Georgia B. Ridder

Georgia Ridder (December 5, 1914 – June 14, 2002) was an American thoroughbred racehorse owner and a member of the board of directors of the Oak Tree Racing Association.

Georgia B. Ridder
Born(1914-12-05)December 5, 1914
Baltimore, Maryland
United States
DiedJune 14, 2002(2002-06-14) (aged 87)
EducationEthel Walker School
OccupationThoroughbred racehorse owner
Spouse(s)Bernard J. Ridder
ChildrenBernard Jr., Michael
Parent(s)Laurance Buck & Mary Elizabeth Pue

Biography

Born Georgia Buck in Baltimore, Maryland, she attended Ethel Walker School in Simsbury, Connecticut. She married Bernard J. Ridder, co-founders and operators of the Knight Ridder newspaper chain. The couple made their home on Long Island, New York until 1955 when they moved to Pasadena, California where he husband took over as publisher of the Pasadena Independent & Star News.

Active in Pasadena culture, Georgia Ridder was a member of the board of directors of the Pasadena Art Museum and the Pasadena Symphony Association.

Ridder Thoroughbred Stable

A few years after settling in California, Georgia and Ben Ridder became owners of Thoroughbred racehorses. Some of their notable runners included Flying Paster, the winner of the Grade 1 Santa Anita and Hollywood Derbys and California Horse of the Year plus the Eclipse Award winner, Cascapedia.

Following her husband's death in 1983, Georgia Ridder continue to operate their stable. She owned the 165-acre (0.67 km2) Hidden Springs Ranch in Mountain Center in the San Jacinto Mountains and enjoyed considerable further success highlighted by Cat's Cradle being voted California Horse of the Year in 1995 and Alphabet Soup's win in the 1996 Breeders' Cup Classic.

Georgia Ridder died at her Pasadena home in 2002 at age eighty-seven.

gollark: Does anyone know of good personal search engine-type things? Right now I use Recoll, but it's taking entire decaseconds on my ~4GB index and this is too much.
gollark: As an alternative, you can run a VM, probably.
gollark: Or at least important features of how fares are encoded mean that this could happen, but in practice it's just quite hard.
gollark: This seems really terrible. Apparently airline pricing is so byzantine that some problems in it are literally uncomputable.
gollark: http://www.demarcken.org/carl/papers//ITA-software-travel-complexity/text0.html

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.