings, is possessed of a weight and of forces peculiar to himself. The weight inherent to the material of which the animal is composed, renders the mass in- ert, and tends to fix it to the ground. The forces, on the con- trary, by the power they give him of moving this weight, of di- viding it, of transferring it from one of his parts to another, communicate movement to his whole being, determine his equilibrium, speed, and direction. To make this truth more evident, let us suppose a horse in repose. Plis body will be in perfect equilibrium, if each of its members supports exactly that part of the weight which falls upon it in this position. If he wish to move forward at a walk, he must transfer that part of the weight, resting on the leg which he moves first, to those that will remain fixed to the ground. It will be the same thing in other paces, the transfer acting from one diagonal to the other in the trot, from the front to the rear, and reciprocally, in the gallop. We must not then confound the weight with the forces ; the latter producing the results, the former being sub- ordinate to them. It is by removing the weight from one ex- tremity to the other that the forces put tlie limbs in motion, or keep them stationary. The slowness or quickness of the trans- fers fixes the different paces, which are correct or false, even or uneven, according as these transfers are executed with cor- rectness or irregularity. It is understood that this motive power is subdivisible ad infinitum^ since it is dispersed throngh a''l the muscles of the animal. When the latter, himself, determines the use of them, the forces are instinctive ; I shall call them transmitted, when they emanate from the rider. In the first case, the man is gov- erned by his horse, and is merely the plaything of his caprices ; in the second, on the contrary, he makes the horse a docile in- strument, submissive to all the impulses of his will. The horse, then, from the moment he is mounted, should act only b}'" trans- mitted forces. The invariable application of this principle con- stitutes the true art of the horseman. rKINCIPLES OF BRKAKINO. 383 But such a result Ciinuot ])0 attained instantaneously. Tlio young horse, in freedom, having been accustomed to regulate his own movements, will not, at first, suhmit without difficulty and resistance to the strange influence that now assumes to take the entire control of them. A struggle must necessarily ensue between the horse and his rider, who will be overcome unless he is possessed of energy, patience, and, above all, knowledge necessary to the carrying of his point. The forces of the ani- mal being the element upon which the rider must principally work, first for conquering, and in the end for directing them, it is necessary he should apply himself to these before any thing else. He must study what they arc, whence they spring, the parts where they unite to etfect the strongest resistance by mus- cular contraction, and the physical causes, which occasion these contractions. When this is discovered, he will proceed with his pupil b}^ means in accordance with his nature, and his lU'o- gress will be proportionably rapid. Unfortunately, we search in vain, in ancient or modern authors on horsemanship, I will not say for rational principles, but even for any data in connection with the forces of the horse. All speak very prettily about resistances, oppositions, lightness, and equilibrium ; but none of them have understood how to tell us what causes these resistances, how we can combat them, de- stroy them, and produce that lightness and equilibrium, which they so earnestly recommend. It is this hiatus which has caused so much doubt and obscurity about the principles of horsemanship; it is this that has kept the art so long sta- tionary ; it is this hiatus, which, in a word, I conceive myself able to fill. And first, I lay down the principle that all the resistances of young horses spring, in the first place, from a physical cause, and that this cause only becomes a moral one, through the awk- wardness, ignorance, or brutality of the rider. In fact, besides the natural stifi'ness peculiar to all horses, each of them has his own peculiar conformation, the greater or less perfection of which produces the degree of harmony which exists between the forces and the weight. The want of this harmony occasions the ungracefulness of their paces, the difficulty of their move- ments, in a word, all the obstacles to a good education. In a 384 THE HORSE. state of freedom, however bad may be the structure of a horse, instinct is sufficient to enable him to make such a use of his forces as to maintain his equilibrium ; but there are movements which it is impossible that he should make, until a preparatory exercise shall have put him in the way of supplying the defects of his organization by a better combined use of his motive power. A horse puts himself in motion only by means of as- suming a given position ; if his forces be such as to oppose themselves to this position, they must first be annulled, before they can be placed by the only ones which can effect it. Now, I ask, if before overcoming these first obstacles, the rider adds to them the weight of his own body, and his unreason- able demands, must not the animal experience still greater diffi- culty in executing certain movements ? The efforts we make to compel him to submission, being contrary to his nature, must we not necessarily find insurmountable opposition? He will naturally resist, and with so much the more advantage, because his forces being ill-distributed, will suffice to paralyze the efforts of his rider. The resistance then emanates, in this case, from a physical cause. This becomes a moral one from the moment when — the struggle going on by the same processes — the horse begins of his own accord to concert means for resisting the tor- ture imposed on him, and when we undertake to force into ope- ration parts, which have not previously been rendered supple, and liable to flexion. "When things come to this state, they can only from bad become worse. The rider, soon disgusted at the impotence of his own efforts, will throw upon the horse the responsibility of his own ignorance ; he will brand as a jade an animal possess- ing perhaps the most brilliant resources, and of which, with more discernment and tact, he could have made a hackney as docile in character, as graceful and agreeable in his paces. I have often remarked that horses considered indomitable, are those w;hich develope the most energy and vigor, when we know how to remedy those physical defects, which prevent their mak- ing use of them. As to those which, in spite of their bad for- mation, are by a similar system made to show a semblance of obedience, we need thank nothing but the softness of their natures. If they can be made to submit to the simplest exer MALCONFORMA'nON. 385 cise, it is only on condition that we do not demand any thing more of them ; for tliey wonkl soon find energy to resist any farther attempts. The rider can make them go along at differ- ent paces, to he sure ; hut how disconnected, how stiff, how nngraccful in their movements, and how ridiculous such steeds make their unfortunate riders look, as they toss them about at will, instead of being guided by them ? This state of things is natural and necessaiy, unless we first remove the cause of it ; the irnproper distribution of their forces, and the rigidity caused hy a had coo') formation. But it may be objected, allowing that these difficulties are caused by the formation of the horse, how is it possible to remedy them ? You do not surely pretend to change the structure of the animal, and reform the work of nature ? Undoubtedly not ; but while I confess that it is impossible to give more breadth to a narrow chest, to lengthen a short neck, to lower a high croup, to shorten and fill out long, weak, narrow loins, I do not the less insist that, if I prevent the different muscular contractions re- sulting from these physical defects, if I supple the muscles, if I make myself master of the forces so as to use them at will, it will be easy for me to conquer these resistances, to give more action to the weak parts, and to subdue the excess of those which are too vigorous, and thus to make up for the deficiencies of nature. Such results, I do not hesitate to say, were and still are im- possible under the old methods. But if the science of those, who follow the old beaten track, find so constant an obstacle in the great number of horses of defective formation, there are, un- fortunately, some horses who, by the perfection of their organi- zation, and the consequent facility of their education, contribute greatly to perpetuate the impotent routines that have been so unfavorable to the progress of horsemanship. A well consti- tuted horse is one, all the parts of which being regularly harmo- nized, induce the perfect equilibrium of the whole. It would be' as difficult for such a subject to depart from this natural equili- brium, and take up an improper position, for the purpose of resistance, as it is at first painful to the badly formed horse to be brought into that just distribution of forces, without which no regularity of movement can be hoped. Vol. II.— 25 386 THE HORSE. " It is then onlj in the education of these last that the real difficulties of horsemanship consist. With the others the break- ing ought to be, so to say, instantaneous ; since, all the springs being in their places, there is nothing to be done but to put them in motion ; this result is always obtained by my method. Yet the old principles demand two or three years to reach this point. And when, by feeling his way without any certainty of success, the horseman, gifted with tact and experience, succeeds at last in accustoming the horse to obey the impressions communicated to him, the rider imagines that he has surmounted great difficul- ties, and attributes to his skill a state so near to that of nature, that correct principles would have obtained it in a few days. Then as the animal continues to display in all his movements the grace and lightness natural to his beautiful formation, the rider does not scruple to take all the merit to himself; thus showing himself as presumptuous in this case as he was unjust when he made the badly formed horse responsible for the fail- ure of his attempts. If we once admit these truths ; — ■ That the education of the horse consists in the complete sub- jection of his powers ; That we can only make use of his powers at will, by annul- ling all resistances ; And that these resistances have their source in the muscular contractions occasioned by physical defects ; The only thing necessary will be to seek out the parts in which these contractions arise, in order to endeavor to oppose and destroy them. Long and conscientious observations have shown me that, whatever be the faults of formation that prevent a just distribu- tion of forces in the horse, it is always in the neck that the most immediate effect is felt. There is no improper movement, no resistance, which is not preceded by the contraction of this part of the animal ; and as the jaw is intimately connected with the neck, the rigidity of the one is instantly communicated to the other. These two points are the fulcrum upon which the horse relies, in order to defy and overpower all the rider's efforts. We may easily conceive the immense obstacle they must present to the exertions of the latter, since the neck and head being the THE FLEXING8 OF TllE IIOR8E. 387 two principal levers by which we direct the animal, it is impos- sible to obtain any thing from him until we render ourselves masters of tliese first and indispensable means of action. Behind the parts in which the forcea are most exerted by muscular con- tractions for resistance, are the loins and the croup. The contraction of tliese two opposite extremities are, mu- tually the one to the other, causes and effects, that is to say, the rigidity of the neck induces that of the haunches, and vice versa. We may combat the one by the other ; and so soon as we have succeeded in anuUing them, so soon as we have re-established the equilibrium and harmony which they prevented between the fore and hind parts, the education of the horse will l:)e half finished, I proceed now to point out the means of arriving in- fallibly at this result. THE FLEXINGS OF THE HOKSE. This work being an exposition of a method which is designed to subvert most of the old principles of horsemanship, it is under- stood that I now address men only who are already conversant with the equestrian art, and unite to an assured seat a familiarity with the horse, sufficiently great to understand all that concerns his mechanism. I will not, then, revert to the elementary processes ; it is for the instructor to judge if his pupil possess a proper de- gree of solidity of seat, and is sufficiently a part of the horse ; for at the same time that a good seat produces this identification, it favors the easy and regular play of the rider's extremities. My present object is to treat principally of the education of the horse ; but this education is too intimately connected with that of the rider, that he should make any considerable progress in the one without a knowledge of the other. In explaining the processes which should produce perfection in the animal, I shall necessarily teach the horseman to apply them himself; he will only have to practise to-morrow what I teach him to-day. Never- theless, there is one thing that no precept can give ; that is, a fineness of touch, a delicacy of equestrian sensibility which be- longs only to certain privileged organizations, and without which, we seek in vain to pass certain limits. Having said this, we will return to our subject. 388 THE HORSE. We now know the parts of the horse in which the muscular contractions lie which produce the most resistance, and we feel the necessity of supplying them. Shall we then cease to attack, exercise, and conquer them all at once ? No ; this would be to fall back into the old error, the inefficiency of which we are convinced of. The animal's muscular power is infinitely supe- rior to ours ; his instinctive forces, moreover, being able to sus- tain themselves the one by the others, we must inevitably be conquered if we put t^iem all at once in motion. Since the contractions have their seat in separate parts, let us profit by this division to combat them separately, as a skilful general destroys, in detail, forces which, when combined, he would be unable to resist. For the rest, whatever the age, the disposition, and the structure of my pupil, ray course of proceeding at the start will always be the same. The results will only be more or less prompt and easy, according to the degree of perfection in his nature, and the influence of the hand to which he has been pre- viously subjected. The flexings, which will have no other object in the case of a well-made horse, than that of preparing his forces to yield to our influence, will re-establish calm and confi- dence in a horse that has been badly handled ; and in a defec- tive formation, will make those contractions disappear, which are the causes of resistance, and the only obstacles to the pro- ducing of a perfect equilibrium. The difficulties to be sur- mounted will be in proportion to this complication of obstacles, but will quickly disappear with a little perseverance on our part. In the progression we are about to pursue, in order to produce suppleness in all the different parts of the animal, we shall naturally commence with the most important parts, that is to say, with the jaw and the neck. The head and neck of the horse are at once the rudder and compass of the rider. By them he directs the animal ; by them, also, he can ascertain the regularity and precision of his move- ments. The equilibrium of the whole body is perfect, and its lightness complete, when the head and neck remain of them- selves easy, pliable, and graceful. On the contrary, there can be no elegance, no ease of the whole, when these two parts are rigid. Preceding the body of the horse in all the impulses STrFFNESS OF NECK. 389 communicated to it, they ought to give warning, and show bj their attitude the positions to be taken, and the movements to be executed. The rider has no power so long as they remain contracted and rebellious ; he disposes of the animal at will, when once they become flexible and easily managed. If the head and neck do not first commence the changes of direction, if in circular movements they are not inclined in a curved line, if in backing they do not bend back upon themselves, and if their lightness be not always in harmony with the different paces at which we wish to go, the horse will have it in his own power to execute or to refuse these movements, since he will remain master of the employment of his own forces. From the first moment I observed the powerful influence exercised by the stiffness of the neck on the whole mechanism of the horse, I attentively sought the means to remedy it. Re- sistance to the hand acts always either sideways, upward or downward. I at first imagined that the neck was the sole source of these resistances, and applied myself to suppling the animal by flexions, repeated in every direction. The result was immense ; but although, at the end of a certain time, the sup- plings of the neck rendered me perfectly master of the forces of tlie fore-parts of the horse, I still found a slight resistance for which I could not at first account. At last, I discovered that it proceeded from the jaw. The flexibility I had communicated to the neck even increased the effect of this stiffness of the muscles of the lower jaw, by permitting the horse in certain cases to escape the action of the bit. I then bethought me of the means of combating these resistances in this, their last stronghold, and from that moment it is there I have commenced my work of suppling with that part. The first exercise is performed on foot, and gives the means of making the horse come to the man, and rendering him steady to mount and generally docile. Before commencing the exercises of flexions, it is essential to give the horse a first lesson of subjection, and teach him to recognize the power of man. The first act of submission, which might appear unimportant, will have the effect of speedily ren- dering him calm, of giving him confidence, and of preventing 390 THE H0K8E. all those movements which might distract his attention, and mar the success of the commencement of his education. Two lessons, of half an hour each, will suffice to obtain the preparatory obedience of every horse. The pleasure we expe- rience in thus playing with him will naturally lead the rider to continue this exercise for a few moments each day, and make it both instructive to the horse and useful to himself. The mode of proceeding is as follows ; — The rider will approach the horse, without roughness or timidity, his whip under his arm ; he will speak to him without raising his voice too much, and will pat him on the face and neck ; then with the left hand he will lay hold of the curb reins, about six or seven inches from the branches of the bit, keeping his wrist stiff, so as to present as much force as possible when the horse resists. The whip will be held firmly in the right hand, the point towards the ground, then slowly raised as high as the horse's chest, in order to tap it at intervals of a second. The first natural movement of the horse will be to withdraw from the direction in which the pain comes, by backing away from it. The rider will follow this backward movement, without discontinuing the firm tension of the reins, or the little taps with the whip on the breast, applying them all the time with the same degree of intensity. The rider should be perfectly self-possessed, that there may be no indica- tion of anger or weakness in his motions or looks. , Becoming tired of this constraint, the horse will soon seek to avoid the in- fliction by another movement, and by coming forward he will arrive at it; the rider will avail himself of this second instinctive movement to stop and caress the animal with his hand and voice. The repetition of this exercise will give the most sur- prising results, even in the first lesson. Tlie horse, having dis- covered and understood the means by which he can avoid the pain, will not wait till the whip touches him, he will anticipate it by rushing forward at the least gesture. The rider will take advantage of this to effect, by a downward force of the bridle hand, the depression of the neck, and the getting him in hand ; he will thus at an early period of his education dispose the horse to receive the exercises which are to follow. This training, besides being a great recreation, will serve to render the horse steady to mount, will greatly abridge the FLEXIONS OF THE JAW. 391 process of liis education, and accelerate the development of his intelligence. Should the horse, by reason of his restless or wild nature, become very unruly, we should have recourse to the cavesson, as a means of repressing his disorderly movements, and use it with little jerks. I would add, that it requires great prudence and discernment to use it Avith tact and moderation. The flexions of the jaw, as well as the two flexions of the neck which follow, are executed standing still, by the man on foot. The horse must be brought out to the ground saddled and bridled, with the reins on his neck. The man will flrst see that the bit is properly placed in the horse's mouth, and that the curb-chain is fastened so that he can introduce his finger between the links and the horse's chin. Then looking the animal good- naturedly in the eyes, he will place himself before him near his head, holding his body straight and firm, planting his feet a little way apart in order to steady himself, and enable him to struggle advantageously against all resistances. In order to execute the flexion to the right, the man should take hold of the right curb-rein with the right hand, at about six inches from the branch of the bit, and the left rein with the left hand, at only three inches from the left branch. He must then draw his right hand towards his body, pushing out his left hand so as to turn the bit in the horse's mouth. The force employed ought to be entirely determined by and proportioned to the resistance of the jaw and neck, and of these only, so as not to affect the rest of his body. If the horse back, to avoid the flexion, the opposition of the hands should still be continued. If the preceding exercise have been completely and carefully practised, it will be easy by the aid of the whip to prevent this retrograde movement, which is a great obstacle to all kinds of flexions of the jaw and neck. Figure 1. So soon as the flexion is obtained, the left hand will let the left rein slip to the same length as the right, then drawing the two reins equally, will bring the head near to the breast, and hold it there oblique and perpendicular, until it sustains itself without assistance in this position. The horse, by champing the bit, will show that he is in hand as well as perfectly submissive. The man, to reward him, will cease drawing on the reins imme- 392 THE HORSE. diatelj, and after some seconds will allow him to resume liis natural position. Figure 2. Figure 1. The flexion of the jaw to the left is executed upon the same principles, and by inverse means ; the man being careful to change alternately from the one to the other. Figure 2. The importance of these flexions of the jaw is easily un- derstood. The result of them is to prepare the horse to yield instantly to the lightest pressure of the bit, and to supple DEPKE88ION OF NECK. 393 directly the muscles which join the head to the neck. As the head ought to precede and determine the different attitudes of the neck, it is indispensable that the latter part be always in subjection to the former, and respond to every impulse conveyed to it. This would be only partially the case, should we produce flexibility in the neck alone, which would then force the head to obey it, by drawing the latter along in its movements. The cause appears, therefore, why I at first experienced resistance, in spite of the pliability of the neck, of which I could not ima- gine the cause. The followers of my method, to whom I have not yet had an opportunity of making known the new means just explained, will learn with pleasure that this process not only brings the flexibility of the neck to a greater degree of per- fection, but saves much time in finishing the suppling. The exercise of the jaw, while fashioning the mouth and head, also induces flexibility of the neck, and accelerates the getting of the horse in hand. This exercise is the first of our attempts to accustom the forces of the horse to yield to those of the rider. It is necessary then to manage it very nicely, so as not to discourage him at first. To enter on the flexions roughly would be to shock the animal's intelligence, who would not in that case have time to comprehend what is required of him. The opposition of the hands will be commenced gently but firmly, nor cease until perfect obedience is obtained ; except, indeed, the horse back against a wall, or into a corner ; but.it will diminish or increase its effect in proportion to the resistance, in such a way as always to govern it, but not with too great violence. The horse which will not at first submit without difficulty, will in the end come to regard the man's hand as an irresistible regulator, and will accustom himself so completely to obey it, that we shall soon obtain, by a simple pressure of the rein, what at first required the whole strength of our arms. At each renewal of the lateral flexions, some progress will be made in the obedience of the horse. As soon as his first re- sistances are a little diminished, we must pass to the perpen- dicular flexions or depression of the neck. The man will place himself as for the lateral flexions of the j-aw ; he will take hold of the reins of the snaffle with the 394 THE HOKSE. left Land, at six inches from the rings, and the curb-reins at about two inches from the bit. He will oppose the two hands by effecting the depression with the left and the proper posi- tion with the right. Figure 3. As soon as the horse's head shall fall of its own accord, and by its own weight, the man will instantly cease all kind of force, and allow the animal to resume his natural position. DEPRESSION OF NEOK. 395 This exercise, being often repeated, will soon give supple- ness to the elevating muscles of the neck, which play a promi- nent part in the resistances of the horse, and will I'arther lacili- tate the direct flexions and the getting the head in position, wliich should follow the lateral flexions. The man can execute this, as well as the preceding exercise, by himself; yet itwonld be well to put a second person in the saddle, in order to accus- tom the horse to the exercise of the supplings with a rider. This rider should just hold the snaffle-reins, without drawing on them, in his right hand, the nails downward. The flexions of the jaw will have already communicated suppleness to the upper part of the neck, but we have obtained it by means of a powerful and direct motive power, and we must accustom the horse to yield to a less direct i-egulating force. Furthermore, it is desirable that the pliability and flexi- bility, especially necessary in the upper part of the neck, should be transmitted throughout its whole extent, so as entirely to destroy its rigidity. The force from above downward, practised with the snaflSe, acting only by the head-stall on the top of the head, often takes too long to make the horse lower his head. In this case, we must cross the two snaifle reins by taking the left rein in the right, and the right rein in the left hand, about six or seven inches from the horse's mouth, in such a way as to cause a pretty strong pressure upon the chin. This force, like all the others, must be continued until the horse yields. The flexions being repeated with this more powerful agent, will put him in a con- dition to respond to the means previously indicated. If the horse responded to the first flexions represented by Figure 4, it would be unnecessary to make use of this one, (Figure 5). We can act directly on the jaw so as to render it prompt in moving. In order to do this, we take the left curb-rein about six inches from the horse's mouth, and draw it straight towards . the left shoulder ; at the same time we draw the left rein of the snaffle forward, in such a way that the wrists of the person holding the two reins shall be opposite and on a level with each other. The two opposed forces will soon cause a separation of the jaws, and end all resistance. The force ought always to be proportioned to that of the horse, whether in his resistance, or in 396 THE H0K8E. his easy submission. Thus, hj means of this direct force, a few lessons will be sufficient to give a pliability to the part in ques- tion which could not have been obtained by any other means. Fiffure 6. Figure 5, For the lateral flexions of the neck, the man will place himself near the horse's shoulder, as for the flexions of the jaw ; he will take hold of the right snaffle-rein, which he will draw upon across the neck, in order to establish an intermediate point between the influence which is conveyed from himself and the resistance which the horse off'ers ; he wWi hold up the left rein with the left hand about a foot from the bit. As soon as the horse endeavors to avoid the constant tension of the right rein by inclining his head to the riglit, he will let the left rein slip so as to offer no opposition to the flexion of the neck. When- LATERAL FLKXIONS OF THE NECK. 397 ever the horse endeavors to escape the constraint of the right rein, by bringing his croup around, he will be brought into place again by slight pulls on the left rein. Fisure 6. "When the head and neck have entirely yielded to the right, the man will draw equally on both reins to place the head perpendicularly. Suppleness and lightness will soon follow this position, and. as soon as the horse evinces, by champing the bit, entire freedom from stiffness, the man will cease the tension of the reins, being careful that the head shall not avail itself of this moment of freedom to displace itself suddenly. In this case, it will be sufficient to restrain it by a slight support of the right rein. After having kept the horse in this position for some seconds, the instructor will make him resume his former posi- 398 THE HORSE. tion bj drawing on the left rein. It is most important that the animal in all his movements should do nothing of his own accord. Tlie flexion of the neck to the left is executed after the same principles, but by inverse means. The man can repeat with the curb, what he has previously done with the snaffle-reins ; but the snaffle should always be employed first, its efi'ect being less powerfnl and more direct. "When the horse submits without resistance to the preced- ing exercises, it will prove that the suppling of the neck has already made a great step. The rider can, henceforward, con- tinue his work by operating with a less direct motive power, and without the animal's being impressed by the sight of him. He will place himself in the saddle, and commence by repeat- ing, with the full length of the reins, the lateral flexions, in which he has already exercised his horse. Of lateral flexions of the neck, the man being on horse- back, in order to execute the flexion to the right, the rider will take one snaffle-rein in each hand, the left scarcely feeling the bit ; the right, on the contrary, giving a moderate impression at first, but which will increase in proportion to the resistance of the horse, and in a way always to govern him. The animal, soon tired of a struggle which, being prolonged, only makes the pain proceeding from the bit more acute, will understand that the only way to avoid it is to incline the head in the direction from which the pressure is felt. As soon as the horse's head is brought round to the right, the left rein will form an opposition, to prevent the nose from passing beyond the perpendicular. Great care should be taken that the head remain always in this position, without wliich the flexion would be imperfect and the suppleness incomplete. Tlie movement being regularly accomplished, the horse will be made to resume his natural position by a slight tension of the left rein. The flexion to the left is executed in the same way, the rider employing alternately the snaffle and the curb-reins. I have already mentioned that it is of great importance to supple the upper part of the neck. After mounting, and having obtained the lateral flexions without resistance, the rider will LATERAL FLEXIONS ON HORSEBACK. 