History and Origin of the Breed
The term Thoroughbred describes a breed of horse whose ancestry
traces back to three foundation sires -- the Darley Arabian, the Godolphin Arabian and the
Byerly Turk. Named after their respective owners -- Thomas Darley, Lord Godolphin and
Captain Robert Byerly -- these three stallions were brought to England from the
Mediterranean Middle East around the turn of the 17th century and bred to the stronger,
but less precocious, native horse. The result was an animal that could carry weight with
sustained speed over extended distances, qualities which brought a new dimension to the
burgeoning, aristocratically supported, sport of horse racing.
So began a selective breeding process which has been going on for more than 300 years, breeding the best
stallions to the best mares, with the proof of superiority and excellence being
established on the race track. Key to this selective breeding process is the integrity of
the breed's records. In early days, Thoroughbred breeding records were sparse and
frequently incomplete, it being the custom, among other things, not to name a horse until
it had proved outstanding ability. It was left to James Weatherby, through his own
research and by consolidation of a number of privately kept pedigree records, to publish
the first volume of the General Stud Book.
He did this in 1791, listing the pedigrees of 387 mares, each of which could be traced
back to Eclipse, a direct descendent of the Darley Arabian; Matchem, a grandson of the
Godolphin Arabian; and Herod, whose great-great grandsire was the Byerly Turk. The General
Stud Book is still published in England by Weatherby and Sons, Secretaries to the English
Jockey Club.
Several years later, as racing proliferated in the fast-expanding continent of North
America, the need for a pedigree registry of American-bred Thoroughbreds, similar to the
General Stud Book, became apparent. Col. Sanders D. Bruce, a Kentuckian who had spent
almost a lifetime researching the pedigrees of American Thoroughbreds, published the first
volume of The American StudBook in 1873. Bruce closely followed the pattern of the first
General Stud Book, producing six volumes of the register until 1896, when the project was
taken over by The Jockey Club.
Integrity of The American Stud Book is the foundation on which all Thoroughbred racing
in North America depends. Without assurance, beyond all reasonable doubt, of the identity
of every Thoroughbred which competes, or which is bred with a view to continuing the
breed, the sport of racing as it is known today, could not exist. Nor would there be any
possibility of measuring results of the centuries-old quest to improve the Thoroughbred.
When The Jockey Club published its first volume of the studbook the foal crop was about 3,000. By 1986 it
exceeded 51,000. The Jockey Club embraced new computer technology to meet the registration
challenges posed by such large numbers. Today, The Jockey Club manages one of the most
sophisticated computer operations in the country. Its database holds the names of more
than 1.8 million horses on a master pedigree file, names that trace back to the late
1800's. The system also handles daily results of every Thoroughbred race in North America,
as well as processing electronically transmitted pedigree and racing data from England,
Ireland, France and other leading Thoroughbred racing countries around the world.
Further giant strides in improvement of the integrity of the Stud Book came in 1977,
when The Jockey Club, taking advantage of medical science advances, took the first steps
of an extensive blood-typing program. Today every Thoroughbred foal registered in The
American StudBook, and its sire and dam, is blood-typed to insure parentage verification.
Although there are records of horse racing on Long Island as far back as 1665, the
introduction of organized Thoroughbred racing to North America is traditionally credited
to Governor Samuel Ogle of Maryland, who first staged a Thoroughbred race "in the
English style" at Annapolis in 1745.
As America developed so did Thoroughbred racing, spreading across the nation from coast
to coast until today the volume of racing in America far outweighs that of any other
country in the world. American bloodlines, too, have come to be respected in the four
corners of the earth.
What began as a pastime and sporting amusement for the wealthy has now become a
worldwide multi-million dollar industry whose economic impact is widely felt at regional
and national levels. From license fees and direct taxes on pari-mutuel handle Thoroughbred
racing generates nearly $500 million in government revenue each year. But this is
relatively minor in comparison to the overall urban and rural economic contribution made
by the wide and varied infrastructure of the racing and breeding industry as a whole. A
recent estimate, for example, put the industry's contribution to the economy of New York
State alone at more than $1.8 billion each year.
