Saxon (horse)

Saxon (1871–1895) was a British-bred American-trained Thoroughbred racehorse that won the 1874 Belmont Stakes, the eighth running of that stakes race.

Saxon
SireBeadsman
GrandsireWeatherbit[1]
Damimported Girasol
DamsireAsteroid
SexStallion
Foaled1871
CountryUnited Kingdom
ColourBrown
BreederJoseph Hawley
OwnerPierre Lorillard
TrainerW. Prior
JockeyG. Barbee
Record8 starts, 2 wins
Earnings$5,150 (about $116,000 today)
Major wins
1874 Belmont Stakes

Background

Saxon was a brown stallion sired by Beadsman, and was bred in England,[2] by Joseph Hawley.[1][3][notes 1] He was imported into the United States by Pierre Lorillard,[3] along with his dam.[4] Saxon's dam was the imported mare Girasol, who was sired by Asteroid and out of the mare Gillyflower. Gillyflower was sired by Venison.[5]

Racing career

As a two-year-old, Saxon won the 1873 August Stakes.[5]

Saxon won the 1874 Belmont while owned by Pierre Lorillard. This was the eighth running of the stakes race.[6] The race was run on June 13, 1871 at a distance of 1 12 miles (i.e. 12 furlongs (2,400 meters)) on a fast track. He finished first by a neck over Grinstead, and third place went to Aaron Pennington. All the horses in the race carried 110 pounds (50 kg), and the value to the winner was $4,200 (about $95,000 today),[7][2] with the winning time being 2 minutes and 39 12 seconds.[2] The winning jockey was G. Barbee, and the winning trainer was W. Prior.[6]

In his racing career, Saxon won 2 times out of 8 starts, with total earnings of $5,150 (about $116,000 today).[7][1]

Stud record

As a breeding stallion, he sired three stakes winners: Gerald out of Girl of the Period by Virgil, Hiawasse out of Vandalite by Vandal, and Zamora out of Zoo Zoo by imported Australian.[8] Gerald, an 1879 brown stallion, won the 1881 Foam Stakes.[5] Hiawasse, an 1879 brown mare, won the 1882 Ladies Handicap, 1881 Monmouth Oakes, and the 1881 Mermaid Stakes.[9] Hiawasse was undefeated as a three-year-old racehorse.[10] Zamora, an 1881 gray mare, won the 1884 Tennessee Oaks.[11]

Saxon was used as a breeding stallion by his owner, Pierre Lorillard. Once, Lorillard's brother George teased Pierre that Saxon's offspring were not as good as expected. Pierre then challenged George to a match race between one of Saxon's offspring against any racehorse that George owned. The result was that Hiawasse won the match race by four horse lengths.[10]

Saxon died in February 1895 at the Cliff Lawn Stud, the farm of W.B. Cheatham, in Nashville.[12]

Notes

  1. The racing chart for the 1874 Belmont Stakes gives his breeder as Thomas Hawley, but this is contradicted by the American Stud Book and other sources writing after the race.[1][3]

Citations

  1. Hewitt Great Breeders pp. 232-233
  2. New York Racing Association "1874 Belmont Archived October 7, 2011, at the Wayback Machine" The Belmont Stakes
  3. Bruce American Stud Book 1 p. 90
  4. Bruce American Stud Book 4 p. 28
  5. Hogan Index to Stakes Winners p. 236
  6. New York Racing Association "Belmont Stakes Archived July 7, 2011, at the Wayback Machine" The Belmont Stakes
  7. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved January 1, 2020.
  8. Hogan Index to Stakes Winners p. 663
  9. Hogan Index to Stakes Winners p. 504
  10. Robertson History of Thoroughbred Racing in America p. 128
  11. Hogan Index to Stakes WInners p. 524
  12. Staff "Post and paddock" Spirit of the Times
gollark: Well, we have a fifth of the population, so absent any differences you'd expect a fifth of the rate of police murdering.
gollark: ???
gollark: Well, maybe? I've never interacted with them except for seeing some walking around intimidatingly with guns at the train station for some reason.
gollark: I say keep the death penalty in cases of very obvious and bad things, i.e. acts of terrorism where someone... I don't know, published a manifesto saying "yes I am going to kill some people now", did so and got caught.
gollark: Only TWO of these are related to the justice system.

References

  • Bruce, S. D. (1884). American Stud Book. 1 (Revised ed.). New York: Turf, Field, and Farm. OCLC 228769751.
  • Bruce, S. D. (1884). American Stud Book. 4. New York: Turf, Field, and Farm. OCLC 246797991.
  • Hewitt, Abram S. (1982). The Great Breeders and Their Methods. Lexington, KY: Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association. OCLC 12739523.
  • Hogan, Clio D. (n.d.). Index to Stakes Winners 1865–1967. Solvang, CA: Flag Is Up Farms. OCLC 29213840.
  • New York Racing Association (2010). "1874 Belmont Stakes" (PDF). The Belmont Stakes. New York Racing Association. Archived from the original (pdf) on October 7, 2011. Retrieved May 25, 2011.
  • New York Racing Association (2010). "Belmont Stakes". The Belmont Stakes. New York Racing Association. Archived from the original on July 7, 2011. Retrieved May 25, 2011.
  • Robertson, William H. P. (1964). The History of Thoroughbred Racing in America. New York: Bonanza Books. LCCN 64-17364.
  • Staff (February 16, 1895). "Post and paddock" (PDF). The Spirit of the Times. Retrieved July 30, 2011.

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