399 often content himself with executing tlicui half way, the head and upper part of the neck pivoting upon tlie lower part, wliich will serve as a base, or axis. This exercise must bo frequently repeated, even after the horse's education is completed, in order to keep up tlie pliability of his neck, and facilitate the getting him in hand. It now remains for us, in order to complete the suppling of the head and neck, to combat the contractions which occasion the direct resistances, and prevent our getting the horse's head into a perpendicular position. For the direct flexions of the head and neck, or for bring- ing in the nose, the rider will first use the snaffle-reins, which he will hold together in the left hand, as he would the curb-reins. He will rest the outer edge of the right hand upon the reins in front of the left hand, in order to increase the power of the right hand ; after whicii he will gradually bear on the snaffle- bit. So soon as the horse yields, it will suffice to raise the right hand, in order to diminish the tension of the reins, and reward the animal. As the hand must only present a force proportion- ed to the resistance of the neck, it will only be necessary to hold the legs rather close to prevent backing. When the horse obeys the action of the snaffle, he will yield much more quickly to that of the curb, the effect of which is so much more powerful. The curb, of course, needs more care in the use of it than the snaffle. The horse will have completely yielded to the action of the hand, when his head is carried in a position perfectly perpen- dicular to the ground; from that time the contraction will cease, which the animal will show, as in every other case, by champ- ing his bit. The ri-der must be careful not to be deceived by the feints of the horse, feints which consist in yielding one-fourth or one-third of the way, and then hesitating. If, for example, the nose of the horse having to pass over a curve of ten degrees to attain the perpendicular position, should stop at the fourth or sixth, and again resist, the hand should follow the movement, and then remain firm and immovable, for a concession on its part would encourage resistance and increase the difficulties. When the nose shall descend to No. 10, the perpendicular posi- tion will be complete, and the lightness perfect. The rider can 400 THE HORSE. then cease the tension of the reins, but at the same time he must not permit the head to leave its position. If he lets it return at all to its natural situation, it should only be to draw it back again, and to make the animal understand that the perpendicular position of the head is the only one allowed when under the rider's hand. He should, at the outset, accustom the horse to cease backing at the pressure of the legs, as all backward move- ments would enable him to avoid the effects of the hand, or create new means of resistance. This is the most important flexion of all ; the others tended principally to pave the way for it. So soon as it is executed with ease and promptness, so soon as a slight touch is sufficient to place and keep the head in a perpendicular position, it will prove that the suppleness is completely effected, the contraction destroyed, and lightness and equilibrium established in the fore- hand. The direction of this part of the animal will, hencefor- ward, be as easy as it is natural, since we have put it in a con- dition to receive all the influences we desire to convey to it, and instantly to yield to them without effort. As to the functions of the legs, they must support the hind parts of the horse, in order to obtain the bringing in of the nose to the chest in such ' a way that he may not be able to avoid the effect of the hand by a retrograde movement of his body. This complete getting in hand is necessary, in order to drive the hind legs under the centre. In the first case, we act upon the forehand ; in the second, upon the hind parts ; the first serves for affecting the perpendicular position of the head, the second for bringing the haunches under him. I published four editions of my Method, without devoting a special article to the combination of effects. Although I myself made a very frequent use of it, I had not attached sufficient im- portance to the great necessity of this principle in the case of teaching ; later experiments have taught me to consider it of more consequence. The combination of effects means the continued and ex- actly opposed forces of the hand and the legs. Its object should be to bring back again into a position of equilibrium all the parts of the horse which depart from that position, in order to prevent him from going ahead, without backing him, and vice versa; BESTING THE CHIN ON BREAST, 401 finally, it serves to prevent any movement from the right to the left, or from the left to the right. By this means, also, we distri- bute the weight of the mass equally on the four legs, and produce temporary immobility. This comhination of effects ought to pre- cede and follow each exercise within the graduated limit assign- ed to it. It is essential when we employ the aids, i. e., the hand and the legs in this, that the action of the legs should precede, that of the hand, in order to prevent the horse from hacking against any place ; for he might find, in this movement, points of support that would ciuible him to increase his resistance. Thus, all motion of the extremities, proceeding from the horse himself, should be stopped by a combination of effects ; finally, when- ever his forces get scattered, and act inharmoniously, the rider will find in this a powerful and infallible corrective. It is by disposing all the parts of the horse in the most exact order, that we shall easily transmit to him the motive im- pulse which should cause the regular movements of his extremi- ties ; it is thus also that we address his comprehension, and that he is made to appreciate what we demand of him ; then will follow caresses of the hand and voice as a moral effect ; they should not be used, though, until after he has done what is de- manded of him by the rider's hand and legs. When the horse naturally brings in his chin too closely on his breast, although but few are disposed by nature to do this, it is not the less necessary to practise on them all the flexions, even the one which bends down the neck. In. this po- sition, the horse's chin comes back near the breast, and rests in contact with the lower part of the neck ; too high a croup, joined to a permanent contraction of the muscles that 'lower the neck,. is generally the cause of it. These muscles must then be sup- pled in order to destroy their intensity, and thereby give to the muscles which raise the neck, their antagonists, the predomi- nance which will make the neck rest in a graceful and useful position. This first accomplished, the horse will be accustomed' to go forward freely at the pressure of the legs, and to respond without abruptness or excitement, to the touch of the spurs ; the object of these last is to bring the hind legs near the centre, and to lower the croup. Tlie rider will then endeavor to raise the horse's head by the aid of the curb-reins ; in this case, the Vol. IL— 26 403 THE HOESE. hand will be held some distance above the saddle, and well out from the body ; the force it transmits to the horse ought to be continued until he yields by elevating his head. As horses of this kind have generally little action, we must take care to avoid letting the hand produce an effect from the front to the rear, in which case it would take away from the impulse necessary for movement. The pace, commencing with the walk, must be kept up at the same rate, while the hand is producing an elevating ef- fect upon the neck. This precept is applicable to all the chan- ges of position that the hand makes in the head and neck ; but is paticularly. essential in the case of a horse disposed to depress his neck. It should be remembered that the horse has two ways of responding to the pressure of the bit ; by one he yields, but withdraws himself from it at the same time by shrinking and coming back to his former position. This kind of yielding is only injurious to his education, for if the hand he held too forcibly, if it do not wait till the horse changes of his own accord the position of his head, the backward movement of his body would precede, and be accompanied by a shifting of the weight backward. In this case, the contraction of his neck remains all the while the same. The* second kind of yielding, which contri- butes so greatly to the rapid and certain education of the horse, is effected by giving a half or three-quarter tension to the reins, sustaining the hand as forcibly as possible without bringing it near the body. In a short time the force of the hand, seconded by the continued pressure of the legs, will make the horse avoid this slight but constant pressure of the bit, but by means of his head and neck only. Then the rider will only make use of the force necessary to displace the head. It is by this means that he will be able to place the horse's body on a level, and will obtain that equilibrium, the perfect balance of which has not hitherto been appreciated. Resuming what we have just explained in the case of a horse who rests his chin on his breast, we repeat that it is by producing one force from the rear to the front with the legs, and another from below upward with the hand, that we are soon enabled to improve the position and movements of the horse. So that, whatever may be his disposition, it is by first causing OF THE MOUTH AND THE BIT. 403 the depression of tlie neclv, that we gain a masterly and perfect elevation of it. I will close this chapter bj some reflections on the sup- posed difference of sensibility in horses' mouths, and the kind of bit wliich ought to be used. I have already treated this subject at length in my Com- prehensive Dictionary of Equitation ; but as, in this work, I make a complete exposition of my method, I think it necessary to repeat it in a few words. I cannot imagine how people have been able so long to at- tribute to the mere difference of formation of the bars, those contrary dispositions of horses which render them so light or so hard to the hand. How can we believe that, according as a horse has one or two lines of flesh, more or less, between the bit and the bone of the lower jaw, he should yield to the lightest impulse of the hand, or become unmanageable in spite of all the efforts of two vigorous arms ? Nevertheless, it is from remain- ing in this inconceivable error, that people have forged bits of so strange and various forms, real instrum.ents of torture, the effect of which is to increase the difficulties they sought to remove. Had they gone back a little farther, to the source of the re- sistances, they would have discovered that this one, like all the rest, does not proceed from the difference of formation of a feeble organ like the bars, but from a contraction communicated to the different parts of the body, and above all to the neck, by some serious fault of constitution. It is then in vain that we attach to the reins, and place in the horse's mouth a more or less murder- ous instrument ; he will remain insensible to our efforts, so long as we do not communicate to him that suppleness which alone can enable him to yield. In the first place, then, I lay down as a fact, that there is no difference of sensibility in the mouths of horses ; that all pre- sent the same lightness, when in position with the nose brought in, and the same resistances, in proportion as they recede from that position. There are horses hard to the hand ; but this hardness proceeds from the length or weakness of their loins, from a narrow croup, from short haunches, thin thighs, straight hocks, or — a most important point — from a croup too high or 404 THE HOKSE. too low in proportion to tlie withers ; such are the true causes of resistances. The contraction of the neck, the closing of the jaws, are only the effects ; and as to the bars, they are only there to show the ignorance of self-styled equestrian theoricians. By suppling the neck and the jaw, this hardness completely dis- appears. Experiments, a hundred times repeated, give me the Wght to advance this principle boldly ; perhaps it may, at first, appear too arbitrary ; but it is none the less true. Consequently, I only allow one kind of bit, and this is the form and the dimensions I give it, to make it as simple as it is easy. The arms straight and six inches long, measuring from the eye of the bit to the extremity of the branch ; circumference of the bit two inches and a half; port, about two inches wide at the bottom, and one inch at the top. The only variation to be in the width of the bit, according to the horse's mouth. I insist that such a bit is sufficient to render passively obe- dient all horses which have been prepared by supplings ; and I need not add that, as I deny the utility of severe bits, I reject all means not coming directly from the rider, such as martin- gales, &c. CONTINUATION OF PEACTISINGS TO PBODUCE SUPPLENESS. In order to guide the horse, the rider acts directly on two of his parts ; the fore parts and the hind parts. To effect this he employs two motive powers ; the legs, which give the impulse by the croup ; and the hand, which directs and modifies this im- pulse by the head and neck. A perfect harmony of forces ought then to exist always between these two motive powers ; but the same harmony is equally necessary between the parts of the animal which they are intended particularly to impress. Our endeavors to render the head and neck flexible, light, and obedient to the tou«h of the hand, would be vain, its results incomplete, and the equilibrium of the whole animal imperfect, so long as the croup should con- tinue immovable, dull, contracted, and rebellious to the direct governing agent. I have just explained the simple and easy means of giving FLEXIONS OF THE CROUP. 405 to the fore parts the qualities indispensable to their good man- agement; it remains to tell how we can in the same manner fashion tlie hind parts, in order to give complete suppleness to the horse, and bring about a uniform harmony in tlie develop- ment of all his moving j)arts. The resistances of the neck and croup mutually aiding one another, our labor will be more easy, as we have already destroyed the opposition of the former. In order to teach the flexions of the croup, and to render it movable, the rider will hold the curb-reins in the left hand, and those of the snaffle, crossed, in the right, the nails of the right hand held downward ; he will first bring the horse's head into a perpendicular position, by drawing lightly on the bit ; after that, if he desire to execute the movement to the right, he will carry the left leg back behind the girths and press it closely to the flanks of the animal, until the croup yields to this pressure. The rider will at the same time make the left snaffle-rein felt, proportioning the efiect of the rein to the resistance which is opposed to it. Of these two forces, thus transmitted by the left leg and the rein of the same side, the first is intended to com- bat the resistance, and the second, to determine the movement. The rider should content himself in the beginning with making the croup execute one or two steps only sideways. The croup having acquired more facility in moving, we can continue the movement so as to complete reversed pivot motions to the right and the left.* As soon as the haunches yield to the pressure of the leg, the rider, to cause the perfect equilibrium of the hoi'se, will immediately draw upon the rein opposite to this leg. The motion of this, slight at first, will be progressively increased until the head is inclined to the side towards which the croup is moving, as if to look at it coming. To make this movement understood, I will add some ex- planations, the more important as they are applicable to all the exercises of horsemanship. The horse, in all his movements, cannot preserve a perfect * Pivot movements are of two kinds, when one of the fore legs remain perfectly stationary as if nailed to the ground, and the hind legs are made to move around them in a perfect, until the horse is standing in a reverse position, and vice versa, when one cf the hind feet are stationary and the fore feet traverse around them. 406 THE HOEBE. and constant equilibrium, without a combination of opposite forces, skilfully managed by the rider. In the reversed pivot motion, for example, if when the horse shall have yielded to the pressure of the leg, we continue to oppose the rein on the same side on which we give the pressure of the leg, it is evident that we shall overshoot the mark, since we shall be employing a force which has become useless. We must then establish two motive powers, which in effect balance each other, without in- terfering ; this will be done by the tension of the rein on the opposite side to that on which the leg acts in the pivot move- ments. So, we must commence with the rein and the leg of the same side ; when it is time to pass to the second part of the work, we must employ the curb-rein in the left hand, and finally the snaffle-rein opposite to the leg. The forces will then be kept in a diagonal position, and in consequence, the equilibrium natural, and the execution of the movement easy. The horse's head being turned to the side to which the croup is moving, adds much to the gracefulness of the performance, and aids the rider in regulating the activity of the haunches, and keeping the shoulders in position. For the rest, practice alone will teach him how to use the leg and the rein, in such a way that their motions will mutually sustain, without at any time counteracting one another. I need not observe, that during the whole of this exercise, as on all occasions, the neck should remain supple and light ; the head in position, perpendicular, and the jaw movable. While the bridle hand keeps them in this proper position, the right hand, with the aid of the snaffle, is combating the lateral resistances, and determining the different inclination, until the horse is sufficiently well broken to obey a simple pressure of the bit. If, when combating the contraction of the croup, we per- mitted the horse to throw its stiffness into the fore parts, our efforts would be vain, and the fruit of our first labors lost. On the contrary, we shall facilitate the subjection of the hind parts, by preserving the advantages we have already acquired over the fore parts, and by preventing those contractions we have yet to combat from acting in combination. The leg of the rider opposite to that which determines the rotation of the croup, must not be kept away from his side EMPLOYMENT OF AN ASSISTANT. 407 during tlie movement, but must remain close to the horse, and hold him in place, while giving the same impulse from the rear forward, which the other leg communicates from right to left, or from left to right. There wall thus be one force keeping the horse in position, and another determining the rotation. In order that the pressure of the one leg should not counteract that of the other, and in order that they be susceptible of being used together, the leg intended to move the croup should be placed further behind the girths than the other, which must be put steady with a force equal to that of the leg which deter- mines the movement. Then the action of the legs will be dis- tinct, the one bearing from right to left, the other from the rear forward. It is by the aid of the latter that the hand places and fixes the fore legs. To accelerate these results, at first, a second person may be employed, who wnll place himself at abreast with the horse's head, holding the curb-reins in the right hand, and on the side opposite that to which we wish the croup to traverse. He will lay hold of the reins at six inches from the arms of the bit, so as to be in a good position to combat the instinctive resistances of the animal. The rider will content himself with holding the snaffle-reins lightly, and acting with his legs as I have already directed. The second person is only useful when we have to deal with a horse of intractable disposition, or to aid the inexpe- rience of the man in the saddle ; but as much should be done without assistance as possible, in order that the ]3iactitioner may ■judge for himself of the progress of his horse, seeking all the while for means to increase the efficiency of his touch. Even while this work is in an elementary state, he will make the horse execute easily all the figures of the man<^ge of two pistes. After eight days of moderate exercise, he will have accomplished, without efibrt, a performance that the old school did not dare to undertake until after two or three yeai's of study and work with the horse. When the rider shall have accustomed the croup of the horse to yield promptly to the pressure of the legs, he will be able to put it in motion, or keep it motionless, according to his pleasure, and he can, consequently, execute all ordinary pivot motions. For this purpose he will take a snaffle-rein in each 408 THE H0K8E. hand, one to direct the neck and shoulders towards the side to which he desires to wheel, the other to second the opposite leg, if it be not sufficient to keep the croup at rest. At first, this leg should be placed as far back as possible, and not be used until the haunches bear against it. Bj careful and progressive management the results will soon be attained. At the start, the horse should be allowed to rest after executing two or three steps well, which will give five or six halts in the complete ro- tation of the shoulders around the croup. Here the stationary exercises cease. I will now explain how the suppling of the hind parts will be comj)leted, by be- ginning to combine the play of its springs witli those of the fore parts. The retrograde movement, otherwise called backing, is an exercise, the importance of which has not been sufficiently appreciated, and which yet ought to have great influence on his education. When practised after the old erroneous methods, it was of no use, as the exercises which ought to precede it were unknown. Backing properly differs essentially from that incor- rect backward movement, which carries the horse to the rear with his croup contracted and his neck stiff; that is, backing away from and avoiding the effect of the reins. Backing cor- rectly supples the horse, and adds grace and precision to his natural motions. The first of the conditions upon which it must be obtained, is the keeping the horse well in hand, that is to say, supple, light in the mouth, steady on his legs, and perfectly balanced in all his parts. Thus disposed, the animal will be ' able with ease to move and elevate equally his fore and hind legs. It is here that we shall be enabled to appreciate the good effects and the indispensable necessity of suppling the neck and haunches. Backing, which at first gives considerable pain to the horse, will always induce him to combat the motions of the hand, by stiffening his neck, and those of the legs, by contract- ing his croup ; these are the instinctive resistances. If we can- not obviate the untoward disposition of them, how can we expect to obtain that shifting and reshifting of weight, which alone can render the execution of this movement perfect? If the motive impulse which, in backing, ought to come from the BACKING. 409 fore parts, should pass over its proper limits, the movement would become painful, impossible, in fact, and occasion on the part of the animal sudden, violent movements, which are always injurious to his organization. On the other hand, the side motions of the croup out of the true line of action, by destroying tlie harmony which should exist between the relative forces of foi'c and hind parts, also hinder the proper execution of the backing. The previous exercise to which we have subjected the croup, will aid us in keeping it in a right line witli the shoulders, and in so preserv- ing tlie necessary transfer of the forces and weight. To commence the movement, tlie rider should first assure himself that the haunches are on a line with the shoulders, and the horse light in hand ; then he may slowly close his legs, in order that the action which they communicate to the hind parts of the horse, may make him lift one of his hind legs, and prevent the body from yielding, before the neck gives to his hand. It is then that the immediate pressure of the bit, forcing the horse to regain his equilibrium behind, will produce the first part of the backing. As soon as the horse obeys, the rider will instantly give the hand to reward the animal, and not to force the play of his fore parts. If his croup be displaced, the rider will bring it back by means of his leg, and if necessary, use for this purpose the snaffle-rein on that side. After having defined what I call the true movement of backing, I ought to explain what I understand by shrinking back s^ as to avoid the bit. This movement is so painful to the horse, so ungraceful, and so much opposed to the right develop- ment of his mechanism, that it cannot fail to have struck any one who has occupied himself at all with horsemanship. We force a horse backward in this way, whenever we crowd his forces and weight too much upon his hind parts ; by so doing we destroy his equilibrium, and render grace, measure, and cor- rectness impossible. Lightness, always lightness ! this is the basis, the touchstone of all beautiful execution. TVitli this, all is easy, to the horse as well as to the rider. That being the case, it is to be understood that the difficulty of horsemanship does not consist in the direction which is to be given to the horse, but in the position which he must be made to assume — a 410 THE HORSE. position which alone can smooth all obstacles. Indeed, if the horse execute, it is the rider who impels him to do so ; upon him, then, rests the responsibility of every false movement. It will suffice to exercise the horse for eight days, for five minutes each lesson, in backing, to make him execute it with facility. The rider will content himself the first few times with one or two steps to the rear, followed by the combined eifect of the legs and hand, increasing in proportion to the progress he makes, until he finds no more difiiculty in a backward than in a forward movement. What an immense step we shall then have gained in the education of our 2)upil ! At the start, the defective formation of the animal, his natural contractions, the resistances which we encountered every where, seemed as if they Avould defy our efforts, for ever. "Without doubt those efforts would have been vain, had v/e made use of a bad course of proceeding ; but the wise system of progression which we have introduced into our work, the destruction of the instinctive forces of the horse, the suppling of the parts, the separate subjection of all the rebel- lious influences, have soon placed in our power the whole of his mechanism to a degree which enables us to govern it com- pletely, and to restore thai pliability, ease, and harmony of the parts, which their bad arrangement threatened always to pre- vent. Was I not right then, in saying, that if it be not in my power to change the defective formation of a horse, I can yet prevent the consequences of his physical defects, so as to render him as fit to do every thing with grace and natural ease, as the better-formed horse ? In suppling the parts of the animal upon which the rider acts directly, in order to govern and guide him, in accustoming them to yield without difiiculty or hesitation to the different impressions which are communicated to them, I have destroyed their stiffness, and restored the centre of gravity to its true j^lace, namely, to the middle of the body. I have, besides, settled the greatest difficulty of horsemanship ; that of subjecting to my will, which is more necessary than aught else, the parts upon which the rider acts directly, in order to pre- pare for him infallible means of impressing his will upon the liorse. STATIONARY EXERCISE. 411 It is only by destroying the instinctive forces, and by sup- pling the different parts of the horse, tliat we can oljtain this. All the springs of the animal's body are tlius sun-endered to tlie discretion of the rider. But this first advantage will not be enough to make him a complete horseman. The employment of these forces, surrendered thus to him, will require botli tact and skill, which must be obtained by careful practice, and are the fruits only of long experience. I will show in the subse- quent chapters the rules to be observed. I will conclude this one by a rapid recapitulation of the progression to be followed in the supplings. Stationaiy exercise by the rider on foot. Fore parts. — 1. Flexions of the jaw to the right and left, using the curb-bit. 2. Direct flexions of the jaw, and depression of the neck. 3. Lateral flexions of the neck with the snaffle-reins and with the curb. Stationary exercise by the rider on horseback. — 1. Lateral flexions of the neck with the snaflle-reins, and with the curb- reins. 2. Direct flexions of the head, or placing it in a perpen- dicular position with the snaflle, and with the curb-reins. Hind parts. — 3. Lateral flexions, and moving the croup around the shoulders. 4. Rotation of the shoulders around the haunches. 5. Combining the play of the fore and hind legs of the horse, or backing. 1 have placed the rotation of the shoulders around the haunches in the nomenclature of stationary exercise. But the ordinary pivot motions being rather complicated and difficult for the horse, he should not be completely exercised in them until he has acquired the measured time of the walk, and of the trot, and can easily execute the changes of direction." — Bauch- er^s Method of HorsemansMjp. I will only add here in relation to trotting and galloping horses, and to the training of them, that it has been well re- marked, by an able English writer on these topics, that no animal when, in a state of nature, he desires to increase his speed, goes at the top of any one pace, but adopts a moderate 412 THE HORSE. rate of that which is the next quicker than the one at which he is now going, nnless it be when, in mortal terror or furious haste, he goes at the fastest rate of all that he can command. If he be walking at a moderate gait, and desire to go some- what quicker, he does not increase his walk to its utmost, but breaks into a slow trot. The same again, of trotting, he increases that trot by striking into a canter, and from that into a gallop. The utmost speed of any pace is far more distressing to a horse, than a far superior speed, on the whole, but an inferior speed at a superior pace. And to continue, for a very long distance, at the top of any one pace, is the most fatiguing of all ; since the same set of muscles are exerted in precisely the same manner, all the time ; whereas, by varying the pace, though at the same time, diiferent muscles are brought into play and are exerted in a diiferent way. If it be necessary to travel a horse a certain large number of miles at a given high rate of speed, say ten or twelve miles an hour, he will accomplish it with twice the ease if allowed to trot and gallop alternately, that he will, if compelled to main- tain either pace, throughout the whole distance. This it is which makes so long practice necessary to the at- tainment of great excellence in trotting horses ; and which causes them, above all other horses, constantly to improve in speed and powers of endurance, the longer they are kept at it, until their powers actually fail through decrepitude and old age. This too, it is, which renders long time-trotting matches so ter- ribly exhausting to the horse and so unutterably cruel, that every humane man and true lover of the horse desires to see them abolished by legal enactment. STABLING AND STABLE ARCHITECTURE. There is probably no one thing, which has so great an influ- ence on the well-being of horses, or the reverse, as the construc- tion and aiTangenient of the stables ; and in none has there been, for the most part, until a recent period, so much miscon- ception as to what is requisite, and so much ignorance displayed both by architects and horse owners, as in this particular. It being well known and admitted that a horse cannot be in the highest condition, and capable of doing his best, without having a short, fine, silky and blooming coat, and that, if he be put to such work as makes him sweat profusely, when his hair is coarse, long and shaggy, he incurs great risk of taking serious cold, beside the consideration that such a coat vastly increases the labor of the stablemen ; it has of course always been an object with horse proprietors, to produce and promote, by all means in their power, this condition of the skin. Now to this end, heat, to a certain degree, is indispensable ; but both the degree and the proper means of producing this heat have been dangerously miscalculated, and exaggerated. The entire exclusion of the outer atmospheric air has had the most baleful results, producing, of necessity, a corrupt and fetid state of that most vital element which the animals are compelled to breathe, mixed with the powerful effluvia from the pores of their own bodies, and the vapors arising from 414 THE HORSE. their excrements and urine, tlie latter replete with pungent ammonia. In extreme cases, the consequences ot this exclusion is blind- ness, and the almost instantaneous generation of that deadliest of equine scourges, the glanders ; which a few years since was so fatal, in many of the French cavalry stables, that the loss of chargers by it,, in many years, exceeded fifty per cent, of all the horses in garrison, in certain districts. On one occasion, on board ship, in the ill-fated Quiberon expedition, during tlie war of the French revolution, the hatches having been necessarily closed on account of bad weather; this disease broke out with such incredible fury, either spontaneously generated, or what is more probable — communicated to tlie rest from some one infected animal, in which the undetected symptoms had been aggravated into sudden virulence by the condition of the air in the closely packed hold, that nearly the whole number of the troop and artillery horses of the expeditionary forces perished. Again, because at times, when he is seeking to rest, the horse likes a darkened chamber; stables have been too often built, with scarcely any provision for the admission of light, without which no stable can be kept either clean or wholesome, much less cheerful. And the horse is, above all things, a sociable and cheerful animal, becoming excessively attached to his comrades of his own family, or, if deprived of their society, to any dog, cat, goat, or even poultry, which may chance to share his confine- ment. If a horse be shut up alone, in a loose box, or hut, which has a window or upper part of the door open to the exterior air, he will be constantly seen putting out his head to seek for amusement, by looking at what is passing around him. It is the height of cruelty to exclude the light from a poor animal, which is thus reduced to a worse condition than that of the State prisoner of the present day ; whose worst punishment, for obstinate contumacy, consists in immurement in a darkened dungeon. How fatal may be the effects of such confinement in dark- ness, to animals, is curiously illustrated by the story of the poor THE EFFECT OF DARKNESS. 415 Newfoundland and Esquimaux dogs, related hy the excellent and lamented Kane, which in consequence of being confined, through necessity, in a dark konnol, during the half year of Arctic winter midnight, became afflicted with a disease partak- ing the symptoms of melancholy insanity — I do not mean hy- drophobia— and pined away, until they literally died of the effects of solitary imprisonment and total darkness. It may be said, then, that the things indispensable to the horse in his stable, are warmth, light, air, a dry atmosphere, freedom from all ill odors, absence of any currents of wind fall- ing directly on his frame or limbs, and sound, dry, level stand- ing ground. If it were possible, it would be advisable that every horse should be in a loose box, which should be contiguous to another box, the divisions planked closely up to about four and a half or five feet from the ground, and above that separating the occu- pants of the adjoining chambers only by stout upright bars, too close to admit of the head being passed through, but sufficiently wide to permit of the animals' seeing and smelling one another, and, in their mute way, conversing. Where space and expense are not considerations, I strongly advise this method ; the horses will keep themselves, in some degree, in exercise, by walking to and fro ; they will be at liberty to rest and roll, if they desire it, and will be in all ways happier, more comfort able, and better to do in the world. Every stable should have, at least, one such box for sick or tired horses. ISTone but those who have observed it, can imagine how a horse, after a severe day's work, rejoices and luxuriates in a large loose box, plentifully provided with warm, clean, dry litter. It is a pleasure to see one so situated ; and we shou'id spare no pains to contribute all in our poAver to the comforts ot the good, honest, faithful, docile, hard-working, intelligent and affectionate servant, who ministers so largely to our wants and our pleasures ; and who only passes, as being inferior to the dog in sagacity, teachableness and love for his master, because we, for the most part, abandon him, except when we are on his back, or in the vehicle behind him, to the care of rude, ignorant, and too often cruel servants ; because we limit his education to the learning of paces, and, at most, a few tricks of the manege * 416 THE HORSE. and do not endeavor to cultivate liis resources, increase his in- telligence, or conciliate his affections. I have owned horses, in mj younger days, one in particular, a beautiful chestnut, thoroughbred park hackney, by Comus out of a Filho da Puta mare, with a white blaze and four white stockings, which I bought of my friend, Mr. Manners Sutton, now Lord Canterbury, just after leaving Cambridge, which had all the affection and all the docile intelligence of the cleverest Newfoundland dog, I ever saw. His demonstrations of joy, when he saw me after a short absence, were as uproarious as those of a spaniel ; he literally seemed to understand every word that was said to him ; and, having been perfectly trained to the manege, would jump into the air and yerk out his heels, kick with either hind leg, strike with either fore leg, and do a dozen other pretty tricks, at the word of command, without any touch or signal of either heel or hand. He was also a horse of extra- ordinary action, power and speed, having once won me three matches, on three consecutive days, to walk five, trot fifteen, and gallop twenty miles, each in an hour, with my own weight, which w^as then 12 stone, or 168 lbs., on his back. But to resume — the stable, whether built of wood or brick, must be warm, dry, light, -airy, and well ventilated. Yet it must have the means of being darkened, and it must be kept as cool as possible in the summer. I think it is the best, if it can be kept as nearly as possible at an even temperature of about YO degrees of Fahrenheit through the whole season — certainly not more — for fast working-horses ; — for cart-horses, and beasts of burthen, no such temperature is needed. A stable must be perfectly well drained; and the drains must be provided with valves, opening outward before the rush of descending fluids, so as to exclude the air, which, if it blows in upon the heels, is very injurious ; and the dunghill should be at a distance, and not under the window. The standing ground should be as level as is compatible with a sufficient descent to carry off the water ; for which purpose an inch to the yard is an ample allowance ; and the material should be such as will neither absorb the moisture so as to be continually damp, nor become saturated with ammonia ; which r)iml, icool STABLE FLOOR AND WINDOWS. 