It has been quite a week of news, and I’m willing to bet I’m not the only one who’s tired. So, I figure it wouldn’t be the worst thing in the world to look elsewhere for a bit of a break. Today is the 150th running of the Kentucky Derby, and in its honor, I'm posting a piece my friend Michael S. Green and I wrote together a number of years ago on Ten Famous American Horses. It has no deep meaning...it’s just fun. And it was totally fun to research, too: I watched hours and hours of Mr. Ed and reading television history to try to figure out what made it such a popular show. This remains one of my favorite things I ever had a hand in writing.
1) Traveller
General Robert E. Lee rode Traveller (spelled with two Ls, in
the British style) from February
1862 until the general’s death in 1870. Traveller
was a grey American Saddlebred of 16 hands. He had great endurance for long
marches, and was generally unflappable in battle, although he once broke both
of General Lee’s hands when he shied at enemy movements. Lee brought Traveller
with him when he assumed the presidency of Washington and Lee University.
Traveller died of tetanus in 1871. He is buried on campus, where the safe ride
program still uses his name.
2) Comanche
Comanche was attached to General Custer’s detachment of the 7th
Cavalry when it engaged the Lakota in 1876 at the Battle of Little Bighorn. The
troops in the detachment were all killed in the engagement, but soldiers found
Comanche, badly wounded, two days later. They nursed him back to health, and he
became the 7th Cavalry’s mascot. The commanding officer decreed that the horse
would never again be ridden and that he would always be paraded, draped in
black, in all military ceremonies involving the 7th Cavalry. When Comanche died
of colic in 1891, he was given a full military funeral (the only other horse so
honored was Black Jack, who served in more than a thousand military funerals in
the 1950s and 1960s). Comanche’s taxidermized body is preserved in the Natural
History Museum at the University of Kansas.
3) Beautiful Jim Key
Beautiful Jim Key was a performing horse trained by formerly
enslaved veterinarian Dr. William Key. Key demonstrated how Beautiful Jim could
read, write, do math, tell time, spell, sort mail, and recite the Bible.
Beautiful Jim performed from 1897 to 1906 and became a legend. An estimated ten
million Americans saw him perform, and others collected his
memorabilia—buttons, photos, and postcards—or danced the Beautiful Jim Key
two-step. Dr. Key insisted that he had taught Beautiful Jim using only kindness,
and Beautiful Jim Key’s popularity was important in preventing cruelty to
animals in America, with more than 2 million children signing the Jim Key Band
of Mercy, in which they pledged: “I promise always to be kind to animals.”
4) Man o’ War
Named for his owner, August Belmont, Jr., who was overseas in
World War I, Man o’ War is widely regarded as the top Thoroughbred racehorse of
all time. He won 20 of his 21 races and almost a quarter of a million dollars
in the early twentieth century. His one loss—to “Upset”—came after a bad start.
Man o’ War sired many of America’s famous racehorses, including Hard Tack,
which in turn sired Seabiscuit, the small horse that came to symbolize hope
during the Great Depression.
5) Trigger
Entertainer Roy Rogers chose the palomino Trigger from five
rented horses to be his mount in a Western film in the 1930s, changing his name
from Golden Cloud to Trigger because of his quick mind and feet. Rogers rode
Trigger in his 1950s television series, making the horse a household name. When
Trigger died, Rogers had his skin draped over a Styrofoam mold and displayed it
in the Roy Rogers and Dale Evans Museum in California. He also had a 24-foot
statue of Trigger made from steel and fiberglass. One other copy of that mold
was also made: it is “Bucky the Bronco,” which rears above the Denver Broncos
stadium south scoreboard.
6) Sergeant Reckless
American Marines in Korea bought a mare in October 1952 from a Korean stable boy who needed the money
to buy an artificial leg for his sister, who had stepped on a land mine. The
marines named her Reckless after their unit’s nickname, the Reckless Rifles.
They made a pet of her and trained her to carry supplies and to evacuate
wounded. She learned to travel supply routes without a guide: on one notable
day she made 51 solo trips. Wounded twice, she was given a battlefield rank of
corporal in 1953 and promoted to sergeant after the war, when she was also
awarded two Purple Hearts and a Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal.
7) Mr. Ed
Mr. Ed was a talking palomino in a 1960s television show by the
same name. At a time when Westerns dominated American television, Mr. Ed was
the anti-Western, with the main human character a klutzy architect and the hero
a horse that was fond of his meals and his comfortable life, and spoke with the
voice of Allan “Rocky” Lane, who made dozens of “B” westerns. But the show was
a five-year hit as it married the past to the future. Mr. Ed offered a gentle,
homely wisdom that enabled him to straighten out the troubles of the humans
around him. The startling special effects that made it appear that the horse
was talking melded modern technology with the comforting traditional community
depicted in the show.
8) Black Jack
Black Jack, named for John J. “Black Jack” Pershing, was the
riderless black horse in the funerals of John F. Kennedy, Herbert Hoover,
Lyndon Johnson, and Douglas MacArthur, as well as more than a thousand other
funerals with full military honors. A riderless horse, with boots reversed in
the stirrups, symbolized a fallen leader, while Black Jack’s brands—a U.S.
brand and an army serial number—recalled the army’s history. Black Jack himself
was buried with full military honors; the only other horse honored with a
military funeral was Comanche.
9) Khartoum
Khartoum was the prize stud horse of Jack Woltz, the fictional
Hollywood mogul in Mario Puzo’s The Godfather. In one of the film version’s
most famous scenes, after Woltz refuses requests from Don Vito Corleone to cast
singer Johnny Fontane in a movie, Woltz wakes up to find Khartoum’s head in bed
with him… and agrees to use Fontane in the film. In the novel, Fontane wins the
Academy Award for his performance. According to old Hollywood rumor, the story
referred to real events. The rumor was that mobsters persuaded Columbia
Pictures executive Harry Cohn to cast Frank Sinatra in From Here to Eternity.
As Maggio, Sinatra revived his sagging film career and won the Oscar for Best
Supporting Actor.
10) Secretariat
Secretariat was an American Thoroughbred that in 1973 became the
first U.S. Triple Crown winner in 25 years. His records in the Kentucky Derby,
the Preakness Stakes, and the Belmont Stakes still stand. After Secretariat was
stricken with a painful infection and euthanized in 1989, an autopsy revealed
that he had an unusually big heart. Sportswriter Red Smith once asked his
trainer how Secretariat had run one morning; Charlie Hatton replied, “The trees
swayed.”
-Heather Cox Richardson
11) Seabiscuit was a champion thoroughbred racehorse in the United States who became the top money-winning racehorse up to the 1940s. He beat the 1937 Triple Crown winner, War Admiral, by four lengths in a two-horse special at Pimlico and was voted American Horse of the Year for 1938.
ReplyDelete-Wikipedia
Born: May 23, 1933, Lexington, KY; Died: May 17, 1947, Ridgewood Ranch, CA