Responding to the aberration of mid-1980's astronomic yearling prices which were fueled
by European and Middle East racing interests, the annual North American Thoroughbred foal
crop peaked at 51,293 in 1986. The decade was to show an overall production increase of
65% on the aggregate crops of the 1970's. But adjustments were inevitable and the foal
crop has decreased each year since that high point. There are indications, however, that
this necessary adjustment has more than served its purpose and that a rationalized and
more stable breeding industry can once again look forward to controlled growth.
The Thoroughbred is one of the most brilliant and versatile horses bred in the world
today. Noted for its ability to carry speed over extended distances, the Thoroughbred is
also a popular choice among horsemen in many disciplines beyond the race track, including
hunting, jumping, eventing and polo. The Thoroughbred has been used to create new breeds
of horses and to upgrade others. The key to the Thoroughbred's greatness is its speed and
endurance, for which it has been bred for over 300 years.
The Thoroughbred Foundation Stallions
The Thoroughbred originated in Great Britain and its
genetic origin is Arabian. The "foundation" stallions of the breed were: the
Beyerly Turk, the Darley Arabian and the Godolphin Arabian. They were bred to native
sprinting mares -- very probably Scottish Galloways -- and the resultant foals were the
first Thoroughbreds per se.
The Byerly Turk
At the siege of Buda, Captain Byerley captured a horse from the Turks which
would carry his name into history. The horse became known as the Byerley Turk and was the
first of the three foundation stallions to come to Britain. Reputedly ridden at the Battle
of the Boyne in 1690 by Captain Byerley, this horse distinguished himself as a sire
although he was not bred to many mares. In spite of his name, he was probably an Arab. The
Byerley Turk founded a line of Thoroughbreds, the most distinguished of which was Herod,
who was foaled in 1758, and proved to be a very successful sire himself.
The
Darley Arabian
The second of the three foundation stallions to be imported to England was the Darley
Arabian. He was foaled in 1700 and bought by Thomas Darley in Aleppo (Syria) in
1704. The horse was shipped to Yorkshire, England where he was bred to numerous mares. The
most successful matings were with Betty Leeds, which resulted in two very important colts:
Flying Childers and Bartlet's Childers. Through the Childers line, the Darley Arabian was
the great-great-grandsire of Eclipse who gained the description "Eclipse first, the
rest nowhere." The Darley Arabian is the most important of the three foundation
stallions in terms on his influence of the Thoroughbred breed.
The Godolphin Arabian
The last of the foundation stallions to come to England was a horse foaled in Yemen. After being shipped to Syria
and then to Tunis, he was given to the King of France as a gift. One story tells of the
horse pulling a lowly water cart in Paris. The carthorse was admired and bought by an
Englishman named Edward Coke, who brought him to England. The second Earl of Godolphin
acquired the horse and bred him to several distinguished mares. Mated to Roxana, he sired
Lath, the greatest racehorse in England after Flying Childers: and another mating of these
two produced Cade, the sire of the great Matchem who carried on the line of the Godolphin
Arabian. In 1850 it was remarked that "the blood of the Godolphin Arabian is in every
stable in England."
Offspring of the Foundation Stallions
Keeping in mind the fact that the foundation stallions were Oriental
horses, it should be noted that the descendants of these sires were the first actual
Thoroughbreds. They were the progenitors of the breed, as we know it today. The foundation
sires stand at the beginning of the Thoroughbred bloodline, but a number of generations
were required to create horses which could consistently pass on the distinguishing
characteristics of the Thoroughbred horse. Out of some 200 Oriental horses imported to
England between 1660 and 1750, only the direct descendants of these three foundation
stallions contributed to the breed's greatness.
Herod
The offspring which fixed the influence of the Byerley Turk as a foundation sire was named
Herod who was foaled in 1758. He was owned by the Duke of Cumberland, the third son of
King George II, who was an important breeder of horses at Newmarket and in Hanover.
Although Herod was not an outstanding racehorse, he did prove to be a superlative sire.