417 will offend the air, and tend to produce heat in the feet of the animal. I consider planks, which are the ordinary flooring of Amer- ican stables, exceedingly objectionable on this score. Hard l)rick, set edgewise in cement, or good well squared paving stones, or even cobble stones, set in the same manner, or flagstones chiselled in deep grooves, so as to prevent the horse from slipping, all make good flooring for stalls and boxes, but I greatly prefer the flrst. The best covering for drain mouths, which should be in the centre of loose boxes, with the floor gently descending to them on all sides, and at the foot of stalls, is a large flagstone, chis- elled with intersecting grooves at right angles, an inch wide by half an inch deep, with perforations at every point of intersec- tion. The stable should be, at least, twelve feet high in the clear ; beside having a shaft, or dome, ascending through the loft to a cupola, which should be provided with ventilators of Collins' new pa- tent plan, which allows the egress of the hot and tainted air as it as- cends, but prevents the ingress of descending currents from above. The bottom of the windows, which should be opposite to each other, so as to admit of a thorough draft in hot weather, should not be less than eight feet from the ground, so that the uir cannot blow directly on the horses. The sashes may be made to slide from down upward and vice versa, in the thick- ness of the wall, by means of pulleys, and can be regulated by cords. They should be guarded by wire nettings, without, to prevent the entrance of flies ; and with shutters or Yenetian blinds, within, to exclude the light, when needful. The doors should in no case be less than five feet wide, and should open outward and in two halves transversely, so as in very hot weather to leave the iTpper part open. They should also be furnished with summer door-frames of wire gauze. Vol. II.— 27 418 THE HORSE. Loose boxes should not be less than twelve feet square ; but the best size is fifteen by twelve. Stalls should not be less than eight feet — nine is better — in depth, by six in width ; and the stable from wall to wall should not be less than fifteen feet in the clear. There should be cup- boards and shelves, for buckets, currycombs, brushes, chamois leathers, and such other things ; and proper places for securing pitchforks, dung forks, brooms, and the like. Nothing must be left lying about, nor must there be any dark holes and corners, for the accumulation of dirt and rubbish, and the encouragement of lazy and slov- enly grooms. The divisions of the stalls should be of good sound two-inch oak, if pos- sible, but if not, of pine, plank. Thin stall divisions are dangerous ; as horses will at times kick through them, and lame themselves severely; they should be at least six feet high at the foot post, which should be of ' solid, stout oak ; and they may be a foot higher at the head. The walls should be wainscoted with oak, to the same height as the stalls, all round loose boxes, and wherever they occur in stalls. The best mangers and racks are enamelled iron ones, made in quad- rant form of two foot radius, placed in the opposite corners of stalls or boxes. The manger should be about three feet, and the bottom of the rack about four feet, from the ground. The bars of the rack should be perpendi- cular, and the back of it sloping forward, from the top to the bottom. There should be a seed drawer under it, and, if it be made with the bars loose, so as to revolve like pivots in sockets THE AIR SYSTEM. 419 at the top and at the bottom, so much the better, as this ar- rangement will prevent crib-biting. The same method is excellent for the bars, at the top of par- titions between loose boxes ; which bars may be also made of enamelled iron to great advantage. Commodious cui)boards may be made under the racks and mangers, for containing a water bucket and stable implements, and will save the further purpose of preventing the horse, when rising, after taking his rest, from striking his head or limbs against the under surfaces. Midway between the rack and manger, at the head of the stall, must be a perpendicular tube or shaft to contain the halter and halter weight, running over a pulley ; and I will here add, that much the best and neatest halter is a fine steel chain covered with leather, like a dragoon bridle, and attached to the ring of the headstall by a spring swivel. The walls, where not wainscoted, must be hard-finished and whitewashed. The floor of the loft must be made of exceeding close, well-jointed plank, and should also be under-drawn and ceiled, as should also the sides of the air-shaft, or dome, in order to prevent the hay from being impregnated with the efiluvia of the ammonia and perspiration, which render it odious to the animal, and prejudicial to his health. There should on no account, for the same reason, be traps above the racks for throw- ing in the hay, which ought invariably to be tossed out of the upper windows, and brought into the stable by the door, from without, or carried down the stairs within. And last, but most important of all, there should be in every stable, in the thickness of the head wall a tube or air-pipe, either round or square, of full six inches in diameter, running from end to end, open at both extremities, to the fresh external air, the apertures being covered by wire gauze to prevent the entrance of vermin. This pipe should be at the level of the manger, and from it, into each stall, should be brought at regular intervals, not less 420 THE HOESE. than six circular perforated passages of one inch diameter each, and into each loose box not less than twelve of the same ; but twice that number would be decidedly more advantageous. These perforations should be made diagonally upward, and brought into the stable along the upper edge of a chamfered cornice running across the stall, from the rack to the manger, through the middle of the perpendicular side of which the halter may be brought out. The air-pipe in the wall, with the chamfered or rounded cor- nice, is sliown by the accompanying cut ; it is also exhibited in the thick- ness of the walls in the ground plans of the different stables by a white internal line. There should be a convenient harness-room, with glass cases, and a grate or stove, which should be accommodated with a boiler for heating water for the stables, pre- paring mashes, steaming vegetables, and such like needful little jobs, as well as for keeping the leather of the saddles and harness from mould- ing and the steel work from rusting. In small stables, where to save space is an object, the harness-room may contain a folding bedstead, so that it can be used as a groom's sleeping apartment also. Tliere should also be to every well appointed stable a con- venient feed-room, provided with binns, a proper size for which is four feet by two, and about two and a half to three in height, with lids and hasps, for containing oats, cut feed, corn, carrots, and green meat ; and this room may, if required, contain the stairway to the hay-loft. The binns ought not to be less than six or eight in number, arranged on each side with a gangway between them, and if lined with zinc or tin, although it will cost a trifle more, in the first instance, it will be a saving in the long run, by preventing the waste by rats and mice, and the Bpoiling of what is not devoured by their nasty excrements. There should be a good glass lantern, in a stable, hung from 9 inch wall. HARNESS ROOMS. 421 the ceiling, capable of holding two or more large candles, or an oil lamp, with a strong reflector, so as to afford ample light for night cleaning of late horses ; and horn or globe-glass hand lan- terns, for ordinary use. No candle should ever be carried into a stable uncovered, nor any smoking either of cigars or pipes allowed, as the smell is not agreeable to the horses, however it may be to the men, and there is always danger of their com- municating fire to the straw. "When the iron ware, steel bits, stirrups, and such like imple- ments of a stable are likely to be lying idle and out of use for some time, they may be preserved from rust by throwing them into a barrel of lime, which has been slacked some time before, and let to die ; but I do not recommend the practice, as it en- courages laziness and slovenl}'^ habits in grooms, which cannot be too strongly reprobated ; and a harness-room never looks so well, or aJEFords so much pride and satisfaction to a good servant as when it is full of well-cleaned saddles and harness, and re- splendent with steel bits, stirrup-irons, curb-chains, spurs and hames all bright, shining and redolent of elbow grease — saddle benches may be fastened to the walls on high to save room, but when so situated the saddles are too apt to be out of sight out of mind, and to be covered with layers of deep dust. The accompanying cut shows a neat and convenient stand or bench for saddles and bridles, to which a shelf may be added below, guarded by edges like a tray, for containing brush- es, currycombs, chamois leathers, sponges, dusters, and such little needful appurte- nances of the sta- ble, as cannot be spared, and as ought to have, 422 THE HOESE. each one, its proper place, in which it should be put away when done with, and found again when needed. I now proceed to give the plans of three stables, with eleva- tions and estimates, drawn under my instructions, and the ele- vations designed with great good taste according to his own ideas, by Mr. Kanlett, of New York, the well known and dis- tinguished architect. The first is for a coach-house and stabling for three or four horses, as may be desired, with harness room, servants' room, and hay loft and feed-rooms, above, designed for a town lot of 25 feet front by 44 in depth. It is built with 12 inch walls of brick on the outer sides and partition walls of nine inches. It is paved with hard brick, laid edgewise in cement on a foundation of concrete sloping in all directions to the coverings of the drain mouths, which are of channelled and perforated flagstones, as described. • The second is for a small country stable. The third is for a large stable for a gentleman's country seat. STABLE PLANS. 423 I. CITY STABLE AND COACH HOUSE. A, is the carriage entrance, ten feet in width, with a wooden platform or bridge- way over the grated area for litter, into which the drains empty. B, is the coach- house, twenty -three feet in width, by fif- teen feet deep, in the clear, to be paved like the stables with a similar descent and perforated flagstone, for facilitating the washing of both car- riages and horses un- der cover. The great width, twenty - three feet, will allow an ample space for the passage of the horses to the gangway C, leading to the stables, which is seven feet in width, lighted by the glass door, guarded with iron netting, of , , , Tr< Ground Plan. the harness room iL, at the end. "Within the coach house is a staircase, O, leading 424 THE HOKSE. into tlie hay-loft and servants' rooms, under which can be made a convenient closet for brooms, shovels, &c. D, the stable, proper, is twentj-five feet deep by fifteen wide in the clear. Paved as described above. It is here represented as divided into a loose box, of fifteen feet by eleven and a half, in the clear, and two stalls of nine feet by six, also in the clear. The part round the exterior separated by dotted lines, shows the portion which is covered by the ceiling at twelve feet from the ground ; the oblong within the lines is that which rises throughout to the roof and cupola above, allowing the egress of the heated air. This part may be either, simply, transversely firred out and ceiled on straight lines slanting to the ventilator, or prettily curved and domed according to the taste and means of the proprietor. In either case side lights can be let in to illuminate the hay-loft. It must be observed, that if it be desired to use this space, always, as a four-stalled stable, all that is ne- cessary to do, is to take away the long division between the loose box and stalls, and to divide the former into two of the latter. If it be thought well to retain the box, with the power of con- verting it at pleasure into two stalls, all that is needed will be to have a socket filled by a movable stone plug at the edge of the flag drain cover, for the re- ception of a grooved stall post, which will bolt to the rafter of the ceiling overhead, which is so arranged as to coin- cide exactly Avitli its position. This can be fitted with grooved and tongued planking, lying liorizontally, having its other extremities se- cured by two strips screwed to the wall, and kept in its ])lace above by a similar grooved Transverse Section T T on Plan. TOWN STABLE ELEVATION. 425 rider or cornice, fitting into a socket in the stall post and bolted to the wall. The parts being prepared, when the stable is built, may be kept in the loft, and could be easily put up or taken down in half an hour. The extra rack and manger of iron, as described above, could be fastened up without difficulty. E, is a harness-room with a fire-place, of nine feet by seven in the clear. F, are flagstones covering the open- ings into the drains, channelled at six inches distance with intersecting grooves of an inch wide by half an inch deep, perforated with inch holes at the angles of intersection. G, are covered drains with a fall in the directions of the arrow heads, leading into the area for lit- Elevation. ter, and guarded at the opening by flap valves, opem'ng out- ward. They should be a foot wide and nine inches deep, with a fall of two inches to the yard. H, is the air-pipe in the thickness of the wall, for introducing fresh atmospheric air into the stalls and boxes. I, I, are two stable windows, the bottom seven feet from the floor, extending to the ceiling, with wire-gauze and shutters as described before. M, a fire-place, above which a boiler with a cock and safety- valve for escape of steam, should be permanently fixed. N, are the enamelled racks and mangers described above, of which separate representations are given on page 388. O, is the stair to the loft 436 THE H0K8E. P, grated area to contain litter, &c. Q, is the bridgeway over it. Annexed is the estimate, at which Mr. Ranlett considers that this stable can be built in good style, with all the requisite con- veniences. 160 Cubic yds. excavations, 1 136 Super, ft. stall division 0 18 24 48 at $0 18 $28 80 297 " yds. plastering 0 25 74 25 950 " ft. stone work 0 18 171 00 Staircase and closet 20 00 45 Lin. " stone drain 0 60 27 00 Cupola ventilation, 65,500 Bricks in the walls - 9 00 589 50 complete 40 00 342 Super, ft. paving in 490 Super, ft. side ceiling 0 06 29 40 concrete 0 60 205 20 1 Pair front doors, 70 ft. 0 30 21 00 35 Lin. ft. airie coping 0 40 14 00 1 Sash door and grating 15 00 80 " " wall " 0 30 24 00 1 Pair stall doors, 40 ft. 0 18 7 20 1 Door sill, 8 ft. 0 80 6 40 2 Doors in second story 10 00 20 00 7 Window sills - 2 50 17 50 1 Window, 15 lights, 6 " lintels 3 50 21 00 12 X 18 20 00 65 Super, ft. channelled 6 Windows, 12 lights. flagging 0 75 48 75 12 X 16 - - 15 00 90 00 41 Lin. ft. iron air pipe 0 90 36 90 1 Window in partition 6 00 6 Racks and mangers 21 00 126 00 1 Mantle of wood 5 00 1 Plank bridge - 5 00 588 Super, ft. of oak 22 Super, ft. iron grating 0 60 13 20 wainscoting - 0 12 70 56 4810 Ft. timber SO 00 144 00 Painting — two coats, 1440 Super, ft. floor 0 08 115 20 including the roof 920 " " roof, plank 0 16 247 20 and brick front - and tin 25 Lin. ft. front cornice 1 25 .31 25 Whole cost - $2394 76 SMALL OOUNTBY STABLE. 427 n. SMALL COUNTRY STABLE FOR PARTICULAR LOCATION. The following plan represents the ground plan and elevation of a small country stable, built for a particular location, under the author's own supervision, and by his plan. It is a long pa- rallelogram on a side hill, having a depth of forty-two feet by a width of fifteen over all. It is built of boards perpen- dicularly arranged, grooved and tongued, the joints covered with battens, and iirred, lathed, and hard finished within, finish- ed in all respects exactly as the stable described in the first instance. Side Elevation. It contains in the side hill, a vaulted carriage house, with root and coal-houses beyond it, built of field stone, arched in 428 THE H0E8E. Growivd J^ Scale 12£t. 24 =1 Ground Plan. the basement ; and above — the ground being level with the roof of the vault on the upper or left-hand side — we find A, the groom's chamber and harness-room, with fire- place as before, fourteen feet by eight in the clear, entered by a door in front, from a balcony reached by an outer stair- case. B, stable divided into two loose boxes, arranged in all respects, as des- cribed above, ventilated, aired, lighted and paved, with drains, racks, man- gers, &c., as before, each fourteen feet by twelve, and each, if desired, divi- sible into two stalls of nine feet by six. C, a feed-room, with binns described as above, and a ladder to the hay- loft. js-eg^^^* End Section. SMALL COUNTRY STABLE. 429 D, a shed entry to render the stable warm in winter and cool in summer. F, the ^a' - rsrv. «*eg?^r?:^ ^no.ipi^sr:-^xa|M^«»^^^^*>^ ^ •■ ?-« >:■ V BAR 6HOE6. 529 dent, and there will not be, as is too often the case, the cutting, paring, and injuring of the foot, in order to make it fit the shoe. More injury than would be readily believed is done to the foot, by contriving to get on it too small a shoe. Clips are often necessary, in order more securely to fasten the shoe. Tliey are little portions of the upper edge of the shoe hammered out, and turned up on the crust, and fitted in a little depression made in the crust. Tliey prevent the shoe from being loosened or torn off, both in rapid action and heavy draught, and are therefore used on all heavy, and on many light horses. They are sometimes placed on the side of the shoe, and at the beginning of the quarters, and on all horses that are ac- customed to paw violently with their feet. Necessity alone, however, will justify their use. The calkin is a prolongation and turning down of the shoe at the heel, enabling the animal to dig his foot more firmly into the m-ound, and with more advantao-e throw his weight into the collar; but it is an abominable and most injudicious practice to place the calkin on one side alone, as is too often done ; an un- equal direction and distribution of the weight and bearing of the foot is often given, which is necessarily productive of mis- chief. Few are the cases which will justify the use of calkins on the fore feet, or even on the hind feet, except they are of equal height on each foot ; and few things are more injurious to the foot of the horse than wearing the same shoe more than three weeks or a month, let the work be heavy or light. The shoe never should be heavier than the work absolutely requires. This is acknowledged in the shoe of the hunter and the racer,, and will tell in the case of every horse after a hard day's work.. The calkin is required on the outside of the hind shoes of hunt- ers, to prevent them from slipping at their leaps ; but the in- side of the shoe must be made of a compensating thickness, to afford an even bearing for the foot. The bar shoe is indispensable in most large stables. It is a very simple contrivance, being nothing more than the contin- uation of the common shoe over the heels. The bearing of the shoe may thus be taken off from every weak and tender part of the foot, and be either thrown on some other point which is better able to bear the pressure, or diffused over the foot. It is Vol. II.— 34 530 THE HORSE. useful in some cases of bad corns, wliicli are thus protected from injury ; in sand-crack, the pressure may be removed from either or both sides of the fissure ; pumiced feet may be raised by this shoe above the possibility of injury ; and in thrush and in can- ker not only is the weight thrown off the diseased part, but any kind of dressing may be easily retained on the sore. It is a shoe, however, that cannot be safely used for any considerable time, or, at least, it requires occasional or even frequent change, on account of its becoming gradually pressed down on the sore part beneath. Bar shoes are not safe for use when much speed is required, and they are dangerous when frost is on the ground. Tlie tip is a very different kind of shoe. It reaches but half round the crust. It is used when the horse is at rest ; and, the quarters of this shoe being unfettered, the contracted foot is sometimes enabled to regain its natural open state. It has been tried for road- work, but, as might naturally be expected, it ut- terly failed when often or long used. The leather shoe is principally useful when the foot has been injured or inflamed. It, to a considerable degree, breaks the shock, which would otherwise be painfully felt when the foot is put on the ground. It consists of a piece of leather or felt, about an inch in width, which is placed between the crust and the shoe ; and this very materially obviates concussion. It must not, however, be long worn, for the nails cannot always be driven securely ; there will be too much play upon them, and they will become loosened ; also the holes which they ac- curately filled at first will be enlarged, and the crust will be broken away. The sole is sometimes entirely covered with leather. This furnishes a temporary defence for the foot, but there is much insecurity of fastening ; the tow or other dressing introduced between the sole and the leather, is not always equably distrib- uted, and frequently the stopping produces a scaly spongy horn, or gravel and dirt Avill gradually accumulate between the leather and the horn, and the foot will be considerably injured. Gutta percha is substituted with good effect. One other shoe, the invention of Mr. Percival, must be men- tioned— the horse-sandal. It consists of a simple apparatus ROARING. 531 sufficiently light even to be carried in the pocket, but is more frequently attached to the saddle, and which, on the loss of a shoe, can be applied to the foot in the space of a minute, and so securely attached to it that the sportsman may continue the chase to the end of the longest run. The same sandal has been repeatedly worn more than one hundred miles. It may be pro- cured from any respectable harnessmaker. Roaring.— The quality of soundness involves several questions of no mean importance, especially with regard to those maladies which are capable of being transmitted. It is very apparent to those whose practice among horses is extensive, and who are best able to form accurate opinions, that spavins and curbs are less frequent than they were five-and-twenty years ago. This may fairly be attributed to the fact, that considerable circum- spection has been exercised in avoiding such animals for breed- ing purposes as, possessing peculiar conformations in their hocks, would render their offspring predisposed to those de- fects. Blindness is certainly less prevalent than formerly. Superior management in the stable has evidently assisted in averting this evil ; insuflaciently ventilated, dark stables, with an accumulation of dung to generate ammonia, are fortunately out of fashion. Tliere is an impression that roaring is more frequent ; and among race-horses it is not without foundation. As an heredi- tary complaint, it may certainly be traced to several sources — to horses whose progeny have, in many instances, given une- quivocal testimony of the infirmity. When the fact is seriously considered, it is surprising that gentlemen of known talent, owners of valuable studs, liberal in every item of expense cal- culated to promote the success of their young racing stock, should ever breed from sires or dams known to entail this malady on their progeny. A veterinary surgeon of great ability and observation, has stated that every stallion, when consigned to the stud, becomes a roarer. It is a startling assertion, and induced me to investigate the fact very minutely. The result does not corroborate the statement to the full extent of the de- claration, although I discovered sufficient to lead me to the conviction that it is a very prevalent affliction. I must here, however, introduce a reserving clause, arising from the difficulty 532 THE HOKSE. whicli exists of positively deciding upon every case, which I shall enter upon more minutely as I proceed. In contradiction to the assertion of the professional, I must observe that at various times I had two hunters, which were used for stud purposes during the summer; one of them continued in my possesion three seasons, the other two : most assuredly they were not either of them roarers. This might have been, and very prob- ably was, prevented by the work they performed during the hunting season ; for it is quite certain that very many stallions, especially those which belong to private breeding establish- ments, and are kept principally for the use of those establish- ments, do not enjoy that exercise which is absolutely necessary for the maintenance of their health. The country stallion, which travels from fair to fair, and from market to market, is infinitely more favorably treated in this respect, tlian his more highly distinguished brother who presides over a private and choice seraglio. Roaring may be divided into two classes ; that which must be pronounced, in oj)position to all theory, as decidedly hereditary ; and that which is produced in individuals in consequence of catar- rhal disorders, strangles, influenza, or any other temporary cause which establishes inflammation, and a consequent thickening in the mucous membrane lining the trachea, or parts adjacent, which are the seats of the disorder. Some persons are skepti- cal respecting the hereditary transmission of roaring ; for which little surprise can be entertained, when the difiiculties which enshroud numerous equivocal indications are enumerated. To unravel the mystery, the primary cause must be ascertained ; for it would be exceeding the limits of truth and experience to say that because a horse is a roarer himself, he will transmit it to his stock. Certain conformations, or rather malformations, of the limbs, — such as the legs, the hocks, and the feet, — are often transmitted from the parent to the ofl'spring ; from which splints, curbs, spavins, navicular diseases, and other infirmities, have their origin ; and these are admitted in the category of hereditary complaints ; yet it cannot be accepted as a rule without exception, that all tlie produce of malformed animals shall inherit the imperfections of their parents. Upon the principle of malformation in the parts immediately or indirectly CAUSES OF ROARING. >33 connected with the organs of respiration, roaring must un- doubtedly come within the definition of an hereditary cause. But when a thickening tates place of the mucous membrane lining the parts which are the scat of the disorder, or ossiiica- tion of the cartilages of the windpipe, in consequence of in- flammation, resulting from bronchitis, influenza, colds, or such- like accidental occurrences, providing no malformation of the parts previously existed, roaring cannot with propriety be de- nominated hereditary. The difiiculty is such cases is to deter- mine whether that malformation of parts does exist. To assign to such accidental causes as the latter the aspersion of heredi- tary transmission, is not consonant with reason. There are as many degrees or intonations of roaring, as there are notes on the gamut ; and those notes ascend from piano to forte. This renders it difiicult in some slight cases to decide positively whether a horse is a roarer or not; and good judges may be mistaken. The state of the animal very frequently occasions an impediment to an accurate decision ; if he be in very plethoric condition, he will not unfrequently give slight indications of roaring ; but when he is divested of that super- abundance of fat, all the disagreeable symptoms disappear. The usual test of startling the animal, is by no means an infal- lible criterion, neither is the stethoscope in all cases to be relied upon. There is but one positive mode of determining the ques- tion ; the animal being in a proper condition, he must be ridden and tried in all his paces. With stallions this proof is not oft- en practicable ; and unless they are badly affected, it is oflen impossible to prove that they are roarers. There is no point iipon which the owner of such a horse is so tenacious as that of an accusation that his favorite is a roarer. Tell the proprietor that his horse's legs are bad, insinuate that he broke down in consequence, he will receive your remark with complacency ; tell him that his horse's hocks are bad, and point out to him an incipient spavin, or an unequivocal curb, he will receive your objection with indifference ; point out to him a multitude of unsymmetrical proportions, he will listen to you with calmness ; but only intimate to him that you think his horse is a roarer, and he will roar in your ear a challenge of defiance in proof of your allusion. 534 THE HORSE. Large horses certainly have a greater tendency to become roarers than smaller ones, and irritable-tempered ones more fre- quently than those of a phlegmatic disposition. Several of the largest stallions might be enmnerated as being predisposed to entail this malady on their issue. These are certainly valid reasons for not giving a preference to horses of large size, al- though public opinion predominates in their favor. Stallions are more subject to the complaint than geldings, and geldings more so than mares. Compactly-formed horses of moderate size seldom indulge their owners with music. It is very diffi- cult to assign any reason for this ; but it appears that there is a greater constitutional disposition in stallions to inflammation about the respiratory organs than there is in mares or geldings, and that inflammation, resulting in deposits of lymph and ossification of the cartilages, produces the disorder. This phenomenon may be explained in consequence of the sympa- thy which is well known to exist between various parts of the body. A change in the atmosphere is a very frequent cause of in- flammation in the respiratory organs, and severe frosts, such as we experienced during the winter of 1853 and 1854, are very likely to produce it. In order to preserve the blooming condi- tion of their horses' coats, it is a common practice with grooms to keep the stables as warm as possible when a frost sets in ; but it is a most dangerous observance. Of the importance of keep- ing horses warm in their bodies, there cannot be a question ; but that is better regulated by extra clothing. If the atmo- sphere of the stable be raised to a temperature greatly exceed- ing that of the open air, the horses, when taken out to exercise or woi-k, are liable to serious consequences, from the great in- crease in the amount of oxj^gen which rushes through the resjDiratory organs in the act of inspiration. Tlie quantity of oxygen is regulated by the temperature of the atmosphere ; and there are few persons who have not experienced the incon- venience attendant upon j^assing from an overheated ball-room into the open air ; and they generally take the precaution of adopting additional clothing. The case of the horse is precisely analogous. Although a very liberal premium has been offered by a no- REMEDIES FOR ROARING. 535 bleman as an additional stimulus to the profession, the cure for roaring has not yet been discovered. When it proceeds from malformation, it is impossible ; or if the cartilages of the wind- pipe become ossified, no remedy can be found to reacli those parts. An extensive deposit of lymph having taken place in the mucous membranes with which the respiratory organs are defended, comes within the same category. A strong stimulus applied to the sinews, joints, or muscles, in tlie event of lame- ness, may, and frequently does, impart a wonderful effect ; but it is a different affair when internal organs, such as those of res- piration, are disordered ; those parts cannot be brought into immediate contact with any application. When a horse is af- fected with inflammation about those parts which are the seat of the disorder, if it be vigorously attacked in its incipient state with the usual stimulating preparations, providing there is no malformation to contend against, the malady may in very many cases be prevented ; and a vast number of cases of confirmed roaring are to be attributed to neglect or delay at the important crisis of commencement. Those who would avoid breeding roarers must avoid breeding from parents whose progeny has evinced a predisposition to the complaint. So far every breeder has the remedy in his own hand ; but with the utmost caution, all living creatures are subject to disorders ; and if the results are unfortunate, in defiance of the most skilful treatment, breed- ers must console themselves with the reflection that their disap- pointments are the decrees of fate. The following formulae may be said to contain most of the remedies necessary for the use of the amateur : when disease prevails, the safest plan is to call in the assistance of a veteri- nary practitioner. When calomel or emetic tartar is given for the expulsion of worms, it should be mixed in a small portion of bran mash, af- ter fasting the animal five or six hours; two doses given at similar intervals will be most effective. They must be worked off with linseed oil or aloes, after an equivalent lapse of time ; and as alkalies neutralize the effects of either of those medi- cines, soap must be excluded, if the form of ball is preferred. As an external stimulating application for the throat in cases of inflammation arising from cold or other causes, com- 536 THE HOKSE. mon mustard, mixed with water as for the table, is an excellent remedy, and is eqnal, if not superior, to any of the more com- plicated nostrums. When cooling remedies are required to the legs, cold water is the best. The introduction of nitre and sal-ammoniac will increase the evaporation ; but great care is requisite to renew such medicated lotions very frequently ; because, when the re- frigerating process is over, they become stimulants : thus, on ordinary occasions, cold water constantly applied with very loose linen bandages is to be preferred. Table showing the proportions of medicines to be given to horses at various ages, — To foals, . Yearlings, Two-years-old, . Three-years-old, Four-years-old and upwards, 30 Common Aloetio Purgative. Aloes finely powdered, . . 4 drachms. Hard soap, K^^l^^ . . . 2 drachms. Ginger, ) Mix and form a ball, varying the proportions according to the age and constitution of the horse. Aloetio Purgative without Soap. Aloes broken in pieces, . . 4 drachms. Olive oil or lard, . . .1 drachm. Ginger in powder, . . .2 drachms. Treacle, . . . • li drachm. The aloes and oil, or lard, must be melted in a jar placed in a saucepan over the fire ; and when melted, the ginger and treacle are added. The aloes must not be boiled longer than to effect their solution. Calomel or Tar- Linseed Oil. Aloes. taiized Antimony. Grains. Ounces. Drachms. 10 4 to 6 i to 1 15 to 20 6 " 8 1 " H 20 " 25 8 " 12 2 " 2i 25 " 30 12 " 15 2i" 3i 3, 30 " 60 1 " 2 pts. .4 " 6- PRESCRIPTIONS. 537 Aloetic Alteratives. Aloes in fine powder, . . 2 drachms. Nitre, 2 drachms. Soap, 2 drachms. Mix and form one ball. To be given daily till a slight action of the bowels is produced. Antimonial Alterative. ^'!l^!''"'' • • i each 2 to 3 drachms. ,\ Sulphnret of antimony Treacle to form a ball. One of which may be given four, five, or six days in succession. The preparation necessary before giving aloetic purges should be very scrupulously attended to. Bran mashes must be liberally substituted for hay during the twenty-four hours previous to giving the ball ; and the horse requires to be walked out during its operation. All the above admirable remarks on the diseases of the horse, with the formulas for all the more ordinary affections, are taken, without alteration, omission, or remark, from the excellent work by Youatt and Cecil on the Horse, as reprinted from " Knight's Store of Knowledge.'