Tennessee's Arabian Horse Racing Heritage
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About this ebook
Andra Kowalczyk
A longtime equestrienne, Andra Kowalczyk also has studied the horse�s historical role in American society, producing a master�s thesis, �Horse Race: Class and Gender, American Cultural Identity Viewed Through Horse Racing,� as well as an entry in the Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture on the state�s history of breeding purebred horses. She raises Polish Arabian horses, preserving a sire line imported to the United States as a World War II prize of war. Recently she has ventured into the Arabian racing scene with a colt she bred and raised.
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Tennessee's Arabian Horse Racing Heritage - Andra Kowalczyk
collection.
INTRODUCTION
The Arabian horse since ancient cultures has embodied the ideal war mount: agile, efficient, and of unsurpassed stamina. In Middle Eastern deserts, the breed evolved into a small, thrifty, tough horse, capable of thriving in an environment of sparse water and food. In relative isolation, the Arabian horse’s attributes, including speed, became fixed. Proof of the breed’s genetic prepotency exists in the blood of all light horse breeds, as Europeans acquired so-called hot-blooded
Arabian stallions for crossing on their cold-blooded
native stock in the Old World. The influence of the Arabian horse perhaps was most profound in England, where aristocrats began acquiring Arabian stallions for breeding horses for racing alone. The selective breeding for speed soon created a new type of horse—taller, narrower, and longer than the Arabian horse—and by the early 18th century, the Thoroughbred horse was considered its own distinct breed, specifically for racing.
All modern Thoroughbred horses trace to at least one of the three most used Arabian stallions imported to England: the Byerly Turk, imported in 1689; the Darley Arabian, 1704; and the Godolphin Arabian, 1730; as they are historically known, each bearing the eponymous title of its owner. Traditionally horse racing, called the Sport of Kings, has been characterized by wealth, exclusivity, and government connections both in England and in the American colonies. From the Colonial period into the 20th century, Americans of a privileged society sought to emulate British class traditions and customs, in part, via the breeding and racing of Thoroughbred horses. The Arabian horse was still valued for upgrading stock, both Thoroughbreds and other breeds. It was not until the late 19th century that horse breeders in America desired to preserve the purebred Arabian horse.
The Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893 introduced visitors to exotic places, sights, and sounds. The fair’s Syrian exhibit, complete with Arabian horses from the desert performing an exciting Wild East
show, enjoyed great popularity. Twenty-eight horses from the Syrian exhibit were sold at the end of the fair, and a handful of horse breeders fancied the idea of breeding purebred Arabian horses in America. By 1908, an Arabian Horse Club was founded. Many of the owners of Arabian horses, including cavalry colonel Spencer Borden and political cartoonist Homer Davenport, championed the tough, thrifty breed for use by the U.S. cavalry. This idea was met with resistance, as army officers preferred the taller Thoroughbred. Also there were strong political ties between the army and the Thoroughbred Jockey Club.
The necessity of purchasing thousands of horses during World War I caused Congress to establish an army horse-breeding program. In 1919, the new U.S. Army Remount Board, consisting of army and civilian horsemen, recommended methods and regulations for supervising the breeding of horses, in the hands of public caretakers, for army use. The breeding program had a two-pronged purpose: to improve the quality of American horses and to maintain in peacetime horses that could be called up to service in case of an emergency. The army instituted a series of annual endurance races, open to the public, for testing equine performance.
Overall, the results of these endurance rides, from 1919 to 1922, provided strong evidence supporting the Arabian as the horse of choice: they required 50 percent less feed than larger horses, and they suffered only a 15 percent lameness rate, compared to up to 90 percent for Thoroughbreds. The Arabian horses also lasted longer, recovered more quickly, and carried more weight proportionally. The attention from the U.S. Army would later have repercussions in the development of Arabian horse racing in America.
By 1922, in the United States, there were approximately 300 Arabian horses, 4,000 Morgans (an American breed created with the inclusion of Arabian ancestors), and 16,000 Thoroughbreds. By 1927, the number of horses registered with the Arabian Horse Club in the United States had risen to 639, and by 1936, the number had edged up to almost 700.
Gen. Jacob McGavock Dickinson, owner of the Travelers Rest Arabian Stud in Nashville, Tennessee, was a primary contributor to the growth of the breed’s population in America as well as a pioneer of a racing sport that did not exist officially until 1959. On his goal to preserve the purebred Arabian horse, he superimposed the desire to test his stock for racing athleticism as an indicator of general health and substance. His efforts can be considered the foundation of Arabian horse racing.
One
PRESERVATION
Judge John Overton established Travellers Rest Plantation in 1799 in Nashville, Tennessee. The 2,300-acre estate took its name from the reprieves in Overton’s career as a circuit judge traveling many exhausting miles on horseback. Travellers Rest Stud became renowned