His descendants were extremely important in the development of the Thoroughbred throughout
Europe and America. Among the most notable descendants of Herod were Diomed (winner of the
first Epsom Derby in 1780), Sir Archie, the Flying Dutchman, and Epinard.
Eclipse
1764 was the year of a great eclipse and this astronomical event became the name of the
horse that was a star in the history of the Thoroughbred. Eclipse, as we know him, was by
Marske, out of Spiletta and was bred for the Duke of Cumberland. He began racing in 1769
at age five, when he ran away from his competition in his first race at Epsom. It was at
this race that the famous Denis O'Kelly remarked, "Eclipse first, the rest
nowhere." Eclipse won 18 races in his career and he was never whipped or spurred. He
went on to a distinguished career at stud, siring Pot-8-O's who passed on his influence to
such descendants as American Eclipse, Hyperion, Kelso, and Sea Bird. The list of Eclipse's
distinguished descendants is virtually endless, and he is the reason for the predominance
of the Darley Arabian line over the lines of the other two foundation stallions.
Matchem
Most racehorses are noted for their speed, but the speed often comes at the price of an
excitable temperament, and even viciousness. The horse Matchem foaled in 1748 was the
grandson of the Godolphin Arabian. Besides speed, he supplied an excellent disposition to
his descendants. The horse Snap was compared to the gentle Matchem: "Snap for speed
and Matchem for truth and daylight." (Snap was a grandson of the Darley Arabian.)
When we consider Matchem's blood heirs, we find many even-tempered yet fast horses.
Matchem's influence was not as widespread as his famous peers, but his offspring had a
particular influence on American horses. The owner's son, Edward Fenwick, who immigrated
to South Carolina in 1755, brought ten of Matchem's descendants to America. Brutus, one of
Matchem's sons, dominated racing in South Carolina for some time.
Breed Characteristics
The Thoroughbred stands a little over 16 hands on average
and its appearance reveals its Arabian ancestry. A refined head with widely-spaced,
intelligent eyes sits on a neck which is somewhat longer and lighter than in other breeds.
The withers are high and well defined, leading to an evenly curved back. The shoulder is
deep, well-muscled and extremely sloped while the heart girth is deep and relatively
narrow. The legs are clean and long with pronounced tendons and move smoothly in unison
through one plane. The bone structure of the upper hind leg makes room for long, strong
muscling. The thighbone is long and the angle it makes with the hipbone is wide. The
powerful muscling of the hip and thigh continues to the gaskin that is set low. Coat
colors in Thoroughbreds may be bay, dark bay, chestnut, black or gray; roans are seen only
rarely. White markings are frequently seen on both the face and legs.
Significant American Thoroughbreds
Bulle Rock
An event of central importance in the history of American horse racing was the importation
of Bulle Rock to Virginia in 1730 by Samuel Gist. A son of the Darley Arabian, Bulle Rock
is remembered as the first Thoroughbred to reach American shores. He was 21 years old when
he arrived, and had been a successful racehorse in Britain in his youth. By 1800, Bulle
Rock was followed by a succession of 338 other imported equine Thoroughbreds.
Monkey, Janus and Fearnought
Of the 63 identifiable Thoroughbred imports before the Revolution, the most important were Monkey, Janus and
Fearnought. Monkey was imported in 1747 at the age of 22 and sired some 300 colts in
Virginia. Janus was imported as a ten-year-old by Mordecai Booth in 1756 and had a
profound influence on the Quarter Horse. John Baylor imported Fearnought in 1764 as a
nine-year-old. Fearnought had a stud fee that was five times the amount charged for other
good sires, and he was the most important Thoroughbred sire in America until Diomed was
imported after the Revolution.
Diomed
Among the most important horses imported after the Revolution was Diomed, foaled in 1777. He was the
winner of the first Epson Derby in England in 1780. A great winner in his youth, Diomed's
career later floundered. An American, Colonel John Hoomes bought him, in 1798. Diomed had
a reputation in England as "a bad foal-getter. " But Mount Airy's John Tayloe,
II put a number of his mares to Diomed, and he liked the results. Diomed sired some of the
most famous horses in American turf history. Diomed sired Haynie's Marie,the undefeated
Ball's Florizel, Potomac, Duroc, and greatest of all, Sir Archie, who became a singularly
important influence in American Thoroughbred history. He sired the line that extended to
Timolean, Boston and Lexington.