^ They are the best and most practical of any thing ever pub- lished within the same compass, and should be in the hands of every horseman. KACING AND BETTING RULES OF THE AMEEICAN JOCKEY CLUB, AS ADOPTED TO JUKE ISTH, 1870. DUTIES OF OFFICERS. Rule I. — Duties of Race Stewards. — The Race Stewards shall have the entire management of the racing during the term for which they have been appointed, and, for all purposes connected with the races, shall have full control of the Course and Stands, and the grounds appertaining thereto; they shall appoint the Judges, Distance Judges, Handicapper, Timers and Starter, either from among themselves or not, as they may see fit ; they shall exact compliance with all racing rules within their province, maintain the authority of the Judges and Starter, and enforce all penalties prescribed by the racing rules; they shall be charged with the police of the Course and shall have power to fine, suspend, rule off, or expel any person for misbehavior, or for violation of any regulation they may establish, which does not conflict with the racing rules. EuLE II. — Majority to Govern. — When the Race Stewards differ in opinion, the decision of a majority shall prevail. Rule III. — Power to Postpone. — The Race Stewards shall have power to postpone races. Rule IV. — Substitutes for Absent Steivards. — Should there be necessity on a race-day for prompt judicial action on the part of the Race Stewards, and less than three of them are on the Course, the Steward or Stewards present shall increase their number to three by selection from members of the Jockey Club who have previously filled the office ; and the substitutes thus appointed shall, for the occasion, be clothed with the authority of official appointees. Rule V. — A Life Member may Object to their Acts. — If a life member of the American Jockey Club shall object to any act or decision of the Race Stewards, he shall give notice, in writing, to the Clerk of the Course, who shall refer the same to a General Meeting of the Club, to be held at an early day. Rule Y1.— Duties of Judges. — There shall be three Judges — a Presiding Judge and two assistants. The Judges shall decide which horse wins, and assign their respective places in the race to as many 540 THE HOESE. of the other horses as they may think proper ; except, when in run- ning the best of heats, it is necessary to place all the horses. When the Judges differ in opinion, the majority shall govern. If one of the Judges be in the stand during the running of a heat or race, it shall not be void. The Judges shall decide all disputes relative to the racing, and from their decision there shall be no appeal ; they shall receive no evidence in regard to foul riding except from the racing oflBcials; they shall have control and authority over the horses about to start, the jockeys, and all attendants on the horses. Any such person refusing to obey their orders shall be fined, sus- pended, or ruled off the Course, at the discretion of the Stewards ; and if a fine be not paid within twelve hours from its imposition, the delinquent shall be ruled off the Course. The Judges shall not permit any person, whether an officer of the Club or not, to remain in the stand during the running of a race, except the Clerk of the Course. EuLE VII. — Patrol Judges. — The Judges may appoint Patrol Judges, whose duty it shall be to observe the running of the horses from places designated to them, and, if any foul riding or other ir- regularity come under their observation, to report to the Judges immediately after the heat or race. Rule VIII. — Distance Judges. — During the running of the best of heats, the Distance Juclge and his assistant shall occupy the dis- tance stand, and, at the termination of each heat, shall report to the Judges the horse or horses that have been distanced. EuLE IX. — Timers. — There shall be one Timer and one Assist- ant Timer, who shall occupy the Timers' Stand, and mark upon the timing-board the time of each heat or race, which shall be the ofl&cial time to be recorded. EuLE X. — Starter and Ms Assistant. — The Starter shall be re- movable by the Stewards. He shall select an assistant. The state- ment of the Starter and his assistant, as to incidents of the start, shall be conclusive. Rule XI. — Duties of the Cleric of the Coiirse. — The Clerk of the Course, or his deputy, shall attend the Judges during each race; he shall discharge all the duties, whether expressed or implied, required by the racing rules, and report to the Stewards or Judges, as the case may demand, all violations of those rules or of the regulations of the Course, coming under his notice ; he shall keep a complete record of all races, and, at the close of each meeting, make a report of the races to the Secretary for publication ; he shall receive all stakes, forfeits, entrance moneys and fines, and pay over all money RULES OF THE AMERICAJST JOCKEY CLUB. 641 SO collected by liim to the Treasurer of the American Jockey- Club. KuLE XII. — Duties of Superintendent. — It shall be the duty of the Superinteudeut to assign to applicants such stables as he may think proper, to be occupied only by horses in preparation for racing ; he shall furnish straw for bedding, for all such horses, for three weeks prior to each meeting; he shall see that the Course is kept in order, at all proper times, for training and racing, and exer- cise such general control over it as may be necessary to protect its condition and the rights of all parties using it. He shall have general authority to preserve order and prevent improper conduct upon the Course and grounds connected therewith, and sliall decide all conflicting claims of privileges between parties occupying them for any purpose. RACING RULES. Rule I. — Of Age. — Eace-horses take their ages from the first of January. Rule II. — A Hand and a 'Stone. — Four inches are a hand. Fourteen pounds are a stone. Rule III. — Untried and Maiden Horses. — An untried stallion or mare, is one whose produce has never won a registered prize in any countiy, A maiden horse or mare, is one that has never won a registered prize in any country. Rule IV. — A Purse. — A purse is a sum of money or other prize, oflFered for a race for which the horses entered are obliged to start. The owner of a horse entered for a purse and not started, shall be ruled off the Course, unless reasons satisfactory to the Judges of the race in which the default occurs, be given before the time appointed for weighing. In case of postponement of a race, all entries are cancelled. Rule V. — Siueepstahes. — A sweepstakes is a race, the prize for which is the aggregate of the stakes which the nominators of the horses agree to deposit ; and if an additional sum of money, cup, piece of plate, or other reward, is offered to the winner, the race is still a sweepstakes, whatever be the name given to such addition. Three subscribers make a sweepstakes ; and if a stake has the re- quired number of subscribers at the expiration of the time of closing, and the number is afterwards reduced by death (or, in the case of a produce stake, by failure of produce), the race is not void so long as there are two horses left, the property of different per- sons ; and if the number is reduced to two, it is still a sweepstakes. 543 THE HORSE. EuLE VI. — A Plate. — A plate is a sum of money or other prize offered for a race, for which two or more horses may be entered by the same person, but in which no person can run, in his own name or in that of any other person, two horses of which he is wholly or in part owner on the day of the race, unless permitted to do so by a special clause in the articles. Entrance money to be paid at the time of naming. The rules governing sweepstakes do not apply to this race. Rule VII. — Post Match or Post Stake. — For a post match or post stake, a subscriber is not obliged to declare the horse he in- tends to run until ten minutes before the hour appointed for the race. Nevertheless, when any prize is added to the stakes, the horse must be declared to the Clerk of the Course at the usual hour of closing entries of the day previous to the race. '' Rule VIII. — Handicap. — A handicap is a race in which the horses carry weight according to their merits, in the estimation of the handicapper. Rule IX. — Order of Starting. — In purses, the places of horses at starting shall be determined by the order in which they are drawn from the box ; in other races, the places at starting shall be determined by lot by the Clerk of the Course. The horse to which the' pole or inside is allotted shall take his place on the inner or left-hand side of the Course ; the others shall take their places on his right, according to allotment. When, how- ever, the starting point is so situated that the right hand side of the track is the shorter, the horse entitled to the track shall take his place on the right, and the others shall take their places on his left, according to allotment. The winner of a heat shall at the next start have the pole, and the others shall take their positions on his right or left, as the case may be, in the order in which they came out the previous heat. Rule X. — Omissions of Weight.— When a match or sweepstakes is made, and no weight mentioned, the horses shall carry the estab- lished weight for age. Rule XI. — Omissions of Distance. — When a match or sweep- stakes is made and no distance mentioned, the distance shall be that which is usually run by horses of the same age as those en- gaged, viz. : If two years old, six furlongs ; if three years old, one and three-quarter miles ; if four years old, three miles ; and if five years old, and upward, four miles; and if the horses be of different ages, the distance shall be fixed by the age of the youngest. RULES OF THE AMERICAN JOCKEY CLUB. 543 EuLE XII. — Omissions of Day. — If no day is mentioned for a race, it shall be run on the last day of the meeting in progress ; or should it he made between meetings, then on the last day of the next meeting. KuLE XIII. — Of Dress and Colors. — All riders must be dressed in jockey costume — cap and jacket of silk or satin, breeches of ivhite corduroy, cords, flannel or buckskin, and top-boots. The colors selected by owners are to be recorded with the Clerk of the Course, and, when thus recorded, ai'e not to be used by others. A list of all colors that have been recorded is to be posted in the Judges' stand. KuLE XIV. — Nominations and Entries. — In all nominations and entries, the horse, mare, or gelding entered must be clearly identi- fied. The color, sex, name, age, sire and dam must be given ; and if the dam has no name, such further pedigree and description must be added as will distinguish the horse intended to be named from any other of a similar pedigree. If the dam was covered by more than one stallion, the names of aU of them must be men- tioned. When a horse has run once over the Course of any recog- nized association, it will be sufficient afterward to give his name and age. K the name of a horse is changed, it is necessary in entering the said horse to give his old as well as his new name, until he has run once under it over a Course as above ; and if his name is changed again, aU his names must be reported for a like period. KuLE XV. — Nomination of Foreign Horses. — No -horse foaled out of the United States, shaU run for any race, until his owner has produced a certificate of some racing club of the country where the horse was foaled, or from the mayor or other public ofiicer of the district, stating the age, pedigree, and color of the horse, and the marks by which it is distinguished, or has produced other evidence of identity satisfactory to the Stewards. EuLE XVI. — Insufficient Description a Disqtialification. — If any horse be named, without being identified as before directed, he shall not be allowed to start in the race, but his owner shall be liable to pay the forfeit, or, if it be a play or pay race, the whole stake. EuLE XVII. — Fraudulent Entry a Perpetual Disqualification. — If a horse should fraudulently run, or be entered to run for any race by a false description, such horse is thenceforth disqualified for running in any race, and the owner shall be compelled to return any sum of money won in any race which the horse may then and thereafter have won. 544 THE HOESE. When a horse has been struck out of an engagement by the person legally entitled to do so, if the horse be permitted to start by mistake for the said engagement, he shall not be entitled to receive the prize or stakes though he come in first. If any horse has been allowed to start in consequence of fraud or misrepresentation on the part of the owner or other person having charge of the horse, that person shall be ruled off the Course, and the horse shall be disqualified for running for any race thereafter. EuLE XVIII. — Qualification Dates from Time of Closing. — In naming or entering for any race where there shall be any particular conditions required as a qualification to start, it shall be suflBcient if the horse were qualified at the expiration of the time allowed for naming or entering, and he shall not be disqualified by anything which may happen after the expiration of that time, unless so specified in the article, or unless he become disqualified under the rules relating to defaulters. If a brood-mare engaged in a produce stake drops her foal before the first of January, the nomination is void ; and if she has a dead foal, or is barren, the nomination is void. EuLE XIX. — Nominations not to he Changed after Closing. — No person who has once subscribed to a stake shall be allowed to with- draw his name ; and no nomination shall be altered in any respect without the consent of all the parties in the race. EuLE XX. — Excejition to the Preceding Bide. — When a person takes a nomination for a stake in which the forfeit is to be declared by a particular time, and does not declare forfeit by the time fixed in the article, he shall thenceforth be considered to have taken the engagement on himself, and shall be held equally liable with the original subscriber. EuLE XXI. — TJse of Fictitioris Names. — When any person enters a horse or subscribes to a stake under a fictitious name, or in the name of a person not fully identified at the time, he shall be con- sidered in all respects as the owner of the horse and as the sub- scriber to the stake, and in the event of the forfeit not being paid, his real name shall be published in the Forfeit List. Every person who wishes not to engage his horses in his own name must adopt some name which must be registered with the Clerk of the Course, and he cannot enter in any other until the cliange is duly notified to him. No person who enters horses in an assumed name shall be allowed to adopt and register as such the same name as that of any gentleman who runs his horses in his own name. RULES OF TUE AMERICAN JOCKEY CLUB. oio EuLE XXII. — Unauthorized Nominations. — Any person enter- ing or nominating a horse for a. race without autliority from the owner, shall be responsible for the stake or forfeit ; entrance money shall be retained and added to the prize ; and the horse shall be dis- qualified for running in any race until the stake or forfeit is paid, unless the owner shall have promptly disavowed the act by letter addressed to the Clerk of the Course. Publication of the entry or nomination shall be held as notice to the owner. If it shall appear to the Stewards that the authority denied has been granted, the owner shall also be responsible for the stake or forfeit, and the horse shall be disqualified for running in any race until it is paid ; and if the Stewards believe that any fraud was designed, all persons impli- cated therein shall be ruled ofi" the Course. • Rule XXIII. — Nominations not required to be made on Sunday. — When the day fixed for the closing of, or naming for, any stake or plate, or for declaring forfeit or produce, shall fall on Sunday, subscriptions, nominations, or declarations for such stake or plate may be received on the following day ; provided that there is an interval of one day between the day of closing naming or declaring and the day of running. Rule XXIV. — Allowance of Weight in certain cases. — In every race in which there is an allowance of weight to the produce of untried horses or mares, or to maiden horses or mares, such allow- ance shall not be made unless claimed before the expiration of the time for naming. Rule XXV. — Nominations in Stakes in event of Death. — AU nominations in stakes are void by the death of the subscriber, ex- cept where a horse is sold with his engagements, and a written' acknowledgment from both purchaser and seller has been delivered to the Clerk of the Course, previous to the death of the original subscriber. If any of the parties to a joint nomination die, all its privileges and responsibilities attach to the survivors. The death of a horse does not release the nominator or pur- chaser from liability for a stake or forfeit. Rule XXVI. — Entries in Plates not Void hy Death. — Entries in? plates are not void by the death of the nominator, and are trans- lerred to and become the privilege of the actual owner, unless the- horse has been sold without his engagements. Entrance money for a plate is not to be returned on the death of a horse. Rule XXVII. — Entries to Purses. — All entries of horses to run- Vol. 11—35 546 THE HORSE. for a purse, shall be made under coyer, and deposited with the Clerk of the Course, in a box kept for that purpose, at the Judges' Stand, between three and four o'clock p. m. of the day previous to the race, unless the races of the day be not finished by the first hour named ; and in such case, thirty minutes after the close of the last race. No entry shall be received after the time specified ; and the box shall not be opened except in the presence of an officer or life member of the Jockey Club. Rule XXVIII. — Respecting Stakes and Forfeits. — All stakes shall be put in the hands of the Clerk of the Course before the riders are weighed. On the deposit of a stake, the right to forfeit ceases. When any person has more than one nomination in a stake, he shall not be allowed to start any horse for it unless the forfeits be paid for every horse which does not start, belonging to him, or standing in his name, or in the same name as the horse which runs, as well as the stakes for those which do. Rule XXIX. — Arrears of Owners and Namers to he jmid before Starting. — No person shall start a horse for any race, either in his own name or that of any other person, unless both the owner and namer of such horse shall have paid all former stakes and forfeits ; and this rule shall extend to forfeits incurred on any Course under the control of any recognized association, provided an official notice of such forfeits being due shall have been received by the Clerk of the Course, and published in the Forfeit List. Rule XXX. — Arrears due for a Horse to he paid before lie can start. — No horse shall start for any race unless all former stakes and forfeits due for that horse be paid before starting, provided notice has been given as above. Rule XXXI. — TJie Forfeit List. — A list of unpaid forfeits, with the name of the subscriber to the stake, and the name or descrip- tion of the horse, with the name or sufficient description of the stake, and the amount of the forfeit due, shall be attached to the official summary of the meeting ; and they shall continue to be published until paid. A similar list shall be posted in a conspicuous place in the Judges' Stand, in the office of the American Jockey Club, and, should there be a recognized " betting-room," there also. Rule XXXII. — Persons appearing in Forfeit List Disqualified. — No person whose name shall appear in tlic published forfeit list shall be entitled to enter or run a horse for any race Avhatever, either in his own name or in the name of any other person, until he shall have paid up all the forfeits in respect of which his name appears in the list. RULES OF THE AMEKICAN JOCKEY CLUB. 547 EuLE XXXIII. — Horses appeariiKj in Forfeit List not qualijied to he entered. — No horse wliich appears iii the publislied tbrleit Hst shall be qualified to be entered or to run for any race whatever, until the forfeits mentioned in the said list, as due for sueh horse, shall have been paid. Rule XXXIV. — Suspected Nominations may le struck out. — In order to prevent persons who are defaulters from evading these laws, and continuing to engage horses by the use of fictitious names, the Stewards shall have the power of calling upon the nominator to produce satisfactory testimony that the horse named is not the property, either wholly or in part, of any person whose name ap- pears in the published list of defaulters, and, if the nominator shall fail to do so, the Stewards may cause the nomination to be erased. Rule XXXV. — Liability for Engagements of Horses Sold. — When a horse is sold with his engagements, or any part of them, the seller has not the power of striking the horse out of the engage- ments with which he is sold ; but as the original subscriber remains liable to the respective winners for the amount of the forfeits in each of these engagements, he may, if compelled to pay them by the purchaser's default, place the forfeit on the forfeit list, in the usual manner, as due from the purchaser to himself, and until this forfeit is repaid, both the purchaser and the horse remain under the same disabilities as if the purchaser had been the original sub- scriber. In all cases of sale by private treaty, the written acknowl- edgment of both parties that the horse was sold with his engage- ments is necessary to entitle the buyer or seller to the benefit of this rule ; but when the horse is sold by public auction the adver- tised conditions of the sale are sufficient evidence, and if he has been claimed as the winner of a race of which it was a condition that the winner was to be sold with his engagements, this also is sufficient. Rule XXXVI. — Forfeits paid as above may be placed on Forfeit List. — Wlien a person has a horse engaged in the name of another person, and is entitled, by purchase or otherwise, to start the horse for such engagement, but is prevented by any of the preceding laws from starting his horse without previously pajring up forfeits to which he is not otherwise liable, he may, if he pays these forfeits, start his horse, and have the forfeits, with the names of the horses for which they are due, placed on the forfeit list in the usual man- ner, as due to himself 548 THE HOKSE. EuLE XXXVIl.— Weights.— The following weights shall be carried, viz.: lbs. . 75 . 90 . 95 . 108 . 114 . 118 Two-year-olds shall carry . Three-year-olds shall carry and after 1st September Four-year-olds shall carry . Five-year-olds shall carry . Six-year-olds, and upwards, shall carry In all races exclusively for three-year-olds the weights shall be one hundred and ten pounds, and m all races exclusively for two- year-olds, the weight shall be one hundred pounds. Except in handicaps and in races where the weights are fixed absolutely in the articles, three pounds shall be allowed to mares and geldings. KuLE XXXVIII. — Feather PTeif/Ziits.— Feather-weights shall be considered seventy-five pounds; the usual declaration must be made when the jockey carries above that weight. EuLE XXXIX. — Welter Weights. — Welter-weights shall be two stones added to the respective weight for age. EuLE XL. — Of Names and Numbers. — The name of every horso intended to start in any race except a purse must be notified to the Clerk of the Course, and his number be exhibited, ten minutes before the race; and if any 'alteration be made in the numbers after they have been exhibited, the Judges may call upon the owner, or trainer, or jockey, for an explanation. If this is not satisfactory, the owner or trainer may be fined, at the discretion of the Judges, in any sum not exceeding $100, and the horse shall not be allowed to start in an-other race, until the fine is paid. EuLE XIA.—T0 Weigh before and after Eace.—K jockey is re- quired to show the weight his horse is about to carry, to the Clerk of the Course, at the usual place of weighing, at least 10 minutes before the race, unless excused by the Judges for some special reason, in which case the fact must be notified to the Clerk of the Course. A violation of this rule shall be punished by fine, at the discretion of the Judges. Every rider shall, immediately after the race or heat, ride his horse to the usual place of weighing, then and there alight, after obtaining the consent of the Judges, and not before, and weigli (o the satisfaction of the Clerk of the Course, before doing which W is forbidden to touch any thing beyond the equipments of his horpe. Until ordered to dismount by the Judges, the rider must not suffer Bny person to touch or put cover on his horse. The person unsad- RULES OF THE AMERICAN JOCKEY CLUB. 549 illing the horse shall, as soon as the saddle and efiuipments are re- moved, hand them to the rider, who shall immediately carry them to the scale to be weighed. If the rider be disabled by an accident to himself or horse, which should render him incapable of riding I ack, he may walk or l)e carried to the scale. If the jockey dismounts without permission, or otherwise vio- lates this rule, his horse is disqualified for winning the race at issue, unless he can allege extraordinary circumstances, the sufficiency of which must be decided by the Judges. If a jockey riding a beaten horse does not return to weigh, he shall be fined not less than $25 nor more than $100 and shall not ride until the fine is paid ; and if it can be proved that the owner or trainer connived at this violation of the law, they shall be fined $100 each, and the horse shall be disqualified for running in any race, until all the fines are paid. The jockey is to be weighed with all the equipments of his horse, except the bridle, which it is optional with him to weigh, unless required to do so by the Clerk of the Course ; but nothing shall be weighed off that has not been weighed on. No whip, or substitute for a whip, shall be allowed in the scales in order to make weight, but if one has been carried by the jockey, its weight shall be reported to the Judges by the Clerk of the Course, in case the weight thus carried would be sufficient to disqualify the horse. An allowance of 1 lb. will be made for a curb or double bridle, but no weight is allowed for a snaffle bridle, unless it is put in the scale before the horse is led away. Horses not bringing out the weight shown before the race, or within 1 lb. of it, shall be disqualified for winning the race; but the Judges may make allowance for ovei"plus occasioned by exposure to rain or mud. Rule XLII. — Over-weigld. — Each jockey shall be allowed two pounds, and no more, above the weight specified for his horse to carry, (all allowances to which he is entitled being deducted,) unless a declaration of the extra weight the horse is about to carry has been made to the Clerk of the Course at least 10 minutes before the race; and the extra weight shall be announced or appended to the horse's number when it is put up; and the weight each horse actually carried, if more than 2 lbs. above his weight, shall be stated in the published summary of the meeting: but in no case shall a horse be allowed to start carr^dng more than five pounds over-weight, unless the Judges should be unable to decide before the race to Avhat penalties the horse is liable or to what allow- 550 THE HORSE. ances he is entitled, in which case he may start with any weight his owner may think proper to pnt up. No horse can be dis({nalified for winning on account of overweiglit with which lie has been allowed to start. EuLE XLIII. — Riders Falling. — If a rider fall fi'om his horse while riding a heat or race, and another person of sufficient weight ride him in, no penalty shall be exacted for over-weight, and the horse shall not be disqualified for winning, if brought back to the spot where the rider fell. EuLE XLIV. — Over-iveigM for Purse. — The owner of a horse entered for a purse and not allowed to start, owing to non-compli- ance with the rules relative to weights, shall be fined not less than $100, nor more than $250, to be paid within twelve hours, under penalty of being ruled oif the Course ; and if the Stewards believe that the violation was intended to evade the obligation to start, the horse shall be disqualified for running in any race until the fine is paid, and the owner shall also be ruled off the Course. EuLE XLV. — Of Starting. — The horses shall be started by a flag, unless otherwise ordered by the Stewards, and there shall be no start until, and no recall after, the Assistant Starter drops his flag, in response to the signal from his chief. The horses shall be sum- moned for each heat or race by the bugle-call or bell on the Judges' Stand. EuLE XLVI. — Horses going to post considered Starting. — When the riders of the horses brought out to run for any race are called upon by the person appointed to start them to take their places for that purpose, every horse which comes up to the post shall be considered as starting in the race ; and when the start is ordered by the Assistant Starter's flag, any person refusing to start one of the horses, because of a bad start, or for any other reason deemed insuf- ficient by the Stewards, shall be ruled off the Course. EuLE XLVII. — Power of Starter. — The Starter is prohilnted fi'om making a running start ; the horses must Avalk up, and be started from a walk. He has authority to order the jockeys up in a line as far behind the starting-post as he may think i)roper, and any jockey disobeying the orders of the Starter, or taking any unfair advantage, shall be punished by a fine or suspension accord- ing to the nature or degree of the offence, at the discretion of the Starter, subject, however, to the revision of the Stewards ; and any jockey who is fined and does not pay the fine within twelve hours from its imposition, shall be ruled off the Course. EuLE XLVIII. — Of Aids. — No person shall be permitted to turn RULES OF THE AMEBIC AX JOCKEY CLUB. 551 or lead a liorsc to the post ; tlie liorscs sliall Ijc started ])y their jockeys, and no other person shall strike a horse to get him from the post, or during the running of a race, nor shall any person stand in the track to point out a path for the rider. A violation of this rule shall he punished at the discretion of the Stewards. EuLE XLIX. — Of False Starts. — When a false start is made, no horse making the false start, nor any horse remaining at the post, shall have clothes thrown upon him, or water given him, or his mouth sponged out; nor shall the rider he permitted to dismount; nor shall any delay be permitted ; but the horses shall be started as soon as brought back to the post. Horses making a false start shall return to the post by the shortest way ; and if the Starter perceive that a longer way is taken, he shall not delay the start for them ; any infringement of this rule shall be punished by fine or sus- pension, at the discretion of the Starter, subject, however, to the re^dsion of the Stewards. When a false start is made, and the horse refuses to return to the post, the Starter may permit him to be led back behind the post, and then let loose. Any person fined under this rule, who does not pay the fine within twelve hours from its imposition, shall be ruled ofi" the Course. EuLE L. — Of Accident. — If an accident happen to a horse or rider, the Starter may grant a reasonable delay, not to exceed fifteen minutes, which, in extreme cases, may be extended by the Judges. EuLE LI. — Of Bolting. — If any horse shall run from the Course into the field, he shall be disqualified for winning the race, although he may come out ahead, unless he turn and again enter the Course at the point from which he swerved. EuLE LII. — Foul Riding. — If in running for any race, one horse shall cross or jostle another, so as to impede him, such horse is disqualified for winning the race, whether such jostle or cross happened by the swerving of the horse, or by the foul or careless riding of the jockey, or otherwise. Although a leading horse is entitled to any part of the Course, if he swerves to either side when a horse is so near him that the latter is compelled to shorten his stride ; or if a horse strikes another while running a race, so as to injure or impede him ; or if a jockey strikes or does any act of violence to another jockey or horse, during the running of a race, it is foul riding, which in all cases, whether accidental or not, disqualifies the horse for winning the race ; and if the judges are satisfied that the riding was intentionally foul, or that the jockey was instructed or induced so to ride, all per- sons guilty of complicity in the offence shall be ruled ofi" the Course. 553 THE HORSE. When a horse is disqualified for foul riding, the penalty attaches to every horse in the race belonging wholly or in part to the same owner. Complaints of foul riding can only be received from the owner, trainer or jockey of the horse affected, and must be made to the Judges, either before or immediately after his jockey has passed the scales. EuLE LIII. — When Heat is Void. — If the start takes place on the wrong side of the starting post, or if no person officially appointed occupies the Judges' Stand, the heat or race is void, and must be run again — in 20 minutes, if the distance to be run is two miles or less, and in 30 minutes, if over two miles. EuLE LIV. — Of Collusion. — When a dead heat for a race not of heats is run, the owners of the horses making the dead heat may agree to divide the prize or stakes, and thus terminate the race; but an agreement between two or more persons not to oppose each other in any race, or to run jointly against any other person or persons, or to divide the prize or stakes after a dead heat, and allow one horse to walk over for a deciding heat, is illegal, and upon proof of such agreement satisfactory to the Stewards, the parties thereto shall be ruled off the Course, and their horses disqualified for winning in all races to which such agreement had reference. EuLE LV. — Winner of a Heat or Race. — The horse that first gets his head to the winning-post shall be considered the winner of the heat or race, EuLE LVL — Of Heats. — In a race of heats, the horse that actually wins two heats, or distances the field, wins the race. When two horses have each won a heat, they only shall start for a third, and the preference between them shall be determined by it. When a race is won by two heats, the preference of the horses is deter- mined by the places they get in the second heat ; and when a race is won by three heats, the horses starting in a third heat sliall only be placed. There shall be no distance in a third heat. Horses started and drawn before a race of heats is won, are held to be distanced. EuLE LVIL— /w Heat Races, only One Horse or One Rider in same interest can Start. — No person shall start more than one horse of which he is the owner, either wholly or in part, either in his own name or in that of any other person, for any race of heats; nor shall two riders from the same stable be permitted to ride in such race. EuLE LVIII. — Horses not to he Draiun dtiring Race of Heats. — RULES FOR THE AMEIIICAN JOCKEY CLUB. 553 Any person who .shall sell or draw his horse (if by the sale the horse be drawn) during the pendency of a race of heats, unless by permission of the Judges, shall be ruled off the Course. EuLE LIX. — Of 'Time hekveen Heats. — The time between heats shall be — In mile heats, 20 minutes. In two mile heats, 25 minutes. In three mile lieats, 35 minutes. In four mile heats, 40 minutes. EuLE LX. — Of Dead Heats. — If for any race not to be run in heats, the first two or more horses shall come in so near together that the Judge shall not be able to decide which won, those horses only shall run for such prize over again, after the last race on the same day, but at an interval of not less than thirty minutes. The other horses which started are deemed losers, and are entitled to their respective places, as if the race had been iinally determined the first time. If for any race of heats it cannot be decided which horse won, it is a dead heat ; and if it be a first heat, the horses not distanced can start for the second ; and in such case, only those making the dead heat and the winner of the second heat can start for a third heat ; and if it be a second heat, the winner of the first heat and those making a dead heat, alone can start for a third. EuLE LXI. — Effect of Dividing after a Dead Heat. — When horses run a dead heat for any race not to be run in heats, and the parties agree to divide the stakes, such horses shall be liable to carry extra weight as winners of that race, whether one of the horses walk over for a deciding heat or not, and if there is any money for the second horse, they divide that also. EuLE LXII. — Dead Heat for Second Place. — When horses run a dead heat for the second place, they divide any money that may be payable to the second horse, and if there is any money for the third, they divide that also ; and if any of these horses run for a race in which there is a penalty for having received a certain amount of money as second horse, they shall be considered as having received only the amount of their respective shares. EuLE LXIII. — When entitled to Second Money. — When it is a condition of a stake or plate, that the owner of a second horse shall receive a certain sum of money out of the stakes or entrance money, and the race is walked over for, or no second horse is placed, the winning horse is entitled to the whole. When the entrance money for a purse is advertised to be given to the owner of the second 554 THE HOBSE. horse, and the purse is walked over for, or no second horse is plaeea, the entrance money is to be retained. If the money advertised to be given to the second horse is a separate donation from the race fund or other source, and the race is walked over for, or no second horse is placed, the money is not given at all. EuLE LXIV. — Of Distancing. — All horses whose heads have not reached the distance-stand as soon as the leading horse arrives at the winning-post, are distanced, but as indispensable proof of the fact, the distance judge must have dropped his flag in response to the Judge's flag. In heats of 1 mile, 40 yards shall be a distance. In heats of two miles, 50 yards shall be a distance. In heats of three miles, 60 yards shall be a distance. In heats of four miles, 70 yards shall be a distance. EuLE LXV. — Ejfect of Disqualification. — In running the best of heats, horses disqualified for winning are to be held as distanced ; and in other races are not to be placed. Whenever a horse which has come in first is disqualified, the heat or race shall be awarded to the next best horse which is qualified. EuLE LXVI. — Of Selling Races. How the Winner may he claimed. — When it is made a condition of any race that the winner shall be sold for any given sum, the owner of the second horse being first entitled, etc., no other person than one who ran a horse in the race shall be entitled to claim. The claim must be made to the Judges or Clerk of the Course within a quarter of an hour after the race. The horse claimed shall not be delivered until the amount is paid to the Clerk of the Course, and he must be paid for by ten o'clock at night on the day of the race, otherwise the party claiming shall not be entitled to demand the horse at any future period; but, nevertheless, the owner of the horse may insist upon the claimant taking and paying for the horse claimed. EuLE LXVII. — Of Sales hy Auction. — When it is a condition of a selling race that the winner shall be put up at auction after the race, the half of any surplus which may thereby be obtained over and above the price for which the horse was entered to be sold, shall be paid to the owner of the second horse, and this shall not invalidate the privilege of the second horse as to the prior claim of any beaten horse, under Eule LXVIII. EuLE LXVIII. — Claim of Beaten Horses. — Any horse running for a selling race is liable to be claimed by the owner of any other horse in the race for the price for which he is entered to be sold and the amount of the stake— the owner of the second horse tu be EULES OF THE AMERICAN JOCKEY CLUB. 555 first entitled to the claim, and the others in the urder in which their horses are placed, and the winner to have the last claim. Rule LXIX. — A person can Claim hut one Horse. — No person can claim more than one horse in the same race, and if two or more persons ec{ually entitled wish to claim, they shall draw lots for the priority. Rule LXX. — Failure to Deliver or Pay for Horses. — Any person, who refuses to deliver, or fails to pay for a horse purchased or claimed in a selling race, shall be ruled off the Course. Rule LXXI. — Extra Weight and Allowances. — When it is the condition of any race that horses shall carry exti'a weight for win- ning a certain number of prizes during the year, or be allowed weight for having been beaten a certain number of times during the year, such winnings and losings shall date from the first of January preceding, and shall extend to the time of starting, unless otherwise specified. Rule LXXII. — Weight not Accumulative. — Extra weight and allowances are not accumulative, unless so specified in the condi- tions. Horses do not carry extra weight for winning a match, and are not entitled to allowance for having been beaten in a match. Winners of hurdle races are not considered winners in flat racing. A horse walking over or receiving forfeit, except for a match, is deemed a winner. Rule LXXIII. — Value of Prizes, how calculated. — In estimating the value of any prize, no deduction shall be made, except of the winner's own stake, or entrance money, and of any sum or sums required by the conditions of the race to be paid out of the stakes or entrance money to the owners of any other horse or horses in the race — the entrance for a purse not to be deducted ; and every prize not in money shall be estimated at its advertised value in cur- rency, and if such value is not designated, it shall be taken at its cost price. Rule LXXIV. — Objection to Qualification. — When the age or qualification of a horse is objected to, either before or after running for any race, the Stewards, or those whom they may appoint, shall have power to order an examination of the horse's mouth by com- petent persons, and to call for all such evidence as they may require, and their decision shall be final. If the disqualification is made out, and they believe that the horse was entered fraudulently, all persons implicated in the fraud shall be ruled off the Course. Rule LXXV. — When Complaints must be made. — All complaints of foul riding, or of horses not running the proper course, or of 556 THE nOKSE. any other irregularities occurring in the heat or race, must be made to the Judges by the owner, trainer, or jockey of a horse in the race, either before or immediately after his jockey has passed the scales. Objections to winning horses on other grounds cannot be enter- tained unless made to the Stewards before the conclusion of the race meeting, save and excepting charges of fraudulent entry, or of running horses under a false description, which may be investigated at any period within one year from the date of the offence. EuLE LXXVI. — Objections to Qualification, whe7i to be made. — When the qualification of any horse is objected to by ten o'clock in the morning of the day of the race, the owner must produce evi- dence to prove the qualification, satisfactory to the Stewards or Clerk of the Course, before the race is run ; and if he shall start his horse without doing so, the prize shall be withheld for a period to be fixed upon by the Stewards, at the expiration of which time, if the qualification be not proved to the satisfaction of the Stew- ards, he shall not be entitled to the prize, though his horse shall come in first, but it shall be given to the owner of the second horse. When the qualification of the horse is objected to after that time, the person making the objection must prove the disquali- fication. EuLE LXXVII. — Fo7' the Protectioji of Owner's, etc. — No owner or trainer shall employ a rider, rubber, or helper, from another stable, who has not produced a written discharge from his last em- ployer, or furnished satisfactory evidence of the termination of his engagement. On receiving complaint in writing, frbm the owner or trainer claiming to be aggrieved in this respect, the Clerk of the Course shall notify the person alleged to be in fault, either person- ally or by letter addressed to his usual post-oflfice of the complaint against him, and of the penalty attached to the offence, and shall give him a reasonable time to appear before the Eace Stewards to refute the charge. If he fail to exculpate himself, or to show that such rider, rubber or helper is no longer in his service, the Eace Stewards shall rule him off the Course and he shall only be relieved from the disability when the Stewards, satisfied that he is no longer censurable in the matter, may think proper to do so. EuLE LXXVIII. — For the Protection of Riders, etc. — Any owner or trainer who shall owe any hired rider, rubber or helper more than three months' wages, payment of which has been demanded and refused, shall, upon proof of the fact satisfactory to the Stewards, be ruled off the Course. The Stewards shall not entertam any complaint, under this rule, unless it is attested by the affidavit of RULES OF THE AMERICAN JOCKEY CLUB. 557 the creditor l)ef(jre a mugistnite and .su1)stantiated by evidence satis- factory to them, and shall not impose the penalty until they have given to the person owing such wages reasonable notice of the com- plaint, either personally or by letter addressed to his usual post- office ; and they shall remove the disability upon proof satisfactory to them of the payment of the debt. EuLE LXXlX. — Ferso7is Expelled from other Courses.— FaWQYj person who is expelled from, or ruled off the Course of any racing Association, recognized by the American Jockey Club, is necessarily niled off every Course under its control. Rule J^XXX.— Of Decorum. — If any owner, trainer, jockey, or attendaiit of a horse use improper language to the officers of the Course, or be guilty of any improper conduct, the punishment of which is not otherwise provided for, he shall be ruled off the Course. Rule LXXXI. — Of Persons allotved on Course during Race. — After the horses are ordered to the starting-post, and until the Judges direct the gates to be re-opened, no person, except the racing officials and the owners, trainers, and immediate attendants of the horses in the race, shall be allowed on the Course to be run over. Rule LXXXII. — Striking out of Engagements.-^^o horse shall be considered as struck out of his engagement unless the declara- tion be made by the owner or some person authorized by him, to the Clerk of the Course or to the Secretary, who shall record the day and hour of its receipt, and give early publicity thereto in the subscription rooms. Rule LXXXIII. — Cases unprovided for. — In all matters rela- ting to the races, or running of a race, not provided for in these rules, the Stewards and Judges shall decide according to the best of their judgment and tlie usages of the turf, and from their decision there shall be no appeal. Additional Rule Adopted Juke 21, 1869. — Resolved, That for all matches run under the rules of the American Jockey Club, at Jerome Park, the Secretary shall be paid by the winner one per cent, upon the amount of the stakes. BETTING RULES. Rule I. — In all bets there must be a possibility to win when the bet is made. " You cannot win where you cannot lose." Rule II. — Bets go as the prize or stakes go. If, however, an 558 THE HORSE. objection he made and sustained, to the qualification of a horse on the ground of incorrect pedigree or nomination, after the race is run, the bets shall go to the horse that comes in first, provided he is of the right age, and in other respects has not transgressed tlie rules of racing ; but if the owner of a horse, or a person on his behalf, succeed by fraud, or by culpable misrepresentation, in starting him for a race for which he is legally disqualified, making himself liable to the penalties in Eule XVII of Racing Rules, the bets will go with the prize or stakes, whether any objection be made either before or after the race. Rule III. — All bets are play or pay, unless otherwise stipulated. Rule IV. — All double bets must be considered play or pay. Rule V. — Confirmed bets cannot be off, except by mutual consent, or by failure to make stakes at the time atid place which may have been agreed upon, in which case it is optional with a bettor not in default to declare then and there that the bet stands. If at the time specified for making stakes, the horse or horses backed are struck out of their engagements, the bet is already lost, unless a start has been stipulated, and the winner is entitled to payment without depositing his stake. If there is no stipulation when the bet is made for the deposit of stakes, they cannot be demanded afterward. Bets between members of the betting-room are not governed by this rule 'where it conflicts with any regulation or practice there established. Rule VL — All bets on races depending between any two horses are void, if those horses become the property of the same person or his confederate, subsequently to the bets being made. Rule VII. — All bets between particular horses are void if neither of them is placed in the race, unless agreed by the parties to the contrary. Rule VIII. — If any bet shall be made by signal or indication after the race has been determined, such bet shall be considered fraudulent and void. Rule IX. — The person who lays the odds has a right to choose a horse or the field ; when a person has chosen a horse, the field is what starts against him. Rule X. — If odds are laid without mentioning the horse before the race is over, the bet must be determined by the state of the odds at the time of making it. Rule XI. — When a race is postponed, all bets must stand ; but if the slightest difference in the terms of the engagement is made, all bets are void. RULES OF HIE AMEUICAJS^ JOCKEY CLUB. 559 Rule XII. — Bets made on horses winning any number of races within the year shall be understood as nicannig L-etween the 1st of January and the 31st of December, both inclusive. EuLE XIII. — If a bet is made between two horses, with a forfeit affixed, — say $100, half forfeit, — and both horses start, cither party may declare forfeit ; and the person making such a declaration would pay 150 if the other horse won, but would receive nothing in the event of his horse winning the race. EuLE XIV. — Money given to have a bet laid shall not be returned, though the race be not run. EuLE XV. — Matches and bets are void on the decease of either party before the match or bet is determined. EuLE XVI. — Bets on a match which terminates in a dead heat are void. EuLE XVII. — When horses run a dead heat for any race, not a match, and the owners agree to divide, all bets between such horses, or between either of them and the field, must be settled by the money betted being put together and divided between the parties, in the same proportion as the prize or stakes. If the dead heat be the first event of a double bet between either of the horses making it and the field, the bet is void ; unless one horse received above a moiety, which would constitute him a winner in a double event. If the dead heat be the first event of a double bet between the horses making it, the bet is void, unless the division was unequal, in which case a horse receiving a larger proportion would in a double event be considered as better placed in the race than one receiving a smaller sum. If a bet is made on one of the horses that ran the dead heat against a beaten horse, he who backed the horse that ran the dead heat wins the bet. EuLE XVIII. — If a match be run by mistake, after the princi- pals have compromised, it does not aflfect the betting or the result. EuLE XIX. — Pools sold shaU not be play or pay, unless so declared at the time. BULES OF THE KENTUCKY ASSOCIATION, Revised April, 1867, WHICH HAVE BEEN ADOPTED BY THE WESTEKN TUKF COKGEESS. EuLE I. — Members. — No person shall be admitted as a member of this Association, unless nominated by a member, and admitted by a vote of the members, at a meeting of the Association. In voting upon the admission of new members, one black-ball in ten shall exclude the applicant. EuLE II. — Expulsion of Memlers. — To expel a member, two- thirds of the members present shall concur, and the number j)resent shall not be less than fifteen. Rule III. — Regular Meetings. — There shall be two Eegular Meetings of the members in each year — one during the race week in the Spring, and the other during the race week in the Fall, at such times and places as may be fixed by the Association or its officers. EuLE IV. — Called Meetings. — A members' meeting may at any time be called by the President, or any three members. One month's notice shall be given of any called meeting, by publication in some newspaper published m Lexington, signed by the Secretary. Eule V. — Quorum. — Ten members, including the President, or one of the Vice-Presidents, shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business, but no alteration of the rules shall be made, or any new rule adopted, unless by a two-thirds vote, when at least fifteen members are present. Eule VI. — Privileges of Members. — Every member shall have the privilege of introducing to the Course and to the Stands, the members of his family under twenty-one years of age. Eule VII. — Stock Transfers. — No transfer of stock shall be au- thorized until the Certificate of Stock is surrendered, and a transfer thereof made on the Transfer Book, by the owner or his attorney, to the purchaser, when a new certificate shall be issued, sealed Avith the seal of the Corporation, attested by the President and Secretary. Eule VIII. — Officers.— T\\q officers of this Association shall be — a President, two Vice-Presidents, Secretary, Treasurer, Superin- tendent, and three Stewards ; all of whom (except the Stewards, who shall be appointed by the President and Vice-Presidents), KULES OE THE KENTUCKY ASSOCIATION. 501 shall be elected to serve two years, or until their successors are elected. KuLE IX. — Elections.— A\\ elections shall be by Imllot. Elections for Officers shall be held on the second day of the regular Spring Meeting, wlien a majority of the votes present shall elect, provided the members present be not less than fifteen. EuLE X. — Vacancies. — When a vacancy shall occur in any ofiBce, the appointment of which is reserved to the members, it shall be the duty of the President and Vice-Presidents to provide for the discharge of the duties until the next Spring Meeting. EuLE XI. — Officers may mahe Ihiles. — The President, Vice-Presi- dents and Secretary, three of them concurring, shall have power to make all useful rules for the preservation of good order and decorum on the Course, and shall decide all matters relating thereto not otherwise provided for. EuLE XII. — Presidenfs Duties. — The President shall preside at all meetings of the Association ; shall act as Judge of all races run over its Course ; shall appoint his Assistant Judges and Timers, and declare the result of each race. In the absence of the President his duties shall be discharged by the oldest Vice-President present. EuLE XIII. — Secretary's Duties. — It shall be the duty of the Secretary to attend the Judges in each day's race ; keep a iDook in which shall be recorded the names of the members, the rules of the Club, the proceedings of each meeting, the entries of horses, the names of their respective owners, the color, name, age, sire and dam of each horse, with a description of each rider's dress. Also an account of each day's race, and the time of each heat ; and after the races are over, he shall publish the result, with a description and pedigree of the winner EuLE XIV. — Treasurer's Duties. — The Treasurer shall receive and disburse all the funds of the Association. He shall give bond with security, to be approved by the President, in such sum as he shall require for the faithful performance of his duties. At each Spring and Fall Meeting, he shall present, in writing, a statement of his receipts and expenditures during the year. EuLE XV. — Stewards. — The Stewards shall attend on the Course, preserve order, clear the track, keep the crowd from the horses when approaching the stand, and exercise vigilance to prevent disorder, and detect foul riding and other misconduct". EuLE XVI. — Superintendent. — The Superintendent shall, under the direction of the President an 1 Vice-Presidents, exercise a general supervision over the grounds of the Association. He Vol. II,— 36 562 THE HORSE. shall have the outside track put in condition for trial runs two weeks before each race meeting, but no one shall go upon the same at any time without his permission, he being the sole judge of the propriety of its use. Rule XVII. — Judges and Tifners. — There shall be three Judges (the President and two Assistants) in the Judges' stand ; no other person shall be admitted to the stand during the pendency of a heat. The Timers shall occupy a separate stand, to be erected opposite the Judges' stand, from which, in like manner, all other persons shall be excluded during the running of a heat. Rule XVIII. — Judges. — The Judges shall decide all disputes that may arise, and no appeal shall be allowed without their consent. In all questions relating to the race, and not provided for by these rules, the Judges will decide according to their best judgment and the usages of the Turf in like cases. Rule XIX. — Judges may postjjone a Race. — The Judges for the day may postpone a purse race on account of bad weather, but for no other cause, and when postponed, the entries then made are to be considered void, and the race re-opened the day previous to its being run. Rule XX. — Entries. — All entries of horses to be run for any purse shall be in writing, sealed and delivered to the Secretary, between the hours of 4 and 7 of the afternoon preceding the race. Each entry shall state the name, age, color and sex of the horse entered ; the name of its sire and dam, and a particular description of the rider's dress. As soon as the hour of seven o'clock shall have arrived, the Secretary shall, at the Pho3nix Hotel, proceed to open the entries, and make out a list of tliem, to be posted up in the Club Room. Rule XXI. — Entrance Money. — Any member entering a horse to be run for his own benefit, shall be required to pay as entrance money seven and one-half per cent, on the amount of the purse ; where the horse is run for the benefit of a jacrson not a member, the entrance shall be 10 per cent. Rule XXII. — Entries in name of Members. — No entry in the name of a member (not owning or controlling the entered horse) shall be valid, unless the signature of the member be written thereon in his own hand. No entry shall be made for a Jockey Club Purse but by a member. Rule XXIII. — Defaulters. — No person sliall be permitted to start in any race over tliis Course, wlio shall have failed to pay all forfeits due by liim on account of stakes run over this Course. Nor RULES OF THii KKJSTUCKY AS80C1AT10N. 563 sliall any horse be permitted to run over this Course, in tlie nume of any person wluitever, so long as forfeits incurred ))y the liorse remain unpaid. No defaulter shall be permitted to make a nomina- < ion in any stake to be run over this Course. Nor sliall a nomina- tion be made 1)y another person of a horse in which a defaulter lias an interest ; and all such nominations are hereby declared void. After each day's race, the Secretary shall make and record on the books of the Association a list of the defaulters, and if any person fails to pay any forfeit or subscription within 90 days after it is due, the Secretary shall declare him a defaulter, and notify all organized Clubs of the same. Rule XXIV. — Nominations ly Persons other than the Owner. — No person shall be permitted to nominate in any stake to l)e run over this Course any horse of which he is not the owner, unless by written permission of the owner, to be filed with the Secretary ; but by such permission the owner shall not incur any liability for the forfeit, the liability and penalties for which shall attach only to the person nomiiiating, and to the horse. Rule XXV. — No Negro to make a Nomination. — No negi-o or mulatto shall be permitted to make a nomination in any stake to be run over this Course. Rule XXVI. — Several Nomi7iations. — Persons making several nominations in the same stake may, by l)ona fide sales of any one or more of them, confer the right upon the purchaser to run in the stake, and may also start himself from the reserved entry or entries. Rule XXVII. — Death of Entered Horse. — If any horse nomi- nated in a stake die, or the person nominating him die before the race, no forfeit shall be required, including Play and Pay races. Rule XXVIII. — Joint Nominations — Death. — In joint nomina- tions, if one of the persons nominating die, the survivor shall be liable for the forfeit, and entitled to the benefit of the nominations. Rule XXIX. — No more than one Horse to start from the same Stables. — Exception. — No two riders from the same staljles shall be allowed to ride in the same race, except by special permission of the Judges. Nor shall more than one horse from any stable be allowed to start in the same race, unless it be a single heat. Nor shall two or more horses, owned in whole or in part by the same person, be allowed to start in the same race, unless it be a single heat. Rule XXX. — Jockey Dress. — Each member of the Association, before starting horses in races over the Association Course, shall be required to report to the Secretary the colors in which Ins Jockey will ride ; but no member shall adopt the same combination of 5G4 THE HOESE. colors previously selected {ind reported by another member. Persona not members of this Association, making entries in stakes to be run over this Course, shall be required to report to the Secretary, at least ten days before the races, the colors in which their Jockeys will ride. The declaration that a rider's dress will be fancy, is not a proper designation of colors. Jockeys' caps and jackets shall be made of silk, satin, merino or velvet ; the pants of linen, cotton, or other appropriate material. For any violation of this rule a penalty of ten dollars shall be assessed by the Judges, and the amount added to the purse or stake of the occasion. EuLE XXXI. — Age. — A horse's age shall be reckoned from the 1st of January; that is to say, a horse foaled in 1858 shall be reck- oned one year old on the 1st day of January, 1859. EuLE XXXII. — Weights and Weighing. — The following weights shall be carried : — 3-year-olds, 86 pounds ; 3-year-olds, 90 pounds ; 4-year-olds, 104 pounds; 5-year-olds, 110 pounds; 6-year-olds and npwar-ds, 115|^ pounds. There shall be allowed to mares, fillies and geldings a deduction of 3 pounds from these weights. The Judges shall see that each rider has his proper weight before the start, and that he has within two pounds of it after each heat. Weight shall not be made by wetting the blanket placed on or under the saddle. At the close of each heat every rider must repair with his horse to the Judges' stand, and await their order to dismount ; and no groom or other person shall be permitted to touch or cover any horse (unless to lead back a refractory horse, or the rider is disabled) until the rider shall have been dismounted by the Judges. The rider shall then repair to the scales with his saddle, to be weighed. For any violation of this rule, the horse involved shall be declared distanced. EuLE XXXIII. — Placing. — The places of the horses at starting shall be determined as drawn from the entry box ; and in stakes they shall stand in the order in which they are nominated. EuLE XXXIV. — Starting. — In every race over tliis Course the mode of starting shall be this: The Judges of the day shall have the horses taken back at least thirty yards fi'om the stand, tinder the care of one of the Stewards ; from that point they shall, in the order of their placing, be led at a walk until the signal to start is given. The Judge may give the signal at any moment wliile the horses are approaching the stand, and should the signal not be given before reaching the stand, the horses shall be again taken back to the place whence they were led. Should any groom, while approaching the stand, fail or refuse to obey the orders of the RULES OF THE KENTUCKY xVSSOCIATION. oG5 Stewards, or intentionally let his horse gu so that he lireak aAvay, the owner of such horse shall, for every such offence, be fined five dollars, which shall go to the Treasury of the Association. Unruly and vicious horses may be assigned any position, at the start, which the Judges may deem necessary to secure the safety of the other horses and riders. The signal for starting shall be the tap of the drum, after which there shall be no recall. In case of a false start the ringing of the bell shall be the signal of recall. The Stewards shall report to the Judges any disobedience or misconduct of the persons starting the horses. EuLE XXXV. — Time letween Heats. — The time between heats shall be 20 minutes for mile heats ; 30 minutes for two mile ; 40 minutes for three mile, and 45 minutes for four mile heats. EuLE XXXVI. — Foul Riding. — A horse that has won a heat shall be entitled to the track in starting for the next heat ; other horses taking position in the order of their placing in the previous heat. The leading horse, in any part of the race, shall have the right to select his ground, from which he shall not swerve, either to the right or left, so as to impede another horse. Should any rider cross, jostle, or strike another, or his horse; run on his horse's heels, or do anything else that may impede his adversary, he will be deemed distanced ; and if intentionally, the offending rider shall never be permitted again to ride over or attend a horse on this Course. EuLE XXXVIL— Bolting. — If any horse shall run from the track into the field, he will be declared distanced, although he may come out ahead, unless he return and again enter the Course at the point from which he swerved. EuLE XXXVIII. — Of Aids. — No person other than the rider sliall be permitted to strike a horse, or attempt by shouting or otherwise to assist a horse in getting a start, or increase his speed in running any race. Nor shall any person stand in the track to point out a path for the rider, under a penalty of exclusion from the Course for either offence, and if such person shall be the owner, trainer or rubber of such horse, or instigated to the act by either of the said persons, such horse shall be declared distanced. But this rule shall not be construed to forbid the starter of any horse from striking him with an ordinary riding whip in order to get him off. EuLE XXXIX. — Horses to run a Fair Race. — Every horse started shall run a lona fide race. If any horse shall run to lose, the owner, trainer and rider shall forfeit all righf.^ under the rules of this Association, and no longer be allowed to hold any connec- tion with it. 566 THE HOKSE. No compromise or agreement between any two persons starling horses, or their agents or grooms, not to oppose each other npon a promised division of the purse, shall be permitted; and no persons shall run their horses with a determination to oppose jointly any other horse in the race. In either case, upon satisfactory proof of such agreement, the Judges shall award the purse to the next best horse, and the persons offending shall never be permitted again to start a horse over this Course. Rule XL. — Patrol Judges. — The President is authorized and emjiowered to appoint any member or members as Patrol Judges, when by him deemed necessary, and upon refusal of any member to serve, to assess against him a fine of not less than ten and not more than twenty dollars. EuLE XLL — Winner and Dead Heats. — In the race best two in THREE, a horse that wins two heats or distances the field, wins the race ; in the race best three in five, the horse that wins three heats or distances the field, wins the race. In heats best two in three, a horse not winning one heat in three, shall not be entitled to start for a fourth heat ; and in best three in five, a horse not win- ning one heat in five, shall not be allowed to start for a sixth heat. When thus prohibited from starting, a horse shall not be deemed distanced, and all bets on his being distanced, shall be void. A Dead Heat shall be considered a heat, except as against the horses that make it. Rule XLII. — Forfeits. — Upon the failure of any one to pay a forfeit before a race, he shall l)e compelled to pay the amount of the entrance, as if his horse had started. Rule XlAll.— Persons Ruled off. — Any person ruled off by any organized Racing Association, shall be considered ruled off by the Kentucky Association, aod if reinstated by that Association, shall be reinstated by this ; and it shall be the duty of the Secretary of this Association to notify the Secretary of all organized Associa- tions of any one ruled off. Rule XLIV. — Walk Over. — In the event of a walk over for any purse advertised to be run for on the Kentucky Association Course, the entire purse will be given to the horse walking over. Rule XIN.— Of the Beaten Horses.— Rq shall be declared the best horse that wins a heat. Of beaten horses that have each won a heat, that one which is best in the last heat of the race, shall be declared best in the race. Those not winning a heat shall be placed, and T)ets decided accordingly as they come to the stand at the termination of the race. If the winner of a heat is after- RULES OF THE KENTUCKY ASSOCIATION. 507 Avards distanced, he is beaten hy those who save their distance. A horse distanced in a second heat, is better than one distanced in the first, and so on through the race. KuLE XLVI. — Drawing. No person shall be permitted to draw or sell his horse during the race, except by permission of the Judges, under the penalty of being excluded from the Club and Course, and not being allowed any participation in its racing here- after. A drawn horse shall be considered distanced. All horses entered for a purse race shall be under the control of the Judges from the time they are entered until the close of the race. Rule XLVII. — Distance. — There shall be two Distance Judges appointed by the President, who shall repair to the Judges' stand, after each heat, and report the distanced horses and any foul riding, if any have been observed by them. A horse whose head reaches the distance as soon as the winner reaches the winning post, shall not be considered distanced. A horse who fails to bring in his proper weight, or is distanced from winning by foul riding, is to be deemed distanced. The distance in a mile shall be . . .50 yards. " " . . .60 " " " . . .80 " " " . . . 100 « In match races there shall be a distance, unless the contrary be expressly stipulated by the parties. EuLE XLVIII. — Doubtful Age, OumersMp, etc. — On suggestion of any doubts as to the age, ownership, etc., of any horse entered for a race, it shall be the duty of the Judges to inquire into the facts, and if satisfied that any rule of the Association is about to be violated, to exclude such horse from the race, and if the horse is permitted to run, from a doubt not being sustained, and any doubt remains on the minds of the Judges, the purse, if won by such horse, shall be withheld until the doubt is confirmed or done away with. On being eventually sustained, the purse shall be awarded and paid to the next l^est horse in the race. EuLE XLIX. — If any Fraud shall he discovered, by which the winner shall have been improperly paid the purse, such as a decep- tion as to weight, age, ownership, partnership, etc., the Judges shall demand its restoration, and it shall be paid over to the owner of the next best horse. If not restored, the illegal holder of the purse, if a member, shall be expelled the Club, and he shall not be allowed tt it 2 n any track, whether short or not, shall constitute a record ; but time RULES 01' THE natio:nal association. 