Sir Archie
Described as the equine "hero of heroes," one of the great native
Thoroughbreds of America was Sir Archie. The horse was originally named Robert Burns, but
John Tayloe, III changed his name to Sir Archie in honor of his friend who owned a half
interest in the colt, Captain Archibald Randolph. William Ransom Johnson, "the
Napoleon of the Turf," once owned Sir Archie and described him as "the best
horse I ever saw." After no more challengers could be found, Sir Archie's racing
career ended and he went to stud. In 23 years at stud, from 1810 to 1833, he sired such
magnificent horses as Timolean, Sir Charles, Henry, and Lady Lightfoot. Sir Archie was
also the great grandsire of Lexington. One authority claimed that Sir Archie "filled
the hemisphere with his blood."
Messenger
In May of 1788, another Thoroughbred was imported from England who put his stamp on the
future of American racing. This horse was Messenger, who first stood at stud in
Philadelphia. After having been sold to Henry Astor of New York and later to Cornelius Van
Ranst, he sired a number of superior racehorses. His greatest descendant was his
great-grandson, known as Rysdyk's Hambeltonian who became the foundation sire of the
Standardbreds.
Twentieth Century Champions
Colin
A true rarity in racing, an unbeaten horse, Colin won all his 15 starts in 1907 and 1908,
including the Belmont Stakes.
Exterminator
Beloved under the nickname "Old Bones," Exterminator originally was purchased as
a workmate for Sun Briar, but wound up defeating the other horse in the 1917 Kentucky
Derby. Exterminator won 50 of 100 races over eight seasons.
Man o' War
Although he last
raced in 1920, Man o' War is still often regarded as the greatest of American race horses.
He won 20 of 21 starts, often in record times and by commanding margins, and later became
a great tourist attraction as a stallion.
Equipoise
Nicknamed "The Chocolate Soldier" for his rich coat color and extraordinary
handsomeness, Equipoise raced through the age of seven in the 1930s, winning 29 of 51
races, often carrying top weights in handicap races.
Count Fleet
The Triple Crown winner of 1943, Count Fleet won the Belmont Stakes by 25 lengths in the
final race of his career.
Citation
Winner of 19 races
in 20 starts as a three-year-old in 1948, Citation followed Whirlaway as the second Triple
Crown winner for the famed Calumet Farm. At six, he became the first Thoroughbred to reach
$1 million in career race earnings.
Native Dancer
Early in the television era, the flashy "Gray Ghost" became a public idol. He
won 21 of 22 starts, losing only to Dark Star in the 1953 Kentucky Derby.
Kelso
The only horse in history to be voted Horse of the Year five times, Kelso, reigned from
1960 through 1964. He was a great weight carrier and won five runnings of The Jockey Club
Gold Cup, then raced at two miles.
Secretariat
In 1973, Secretariat became the first horse in a quarter-century to win the Triple Crown.
His climactic moment was his 31-length victory in world record time in the Belmont Stakes.
"Big Red's" image graced the covers of Time and Newsweek, as well as Sports
Illustrated.
Affirmed
In racing's greatest ongoing rivalry, Affirmed and Alydar waged war through 1977 and 1978.
Affirmed won seven of their 10 meetings, including all three Triple Crown races, but most
were extraordinarily close finishes.
Cigar
During one phase of his career, over three seasons, 1994-96, Allen Paulson's Cigar won 16
consecutive races, matching the modern record of Citation. He traveled to Dubai to win the
first running of the Dubai Cup, and his career earnings were within $100 of $10 million.
Breed Organization
For More Information, Contact:
The
Jockey Club
821 Corporate Drive
Lexington, KY 40503-2794
Tel: (606) 224-2700
Fax: (606) 224-2710
Internet: http://www.jockeyclub.com/
Information supplied by The Jockey Club
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