571 made under the saddle, slnill not be a record in liarness or wagon races. 6. The entrance fee shall be ten per cent, of the purse, unless otherwise specified ; and any person refusing to pay his entrance dues upon demand by the proper authority, shall, together with his horse or horses, be suspended until they are paid in full. 7. No person shall be permitted to draw his horse after said horse has appeared on the track, saddled or harnessed, after having been summoned to prepare for the race, or duinng a race, except by permission of the Judges, under penalty of being expelled. Article III. — In case of Death. — All engagements are void upon the decease of either party or horse, so far as they shall affect the deceased party or horse; but forfeits or matches made play or pay, shall not be affected by the death of a horse. Article IV. — Fraudulent Entries, or Meddling witli Horses. — Any person found guilty of dosing or tampering with any horse, or of making a fraudulent entry of any horse, or of disguising a horse with intent to conceal his identity, or being in any way concerned in such a transaction, shall be panislied by the forfeiture of en- trance money and expulsion ; and any horse that shall have been painted or disguised, to represent another or a different horse, or shall have been entered in a purse in which he does not belong, shall be expelled. Article V. — Reward. — A reward of $50 will be paid to the person who shall first give information leading to the detection of any fraudulent entry and \\\q parties thereto, to be paid out of the funds of the National Association for the Promotion of the Inter- ests of the American Trotting Turf, liy the Treasurer, upon recom- mendation of the officers of the Course where such fraudulent entry was made, provided that this shall not be construed to extend to Courses outside of this Association. Article VI. — Decorum. — If any owner, trainer, rider, driver or attendant of a horse, or any other person, use improper language to the officers of the Course or the Judges in a race, or be guilty of any improper conduct, the person or persons so offending shall ue punished by a fine not exceeding $100, or by suspension or ex- pulsion. Article VII. — Selection of Judges. — There shall be chosen by the proper authority, three (3) competent Judges for the day or race, who shall understand the rules of this Association, and shall be held accountable for their rigid enforcement, and all their decis- ions shall be in accordance therewith. Any person having a bet 573 THE HOKSE. upon, or an interest, either direct or indirect, in any or either of tl:;^ horses in a race, shall not be entitled to judge that race. In all match races these rules shall govern, unless the contrary be ex- pressly stipulated and assented to by the club, association, or pro- prietors of the Course over which the race is to come off. Article VIII. — Power of Judges. — The Judges of the day or race shall have power to appoint distance and patrol Judges; they shaU decide all questions and matters of dispute between parties to the race that are not provided for in the Rules and Eegu- lations, and shall have full power to inflict aU fines and penalties provided by these rules. They shall have entire control and authority over the horses about to start, and the riders or drivers and assistants of the horses, and any such person refusing to obey their orders, shall be punislied by a fine not exceeding 1100, or by suspension or expulsion. No rider or driver shall cause unnecessary delay after the liorses are called up, either by neglecting to j^repare for the race in time, or by neglecting to come for the word, or otherwise ; and when, in scoring, the signal is not given, all the horses in the race shall immediately turn at the tajD of the bell, or other signal given, and jog back for a fresh start. If this rule is not complied with on the part of any rider or driver, the Judges may give the word without regard to the offending party or parties, and they may be punishd by a fine not exceeding $100, or by suspension not to exceed one year. When any horse or horses keep so far aliead of others in scoring that the Judges cannot give a fair start, they shall give the offend- ing party or parties notice of the penalties attached to such offensive conduct, and should they still persist, shall enforce said penalties. When the Judges are prevented from giving the word by a horse or horses being refractory, or from any other cause, they may, after a reasonable time, give the word without reference to the position of the refractory horse or horses, or may give them any j^osition they think proper to facilitate the start. In all cases the Avord shall be given from the Judges' stand, and in no case shall a standing start be given. K the Judges have reason to suppose that a horse is being or has been "pulled," to fraudulently prevent his winning, they shall have poAver to sul)stitute a competent and rclialile driver or rider for the remainder of the race, and if the result of the suc- ceeding heat or heats shall confirm their suspicion, the rider or driver so removed shall be punished by suspension or expulsion. When disputes and contingencies arise, which are not provided for in the Rules, the Judges shall have power to decide in sucli cases ; RULES OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION. 573 but in no case cun there be a compromise in the manner of puni-sli- ment, where the Kules express or name what the penalty shall be, but the same shall be strictly enforced. Judges may require riders and drivers to be properly dressed. Article IX. — Judges' Duty. — The Judges shall be ii\ tlie stand fifteen minutes before the time for starling; they shall weigh the riders or drivers, and determine the positions of the horses, and give each rider or driver his place before starting. They shall ring the bell or give other notice ten minutes previous to the time an- nounced for the race to come oflf, which shall be notice to all parties to prepare for the race at the appointed time, when all the horses must be ready, and any party failing to comply with this rule, shall be punished by a fine not exceeding ^100 ; or the horse may be ruled out by the Judges and considered drawn ; 1)ut in all stakes and matches they shall be liable to forfeit. The Judges shall not notice or receive complaints of foul from anj^ person or persons, ex- cept those appointed by the Judges for that purpose, and owners, riders or drivers in the race. The result of a heat shall not be an- nounced until the Judges are satisfied as to the weiglits of the riders or drivers, and sufficient time has elapsed to receive the re- ports of the Distance and Patrol Judges. When the Judges are satisfied that a race is being or has been conducted improperly on the part of any rider or driver in a race, they shall punish the offender by suspension not to exceed one year, or by expulsion. K a horse is purposely pulled or broken, to allow another horse to win the heat, the horse so pulled or broken shall be distanced, unless such decision shall be deemed to favor a fraud, and the rider or driver shall be punished by suspension not to exceed one year, or by expulsion ; but in case the Judges shall deem such decision as the above to favor a fraud, they shall declare that heat no heat, and shall substitute another driver or rider for the offending one. The presiding Judge shall instruct the riders or drivers in relation to scoring and breaking, prior to the commencement of the race. Article X. — Distance and Patrol Judges. — In all races of heats there shall be a Distance Judge, appointed by the proper authority, who shall remain in the distance-stand during the heats, and imme- diately after each heat shall repair to the Judges' stand, and report to the Judges the horse or horses that are distanced, and any act of foul, if any has occurred under his observation. The Patrol Judges shall repair in like manner to the Judges' stand, and report any act of foul, if any has occurred under their 574 THE HOESB. observation ; the reports of the Distance and Patrol Judges shall be alone received. Article XI. — Accidents. — In case of accidents, ten minutes shall be allowed, but the Judges may allow more time when deemed necessary and proper. Article XII.— Judges' Stand. — None but the Judges of the race in progress, and their assistants, shall be allowed in the Judges' Stand during the pendency of a heat, except members of the Board of Appeals. Article XIII. — Poiver of Postponement. — In case of unfavorable weather, or other unavoidable causes, each Association or proprietor shall have power to postpone to a future time all purses or sweep- stakes or any race to which they have contributed money, upon giving notice thereof. No heat shall be trotted when it is so dark that the horses cannot be plainly seen by the Judges from the stand, but all such races shall be continued by the Judges to the next day, omitting Sunday, at such hour as they shall designate. In all matches and stakes, the above rule shall govern, unless otherwise especially agreed between the parties and the Association or proprietors. Article XIV. — Starting and Keeping Positions. — The horso winning a heat shall take the pole the succeeding heat, and all others shall take their positions in the order in which they came home in the last heat. When two or more horses shall make a dead heat, the horses shall start for the succeeding heat in the same positions tliey occupied at the finish of the dead heat. In coming out in the home-stretch, the foremost horse or horses shall keep the position first selected, or be liable to be distanced ; and the hindmost horse or horses, when there is sufficient room to pass on the inside or anywhere on the home-stretch without interfering with others, shall be allowed to do so, and any party interfering to prevent him or them shall be distanced. If a horse should at any time cross or swerve on the home-stretch so as to impede the progress of a horse behind him, he shall not be entitled to win that heat. If a horse, rider, or driver shall cross, jostle or strike another horse, rider or driver, or shall swerve, or do anytliing that impedes the progress of another horse, he shall not be eniilled to win that heat; and if the impropriety was intentional on flie part of tlie rider or driver, the horse that impedes the other sliall be distanerd, and the rider or driver shall be punished by suspension not to excc"! one year, or by expulsion. Although a leading horse is entitled to any part of the track. EULES OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION. 575 except after selecting his position on tlie home-stretch, if he crosses from the right to the left, or from the inner to the outer side of the track, when a horse is so near him that in clianging his position he compels the horse hehind him to shorten his stride, or if he causes the rider or driver to pull him out of his stride, it is foul ; and if, in passing a leading horse, the track is taken so soon after getting the lead as to cause the horse passed to shorten his stride, it is foul. Aeticle XV. — Loud Shouting. — Any rider or driver guilty of loud shouting or making other unnecessary noise, or of making improper use of the whip, during the pendency of a heat, shall be punished by a fine not to exceed $25 for the first offence, and for the second offence by suspension during the meeting. Article XVI. — Horses Breahing. — When any horse or horses break from their gait in trotting or pacing, their riders or drivers shall at once pull them to the gait in which they were to go the race, and any party refusing or neglecting to comply with this rule, shall lose the heat, and the next best horse shall win the heat ; and all other horses shall be placed ahead in that heat, and the Judges shall have discretionary power to distance the offending horse or horses, and the rider or driver shall be punished by a fine not to exceed 1100, or by suspension not exceeding one year. Should the rider or driver comply with this rule, and the horse should gain by a break, twice the distance so gained shall be taken from him at the coming out. In case of a horse repeatedly breaking, or of running or pacing while another horse is trotting, the Judges shall punish the horse so breaking, running or pacing, by placing him last in the heat, or by distancing him. A horse breaking at or near the score shall be subject to the same penalty as if he broke on any other part of the track. All complaints of foul by riders or drivers must be made at the termination of the heat, and before the rider or driver dismounts or leaves his vehicle by order of the Judges. Article XVII. — Fraudulent ColUsmis or Interference. — In any case where a drivei' is run into and his wagon or sulky broken down without fault on his part, the heat shall be deemed no heat so far as the horses not in fault are concerned, but he who causes the breakdown may be distanced ; and if the Judges find that it was clone wilfully, the driver in fault shall be forthwith suspended or expelled, and his horse shall be distanced. If by any outside interference or obstruction a vehicle is broken 576 THE HOKSE. aown and the horse prevented from winning a heat, that heat shall be deemed no heat. Aeticle XVIII. — Relative to Heats, and Horses eligible to start. — In heats, one, two, three or four miles, a horse not winning one heat in three shall not start for a fourth unless such horse shall haye made a dead heat. In heats best three in five, a horse not winning a heat in five shall not start for a sixth, unless said horse shall have made a dead heat. But where eight or more horses start in a race, every horse not distanced shall have the right to compete until the race is completed. A dead heat shall be considered a heat as regards all excepting the horses making such dead heat, and those only shall start for the next heat that would have been entitled had the heat been won by either horse making the dead heat. A horse prevented from starting by this rule shall not be distanced, but ruled out. A horse must win a majority of the heats which are required by the conditions of the race, to be entitled to the purse or stakes, unless such horse shall have distanced all others in one heat, except when otherwise provided in the published conditions. Aeticle XIX. — Placi7ig Horses. — Horses distanced in the first heat of a race shall be eq^^al, but horses that are distanced in any subsequent heat shall rank as. to each other in the order of the posi- tions to which they were entitled at the start of the heat in which they are distanced, and in deciding the result of any race between the horses contending in the last heat thereof, the relative position of each horse so contending shall be considered as to every heat in the race ; that is, horses having won two heats, better than those T\inning one; ahorse that has won a heat, better than a horse only making a dead heat ; a horse winning one or two heats and making a dead heat, better than one winning an equal number of heats but not making a dead heat ; a horse winning a heat or making a dead heat and not distanced in the race, better than a horse that has not won a heat or made a dead heat; a horse that has been placed " second " twice, better than a horse that has been placed " second " only once,. etc. When two or more horses shall be equal in the race at the com- mencement of a final heat thereof, they shall rank as to each other as they are placed in the decision of such final heat. In case these provisions shall not give a specific decision as to second and third mnn"y, etc., the Judges of the race are to make the awards according to their best judgment and in conformity with the principles of this rule. KULES OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION'. 577 AiiTiCLE XX. — Time behveen Heats. — Tlie time between heats shall be twenty minutes for mile heats ; and for mile heats, best 3 in 5, twenty-live minutes; and for two-mile heats, thirty minutes; for three-mile heats, thirty-five minutes ; and should there be a race of four-mile heats, the time shall be forty minutes. After the first heat, the horses shall be called five minutes prior to the time of starting. AiiTiCLE XXL — Heats in wMclb the Time is 7tuU and void. — If for any cause a heat shall be taken away from a horse that comes in ahead, the heat shall Ijc awarded to the next best horse, and no time shall be given out by the Judges, or recorded against either horse, and the Judges may waive the ajiplication of the rule in regard to distances in that heat, except for foul riding or driving. Article XXIL — Weights and Weighing. — Every horse starting for purse, sweepstakes or match, in any trotting or pacing race, shall carry, if to wagon or sulky, 150 pounds, exclusive of harness ; and if under the saddle, 145 pounds, the saddle and whip only to be weighed with the rider. Eiders and drivers shall weigh in the presence of one or more of the Judges previous to starting for any race, and after each heat shall come to the starting stand and not dismount or leave their vehicle without permission of the Judges. Any party violating this rule may be distanced. But a rider or driver thrown or taken by force from his horse or vehicle, after ha\ang passed the winning- post, shall not be considered as having dismounted without permis- sion of the Judges ; and if disabled may be carried to the Judges' stand to be weighed, and the Judges, may take the circumstances in consideration and decide accordingly. Article XXIII. — Handicaps and Miscellaneous Weights. — In matches or handicaps, where extra or lesser weights are to be carried, the Judges shall carefully examine and ascertain before starting, whether the riders, drivers or vehicles are of such weights as have been agreed upon or required by the match or handicap ; and the riders or drivers who shall carry during the race and bring home with them the weights which have been announced correct and proper by the Judges, shall be subject to no penalty for light weight in that heat, provided the Judges are satisfied of their own mistake, and that there has been no deception on the part of the rider or driver who shall be deficient in weight ; but all parties thereafter shall carry the required weight. Article XXIV. — Size of TT7^;))5.— Riders and drivers will be allowed whips of the following lengths : for saddle horses, 3 IT;. 10 in. ; Vol. II.— 37 578 THE HORSE. sulkies, 4 ft. 8 in. ; wagons, 5 ft 10 in. Double teams, 6 ft. 6 in. ; tandem teams and four-in-hand, unlimited. Article XXV. — Distances. — In heats of one mile, 80 yards shall be a distance. In heats of two miles, 150 yards shall be a distance. In heats of three miles, 230 yards shall be a distance. In heats of one mile, best 3 in 5, 100 yards shall be a distance. Except in heats where eight or more horses contend, then the distance shall be increased one-half. All horses whose heads have not reached the distance-stand as soon as the leading horse arrives at the winning-post, shall be declared distanced, except in cases of unavoidable accidents, when it shall be left to the discretion of the Judges. Article XXVI. — Purse or Stake Wrongfully Obtained. — A person obtaining a stake or purse through fraud, shall return it to the Treasurer on demand, or be punished as follows : — He, together with all the parties interested, and the horse or horses, shall bo expelled until such demand is complied with. Article XXVII. — Protests. — Protests may be made verbally before or during a race, and shall be reduced to writing, and shall contain at least one specific charge and a statement of the evidence upon which it is based, and shall be filed with the Judges, Associa- tion or Proprietor before the close of the meeting. The Judges shall, in every case of protest, demand that the rider or driver and the owner or owners, if present, shall immediately testify under oath, in the manner hereinafter provided ; and in case of their refusal to do so, the horse shall not be allowed thereupon to start in that race, or any heat thereof, but shall be considered and declared ruled out. But if they do comply and take the oath, as herein required, then the Judges shall allow the horse to start, or continue in the race, and the premium, if any is won by that horse, shall be retained a sufficient length of time (say three weeks), to allow the parties interested a chance to sustain their protest. Associations or Proprietors shall be warranted in retaining the premium of any horse in the manner herein mentioned, if at any time before it is paid they shall receive information in their judg- ment tending to show fraud. Any person found guilty of protesting a horse without cause, or with intent to embarrass a race, shall be punished by a fine not exceeding 1100, or by suspension not to exceed one year, or by expulsion. EULES OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION. 579 The required oath shall be iu the following form, to wit : I, of in the county of State of on oath depose and say, that I am the of the called the same entered in a purse for horses that have never trotted better tlian minutes and seconds, to be trotted this day on this Course, and the same that has been protested, and to which this affidavit is in answer, hereby declare and affirm that to the best of my hnoioledge and helief, said before-mentioned horse is eligible to start or compete in the race aforesaid, according to the Rules of this Course; and that I fully believe all the provisions and conditions required in the Eules and Regulations for the govern- ment of trials of speed over this Course, Avere fully and honestly complied with in making the entry aforesaid. Given under my hand, at this day of A. D. 187 Subscribed and sworn to before me, day of A. D. 187 Justice of the Peace. Article XXVIII. — A race " to go as they pleaf^e." — When a race is made to go as they please, it shall be construed that the performance shall be in harness, to wagon or under the saddle ; but after the race is commenced no change shall be made in the mode of going. Article XXIX. — A race " in harmless'- — When a race is made to go in harness, it shall be construed to mean that the performance shall be to a sulky. Article XXX. — Trotting Horse and Running Mate. — A race wherein a trotting horse goes with a running mate shall not create a record for time as a trotting performance. Article XXXI. — A race made and no distance specified. — When a race is made and no distance specified, it shall be restricted to the following distances, viz. : one mile and repeat ; mile heats, best 3 in 5 ; 3 miles and repeat ; or 3 miles and repeat ; and may be performed in harness, to wagon, or under the saddle. Article XXXTL.— Matches against Time.—^hew a horse is matched against time, it shall be proper to allow any other horse to 580 THE HOESE. accompany him in tlie performance, but not to be harnessed with, or in any way attached to him. In matches made against time, the parties making the match shall be entitled to three trials, unless expressly stipulated to the contrary, which trials shall be had in the same day ; the time between trials to be the same as the time between heats in similar distances. Article XXXIII. — WImi Matches become Play or Pay. — In all matches made to come off over any of these Courses, the parties shall place the amount of the match in the hands of the stake- holder one day before the event (omitting Sunday) is to come off, at such time and place as the Club, Association or Proprietor, upon application may determine, and the race shall then become play or pay. Article XXXIV. — Age of Horses — lioiu recTconed. — The age of a horse shall be reckoned from the first day of January preceding the period of foaling. Article XXXV. — A Green Horse. — A green horse is one that has never trotted or paced for premiums or money, either double or single. ' Article XXXVI. — Horses sold tuith Engagements. — The seller of a horse sold with his engagements has not the power of striking him out. In case of private sale, the written acknowledgment of the parties that the horse was sold with engagements is necessary to entitle the buyer to the benefit of this. Article XXXVII. — Suspetision. — The words suspended or sus- pension, wherever they occur in these rules, shall be construed to mean suspension from entering, riding, driving, training or assisting on the grounds of any Course represented in this Association. Article XXXVIII. — Expulsion. — The words expelled or expul- sion, wherever they occur in these rules, shall be construed to mean unconditional expulsion from all the Courses represented in this Association. Article XXXIX.— Rigid of Appeal— Any person who has been subjected to any of the penalties provided by these rules, can appeal from the decision of the Judges to the Association or Proprietors, upon whose grounds the penalty was imposed, and from their decision can appeal to the Board of Appeals, provided they shall do so within one week from the announcement of such decisions, and provided also that where the penalty Avas a fine it shall have been previously paid. Article XL. — Fi7ies. — All persons who may have been fined BY-LAWS OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION. 581 under these rules, unless they pay thorn in full on the day of assess- ment, sliall be suspended until they arc paid in full. All fines shall be paid to the Association or Proprietor on whose grounds they were imposed, and by them shall be paid to the Treasurer of the National Association upon demand. BY-LAWS OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE PROMOTION OF THE INTERESTS OF THE AMERICAN TROTTING TURF. 1. Name. — This Association shall be known under the name of the " National Association for the Promotion of the Interests of the American Trotting Turf." 2. Object. — This Association shall have for its principal object, the prevention, detection and punishment of frauds on the trotting turf of America, and to elevate the standard of trotting. 3. Officers. — The officers of this Association shall consist of a President, as many Vice-Presidents as there are associated Courses represented, Secretary and Treasurer. The duties of the Secretary and Treasurer shall be discharged by one and the same person. 4. President. — The President shall be a member of the Board of Appeals, and when present shall preside at all meetings of the Association and the Board of Appeals, and shall have the casting vote at such meetings. 5. Vice-Presidents. — It shall be the duty of the Vice-Presidents to see that the Secretary is furnished with a statement of all official acts of the executive officers of their respective Courses, relating to this Association ; and at the end of the trotting season each year, to prepare a review of the whole, together with an official summary of all races upon their respective Courses ; said summary sliall con- tain the date, the amount or value of the purse, match or sweep- stake, the full terms and conditions of the race ; the name of the person nominating each horse, the name of each driver, and the color, sex and name of each horse entered ; the position of each and every horse in each heat, the drawn, distanced and ruled out horses ; the official time of each and every heat, the names of the Judges, and such notes and remarks as are necessary for a plain comprehension of the whole. They shall also furnish a list of all persons that have been fined, suspended or expelled, together with the amount of fines and 583 THE HOESE. term of suspension ; and shall furnish a list of the officers of their respective Associations or Courses, with their Post Office address. 6. Secretary and Treasurer. — It shall be the duty of the Secre- tary, when present, to act as Secretary at all meetings of the Associa- tion and Board of Appeals. He shall keep a record, to be kept in a book for that purpose, of all the proceedings of such meetings, and by order of the President, call all meetings of the Association and Board, and attend to all correspondence relating to the affairs of the Association. He shall furnish each associated Course with a written or printed coj^y of the proceedings of all the meetings of the Associa- tion and Board of Appeals, and at the close of each year he shall com- pile and arrange an official record which shall contain the proceedings in detail of all meetings of this Association and Board of Appeals during the year ; a complete record of all races over each and all the associate Courses; a complete list of persons and horses that have been fined, suspended or expelled, together with the amount of fines and term of suspension, and such other matters as may be of interest and service to the Association. Of the matter so collected, he shall have prepared at least one printed copy for each of the associated Courses, and as many more as the Board of Appeals may, in their judgment, deem expedient ; said last-mentioned copies to be disposed of by sale for the benefit of the Association, or in such other manner as the Board of Appeals may direct : And in his capacity as Treasurer, he shall receive and take charge of all moneys that may be due to the Association, and make therefrom such disbursements in payment of demands growing out of the legitimate transactions of the Association, as may be sanc- tioned by the Board of Appeals. He shall keep full, accurate and distinct accounts of his receipts and disbursements, and shall prepare a statement at the end of each year (and as much oftener as the Board of Appeals may require), showing the receipts, expenses, and the financial condition of the Association. 7. Board of Appeals.— The Board of Appeals shall consist of nine (9) members, of whom the President shall be one, and shall have semi-annual meetings at the office of the Secretary, viz. : the second Tuesday in July and January. Special meetings may be called whenever deemed necessary by the President ; and at all meetings, whether regular or special, four (4) members of the Board shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. Due notice of all meetings, in manner provided for notice of Association meet- ings, shall be given by the Secretary to each member of the Beard. The Board of Appeals shall have the general management, con- EY-LAWS OF THE NATIOXAL ASSOCIATION. 583 trol and suiXTiuleiidcncc of the aflUirs of this Aasociution, subject to the Rules, Regulations and By-Laws, and to the Secretary must be addressed all charges against any member of this Association. They shall examine all evidence of fraud or other matters relating to the turf that is brought before them, and shall take such measures to ascertain the truth or falsity of all charges as in their judgment is deemed necessary and proper. The Board of Appeals shall have power to call a new congress whenever deemed necessary to alter, annul, amend or add to these rules. They shall also be entitled to the privilege of honorary membership on the grounds and premises of all the associated Courses. 8. Delegation. — A delegation to a general congress shall consist of one or more persons, not exceeding three, duly authorized iu writing by the President or Secretary of their respective Associar tions, or proprietor or proprietors of individual Courses. 9. Adniissio?i of Memher^s. — All applications for admission to this Association must be made in writing, duly signed and addressed to the Secretary of the Board of Appeals, who alone are authorized to admit members. All new members shall abide by all previous action of this Association, a copy of which shall be furnished them by the Secretary. 10. Fee of Meiiibersliip. — The fee of membership shall be deter- mined by the Board of Appeals, and shall be payable on or before the first day of February, in each year. 11. Forfeiture of MemlersMp. — An Association ha^ang once been admitted shall continue a member upon the prompt payment of dues for the succeeding year, on or before its commencement, unless expelled by vote of the Board of AjDpeals, for a disobedience of the Rules and Regulations or By-Laws of this Association. 12. Duties of Members. — It shall be the duty of each member to see that the Rules, Regulations and By-Laws of this Association are rigidly enforced upon their respective Courses. Members shall in no case allow their Courses to be used for other than legitimate exhibitions, and they shall be held responsible for any violation of the rules of this Association. They shall keep on file all letters, entries and communications relating to their respective Courses, for future reference. They shall furnish each owner, trainer, rider or driver, with a copy of the rules of this Association, if so requested, and shall have at least one copy posted in some conspicuous place in the Judges' stand for the convenience of the Judges. 584 THE HOESE. 13. Clerh of tlie Course. — It siiall be the duty of each member to provide the services of a competent person to assist the Judges in each and every race upon their respective Courses, who shall be styled the Clerk of the Course. He shall understand the rules of this Association, and be able to give any information in regard to them that may be required by the Judges. He may assist in weighing riders or drivers, assigning the posi- tion of horses before the race, or other similar duties at the request of the Judges ; and shall keep a book in which shall be recorded a description of the dress of each rider, and the weight carried ; he shall note the time a heat is finished, and shall notify the Judges, or ring the bell at the expiration of the time allowed between heats; he may assist the Judges in placing the horses at the finish of a heat. He shall record in a book to be kept for that purpose, an ac- count of every heat, in the following form, to wit: First — all horses entered and the name of the riders or drivers ; next, the starting horses and the positions assigned them ; next, a record of each heat, giving the position of each horse at the finish, then the offi- cial time of each heat, and at the end, an official summary of the race, giving the drawn, distanced and ruled-out horses, if any there be. He shall record all protests, fines, penalties and appeals. This book shall be signed by the Judges and shall constitute the official record. 14. Annual 3Ieetings. — The annual meetings of this Association shall be held the first week in February in each year, at such place as may be chosen at the annual meeting next preceding; a written or printed notice of each meeting shall be mailed, postage paid, and addressed by the Secretary to each member, at least thirty days prior to said first week in February, and only those Associations or Courses shall be entitled to be represented at such annual meetings as may, according to the books of the Association, have been mem- bers for six months next preceding such meeting. Eeich member shall be entitled to one vote, and they may vote by delegates duly authorized, or in writing, as they prefer. 15. Special Meetings.— ^^QCinX meetings of the Association shall be called by the Secretary, whenever requested by the Board of Appeals, or in writing by a majority of the members, and fifteen days notice shall bo given by the Secretary, to each mcml)cr, of special meetings in the manner provided for notice of annual meet- ings ; one-fourth of the members shall be represented to constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. BY-LAWS OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION. oHO 16. Election of Officer,'^.— The President and Board of Appeals shall be chosen at the Inaugural meeting of the Association, and annually thereafter, and shall retain their respective offices until a successor is appointed. In case of the resignation or death of any of their members, the Board of Appeals shall have power to fill vacancies until the next election. The Vice-Presidents shall be chosen annually by the executive officers of their respective Associations or Courses, in such manner as they may elect, and shall retain their office until a successor is appointed. Notice of all such elections shall be given to the Secre- tary of this Association within thirty (30) days thereafter. The Secretary and Treasurer shall be elected by the Board of Appeals, and shall hold his office until a successor is appointed. 17. Entries. — The hour for closing the entries of all purses or premiums offered by any of the associated Courses shall be 9 o'clock, P. M. All letters or entries bearing postmark the date of closing, shall be ehgible. 18. Fines. — All fines shall revert to the National Association, and shall be paid to the Treasurer upon demand. 19. Length of Tracks. — All members of this Association shall, upon demand, furnish the Secretary with the statement of a compe- tent civil engineer, who shall certify under oath the exact distance of their respective tracks, measured just three feet from the pole, that is to say, the inside fence or ditch. These certificates shall be en- dorsed by the proper officer of the Course designated, and shall be placed upon the records of this Association. 20. By-Laws. — Each Association may be governed by its own By-Laws, provided they do not conflict with these, or with the Eules and Regulations adopted by this Association. These By-Laws may be amended whenever required by two- thirds of the members, but notice of such amendment shall be given in the call of the meeting, at which they are to be submitted. BETTING RULES. In framing and organizing the Rules of the National Associa- tion for the Promotion of the Interests of the American Trotting Turf, the Convention omitted all reference to betting, but the com- mittee appointed and empowered by the Convention have adopted the following rules which shall control all bets over the different Courses : 1. All decisions of purses, premiums, matches or sweepstakes, 686 THE HORSE. or division thereof, and all pools and bets, must follow the decision of the Judges, from which there shall be no appeal ; and no pools or bets shall be declared off except for fraud. 2. If a race is postponed, it shall not affect the pools or bets that may have been made on it. They shall stand until the race comes off, unless the contrary shall be agreed on between the parties bet- ting; provided the race takes place within eight days of the time first named ; after which time all bets and pools are drawn, unless play or pay. 3. When any change is made in the conditions of a race, all pools and bets made previous to the announcement of the change shall be null and void. 4. When a bet is made on one horse against the field, he must start or the bet is off, and the field is what starts against him ; but there is no field unless one start against him. 5. In pools and betting, the pool stands good for all the horses that start in the race ; but for those horses that do not start, the money must be returned to the purchaser. 6. In races made play or pay, outside bets are not play or pay unless so made by the parties. 7. All bets are void on the decease of either party, but in case a horse should die, play or pay bets made on him stand. 8. If a bet is made on any number of straight heats, and there is a dead heat made, the heats are not straight, and the party bet- ting on straight heats loses. 9. If in any case the Judges declare a heat null and void, it does not affect the bets as in case of a dead heat as to winning in straight heats. 10. When a race is coming off, and a party bets that a heat will be made in two minutes and thirty seconds (2.30) and they make two thirty (3.30) or less, he would win. If he bets they will beat two minutes and thirty seconds, (2.30), and they make exactly two thirty (2.30), he loses ; but if he takes two minutes and thirty sec- onds (2.30) against the field, and they make exactly two tliirty (2.30) it is a tie, or draw bet. All time bets to be decided ac- cordingly. 11. In a double event — where there is no action on the first race in order, in consequence of forfeit or other cause, the bet is off; but where there is an action on the bet, and the party betting on the double event shall have won the first, the bet shall then stand as a play or pay bet for the second event. 12. If a bet should be made during the contest of a heat that a BY-LAWS OF THE IS'ATIONAL ASSOCIATION. 587 named horse will win that heat, and he makes a dead heat, the het is drawn ; but if after the horses have passed the score, a party bets that a certain named horse has won the heat, and the Judges de- clare it a dead heat, the backer or the named horse loses. 13. In races l;etween two or more horses, of a single dash at any distance, which result in a dead heat, it is a draw between the horses making the dead heat, and l)ets between them are off; and if it is a sweepstakes, the money of the beaten horses is to be divided between the horses making the dead heat. 14. When a bettor undertakes to place the horses in a race, he must give a specified place as first, second, third, and so on. The word "last" shall not be construed to mean "fourth and distanced," if four start, but " fourth" only, and so on. A distanced horse must be placed " distanced." 15. Horses shall be placed in a race and bets decided as they are placed in the official record of the day ; provided that where a horse comes in first and it is afterwards found that he was disqualified for fraud, the bets on him shall be null and void, but pool sellers and stake holders shall not be held responsible for moneys paid by them under the decision of the Judges of the race. 16. Bets made during a heat are not determined until the con- clusion of the race, if the heat is not mentioned at the time. 17. Either of the bettors may demand stakes to be made, and, on refusal, declare the bet to be void. 18. Outside bets cannot be declared oflF on the Course unless that place was named for staking the money, and then it must be done by filing such declaration in Avriting with the Judges, who shall read it from the stand before the race commences. 19. Bets agreed to be paid or received, or bets agreed to be made or put up elsewhere than at the place of the race, or any other specified place, cannot be declared off on the Course. 20. Bets on horses disqualified and not allowed to start are void, unless the bets are play or pay. 21. A bet cannot be transferred without the consent of parties to it, except in pools. 22. When a bet is made on a horse's time, it shall be decided by the time made in a public race ; he going single and carrying his proper weight. 23. When a horse makes time on a short track, it shall not con- stitute a record for the decision of bets, but only as a bar for entrance in races. 34. Horses that are distanced or drawn at the conclusion of a 588 THE HORSE. heat are beaten in the race by those tliat start afterward. A horse that is distanced in a heat is beaten by one drawn at the termina- tion of the same heat. 25. A person betting odds has a right to choose a horse or the field. 26. All bets relate to the purse, stake or match, if nothing to the contrary is specified at the time of making the bet. 27. Parties wishing all the horses to start for a bet, must so name it at the time the bet is made. 28. When the Judges declare a heat null and void, all bets on that heat shall stand for decision on the next, and it shall not con- stitute a record for any purpose. 29. All pools and bets shall be governed and decided by these rules, unless a stipulation to the contrary shall be agreed upon by the parties betting. 30. Should any contingencies occur not provided for by these rules, the Judges of the day shall decide them. 31. When a horse which has not been sold in the pools wins the race, the best horse sold in the pools wins the money. 32. Horses that are not placed in the race are equal. k IITDEX. Aaron Burr, i. 175. Abdallah, i. 175, 195. Abjer, i. 507. Aeaster Turk, i. 90, 127. Actieon Mare (imp.), i. 583. Actress (imp.), i. 583. Adana, i. .')83. Adela (imp.) i. 583. Admiral, i. 507. Admiral, ii. 84. Admiral Nelson, 1. 508. Adriaua (imp.), i. 5*1. Molm, i. 139. Africa, birthplace of horse, i. 21. Age of the horse, i. 57-73. shown by dental system, i. 57-73. of noted horses, i. 147. of Moreton's Traveller as connected with the Morgans, ii. 281. Ainderby, i 503. Alarm, i". 584. Albany Pony, ii. 135. Albertazzi, i. 581. Albion, i. 503. Alderman, i. 508. Alexander, i. 150, 503. Alexander (Smalley's), (imp.), i. 508. Alexandria, i. 584. .\lfred Mare (imp.), i. 584. Alice Grey, i. 244. race with Black Maria, i. 245, 246, 247. Alice Grey (trotter), ii. 127. Allegrante (imp.), i. 584. All Fours, i. 509. Amanda, i. 135. Amanda (imp.), i. 584. Amazon (imp.) i. 585. Amazonia, ii. 261. Ambassador, i. 509. American Blood Horse, history of, i. 122. American Boy, ii. 161. American Eclipse, i. 73, n., 136, 152, 161. age of, i. 168. color of, i. 178. figure of, i. 178. genealogical table, i. 150. memoir of, i. 178. pedigree of, i. 178, 187. performances of. i. 179. races with— Duchess of Marl] ough, 1. 177. Lady Lisrhtfoot, Little John, i. Sea Gull, i. 17$ Sir Charles. jTlSl, Sir Henry, i/lS3, 18' American Horses, history of, i. 108. best racing, i. 451. best trotting, ii. 283. of Canada, li. 63. compared with English, i. 419. of Conestoga, ii. 57. Morgan, ii. 104. most renowned, i. 449. pedigrees of racers, i. 156. pedigrees of trotters, ii. 280. trotters, ii. 286. varieties of, ii. 9. of Vermont, ii. 49. American Jockey Club Inaugu- ration Meeting, i. 383. Americus, i. 137, 509. Americus (trotter), ii. 154, 173, 177, 205. Amina, i. 585. Amnrath Marc, i. 585. Anatomy of the horse, i. 56. Andrew Jackson, ii. 187, 214, 261. Anfleld (imp.), i. 509. Anna Maria (imp.), 1. 585. Annette, i. 137. Antfeus, i. 509. Antigua (imp.), i. 536. Anto'nio (imp.), i. 509. Anviliua, i. 580. Apparition, i. 510. Arabia — chai'acteristics of horses of, i. 21. horses not native of, i. 21. horses sent from Egypt to, i. 24. sent from Cappadocia to, i. 21. Arabian Horses — Alexander I., 1. 78, 94. Bell's Gray, i. 96. Belsize, i. 133. Bloody Buttocks, i. 128. Bussorah, i. 151. Chestnut, i. 90. Combe's Gray, i. 96. Cidlen's Brown, i. 96. Cyprus, i. 1.33. Damascus, i. 96. Darlev, i. 96, 103, 125. Godoiphin, i. 96, 127, 138. Gresley's. i. 128. Hall's, i. 128. Hampton Court, i. 1.38. Honeywood's White, i. 96, 1.36. Leed'8 " 1. 96. Lonsdale's Bay, i. 96. Markham's " i. 94, 96. Mustrrovo's Grav. i. 126. The Newcombe Bay Moun- tain, i. 96. Arabian Horses — The Oudethorpe, i. 96. The Tori land, i. 1;38. The Kicburds, i. 1.38. The Wtalli(j7is, i. 104. The Wclli'slcy, i. 74. Arabian Mure (imp.), i. 586. Archduke, i. 510. Archer, i. 510. Archibald, i. 510. Architecture of Stables, ii. 313. Argyle, i. 1G6. Ariel, i. 135. Ariel, i. 152. 1C2, 167. pedigree of, i. 195. performances, i. 201. race with FlirtiUa, i. 203. races of. i. 207. races, recapitulation of, ii. 219. Ariel (trotter), ii. 1P6. match of 50 miles, ii. 186. match of 100 " ii. 186. Aristotle, i. 510. Arminda, i. 1.30. Arnica (imp.), i. 586. jVrra Kookcr, i. 511. Arrow, pedigree of, i. 3-13. best three-mile race of, i. 341-347. performances of, i. 342. Aspasia, i. 158. Ass, i. 22, 53. Asteroid, i. 359-373. and Kentucliy Contro- versy, i. 365. description of, i. .361. pedigree, i. 3-59. performances of, i. 361, 362, 363, 369, 371. race with Loadstone, i. 362, 363. serious accident, i. 369. Atalanta, i. 130. Atlantic (imp.), i. 511. Attraction (imp.), i. 586. Augustus Mare, i. 586. Aurelia, i. .'iSG. Au Eevoir (imp.), i. 587. Australian (imp.), i. 511. Authorities consulted and used in llie jircparation of this work, i. 15. Autocrat, i. 511. Awful (trottor\ ii. 158, 161, 163. trot with Ladv Suffolk, ii. 168. 169. 173." 204. Aypgarth (imp.), i. 511. Azof, siege of, i. 25. Ribraham, i. 126, 1.30. 137, 512, Babraham, f., (imp.), i. 587. Babta (imp.), i. 587. 590 INDEX. Bachelor, see Batchelor. Badger, i. 512. Bajazet. i. l;J3, 150, 512. Bajazet Mare (imp.), i. 587. Bald Charlotte, i. 138, 159. Bald Galloway, i. 135, 138, 138, 145. Ball's Florizel, i. 135. Balrownie, i. 512. Barbarity (imp.), i. 587. Barbs, i. 40, 43. Burton's Mare, i. 127, 138. Compton's, 1. 98. Croft's Bay, i. 127. Curweu's Bay, i. 125, 137. Dods worth's, i. 127, 133. Fairfax's Morocco, i. 95. Godolphin, i. 96. Greyhound, i. 128. Harpur's, i. 128. Button's Grav, 1. 136. Layton Mare,"i. 96, 138, 138. Numidian, i. 32. Taffolet, i. 138. Thoulouse, i. 96. Barefoot, i. 151, 513, Baronet, i. 150, 513. Bartlett'8 Ghilders, i. 106, 125, 1.36. Bascombe (John), pedigree of, i. 164. Bashaw, by Wildair, i. 150. Bashaw (imp.), ii. 513. Grand Bashaw (imp.), ii. 214. Young Bashaw, ii. 214. Bashaw, Junior — history of, ii. 272. pedigree of, ii. 372. Bashful Filly, i. 588. Batchelor, i. 513. Battledore Mare, i. 688. Bay Bolton, i. 125, 136, 139, 159. (imp)., i. 513. Colt (imp.), i. 513. Malton Mare (imp.), i. 588. Richmond (imp.), i. 513. Beau, i. 514. Beautiful Star (imp.), i. 588. Bedford, (imp.)— get of, i. 139, 514. pedigree of, i. 138. Bel Air, 1. 135, 140, 145, 147. mare, i. 141, 144. Bellfounder (imp. trotter), ii. 85, 155, 170. Belle of Saratoga (trotter), ii. 222. Bell's Gray Arabian, i. 96. Belsize Arabian, i. 133. Belshazzar (imp.), i. 514. Belzoni Filly, i. 588. Beppo (trotter), ii. 158, 163, 177, 204. Bergamotte, i. 514. Bernor's Comus, i. 52.3. Bernice (imp.), i. 588. Berv.'ickshire Lass (imp.), 1. 589. Best American horpes, i. 451. English horses, i. 451. four mile heats, i. 462. trotting time, ii. 282. Best time and weight. 462. Betsey Baker, ii. 135, 138, 142, 1-17. 1.50, 186, 188. Betsey Malone, i. 142. BetseV Ransom, imp.), i. 636. Betty' BlazeUa (imp.), i. 589. BOlet, i, 514. Birdcatcher Mare, i. 589. Black Bess (imp.), i. 589. I Hack Dan. ii. 320. Black Douglass, ii. 216. Black Hawk (trotter), pedi- gree, ii. 187. performances, ii. 187, 189, 193, 212. Black Hawk (by S. Morgan), i. 112. ii, 75, 104, 119, 178, 215. Black Hawk (Young), ii. 104. pedigree of, ii. 123. Black Maria (by imp. Shark), i. 135. (by Eclipse), i. 116, 139, 163, 167. form of, i. 225. pedigree of, i. 222. performance of, i, 226. recapitulation of races, i. 248, 249. twenty-mile race, i. 236. Black and all Black, i. 183, 144. Black Jack (trotter), ii. 119. Blacklock Mare (imp.), i. 589. Black Prince (imp.), ii. 515. Blank (English), i. 1.37, 138. Blaze (English), i. 137. Blaze (imp.), i. 515 Blazella (by Blaze) i, 137. Blenldron, i. 515. Blonde (by Glencoe) — race with Arrow, i. 344. race with Little Flea, i. 347. Blood Horse, history of Amer- ican, i. 122. histoi-y of English, i. 74. Blood stock, lost at sea, i. 655- 657. Bloody Buttocks (Arabian), i. 138,. 130, 138. Blossom (by Crab) Mare, i. 136. (imp. horse), i. 515. (imp. mare), i. 589. Bhte Dick, i. 165. Bluster (imp.), i. 515. Boaster (imp.), i. 516. Bob Letcher, ii. 98. pcdicree of, ii. 98. Boletas (imp.), i. 590. Bolivar (by Diomed), i. 137. Boltoii dnip.), i. 51C. Bond's First Consul, i. 136. Bonnets of Blue. i. 137, 103. races with Black Maria, i. 230. Bonnie Scotland, i. 516. Bonnyface (imp.), i. 516. Bonny Lass (imp.), i. 590. Borrock, Billy (imp.), i. 516. Bosphorus, i. 516. Bosquet, 1. .517. Boston, i. 116, 137, 139, 164, 168. age of, i. 276. blindness of. ii. 25. color of, i, 376. pedigree, i. 376, 280, ii. 11, 203. performances, i. 277. race with Fashion, i. 289. Boston Blue (trotter), ii. 135, 1.37, 181. first trot in public for a stake, ii. 133. Boston Girl (trotter), ii, 204, 218, 227. Bowery Boy (trotter), ii. 147. Brahma, i. 517. Brandywine (trotter), ii. 307. Breaking, ii. 343. Breaking (Baucher's system), ii. 376. leading tackle for, ii. 11. rules of, ii. 346. shoeing for, ii. 345. stables necessary, ii. 34.3. teaching the horse, ii. 374. tying up in the stable, ii. 345. Breeding, best age for, ii. 318. choice of stallion for, ii. 315. Cleveland Bay, Emperor, ii. 289. efiects of in-breeding, ii. 54. examples of in-breeding, ii. 296. examples of out-crossing, ii. 305. for general purposes, ii. 392. for racing purposes, ii. 307. for the turf, ii. 292. general breeding, ii. 309. in-and-in, ii. 295. management of mare and foal, ii. .3,39. .341. mongrel breeding, ii. 324. out-crossing, ii. 303. Perchcron Norman Stal- lion, ii. 324. points of brood mare, ii. 313. principles of, ii. 289. selection of brood mare, ii. 310. stud farm for, ii. 333. theory of, in breeding, ii. 309. time for, ii. .319. Bridport or Hill's, Vermont Black Hawk, ii. 119, 120, 220. Brilliant (imp.), i. 517. Brilliant Mare (imp.), i. 590. Brimmer, Good's, i. 144, 145. Britannia (imp.), i. 5ii0, 591. Brocklesby's Betty, i. 136. Brooklyn Maid (trotter), ii. 172. Brown Dick, race with Arrow, i. 344. Brunswick (imp.), ii. 144, 517, BruUls (imp.), i. 517. Bryan O'Lynii (imp.), i. 517. Bucejihalus (imp.), i. .')18. Bucephalus, age of, i. 57. Buenos Ayres, horse of, i. 25. Buffcont (imp.). 518. Bulle Rock (imp.), i. 518. Burton's Barb, i. 127,133. Busiris Marc (inip.), J,G91. Bussor.ili. 7\rnbian, i. 151. Bustard Mare (imp.), i. 591. Bustle (imp.), i. rOl. Bustler, i 105, 1!:9. Butler (Spanish), i. 98. Butler's Virginia Nell, 1. 135. Buzzard (imp.), i. 518. Byerly Turk, i. 96, 127, 188, 145. By the Sea, i. 518. INDEX. 591 c. Cade (Eng.), i. 127, 131, 137, 140. (imp.), I. 518. CadmuH, ii. 85, 80. Cairn-gorni (imp.), i. 592. Caledonia Brauder (imp.), i. m-z. Calirtta Byrd's (imp.), i. 593. Calypso, i. i:JO. Camul (imp.), i. 518. (imp.), i. 147. Camul Mai-o (imp.), i. 592. Cami'lita U'HP-)'. i- 592. Camilla (imp.), i. 592. Canadian Horse, i. 109, 112, 111. stallion, St.Lawrence (trot- ter), ii. 189. Canker, ii. .525. Cannon (imp.), i. 519. Canwell (imp.), i. 519. Cappadocian Uorse, i. 24. Caprice (imp.), i. 593. Cardinal PtilV (imp.), i. 519. Carlisle Turkj i. 125. Carlo (imp.), i. 519. Carpathia, Horse of, i. 41, 44. Cartoucli (Eng. Horae), i. 137. Carver (imp.V j. 519. Casemate (imp.), i. 593. Cassandra (imp.), i. 593. Cassivelan, chariots of, i. 27. Cassias M. Clay (trotter), i. 86. Castaway Mare, i. 127. Castiauii-a (imp.), i. 130, 137, 593. pedigree of, i. 172. Catalainl^imp.), 1. 593. Catarrh, ii. 514. Catchfly (imp.), i. 594. Cato (trotter), ii. 154, 107, 109. Catton (English), i. 100. Catton Mare (imp.), i. 594. Cavalry, Grecian, i. 30-37. horses, ii. 103. Numidian, i. 42, 43, 76. riders, ii. 307. Roman, i. 39. Cayuga Chief (trotter), ii. 173, 175, 179, 183. Celer, i. 135, 141, 145, 147, 159. Celia, i. 130. Centaur Mare (imp.), i. 594. Centinel (imo.), i. 519. Cetns (imp.),"i. 520. Champion Mare (imp.), i. 594. Chance (imp.), i. 520. Chance, f. (imp.), i. 595. Chance Mare (imp.), i. 596. Chancellor (^wotter), ii. 145, 147, 154. Chariot (imp.), i. 520. Charlotte (imp.), i. 595. Charlotte Temple (trotter), ii. 156, 157. Chatauque Chief (trotter), ii. 189, 213, 223. Chateau Margaux(imp.), i. 100, 500, 520. Chateau, b. f. (imp.), i. 595. Cheap (imp.), i. 595. Chedworth Foshuuter, i. 1.38. Chesterfield (imp.), i. 520. Chicago Jack (trotter), ii. 222, 227. Childers (Flying), i. 26, 57, 102, 125, 120, 159, 172, 421. (Bartlett's), i. 100, 125, 136. (imt).), i. 521. Childers Mare (imp.), i. .595. (.'hiddy (Eng. Mare), i. 137. Cicil^ .Iopis, 104, 171, 5al. Clara Howard, 1. 151. Claret (imp.), i. 521. Clarion, pedigree of, i. 163. Cleveland, Bays, i. Ill, 112, 113, ii. 19. W. C. Hives' Bay (imp.) stallion, ii. 289. Clifden (imp.), i. 521. Clifton (imp.), i. 522. Clilton Lass (imj).), i. 596. Clink (imp.), i. 590. Clockfast (imp.), i. 522. Clothing of horses, ii. 452. Clown (Imp.), i. 522. Clubs- American Jockey Club, i. 333. Cenlreville Course, L. I., i. 15S, 107. Hunting Park, Philadel- phia, ii. I'lO. New York Trotting Club, rules of, ii. 1.S7. Racing and betting^ rules of "American Jockey Club, ii. 539. Rules of the lientucky As- sociation, ii. 500. Rules and Regulations of the National Associa- tion, ii. 509. Coach House, ii. 423. Cock-a-hoop (imp.), i. 522. Cock of the Rock, i. 152. Cceur de Lion (imp.), i. 141, 522. Colic, Spasmodic, ii. 513. Collector (trotter), ii. 147, 154, 150. Columbine (imp.), i. 596. Columbus (imp.), i. 522. Columbus (S. White), trot with Ethan Allen, ii. 105. Columbus, Old (trotter), per- formances of, ii. 41, 145, 148, 154, 179, 182. 187. performances of, ii. 145, 148, 154, 179, 182, 187. Combe's Gray Arabian, i. 96. Comfort (imp.), i. 590. Commodore (imp.), i. 522. Commodore, ii. 201, 262. Commoner, i. 133. Comparison of speed, i.419,447. Compton's Barb, i. 96. Comus, Berner's, i. 523. Comus Mare (imp.), i. 597. Conest02:a Horse, i. 100, 109, Hi. history of, ii. 57. Coneyskins, i. 125, 127, 136. Confederate Mare (imp.), i. 597. Confidence (trotter), ii. 156, 102, 172, 178, 199. Congestion, ii. 510. Conqueror, Spanish, i. 98. Consol (imp.), i. 523. Consternation (imp.), i. 523. ii. 25. Constellation, ii. 97. Contract (imp.), i. 523. Contracted feet, ii. 524. Cook's Bel' Air, i. 140. Cora, cli. ra. (imp), i. 597. Corinthian Man; (imp.), 1. 597. Cormoiant (imp.), i. 52^1. Corns, ii. 525. Coronet (imp.), i. 524. Cottager Mare (imp.), i. 597. Cough, ii. 515. Counsellor, i. 127. Courses (Race Courses), early race-courses, i. 125. in Now York, i. HiO. Albany, i. 151 . Bath, L. I.,i.l.':3. Bca\-er Pond, Jamaica, 1. 151. Harlem, i. 151-l!;c3. Newmarket, L. I., i. 151- 15.3. Poti'j'hkecpeie, i. 151. Alexandria, Va., i. 130, 93. Beac(m Course, N. J., i. l.-)3. Fashion Course, L. I., i. 153. Gloucester, Va., i. 127. Mai-ylaud, i. 128. ISatioual Course, L. I., L 153. Newmarket, Va., i. 130. Philadelphia Course, i. 132 -134. Powles Hook, N. J.,i.l53. Richmond, Va., i. 130. Union Course, L. I., i. 153. Washington Course, Charleston, S. C, i. 130. Courses (trotting courses), first trotting course in L. I., America, ii. 133, 147, 152. Act of Legislature of New York, 1821, for the same, ii. 134. Beacon Course, Hoboken, N. J., ii. 107, 169. Canton, ii. 150, 151. Central Course, Baltimore, ii. 14(j, 1.51. Cent rev ille Course, i. 158, 107. Harlem Course, ii. 156, 162. Huntius: Park Course, Philadelphia, rules of, ii. 140-162. Long Island Course, first course in America, ii. 133,131, 117-1.52. Crab (English), Old, i. 125, 127, 130, 138. Routh's (imp.), i. 127, 524. Sheppard's, i. 131, 137. Cracks of the Hoof. ii. 525. Crawford (imp.), i. 524. Crawler (imp.), i. 524. Creeper (imp.), i. 524. Creole (imp.), i. 525. Cripple (English), i. 136. Croft's Bay Barb, i. 127. Cruiser (imp.), i. • 25. Cub (Old Cub\i. 1.31,585. Cub Mare (imp.), i. 598. Cub Marc (Delnncy's), i. 131, 1.50, 598. Cub Mare (Gibson's), i. 131. Cullen Arabian Mare (imp.), i. .598. Cullen Arabian Mare,Duche8S, (imp.), i. 598. 592 INDEX. Cullen's Brown Arabian, i. 96. Cumberland (imp.), i. 525. Cupbearer, i. lo9. Curb, ii. 530. CurwinV Barb, i. 96, 125, 137. Cygnet (English), i. 137. Cj-nthius (imp.), i. 595. Cypron (English), i. 137. Cyprus Arabian, i. 133. Dabster (imp.), i. 525. Daghee (imp.), i. 525. Damascus Arabian, i. 96. DanciugMaster (imp.), i. 526. Daniel D. Tompkins (trotter), ii. 164, 107, 108. Dare Devil (imp.), i. 164, 536. Dai-e Devil Mare, i. 142. Darley Arabian, i. 96, 125, 128. Darlington (imp.), i. 526. David (imp.), i. .526. D'Arcy Turk, i. 90, 126. De Bash (imp.), i. 526. Defiance, ii. 83. Defiance (trotter), ii. 136. Delight (imp.), i. 598. Delphine (imp.), i. 598. Denizen (imp.), 1. 620. Dental System of the Horse, i. 57. Derby (imp.), i. 526. Design, ch. m. (imp.), i. 599. Dexter — history, ii. 253-250. pedigree, ii. 250, 257. performances, ii. 257, 258. D'amond (English), i. 167. Diamond, ii. 108, 109. Dinn (imp.) 1. 599. Diana, i. 1.37. Diana (imp.), i. 599. Diana Syntax (imp.), i. 599. Dickey Pierson, i. 137, 183. Dinwiddie, i. 137. Diomed (imp.), i. 130. pedigree of, i. 137, 141, 144, 147, 161. memoir of, i. 175. his get in England, i. 175, 17(3. his get in America, 1. 137, 527; ii.ll. Diomed, Raglan'f, i. 143, 147. Diomeda (imp.), 1. 599. Dion (imp.), i. 527. Diseases of the Horse, i. 4S0. canker, ii. 525. catarrh, ii. 514. congestion, ii. 510. contracted feet, ii. 534. corns, ii. 525. cough, ii, 515. false quarter, ii. 525. farcy, ii. 531. glanders, ii. 515. grease, ii. 523. inflammation, ii. 513. inflammation of the brain, ii. 517. inflammation of the foot, or acute founder, ii. 52.3. laryngitis, ii. 514. mucous membranes, ii. 513. navicular joint disease, ii. 534. pleurisy, ii. 618. piuniced feet, ii. 234. Diseases of the Horse— quittor, ii. 535. roaring, causes of and rem- edies for, ii. 531-535. sand crack, ii. 525. gpasmodic colic, ii. 513. spavin, ii. 519. splints, ii. 523. Buperpurgation, ii. 514. thrush, ii. 525. tread, or over reach, ii. 525. worms, ii. 514. Docking of Horse, ii. 459. Dodsworth's Barb, i. 127, 133, 108, 157. Dolly (trotter), ii. 163. Dolly Spanker (trotter), ii. 216, 332. Doncaster (imp.), i. 527. Don Cossack Mare (imp.), i. 599. Don Juan (trotter), ii. 163, I'll, 172. Don Quixotte (imp.), i. 537. Dorimaut, i. 137. Dorimaut Mare (imp.), i. 599. Doris (English), i. 188. Doris (imp.), i. 690. Dormouse (English), i. 130. Dormouse (imp.), i. 527. Dotterrel (imp.) i. 537. Dove (imp.), i. 528. Dragon (imp.), i. 598. Dragon (trotter), ii. 135. Dread (trotter), ii. 147, 154, 156. Driver (imp,), i. 528. Driving, ii. 476. Drone (imp.), i. 528. Druid (imp.), i. 528. Duanc, i. 151, 100. Duchess, b. m. (imp.), i. 600. Duchess of Yorli (imp.), i. COO. Duchess (tro.tter), ii. 173, 175, l'i'9, 101, 183, 185, 227. Duke of Bridgewater's Star. i.1.38. Dungannon (English), i. 138. Dungannon (imp.), i. 528. Dungannon, i. 111. Duroc, i. 100, 107, 175, 181. pedigree of, i. 187, 198. Dutchman (trotter), ii. 142, 149, 168, 100, 163, 167, 168, 175, 177, 193, 204. E. Eagle (imp.), i. 529. Eastern Star (imp.), i. 600. Ebony Basto Mare (Old Eng- lish), i. 1.37. Ebony (English), i. 137. Ebony, or Young Ebony (imp.), i. 000. Eclipse (imp.), i. 529, 530. Eclipse (American), i. 57, 103, 105,111,199,136,139,153, 154, lo;, 107. color of, i. 178. figure of, i. 178. memoir of, i. 178. pedigree; of. i. 178,187. performances of, i. 170. race with Lady Lightfoot, i. IHO. race with Sir Charles, i 181. race with Hcnrv, i. 183. Eclipse (English), "i. 136, 138, 160, 161, 355. Eclipse (Harris's), i. 144, 539. obituary, i. 147. age, i. 147. Eclipse (Northern), i. 530. Eclipse (Virginia), i. 140, 147. Edwin Forrest (trotter), best time, ii. 133, 150, 159, 161, 167, 109, 171, 177. Egypt, i. ^1. horse first spoken of in, i. 21. introducted into, i.93,34,27. sent to Arabia by, i. 24. Eleanor (imp.), i. 601. Eli;:a (imp.\ i. 601. Ella (imp.),'i. 601. Ellen Thompson (trotter), ii. 174. Elthan Lass (imp.), i. 602. Emancipation (imp.), i. 530. Emancipation Colt (imp.),i.530. Emancipation Mare (imp.), i. 609. Emelius Mare (imp.), i. 602. Emilia, b. f., (imp.), i. 602. Emily (imp.), i. 603. Emniy (imp.), i. 603. Emperor, ii. 233. Empress, i. 159. Empress (trotter), ii. 174. Emu (imp.), i. 530. Engineer, ii. 208. English Blood Horses, i. 74. best English horses, i. 451. comparisons of speed be- tween American Blood horses and, i. 449, 450. foreign stallions, in Eng- laml in 17.50, i. 103, 104. game of, 4S9. inferiority of old racers, i. 435. most reno'wned American and, i. 449, 4.'30. native stallions in England. in 1730, i. 105. views of the thoroughbred, i. 444. English Eclipse, i. 136, 138, 160. English Eclipse, i. 161, 421. Englishman (imp.), i. 530. English race courses, i. 437-443. Envoy (imp.), i. 530. Ephraim Smooth (trotter), ii. 112, 145, 149. Epsilon, i. 142. Equity, mare (imp.), i. 603. Ericsson— description of, ii. 269. pedigree of, ii. 269. performances of ii. 200,270. race with Morgan Chief and Kentucky,ii. 370, 271. Escape (imp.), i. 5.S1. Espersykes (imp.), i. 531. Essential Points in a thorough- bred for racing, i. 490. Ethan Allen, ii. 104, 105, 215. performances, ii, 278, 279. Eugenins (imp.), i. 631. Expcdilion (imp.), i. 150, 151, 163. .631. Express (imp.), i. 531. Exton (imp.), i. 532. F. Fabricius (English), i. 145. Fair Charlotte (imp.), i. (i03. Fair Rachel (imp.), i. COS. INDEX. 593 Piiirfas Roan (imp.), i. 532. FiiirtU.x's Morocco Barb, i. 95. Fairy (Enu'lisli), i. 13S. Fairy, i. m. Fairy (iiicen (Engliwii), i. 138. Fairy Qiiceu (trotter), ii. 181. Fal'.-ouut (imp.), i. 0U4. Fallowor (imp.), i. 140, 532. Fanuy Junks (trotter)— tcii-milo matcli, ii. 181, 182. oud-liandrccl mile match, ii. is:j, 105, 1%. Fanny Murray (trotter), ii. 189. ouo-liundred-milc match, ii. ISO, 195, 190. Fanny (trotter), ii. 199. Fanny Piillen (trotter), ii. 158, is;», 190. Fanny Kemble, ii. 214. Fautasie (imp.), i. 004. Farcy, ii. 521. Farm Horses, management of, ii. 472. Fashion, cliaracteristics of, i. 137, 151, 104, 107, 109, 170, 284. color of, i. 2S4. form of, i. 285. match race with Boston, i. 239. pedigree of, 1. 287. performances of, i. 285. recapitulation of race with Boston, i. 299. Paugh-a-Ballagh, i. 407, 408. P^avel (Cyprus), i. 82. Favorite (imp.), i. 004. Fizzoletto, Jr. (imp.), 1. 532. P3ar (imp.), i. 604. Fearnought (imp.), i. 127, 144, 145, 532. Fearnought (Baylor's), i. 140. Feed, ii. 436. Feedmg on the road, ii. 481. Fellow (imp.), i. 532. Felt (imp.), i. 532. Pelt Horse (imp.), i. 533. Felucca (imp.;, i. 004. Fiat (imp.), i. 533. Figure (imp.), i. 132, 150, 533. Filagree (imp.), i. 005. Filho Da Puta M. (imp.), i. 605. Firebrand (imp.), i. 533. Firetail (imp.), i. 533. First Consul (Bond's), i. 136, 152. Flag of Truce (imp.), i. 534. Flag of Truce, i. 135. sent to Ohio, ii. 83. Flag of Truce, by Sir Solomon, race with Eclipse, i. 180. Flatterer (imp.), i. 534. Fleet (imp.)., i. 005. Fleeting Moments (imp.), i. 005. Flemish Horse, i. 83, 83, 99, 101, 111 ; ii. 18, 28. Fleur des Champs (imp.), i. 605. Flexible (imp.), i. 534. Flexings of the Horse, ii. 387. Flimnap (imp.), i. 131, 534. Flirtilla, i. 147. race with Ariel, i. 202. Flora Temple (trotter), race with Ethan Allen, ii. 105. fastest time, ii. 2.37. memoir of, ii. 2-30. performances of, ii. 2-35. race with Tacony, ii. 239. Flora Temple (trotter)— races, li. 132, 14.% 149, 1.5'1, 108,171,173,175,177,196, 213, 215, 215, 219, 222, 2-M, 225, a26, 227, a28. Florestinc (imp. mare), i. 606. Florida Hepburn (imp.), i. (306. Floride, by Wu-^nor, race with Pryor, i. 358. Florizel (English), i. 1.30, 137. Florizcl (Bail's), i. 135. Flori/.el, by Old, (imp.), i. 534. Flounce (imp.), i. 60(5. Fluke (imp.), i. 600. Fly (Canadian trotting marc), ii. 327, 328. Flying Childers, i. 57, 102, 125, 127, 136, 159, 172. (imp.), i. 535. Fly-by-Night (imp.), i. 534. Foals, management of, ii. 341. food for, ii. 341. Food of Horses, ii. 4(yl. Pop (imp.), i. 535. Forrester (mip.), i. 535. Forrester Mare (imp.), i. 607. Fortuna (imp.), i. 607. Founder, Acute, ii. 523. Fourth of July (trotter), ii. 174. Fox (English), i. 125, 127, 1.35, 145. Foxcub (English), i. 136. Frances (imp.), i. 607. Frank Forrester (trotter), ii. 198. Frederick (imp.), i. 5.35. Friar (imp.), i. 5.35. Prolicksome Fanny (imp.), i 607. Fun (imp.), i. 607. Fury (imp.), i. 007. Fylde (imp.), i. 535. GJ-. Gabriel (imp.), pedigree of, i. 137. get of, 138, 536. Gabrielle, ch. m. (imp.), i. 608. Gallatin, i. 137, 142, 144, 145. Gallopade (imp.), i. 008. Galloway Horse, origin of, ii. 29. pacer, ii. 33. performances of, ii. 29, 30, 31. Game of English horses, i. 439. Gamenut Mare (imp.)j i. 608. Gasteria, b. f. (imp.), i. 608. Gaulish Horse, i. 40, 43, 75. Gazella (imp.), i. 608. General Managem't of Horses, ii. 409. Genista (imp.), i. 609. Genius (imp.), i. 536. Gibson's Club, i. 131. Gift (imp.), i. 537. Gimcrack (English), i. 136, 198, 220. 281, 288. Gipsey (trotter), ii. 188. Girl o'f My Heart (imp.), i. 609. Girth (imp.^, i. 609. Glanders, ii. 515. Glencoe, ch. (imp.), i. 100,143. 145, 359, 360. pedigree, i. 537. Glenelg (imp.), i. 536. Glenevis (imp.), i. 536. Glengary (imp.), i. 537. Gloriana (imp.), i. 609. God(jlphin ,\rabiaii, i. 96, 127, 130, l;jl, i;j(), 147. Godolphin Arab'n Mare (imp.), 1. (W9. Goldenic (impJ, i. 609. Goldsmith Maid (formerly Goldsmith Marc) — history, ii. 218, 249. description, ii. 250. pedigree, ii. 2.'j0. performances, ii. 2.51, 258. Good's Brimmer, i. 144, 145. Gouty (imp.), i. 5137. Grachtis, i. 137. Grauby (imp.), i. 5.37. Samuol's^ i. 132. imp. or Wilder's, i. 138. Wildman s, i. 186. Gray Grantham (English), I. 130, 137, 159, 172. Gray Archy, i. 142. Gray Childers, i. 125. Gray Diomed, i. 135, 136, 145, 147. pedigree, i. 177. Gray Diomed (English), i. 175. Gray Diomed (Barksdale's), 1. 142. Gray Eagle, i. 104, 167, 168. characteristics of, i. 261. his color and form, i. 253. his pedigreCj i. 253. his races with Wagner, i. 253. first race with, i. 261. the result, i. 265. second race with do., i. 270. the result, i. 275. Gray Eagle (trotter), ii. 188, 190, 193, 194. Gray Marshal (trotter), ii. 188, Gray Eddy (trotter), ii. 219. Gray Harry (trotter), ii. 188. Gray Medley, i. 130, 140, 143, 147. Gray Northumberland, i. 131, 1-32. Gray Orville (English), ii. 22. Gray Robinson(Ehglish Mare), i. 128. Gray Trouble (trotter), ii. 193, 194. Gray Germont (trotter), ii. 902, 203. Grease, ii. 522. Greece (horse of), i. 21. fable of the horse, i. 23. horse-racing, i. 29. Xenophon on the horse of, i. ;35. Green Mount Maid (trotter), ii. 216, 219 Greyhound (imp.), i. 537. Greyhound (Barb), 128, 186, 138, 150, 1.57. Gresley's Arabian, i. 128. Grisewood's Partner, i. 136. Grooming, ii. 436. Gunilda (imp.), i. 010. Gutty (imp.), i. 610. h:. Hackabout (imp.), 1. 610. Hambl?ton (imp.), i. 537. Hambk'tonian, i. 150, 15SJ, 16T. Hamlintonian, i. 137. 594: INDEX. Hampton, i. 137. Hampton Court (imp.), i. 537. Hampton Court Arabian, i. 138. Hard Times (trotter), ii. 199. Harkforward (imp.), i. 538. Harlot (imp.), i. 010. Harness Room, ii. 421. Harper's Barb, i. 128. Hartingtou (imp.), i. 538. Hartley's Blind Horse, i. 105. Hartley's Blind Horse, i. 125. Hartley's Large Mare, i. 133, 134, 159. Hartley's Little Mare, i. 134. Hartley's Koau Horse, i. 1.34. Hautboy (English), i. 107, 126, 136. Hautboy Mare (Wilkes), i. 126, 128, 136. Heads or Tails (imp.), i. 444, 610. Hector (imp.), i. 538. Hector (trotter), ii. 174, 187, 198. Hedgeford (imp.), 1. 151 ; ped- igree, i. 538. Helen, b. m. (imp.), i. 610. Helmsley Turk, i. 95, 105, 128. Henry Perritt, i. 169. Henry Perritt— Fastest Mile- race on record, i. 340,341. Herald (imp.), i. 539. Hercules (imp.), i. 539. Her Majesty (imp.), i. 611. Hero (imp.), i. 539. Hero (trotter), ii. 217, 222, 225. Herod (imp.), i. 539. Hibiscus (imp.), i. 539. Hickory (Virginia), i. 136. Highflyer (English), i. 105, 138, 172, 173. Highflyer, br. c. (imp.), i. 539. Highflyer Mare (imp.), i. 601. Highlander (imp.), i. 539. Hillsborough (imp.), i. 540. Hip (English), i. i;34. Hippona, br. m. (imp.), i. 611. Hiram Drew (trotter), trot with Ethan Allen, ii. 105. History of the Horse- African Barb, i. 40-43, 96, 127, 136. American horse, i. 108. American blood horse, i. 122. Arabian, i. 24, 42, 96, 127, 138 British, i. 27, 41, 75. Buenos Ayres, i. 25. Canadian Horse, ii. 63. Conestoga horse, ii. 67. Egyptian horse, i. 21, 24, 27. English blood horse, i. 74. Grecian, i. 23, 29, 31, 37. Iowa stock, ii. 100. Michigan stock, ii. 88. Morgan stock, ii. 104. Narragansett stock, ii. 67, 69. New York blood horse, i. 149. Ohio stock, ii. 76, 88. Spanish horse, i. 25, 44, 78, 100, 122. Tennessee blood horse, i. 104. Trotting horse, ii. 123. Wild horse of Texas, i. 25, 109. Hob or Nob (imp.), i. 540. Hokee Pokee Mare (imp.), i. 611. Honest John (imp.), i. 540. Honest John (trotter), ii. 199, 218. Honey Comb Punch, i. 126, 136, 138. Honey wood's Arabian, i. 96, 126, 136. Hooton (imp.), i. 540. Hope, ch. m. (imp.), i. 612. Hornet, i. 137. Horse, his origin, i. 21, 23, 27. Age and dental system of, 1.57. American blood, i. 122. American,his varieties and breed, i. 108; ii.9. Barbs, i. 26, 40, 42, 43, 44, 94, 106. Canadian, ii. 63. Conestoga horse, ii. 57. English blood, i. 74. Flemish, i. 83, 88, 109, 111 ; Gaulish, i.' 40, 43, 44, 76. German, i. 42, 43, 77. Imported, list of, i. 507. Iowa stock, ii. 100. Michigan stock, ii. 88. Morgan horse, ii. 104, 110. Narrr.gansett horse, ii. 67. Natural history of the, i. 58. New York blood, i. 149. Norman horse, i. 26. Ohio and western stock, ii. 76 83. Scytnia (horse of), i. 41, 44. Spanish, i. 22, 25, 44, 78, 83,89,98, 110; ii. 15. Syno'nymes of the, i. 45. Tartary (horse of), i. 25. Tennessee blood, i. 140. Thessalian, i. 23, 28, 31,40. Thracian, i. 23, 28, 31, 40, 41, 43, 44. Trotting horse, ii. 123. Turkish horse, i. 94H06. Vermont draught, ii. 49. Wild, i. 25, 26. Horsemanship, ii. 354. Houri (imp.), i. 611. Hugh Lupus (imp.), i. 540. Hunting Park Course, Rules of, ii. 140-162. Hurrah (imp.), i. 540. Hutton's Gray Barb, i. 136. Hyacinth (imp.), i. 612. I. Indian Pony, ii. 65. Inferiority of old Racers, i. 435. Inflammation^ ii. 512. of the brain, 517. of the feet, 523. Invalid (imp.), i.612. Invercauld (imp.), i. 612. Inverlocky (imp.), i. 612. Inverness (imp.), i. 612. Invernglass (imp.), i. 613. Iota (imp.), i. 541. Iowa State, horse stock of, ii. 100. Isabel, br. m. (imp.), i. 613. Isabella, ch. f. (imp.), i. 613. J. Jack Andrews (imp.), i. 541. Jack of Diamonds (imp.), i. 541. Jack Rossiter (trotter), ii. 187, 193, 197, 202, 204, 213. Jack Spigot Mare (imp.) i. 613. James K. Polk (pacer), li. 164, 182, 185, 187, 188, 189, 192. Jane Wellington (imp.), i. 614. Janette, b. f. (imp.), i. 614. Janus (imp.), L 139, 140, 144. Javelina (imp.), i. 614. Jenny Cameron (imp.), 1. 127, 128, 134, 159, 614. Jenny Dismal (imp.), i. 614. Jenny Mills (imp.), i. 614. Jerry (trotter), trot with Whalebone, i. 152, 155. Jersey Kate (trotter), ii. 138. Jerusalem (imp.), i. 616. Jessica, ch. f. (imp.), i. 614. Jig (English), i. 125, 128. Jockey Clubs.— For Rules and Regnlations see Clubs, Racing Clubs, & Courses. John Bull (imp.), i. 542. John Tyler (trotter), ii. 162. Joint Disease, ii. 524. JoUy Roger, alias Roger of the Vale (imp.), i. 127, 133, 139, 140, 144, 145, 146. pedigree of, i. 542. Jonah (imp.), i. 542. Jordon, ch. h. (imp.)j i. 642. Julius Ceesar (imp.), i. 543. Juniper (English), i. 130. Juniper (imp.), i. 543. Junius (imp.), i. 543. Justice, by Justice (imp.), i. 543. Justice, by Regulus (imp.), i. 543. Justice, by Blank (imp.), i .543. Justin Morgan (trotting stal- lion), li. 104. memoir cf, ii. 1(X). description of, ii. 110. K. Kate (trotter), trot of 100 miles, ii. 102, 103. Kemble, Jackson (trotter), ii. 149, 196, 213. pedigree of, ii. 217. three-mile trot, ii. 218. Kentucky, i. 374-406. pedigree, i. 374. description of, i. 375. performances of, i. 375, 376, 377, 378, 379, 381, 382, 389, 400, 403, 405. race with Aldebaran, i. 376. race with Fleetwing and Aldebaran, i. 378. race with Capt. Moore and Rhinodyne, i. 379. race at Saratoga Springs, 1866, i. 381. at American Jockey Club Inauguration, i. 383. against time, i. 403. his get, i. 406. Kill Devil (imp.), i. 616, Kilton (imp.), i, 543. INDEX. 595 King Ernest (imp.), i. 544. KiuL' llcrod (imp.), i. 128, 130, W, i:W. King Iliraui (iuip.), i. 544. King of Cymry (inij).), i. 544. King Tom Mure (imp.), i. 015. King VVillium (imp.), i. 544. Kilty Bull, ch. I', (mip.), i. til.5. Kitty Fisher (imp.), i. 128, 144, 159, 615. Knight of St. George (imp.), i. 515. Knowsloy (imp.), i. 545. Know Nothing, alias Blk. Dan, alias Lancet, ii. ai9, 221, 227. Eotili Khan (imp.), i. 545. La Bayadere (imp.), i. 616. Lady Agnes (trotter), ii. 199. Lady Bevins (^trotter), ii. 199. Lady Brooks (trotter), ii. 204, 213, 215, 216. Lady Bull (imp.), i. 616. Lady Bunbury (imp.), 1. 616. Lady Chesterfield, 1. 137. Lady Elizabeth (imp.), 1. 616. Lady Emily (imp.), i. 616. Lady Fly (imp.), i. 616. Lady Fulton (trotter), ii. 155, 182. twenty-mile trot, ii. 224. Lady G. (Lady Gascoigne), (imp.), i. 617. Lady Grey, gr. f. (imp.), i. 617. Lady Jackson (trotter), ii. 143, 145, 156. Lady Jane (trotter), ii. 182, 188, 189 20'^ 213 Lady Kate (trotter), ii. 151, 201. Lady Lightfoot, by Shark, i. 137. Lady Lightfoot, by Sir Archy, i. 162, 180. produce of, i. 223. Lady Moscow (trotter), i. 114 ; ii. 185, 187, 192, 194, 198, 202, 204, 213, 227. Lady Mostyn (imp.), i. 617. Lady Northumberland (imp.), i. 167. Lady Pelham (trotter), ii. 202. Lady Relief, i. 236. Lady Scott (imp.), i. 617. Lady Sheffield (imp.), i. 617. Lady Suffolk (trotter)), ii. 142, 14'J, 154. first race, ii. 167. memoir of, ii. 209. performances, summary of, ii. 209, 210, 211. pedigree of, ii. 208. races, ii. 163 to 206. Lady Sutton (trotter), perform- ances of. ii. 187, 183, 189, 192, 103. 194. 19s, 204. Lady Sykes (imp.), i. 618. Lady Thorne— description of. ii. 244. history of, ii. 240-242. pedigree of, ii. 943. performances of.ii. 245-247. Lady Vernon (trotter), ii. 216. Lady Victory (trotter), ii. 154, 170. Lady Washington (trotter), ii. 179, 183, 199. Lamplighter, i. 136. Lancet, alias Black Dan, or Know Nothing, ii. 41, 154, 220, a-i"), 2;i6, 2-.;7. Lanercost Mure (imp.), i. 618. Langur Mare (imp.), i. 61b. Langtord (imp.), i. ,545. sent to Ohio, ii. 85. L'Anglaise (imp.), i. 618. Lantern (trotter), ii. 219, 225, 227. Lapdog (imp.), i. 545. Lapdog Mare (imp.), i. 619. Lapidist (imp.), i. 510. Laryngitis, ii. 514. Lath (imp.), i. 127, 131, 546 ; ii. 107. Lawyer, The (imp.), i. 546. Layton's Barb, i. 96, 128, 130. marc, i. 138, 1.57. Leamington (imp.), i. 407-418, .546. description of, i. 409. his get, i. 416, 417. pedigree, i. 407. performances of, i. 411 , 412, 413, 414, 415, 416. Lecomte, i. 160, 169. pedigree of, i. 312. performances of, i. 314-317, .322. first race with Lexington, i. 317. summary, i. 321. second race with Lexing- ton, i. 3a3, 3.35. summary race, i. 340, 347, 348. Leed's Arabian, 1. 96. Leviathan (imp.), i. 135, 143, 145, 147. pedigree of, i. 547. Lexington, i. 160, 169. characteristics of, i. 306. great contest race with Lecomte, i. 317. great match against time, i. 323. his third great race, i. 3.33. pedigree of, i. 393. performances of, i. 308. race, ii. 11. summary, i. 321. the race itself, i. 328. time of race, i. 310, 347. Light Infantry (imp.), i. 150, 1.51. pedigree of, 547. Likeness, ch. m. (imp.), i. 619. Lily (imp.), i. 019. Lindsay^s Arabian, ii. 109. Lister's or Stradliug Turk, i. 96. List of imported Stallions, i. 507. List of imported Mares and Fillies, i. 58:^. Little Flea, i. 140. best three-mile, i. 141, 142, 347. Little Hartley Mare, i. 137. Little Jane (imp.), i. 619. Lochiel (imp.K i. 547. Lofty (imp.), i. 547. Longwaiste (imp.^ i. 547. Lonsdale Bay Arabian, i. 96, 127. i Lonsdale B. fimp.), i. 548. Lottery Mare (imp.), i. 620. I Loup Garon Mare (imp.), i. 620. Lucious (imp.), i. 620. j Lucy (imp.), i. 620. Ludiord (iuii).), i. 548. Lunu (imp.), i. 020. Lurcher (injj).), i. .548. Lurlinc (im)).), i. tm. Luzlmrougli (imp.), i. 548. Lycnrgus (imp.), i. .548. Lyard Cypruii Horse, i. 88. m:. Mac (trotter), ii. 192, 194, 203, 210, 21!i. 220, 222. Madcap, b. f. (imp.), i. 621. Madison, i. 137. Maggie (Burns' Mare), age of, i. .57. Maggy Lauder, (imp), i. 621. Magic (imp.), i. 548. Magnetic Needle (imp.), i. 549. Magnolia, i. 374. produce of, i. 374. Magnum Bonum (imp.), i. 549. Maid of Honor (imp.), i. 621. Maid of the Oaks, i. 136, 145, 103. Maid of Orleans (imp.), i. 621. Maid of Royston (imp.), i. 621. Maid of Wirrcl (imp.), i. 622. Makeless (English), i. 128, 13.3, 133. Major Winfield (now Edward Everett) — history of, ii. 266. 267. pedigree of, ii. 2(i8. Malibrau, ch. m. (imp.), i. 628. Mambriua (imp,), i. 622. Mambrina Mare, br. (imp.), 1. 622. Mambriuo Chief- pedigree, ii. 275. performances, ii. 275, 276. Manfred (imp.), i. 549. Mango, br. c. (imp.), i. 549. Mango, ch. f. (imp.), i. 622. Mania (imp.), i. 622. Marchesa (imp.), i. 62.3. Mares (imp.), i. 583. Mares. Barb of Charles n., i. 103, 105, 106. age for breeding, ii. .318. nianagement of^ ii. 339. points of brood, ii. 313. selection of. ii. ,310, 311. Margrave (imp.), i. 5-19. Margravine, ch. m. (imp.X i. 623. Maria Black, br. m. (imp.), i. 6^3. Maria Haj-nes, i. 141, 142. Marigold "(imp.\ i. 623. Marion (by Sir Archy). i. 174. Marion (trotter), ii. 192. Mariner (by Shark), i. ,300. race with Boston, i. 300. Maritana (imp), i. 623. Mark Anthonv (imp."), i. 127, 135, 140, "141. 145.147. Markham Arabian, i. 91. Marlboroucrh (EnE:lish\ i. 1.36, 137. Marplot limp.), i. 550. Marske. i. 105. 106. 107, 1.36, 160. Mary Gray (imp.), i. 623. Mary Grey (imp.i, i. 146. Mask (imn.i, i. r)5<). Massscbnsetts, horse of, i. 109, 110. 11 \ Master Robert (imp ), i. 550. 596 INDEX. Matchem (imp.), i. 550. Matches of racers— of Ameri- can Eclipse aud Sir Charles, i. 181. of AloDzo aud Orville, i. 423. of American Eclipse and Sir Henry, i. 167. 183, 4ii2. of Ariel and Flirtilla, i. 202, i(j7. of Arrow and Little Flea, i. :yo. of Arrow and Brown Dick, i. 445, 448. of Australia and Kingston, i. 144, 44 1. Of Black Maria and three mares, i. 167, 236, 422. of Boston and Fashion, i. 167, 289. of Childers and Almanzer, i. 420, 423. of Hambletonian and Dia- mond, i. 422. of Lexins;ton and Le- comte, i.lco, 308. 345, 347. of Lexington against Time, i. 327. second match of Lexington and Lecomte, i. .333. Osbaldeston's Match, i. 425. Of Pryor and Lecomte, i. ,354. of Eed Eye and Dick Doty, i. 465. of Red Eye and One-eyed Joe, i. 405. of Sleight-of-Hand and Charles XII., i. 436. of Surplice aud Cymba, i. 444, 447. of Wagner and Grey Eagle, i. 167, 251. Matches of Trotters. — Early matches, ii. 13-1. Ariel, fifty mile match against time, ii. 186. Ariel and Fanny Murray, 100 mile match, ii. IPC. Asteroid with Loadstone, i. 362, 363. barbarous match, ii. 215. best time of trotting matches, ii. 282 to 287. brutal matches, ii. 171. Defiance with Mr. How- ard's horse, ii. 1-36. Dutchman against time, ii. 171. EUen Thompson and Tom Jefferson, ii. 174. Ericsson against Morgan Chief and Kentucky, ii. 270, 271. Fanny Jenks, 100 mile match against time, ii. 183. first match on Hunting Park Course, ii. 142. Flora Temple, matches and trots, ii. 220 to 230 Kemlile Jackson against O'Blonis, ii. 218. Kentucky against Flort- ing and others, i. 378, 370. Lady Kate against time, ii. 1.51. Lady SufTolk, matches and trots, ii. 208-212. Matches of Trotters- Paul Pry against time, Ii. 155. Piirdy's Kate, 100 miles against time, ii. I'.tii. Rattler and Screwdriver, ii. 130. Riptou and Lady Suffolk, ii. 174. Sir Walter Scott against time, ii. 178. tandem match, ii. 183. Trustee, 20 miles against time, ii. 190. Whalebone against time, ii. 139. Whalebone and Jerry, ii. 152. Matchless (imp.), i. 550. Matilda Routh (imp.), i. 623. Maud (imp.), i. 624. Mazube (Riley's Barb), ii. 85. Media, Horse of, i. 24. Medicine, table of, ii. 586. Medley (imp.), i. 138, 161, 162. pedigree of, i. ISO, 550. "et of, i. 136. Medley (Gov. Williams' Gray), i. 136, 140, 143, 144, 147. Medley Mare, i. 138. Medoc, pedigree of, i. 168. Medora (imp.), i. 624. Melrose (imp.), 1. 624. Memoirs of Celebrated Horses: of Sir Archjr, i. 171. of Diomed, i. 175. of American Eclipse, i. 178. of The Justin Morgan Horse, ii. 110. of Lady Suffolk, ii. 208. of Flora Temple, 11. 229. Memnou Mare (imp.), i. 624. Mendoza (iipp.), i. 551. Mercer (imp.), i. 551. Merlin (English), 1. 127. Mermaid (imp.), i. 624. Merman (imp.), 1. 551. Morrjfield (imp.), i. 651. Merry Lass (imp.), 1. 624. Merry Pintle (imp.), i. 551. Merry Tom (imp), i. 552. Jtessenger (imp.), by Mambri- nb, i. 113, 150, 151; ii, 24, 144. 214, 215. pedigree of, ii. 552. Meteor (mip.), i. 552. Meux (imp.), 1. 552. Mexican (imp.), i. 552. Mexico, wild horses of, i. 25. MichiEran, tlie horse stock of, 1i. 88, 89-98. Micky Free (imp.), i. .552. Midge (English Mare), i. 136. Milhner (iihp.), i. 624. Mingo, by Eclipse, i. 163. shape, action, stride, and pedigree, i. 1(J3. Miranda, b. m. (imp.), i. 625. Misfortune (imp.), i. 625. Miss Accident, b. m. (imp.), i. 625. Miss Andrews, b. m. (imp.), i. 625. Miss Bolvoir (English), i. 1.36, 1.07, 150, 172. Miss B'^nnintrton (imp.), i. 625. Miss Cleveland (English), i. 136. Miss Clinker, b. m. (imp.), i. 625. Miss Colvllle (imp.), i. 120, 128. pedigree, i. 625. Miss Golbourue, br. m. (imp.), i. 626. Miss Elliott (English), i. 136. Miss Foote, i. 106. Miss Meredith (English), i. 137. Miss Mischiol' (trotter),' ii. 164. Miss Rockingham (imp.), 1. 626. Miss Rose, b. m. (imp.), i.626. Mies Susan Dodge (imp.), i. 626. Miss Thigh (English), 1. 133. Miss West (imp.), i. 626. Miss Windmill (imp.), i. 626. Modern Hunters, ii. 21. Modesty (trotter), ii. 156, 160, 163. Moloch (imp.), i. 553. Moll Brazen, i. 626. Moll in the Wad, b. m. (imp.), i. (i26. Monarch (imp.), i. 553. Monarch (imp.), by Priam, i. 553. Monkey (English),by Lonsdale Arabian, i. 127. Monkey (imp.), i. 553. Monkey Mare (imp.), i. 627. Mordecai (imp.), i. 553. Morgan Horse, or Justin Mor- gan, i. 112, 113; ii. 75, 104, 105, 106. pedigree, ii. 107, 281. remarks on^ ii. 108, 109. memoir of, li. 110. recorded get. ii. 115, 122. Moreton's Traveler (imp.), i. ' 127, 128, 135, 139, 159; ii. 107, 108. 109, 281. Moro (imp.), i. 553. Morveu (mip.), i. 553. Morwick Ball (imp.), i. 553. Mosco (imp.), i. 553. Moscow (trotter), alias Passe Carreau, i. 114. performances, ii. 176, 179, 185, 186, 187, 194. pedigree of, ii. 180, 182, 183. Moses (English), i. 138. Mount Holly (trotting Stal- lion), ii. 150, 156, 162, 164. Mousetrap (imp.), i. 553. Mucous Membranes, ii. 513. Mufti (imp.), i. 554. Mulatto Mare, b. f. (imp.), i. 627. Musgrovc'B Gray Arabian, i. 126. My Lady (imp.), i. 627. Myrtle (imp.), i. 627. jsr. Nameless, b. m. (imp.), i. 628. Nancy Bywell, b. m. (imp.), i. 028. Nanny Kilham (imp.), i. 628. Narrasrnntctt lioree (pacer), i. 112. the horse, ii. 67. characteristics, ii. 69, 70, 73. 74. Native (imp.), i. .554. Natural History of the Horae, 1.58. INDEX. 597 Navicular, or Joint Disease, ii. 521. Nebula, i. ;j5i). product', i. 350. Nell Uwyii.i (.imp.), i 028. Nellie Jiunc ; (imp), i. (iS^. Nettletoj), \iy j)ioaied, i. IS':. Netty, cli. in. (imp ), i. ()29. NewcomliV vioiuiiaiu Arabi- an, 1. '.)(). Nicholas I., by (ilcncoe, i. 352. Nicholas (imp.), i. 554. Nimiod (imp.), i. 554. Noble (imp.), i. 555. Nonpareil (imp., i. 555. Nonplus (imp.), i. 555. Norman Horse of Canada, i. 101), 114; ii. 47, .50. history of Canadian, ii. 03. North Britton (imp.), i. 555. North Star (imi).), i. 555. Northumberland, alias Irish Gray (imp.), i. .555. Northumberland Mare (imp.), i. 029. Novelty, m. (imp.), i. 029. Novice (imp.), i. G29. Numidian Barbs, i. 32. Nun's Daughter (imp.), i. 029. O. Oberon (imp.), i. 555. Obituaries of Stallions, i. 147. Buujphalus (Alexander the Givat), i. 57. Burns' Maj,'^ie, i. 57. English Eclipse, i. 57. KemWe Jackson, ii. 213. Lady Suftolk, ii. 212. Screwdriver, ii. 147. O'Blenis (trotter), ii. 202, 218. Obscurity (imp.), i 556. Observations on imported stal- lions, i. 500. Octavius Mare (imp.), i. 629. Oglethorpe Arabian, i. 9(5, 12S. Ohio, horse stock of, ii. 70, 83. O'Kelly, i. 143. O'Kelly (imp.), i. 55G. Old Abdallah, pedigree, ii. 281. Old Child Mare (EngUsh), i. 128. Old England (imp.), race with S'elim. i. 131, 102, 556. Old Shock, i. 133. Olympus Filly (imp.), i. 629. Olympus Mare (imp.), i. 630. Only That, b. m. (imp.), i. 630. Oneida Chief (pacer), ii. 172, 173, 177, 178. Onus (imp.), i. 556. Opossum Filly, by Medley, i. 13;;, 1.37. Orleana (imp.), i. 630. Oroonoko (imp.), i. 556. Orphan (imp.), i. 030. Orville Mare (imp.), i. 630. Osbaldestou's Match, to ride 200 miles in ten hours, i. 425. Oscar (imp,), i. 550, 557. Oscar, by Gabriel, i. 136, 138. 163, 1T2. Oscar, by Wonder, i. 141. Oscar Mare (imp.t, i. 630. Othello, or Black-and-all-Black, i, 131, 133, 144. pedigree, i. 557. Otho (English), by Moses, i. 137. Over Cast (imp.), i. 031. Pacers and pacing, ii. 285. bcKt time on record, ii. 285. Galloway's, ii. 33. James K. Polk, ii. 187. Narragansctt's, i. 112. history of, ii. 07, 00. Pocahontas, ii, 220. performances, ii. 285. Pacilic, by Sir Archy, i. 142, 143. Pacolet (imp.), i. 130, 139, 163. pedigree of, i. 557, Pacolet Gray, by Citizen, i. 141, 143. Pacolet (Williamson's), i. 142, 145, 147. Pacolet Mare, i. 631. Pam (imp.), i. 557. Pandora, by Medley, i. 136. P,iuola (imp.), i, 631. Pantaloon (imp.), i. 557. Pantaloon Mare, i, 408. produce, i. 408. Parthian Horse, i. 40. Partner Mare, i. 127, 130, 138, 28, 29, 135, 145. 140. Partner (Grisewood's), i. 130, 138, Partner, Moore's (imp.), i. 557. Partner, Croft's (imp.), i. 557. Partner, by Traveller, i. 135. Passe Carreau (trotter), alias Moscow, i, 179, 182, 183. Passaic (imp.), i. 558. Passenger (imp.), i. 558. Paul Clifibrd (trotter), ii. 119. Paul Pry (trotter), ii. 25, 41, 142, 1 15, 152, 154, 161. Paymaster (imp.), i. 558. Paymaster Mare (imp.), i. 631. Peacemaker, b.y Diomed, i. 137. Peacock (Spanish horse), i. 98. Pedigrees and Get — of Bedford (imp.), i. 138. his get. i. 130. of Diomed (imp.) i., 137. his get, i. 137. of Gabriel (imp.), i. 137, his get, i. 138. of Medley (imp,), i. 1.36. his get, i. 1.36. of Shark (imp.), 1. 136. his get, i. 1.37. Pedigrees, Performances, and Anecdotes of Famous American Racers, i. 15(i. of American Eclipse, i. 178. of Ariel, i. 195, 197, 221. of Arrow, i. 338, 339, of Asteroid, i. 359, 301, of Black Maria, i. 222, 250. of Blue Dick, i. 105. of Boston, i. 270, 280, 283. of Clarion, i. ia3. of Fashion, i. 284, 287,283. performances of, i. 284 to 289. of Grey Eagle, i. 251, 253. of John Bascomb,!. 104. of Kentucky, i. 374, 375. of Leamington (imp.), 1. 407, 111. of Lecomte, i. 312, 313. Pedigrees, Performances, aud Anecdotes of Famous American Kacers— of Lexington, i. 303-305. of Medoc, i. 103, of Mingo, i. 103. of Peytona, i, 164. of Post Boy, i, 103. of Pry or, i,:i61,352. of Sir Archy, i. 172. of Sir Henry, i. 180. of Wagner, i. 251, 252. Pedigree of Flora Temple, (trotter), ii. 2)0, 235. of Kemblc Jaclison. ii. 214. of Lady Suffolk, ii. 208, of .Morgan IIorKc, ii. 107. of Pocahontas, ii. 221. of trotting liorses, ii. 280. Peggy (imp.), i. 0:31. Pelham (frotler), ii. 137, 192, 107, 202, 213. Penelope, ch. m. (imp.), i. 031. Pera (imp.), i, 032. Percy Mare (imp.), i. 632. Performances of American Pacers — American Eclipse, i. 179, Ariel, i. 201. at New Orleans, i. 471, Black Maria, i. 220. Boston, i. 277, 289. Brown Dick, i. 445, 448, Dick Doty, i, 40.5. Fashion, i. 285, 289. Henry Perritt, i. 447. Lexington, i. 308-3.33. Little "Flea, i. S45, most renowned, i, 449, Performances of Famous Trot- ting Horses, ii. 286. Asteroid, i. 3G1-371. Awful, ii, 101. best time on record, ii. 2^31, 282, Dexter, ii. 257, 258. Dutchman, ii. lt;0. Ericsson, ii. 2()9. 270. Fanny Jenks, ii. 181, 183, 195, 106. Fanny Murray, ii. 186. Flora Temple, ii. 235. Goldsmith Maid, ii. 251, 252. Kentucky, i. 375-400. Ladv Suffolk, ii. 209, 210, 211. Lady Thorne, ii. 245-247. Leamington, i. 411-116. Mambrino Chief, ii. 275, 270. Paul Pry, ii. 1.55. Purdy's Kate, ii. 199. Ripton, ii. 173. Tacony, ii. 204-239, Thornedale, ii. 277. Top^'allaut, ii. 143. Trustee, ii. 190, 19.3, 224. Young Morrill, ii. 265, Performances of Racers (Eng- lish)- Almanzor, i. 420, 42.3, 445. Alonzo. i. 423. Brown Betty, i. -120. 423. Chanter, i. ■;•;!. Charles the 12th. i, -1.37. C.vmba, i. 4U. 447. Diamond, i. 422. English Eclipse, i. 420,428, 448, 453, 463. 698 INDEX. Performances of Racers (Eng- lish)— Firetail, i. 421. Flying Childers, 1. 420, 422, 423, 435, 448, 453, 463. Fox, i. 420, 421. Hambletonian, i. 422. Hall's Quibler, i. 422. Kingston, i. 44-1, 447. Osbaldeston match, 1. 425. OrviUe, 1. 423. Sir Tatton Sykes, i. 444, 447. Sleight-of-Hand, i. 437. Speedwell, i. 421. Surplice, 444, 447. West Australian, i. 444, 447. Persian Horse, i. 24, 30. Pet (trotter), ii. 204, 215, 218. Peter Lely Mare (imp.), i. 632. Petwcrth (imp.), i. 632. Peytona, by Gleucoe, i. 162. description of, i. 164. pedigree of, i. 104. race with Fashion, i. 165. Phantomia (imp.), i. 633. Pharaoh (imp.), i. 558. Phaeton, i. 558. Phenomenon (imp.), i. 558. Phil Brown (imp.), i. 559. Philadelphia Sal (trotter), ii. 188. Philadelphia, b. m. (imp.), i. 632. Philip (imp.), i. 559. Phcenix (imp.), i. 151, 559. Piccolina (imp.), i. 633. Pickle (imp.), i. 633. Pirouette, ch. f (imp.), i. 633. Place's White Turk, i. 95, 138, 157. Placentia, f. f. (imp.), i. 633. Play or Pay (imp.), i. 559. Pledge, m. (imp.), i. 603. Plenty, br. m. (imp.), i. 603. Pleurisy, ii. 518. Ploughboy (trotter), ii. 193. Pocahontas (pacer), ii. 86, 181, 220. pedigree of ii. 221. best time on record, ii. 224. Polenta (imp.), i. 634. Polly Hopkins (imp.), i. 634. Polly Moss (imp.), i. 634. Pomona, b. m. (imp.), i. 634. Ponies (Indian), ii. 65. Poppinjay Mare (imp.), i. 635. Portland (imp.), i. 559. Portland Arabian, i. 138. Porto (imp.), i. 560. Possession, m. (imp.), i. 635. Post Boy, by Gabriel, i. 136, 138. Post Boy, by Henry, i. 163. pedigree of, i. 163, 164; ii. 89. Pot-8-o'8 (English), i. 137. Pot-S-o's Marc (imp.), i. 635. Potestas (imp.), i. 635. Potomac, by Sir Archy, i. 136, 137. Potomac (Van Ranst), i. 154, 1.^5. Precipitate (imp.), i. 500. Preci[)itate Mare (imp.), i. 635. Prerogative (imp.), i. 560. Priam (imp.), i. 100, 143, 148, 560. Priam Mare (imp ), 1. 636. •l»rima, i. 636. Primrose, by Diomed, i. 137, 164. Primrose (imp.), i. 636. Primula (imp.), i. 636. Prince (imp.), i. 560. Prince (trotter), ii. 217. ten-mile race, ii. 217. one hundred mUe race, ii. 217, 218. Prince Ferdinand (imp.), i. 560. Prince Frederick (imp.), i. 560. Principles of Breeding, ii. 289. Prioress, by Sovereign (imp.), i. 169. race with Nicholas I , i. 427. Progress in Breeding, i. 427. table of, i. 427. Promise, ch. m. (imp.), i. 637. Prunella (imp.), i. 637. Pryor, by Glcncoe, i. 169. description of i. 353. pedigree of, i. 351. race with Lecomte, i. 354. race with Floride, i. 357. Psyche, gr. m. (imp.), i. 637. Pumiced Feet, ii. 524. Punch (imp.), i. 561. Pnnchinclla (imp.), i. 637. Pussy (imp.), i. 637. Puzzle (imp.), i. 561. Q. Quaga, i. 25, 53. Queen Ann, bl. m. (imp.), i. 637. Queen, The, ch. m. (imp.), i. 638. Queen Mab (imp.), i. 126, 128, 637. Quicksilver, i. 136. Quiet Cuddy, i. 127. R. Eabecca (imp.), i. 638. Races of Famous American Horses — American Eclipse, great match with Sir Henry, i. 183. Ariel and Flirtilla, i. 202. Ariel, i. 202-220. Arrow, i. 343, 347. Asteroid, i. 361-364. at New Orleans, i. 471, 474. best four-mile, i. 454. best three-mile ever run, i. 316. Black Maria, i. 222-250. Black Maria's twenty-mile race, i. 230. Boston, i. 277, 289. Fashion, i. 284, 289. match with Boston, i. 289-299. Kentucky, i. 37.5-393. Lexington i. 308, 309. with Lecomte, i. 317, 321. match against time, i. 323, 328. second witli Lecomte, i. 333, 3-10. Lecomte, i. ,J14-310. with Lexington, i. 317-333. Pryor with Lecouite, i. 3.")4 -356. Wagner and Grey Eagle, i. 253-375. Race Courses (early), i. 125. Albany, N. Y., i. 151. Alexandria, D. C, i. ISO, 193. Bath, Long I; land, i. 153. Beacon, Hoboken, N. J., i. 153. Beaver Pond, Jamaica, L. I., 130, 150. Fashion, Newtown, L. I., i. ;K1, 530. Gloucester, Va., i. 127. Harlem, N. Y. Island, 1. 151, 153. Maryland, i. 128. National, Newtown, L. I., i. .351. New Market, L. I., i. 130, 151, 1.52, 1.53. New Market, Va., i. 130. Philadelphia, i. 132, 134, 135. Poughkeepsie (D. C), N. Y., i. 151, 153. Powles Hook, N. J., ii. 153. Richmond, Va., i. 130. Washington, Charleston, S. C, 1. 130. Race horse, true utility of, i, 476. essential points of, i. 490. Rachel, ch. m. (imp.), i. 638. Racing — early racing, i. 29. in America generally, i. 183 to 466. Cromwell's proclamation against, i. 94, 95. Elizabeth's time, i. 93, 94. in England, i. '57, 79, 80, 88, 93, 419-447. for laces, see Matches and Performances, in Greece, i. 29. James First's time, 1. 93. in Maryland, i. 125-137. Newmarket, Eng., i. 91, 94. in New York, i. 130, 137. in North Carolina, i. 130, 135. in Pennsylvania, i. 132-137. in So. Ca'rolina, i. 130, 135. in Virginia, i. 125. Radish (imp.), i. 638. Raglan's Diomed, i. 142. Ranger (imp.), i. 501. Ranter (imp.), i. 561. Rattle (English), i. 127, 128. Rattler (trotter), ii. 139, 150, 1.55, ICO, K."^, 1C7, 173. Raven's Wing (in p.), i. (i38. Reality, by Sir Archy, i. 187. Recovery "Marc (imp.), i. 688. Reel, by Gltv.coe, i. ](.2, 166. Reiugce (imp.), i. ( S8. Regnlus (imp.), i. 1S7, 1£8, 130, 135, ]S0, 1(;0, 1(.3. pcdiL'ree, fA'il. Remus (in)p.), i. r.61. Republican (imp.), i. .562. Restless (imp.), i. 562. Reube, ch. g., race with Le- comte,"!. *.!.], 847. Revenge (imp.), i. 562. Revenue Blare (in. p.). i. 639. Rhode Island (trotter), ii. 203, 213, 216, Richard's Arabian, i. 138. Richard (imp.), i. 5(52. Riddlesworth (imp.), i. 562. INDEX. 599 Riding, ii. 476, 354. Rin-'let, b. f. (.imp.), i- 630. Riplou (trottoi), ii. 149, 16'J,172. pert'onnaiicort of, ii. 173, 17'J, lH-2, 1S7, 18i). Road, managuiueut of liorses, ii. 470. driving and riding, ii. 477. feeding on road, ii. 4(31. condition l)ull8, ii. 483. Roanoke (pacer), ii. 187. Roaring, ii. 531. Rol)iu Redbreast (imp.), i. 503. Rocliingham (Eng.), i. 127,129. Rock mare (imp.), i. 0.39. Roderick Dbu (imp.), i. 563. Rodney (imp.), i. 503. Rodolph (imp.), i. 563. Rodora (imp.), i. 639. Roger of the Vale (alias) (imp.), Jolly Roger, i. 137, 133, 139, 140, 144, 145, 140. Eolla (trotter), ii. 159, 163. Roman (^imp.), i. 151, 563. Rosalind (imp.), i. 039. Roscius (imp.), i. 563. Rose of Washin^on (trotter), trot with Ethan Allen, ii. 105. Rosina (imp.), i. 040. Roundhead (English), i. 127. Routh's Black Eyes (English), i. 133. Rowton (imp.), i. 564. Royalist (imp.), i. 141. pedigree of, i. 504. Royal Mares (barbs), i. 127, 128. Roxana (English), i. 127. Ruby (imp.), i. 504. Ruler Mare (imp.), i. 640. Rysdyk's Hambletonian — history, ii. 259, 200. his get, ii. 250. pedigree, ii. 260, 261. S. Sacrifice (imp.), i. 640. Saint George (imp.), i. 574. Saint Paul limp.), i. 574. SaUyof the VaUey(imp.), i.640. Sally Miller (trotter), best time, ii. 1.33, 142, 140, 154, 155, 150, 157, 187. Salorta (imp.), i. 040. Saltram (imp.), i. 141, 145, 146. pedigree of, i. 564. Sam Par^ (imp.), i. 564. Sampson (imp.), i. 564. Sampson Filly (English), first winner of St. Leger, i. 161. Sampson Mare (imp.), i. 641. Sandbeck Mare, b. m. (imp.), i. 041. Sarah (imp.), i. 641. Sarpedon (imp.), i. 564. Scarificator (imp.), i. 641. Schumla (imj) ), i. 041. Scotland, Arabian (imp.) into, i. 78. Scout (imp.), i. 505. Screwdriver (trotter), ii. 1.38, 1.39, 140, 142, 144, 103. Screwdriver the Second, ii.lSG. Screws (trotter), ii. 1.3S, 139. Scythia, horse of, i. 44. Scythian (imp.;, pedigree of, i. 565. Seagull (imp.), i. 565. Selal)y Turk, i. 96, 130. Selini (imp.), i. 131, KiJ, 1.34. pedigree of, i. 565. Selima (imp.), i. 127, 128, 1.3.3, 1;M, 137, 147, 159, IW. pedigree of, i. (HI. Selima (imp.), i. 641. Scrab (imi).), i. 565. Sessions (imp.), i. 642. Shadow (imp.), i. .5(i6. Shakespeare (imp.), i. 566. Shakespeare Mare (imp.), i. (>t2. Shamrock (imp.), i. .506. Shark (imp.), i. 116, 145, 161, 102, 1()3. pedigree of, i. 135, 566. get of, i. 137. Shark (Pearce's), 1. 137. Shark (by Eclipse), i. 240. Sharpcatcher (imp.), i. 500. Shepherdess (imp.), i. 642. Sheppard's Crab (English), 1. 1.31, 137. Sherman's (Morgan) stallion, ii. 104. Shock (imp.), i. 566, 567. Shoeing the Horse, ii. 345. cutting of the heels, ii. 490. filing up the shoe, ii. 498. fitting the shoe, ii. 493. general observations on, ii. .507. hind shoe, ii. 503. nail holes, ii. 491. nails, ii. 499. nailing ou tlie shoe, ii. 500. preparing the foot, ii. 486. removing the slioe, ii. 506. the shoe, ii. 489. treatise on, ii. 485. Shotten Herring (Spanish horse), i. 98. Silver (horse), i. 567. Silver (mare), i. 642. Silver Eye (imp.), i. 133, 146. pedigree of, i. 567. Silverlegs, i. ia3. Silver Star (imp.\i. 642. Silvertail (English), i. 127. Sir Archy. i. 130, 136, 142, 145, 161, 164. get of, i. 173,174; ii. 11. memoir of, i. 171. pedigree of. i. 172. Sir Harry (imp.), i. 567. Sir Henry (bv Sir Archy), i. 102," 107," 108. color and form. i. 185. matcli witli Eclipse, i. 183. pedigree, i. ISO. race'with Eclipse, i. 187. time of race with, i. 182. Sir Peter Teazle (imp.), i. 507, 508. Sir Peter (trotter), ii. 149, 150, 153. Sir Robert (imp.), i. 668. SirTatton (imp.), i. 568. Sir \Yaltcr (imp.), i. 508. Sir Walter (by Hickory), i. 180, 181, 183. Sir Walter Scott (trotter), ii. 178. Siskin (imp.), i. 642. Skeleton and structure of horse, i. 55. Skim (imp.), i. 568. Skylark (imp.), 1. 569. Slanc Marc (imp.), i. MS. 81eight-(jf-Uaud Mare (imp.), i. (>13. Slender (imp.), i. 1.50, 569. Slim (imp.), i. .5(J9. Sloven (imp.), i. 131, 150, 569. Slouch (imp.), i. .509. Smol(^nsko (English), ii. 22. Snake (English), i. 100, 128, 1.36. Snap (imj).), i. W.I. Snap (English), i. 136, 1.37, 159, 1C3. Snap Mare (imp.), i. 043. Snipe (imp.), i. 509. Sober John (imp.), i. 570. Somonocodron (imp.), i. 570. Sontag (trotter), ii. 2:i2. Soreheels (English), i. 125. Sorrow (imp.), i. 570. Sourcrout (imp.), i. 1.50, 570. Sovereign (imp.), i. 570. Spadille (imp.), i. .571. Spangle (trotter), ii. 224. twenty mile trot, ii. 224. Spanish Horse, i. 25, 44, 78,83, 89, 98, 100, 111, 122. blood, ii. 15. Spanker (English), i. 107, 129. Spanker's Dam, i. 199, 1.30. Spark (imp.), i. 120, 127. pedigree of, i. 571. Spatuloe"(imp.), i. 643. Spavin, ii. .519. Spectator (English), i. 137, 138. Speed and bottom of American and English horses, i. 419. Speculator (imp.), i. 571. Spiletta (English), i. 107. Spiletta (imp.), i. 644. Splints, ii. 523. Sportsman (imp.), i. 571. Spot (trotter), ii. 142, 147, 148. Spot Mare (imp.), i. 644. Spread Eade (imp.), i. 571. death of, i. 147. Sprightly (imp.), i. 572. Squirt (English), i. 106, 136. Stable management, ii. 436. bathing a horse, ii. 455. clothing a wet do., ii. 452. docking and pricldng, u. 459. dressing, ii. 441. dressing vicious horses, ii. 414. dressing after work, ii. 448. farm horses, ii. 472. general management, ii. 409. horses' food, ii. 464. stable hours, ii. 439. summering horses, ii. 473. trimming the ears, ii. 461. trimming the heels and legs, ii. 462. utility of dressing, ii. 445. vermin, ii. 417. walking a heated horse, ii. 449. walking a wet horse, ii. 451. watering the horse, ii. 469. wisping a wet horse, ii. 452. Stabling and stable- air system, ii. 419. architecture, ii. 413. city stable plans, ii. 423. " estimate of, ii. 426. efiects of darkness, ii. 414. floor and windows, ii. 416. 600 ESTDEX. Stabling and stable — harness room, ii. 421. lar^e country stable, ii. 431. estimate of cost, ii. 4.35. small country stable, ii. 427. estimate, ii. 430. Stafford (imp.), i. 572. StaUions staudiug in England in 1730, i. Iu4, 105. foreign stallions, i. 104. native stallions, i. 105. Stallions (imp,), i.'507. observations on, i. 500. Star (Duke of Bridge water's), i. 343. Star (imp.), 1. 573. Starling (imp.), i. 572. Starling, by Sir Peter Teazle, (imp.), i. 573. Starling Mare (imp.), i. 644. Statira, ch. m. (imp.), i. 644. Staughton Lass (imp.), 1. 644. Stella (imp.), i. G44. SteDa (trotter), ii. 235. Sterling (imp.), i. 573. Sterling or Starling (imp.), i. Stirling (imp.), i. 573. St. George (imp.), i. 574. St. Giles (imp.), i. 574. St. Lawrence (Canadian), ii. 203, 213. (trotter), ii. 189, 199, 202. St. Nicholas Mare (imp.), i. 645. St. Paul (imp.), i. 574. Stock. Horse stock of Ohio and the West, ii. 76, 83. horse stock of Michigan, ii. 88. horse stock of Iowa, ii. 100. original of Michigan, ii. 95. Stockholder (by Sir Archy), i. 142, 146. Stockbridge Chief (trotter), ii. 105. Stolen Kisses (imp.), 1. 645. Stone Plover (imp.), i. 573. Straddling Turk (Lester's), i. 96. Stranger (trotter), ii. 147, 148. Strap (imp.), i. 573. Stud farm, ii. 303. Stump's Mare (imp.), i. 645. Stump's Mare v enetia (imp.), i. 645. Suffolk Punch, i. 112 ; ii. 27, 28. Sultan Mare, i. 645. Sunny_ South (imp.), i. 645. Superiority of modem racers, i. 429. Sweeper (imp.), i. 131. pedigree of, 574. Sweetbriar (imp.), i. 646. Sweetest When Naked (imp.), i. 646. Swiss (imp.), i. ,575. Symmetry (imp.), i. 646. Synonyms of the horse, i. 45. Syrian horse, i. 95. T. Tacony (trotter), ii. 41 , 202, 203. performances, ii. 201, 213, 216. 210, 222. 237, 239. Tadmor Mare (imp.), i. 646, 647. Taffolet Barb, i. 138. Tangier Barb, i. 96. Tanner (imp.), i. 57). Target (imp.), i. 647. Tarquiu (imp.), i. 575. Tartar (English), i. 137. Tartar Mare (imp.), i. 647. Tartarian horse, breed of, i. 25. Tattersall (imp.), i. 575. TeaUie Filly, i. 347 ; race, i. 347. Tears, ch. m. (imp.), i. 647. Tecumseh (trotter), ii. 216, 222. Telegraph (imp.), i. 575. Tenerifte (imp.), i. 575. Teniers Mare, ch. m. (imp.), i. 647. Tennessee, history of the blood horse in, i. 140, 143. Texas, wild horse of, i. 25, 109. The Colonel's Daughter (imp.), i. 648. The Earl (imp.), i. 576. Thessahan Horse, i. 23, 28, 31, 40. Thetis (imp.), i. 648. Thornedale— description of, ii. 276. pedigree of, ii. 274. performances of, ii. 277. Thorntons Mare, i. 127. Thoroughbred race horse, i. 454. what is a, ii. 11. true utility of, i. 476. essential jjoiuts of, i. 490. Thoulouse Barb, i. 96. Thracian Horse, i. 23, 28, 31, 40, 41, 43, 44. Tib Hinman (trotter), ii. 201, 222, 223, 227. Tickle Toby (imp.), i. 576. Time and Weight, i. 422, 423, 462. Timoleon,by Sir Archy, i. 137, 1 12, 140 ; ii. 11, 17. Tippoo Sultan, i. 152, 154. Tiresia's Mare (imp.), i. 648. Titsy (imp.), i. 648. Toby (imp.), i. 576. Toby, alias Sporting Toby, (imp.), i. 131, 576. Tom Breeze (imp.), i. 576. Tomboy Mare (imp.), i. 648. Tom Crib, ch. h. (imp.), i. 576. Tom Jones (imp ), i. 576. Tom Thumb (trotter), ii. 133, 130, 139. performances of, i. 150. Top-gallant, by Diomed, i. 137. Top-gallant, by Gallatin, i. 142. 143, 144. Top-galbnt (trotter), ii. 41, 135, 112, 146, I'B. performances of, ii. 143- 150, 1.53, 154. Touchstone (imp.), i. 576. Tramp Mare (imp.), i. 648. Tranby (imp.), i. .577. Tranby Mare (imp.), i. 649. Trapes (nee Speck), (imp.), 1. 649. Traveller, Coatsworth (imp.), i. .577. Traveller, Moreton's (imp.), i. 127,128,13.5,139,146,159; ii. 107, 108, 109, 281. pedigree of, i. .577. Traveller, Strange'p, alias Big Ben, alias Cliarlemont, (imp.), i. 577. Treasurer, i. 151. Treatise on the Horse, by Xenophon, i. 35. Treatise on Horse Shoeins ii 485. ^ Trifle, by Sir Charles, i. 162, 2;j3, 2:34. twenty-mile race, i. 236- 245. Trifle, by Milo (imp.), 1. 649. Triuculo (imp ), i. 577. Trinket, ch. m. (imp.), i. 649. best time on record, from 1830 to 18,55, ii. 282. miscellaneous examples and extraordinary per- formances of, ii. 286. pedigree of, ii. 280. Betsey Baker, ii. 1.35. Boston Blue, iL 135. Top-gaUant, ii. 135. Tom Thumb, ii. 133. Troadwell Mare, ii. 135. Trotting Clubs- first New York trotting club, ii. 137. first purses, ii. 137-140. rules of club, ii. 138. Hunting Park Association, Philadelphia, ii. 140. rules of, ii. 140, 141. first meeting, ii. 142- 143. Trotting Courses of America, ii. 133. act for establishing the first, ii. 133, 134. the Canton (Baltimore), ii. 1.51. Central (Baltimore), ii. 146. first T. C. established, ii. 133 to 167. first match in public for a stake, ii. 133. Harlem Trotting Park, ii. 156. Hunting Park, Philadel- phia, ii. 142-148. Long Island (U. C), ii. 132, 147, 238. True Blue (English), i. 125, 136. True Blue (imp.), i. 577. True Briton, ii. 107, 109. Truflfle Young (imp.), i. 577. Trumpator ]\tarc (imp.), i. 649. Trumpet's Dam (English), 1. 128. Trnmpetta, b. m. (imp.), i. 649, Trustee, by Catton (imp.), i. 151, 578. Trustee (trotter), ii. 155, 158, 182. twenty-mile trot, ii. 190, 191, 193, 194, 224. Truxton, i. 137, 141. Tuckahoe, i. 136. Tup (imp.), i. .578. Tulij), til. f. (imp.'), i. 650. Tunica (imp.), i. ()50. Turkiih Horses, i. 40,94,95,97. Acaster, i. 95, 127. Bol'/rade, i. 104. Bvcrly, i. 96, 127. D'Arcv, i. 96. Helmslcy, i. 95, 103. .Tohn«on's, i. 104. List(!r'8 or Straddling Turk. i. 96, 104. Lord Carlisle, i. 104, 105. Picgott's, i. 104. INDKX. 601 Turkish ITorPCS— Placo'rt VV'liitc Turk, i. 95. %, 103. Selaby Turk, i. !)(i, 104, 1'JO. Turpiu Mure (imp.), i. GOO. Yellow Turk, i. iW, ia5. Tryall (imp.), i. 137, 1:34, 135, 159. X7. [Jnion Course Rules, ii. 655. Urganda (imp.), i. 650. Va54. Wint(!r on the Ilorfic, i. 44, 45. Woful Mare (imp.), i. 654. Wombat (Imp.), i. 6.55. Wonder (imp.), i. ijgl. Wonder (by Diomed), i. 137. 111, l^y, 147. Woodbine (imp ), i. 6.5.5. Woodcock (imj).), i. 127. Woodpecker (trotter), 11. 192, 217. Wrangler (imp.), i. 581. X. Xcnophon on the Horee, i. 36, 87. Y. Yellow Turk, i. 90, 128, 130. Yorick, 1. i:i5, 150, l(i2. Y'orkshire (imi).). i. 582. Young Klack Hawk, ii. 104. Young Cade (English), 1. VS8. Young Fazzoletto (imp.), 1. 582. Young Flatcatcher (imp.), 1. 5S2. Young Morrill— history, ii. 263, 264. pcdiprcc, ii. 2(;4. perlormances, ii. 265. Young Spot (imp.), 1. 5^. Zacharv Taylor (trotter), ii. 194, 198, 202, 213, 227. Zebra, 1. 25, 53. Zephyrina (imp.)j 1. 655. Zlnganee (imp.), i. 582. Zinganee or Priam Horee, br. h. (imp.), i. 583. Zone (imp.), 1. 655.