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Quarter Horse

The principle development of the Quarter Horse was in the southwestern part
of the United States in Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, eastern Colorado, and
Kansas. Some breed historians have maintained that it is the oldest breed of
horses in the United States and that the true beginning of the Quarter Horse was
in the Carolinas and Virginia. Nye1 has suggested that the Chickasaws secured
from the Indians were the true beginning of the Quarter Horse. These were small
blocky horses, probably of Spanish extraction, which the planters secured from
the Indians, and which were adapted for a variety of uses. The colonists were
quite interested in short races, and it was only natural that they should have
attempted to increase the speed of their horses; to this end some of the best
early Thoroughbreds that were brought to the United States included the horse
Janus, brought to the United States before the English Stud Book was
established, were instrumental in the improvement of these local running horse.
Later Imp. Sir Archy and other Thoroughbred stallions were used.
The early improvement in the Quarter Horse so called because of its great speed
at one quarter of a mile-and the early development of the Thoroughbred in the
United States were closely associated. Some sires contributed notably to both
breeds. Many short-distance horses were registered in the American Stud Book as
Thoroughbreds when the Stud Book was established, even though they did not trace
in all lines to imported English stock.
It is more logical to assume that the true establishment of the Quarter Horse
took place some time later in the southwest range country, rather than in
colonial times. It was in the southwest that the true utility value of these
short-distance horses were truly appreciated. The cowman found the Quarter Horse
quick to start, easy to handle, and of a temperament suitable for handling
cattle under a wide variety of conditions. Even in the Southwest much was
unknown of the breeding of many of the horses that were classified and
registered in the 1940s as Quarter Horses. It is logical, therefore, to conclude
that until the Stud Book was established and the pedigrees were based on fact
rather than on memory and assumptions, the Quarter Horse should have been called
a type of horse rather than a breed.
It is difficult to give the exact origin of the present-day Quarter Horse
because the blending of bloodlines produce a suitable short-distance horse
started in colonial areas prior to the Revolutionary War. This blending of
bloodlines and the infusion of Thoroughbred blood
was continued in the southwestern range territory as the cow country developed.
Cowboys wanted to be well mounted. Ranchers tried to breed the kind of horses on
which these men could work cattle and that could also be used in the age-old
sport of racing. The Quarter Horse was not raced on carefully prepared tracks
but was raced on any suitable open space. Organized races were the exception
rather than the rule with many of the races being run as a “match race” after a
private wager between owner or riders.
In the Southwest country as in the East, no particular attention was made to
keep short-distance horses as a distinct breed. Fast horses whose offspring made
good cow ponies were crossed on existing stock of mares. Many times these mares
carried Spanish, Arabian,
Morgan, or
Standardbred breeding, and some have been referred to as “cold blooded”
mares. The naming of horses after persons was a common practice, and often when
the horses were sold their names were changed; such practices have led to no end
of confusion in attempting to verify pedigrees after the horses, breeders, and
owners were deceased.
The first horse of Quarter type that attracted a great deal of attention in the
Southwest was Steel Dust, foaled in Illinois in 1843, and taken to Lancaster,
Texas, in 1846. He was a blood bay that stood 15 hands high and weighed
approximately 1,200 pounds. Steel Dust was sired by Harry Bluff and traced to
Sir Archy. The popularity of Steel Dust as a running horse and as a sire of
running horses and cow horses caused many horses that descended from him, or
were of similar type, to be called “Steel Dust” horses2. This name was quite
common until the American Quarter Horse Association was established and the name
Quarter Horse was officially adopted.
Other outstanding stallions were introduced into Texas before and after Steel
Dust. Among these were Cooper Bottom by Sir Archy, foaled in Pennsylvania in
1828. In 1839 he was taken by General Sam Houston to Texas, where his
descendants were considered very fast and made excellent cow horses. In 1849,
Old Shiloh, foaled in Tennessee in 1844, was brought to Texas. He was four
generations removed in the male line of Sir Archy. Lock’s Rondo, three
generations removed in the male line from Shiloh, was foaled in Missouri about
1866, and was taken to Texas about 1868. Later he was also used as a sire in New
Mexico.
In 1889, Traveler, a horse of unknown pedigree, was shipped to Texas in a
carload of horses, and legend has it that he had originated in Kentucky.
Traveler was apparently not considered a valuable horse because he was used on a
scraper and at one time changed hands in a crap game. Traveler and his
descendants were mated to some excellent mares, and many Quarter Horses today
trace to him in male line of descent.
The most famous of all sires in the establishment of the Quarter Horse breed was
Peter McCue, foaled in 1895, and bred by Samuel Watkins of Petersburg, Illinois.
Peter McCue was registered as a Thoroughbred but evidence was later presented
that he was not sired by the horse indicated in his official pedigree but was
instead sired by Dan Tucker, who in turn traced his male line to Shiloh. Peter
McCue stood for service in Texas, western Oklahoma, and in Colorado, and most
modern Quarter Horses trace to him. Of the 11,510 Quarter Horses that have been
registered prior to January 1, 1948,3 2,304 of them traced in male line to Peter
McCue through his sons, grandsons, and great-grandsons. Traveler was the only
horse that approached him in importance of male lines with 749 similar
descendants that has been registered up to that date.
The outstanding sires in the Quarter Horse type have not always been horses that
traced in male lines of descent to recognized Quarter Horses; some trace to
registered Thoroughbreds. In addition, many of the mares to which Quarter Horses
have been mated have been Thoroughbred mares or mares of other breeds, so it can
truly be said that the breed has been and still is in a formative period.
Breeders have not objected to Thoroughbred breeding provided the horses were of
the correct type.
Eighteen of the first nineteen registration numbers assigned to horses in vol. I
of the American Quarter Horse Stud Book were saved for living horses that had
proved themselves as outstanding sires of offspring of Quarter Horse type.4
Examination of the pedigrees of these horses indicates that many of them carried
in excess of 50 per cent of Thoroughbred breeding, and only a very few of them
did not carry some known Thoroughbred breeding rather close up in their
pedigrees.
Many ranchers or persons interested in short-distance racing have contributed to
the development of the Quarter Horse. Probably the first really noted improver
was William Anson of Christoval, Texas. Mr. Anson was an excellent stockman who
collected a band of horses of Quarter type. Among the best stallions he used was
Harmon Baker by Peter McCue. Mr. Anson not only bred, used and raced Quarter
Horses but he also was a student of the early history of Quarter Horses and
attempted to concentrate bloodlines that he felt were useful in racing and range
horses.
Another noted Texas breeder was W.T. Waggoner of Vernon and Fort Worth, Texas.
Mr. Waggoner collected the fastest short-distance horses that he could obtain,
and it was said that whenever he found a horse faster than any he already owned
he attempted to purchase it. Many of the better modern Quarter Horses are only a
generation or two away from Waggoner breeding because after Waggoner’s death,
his estate carried on his breeding operations for many years. In the foundation
of the American Quarter Horse Stud Book, the term Waggoner bred was considered
pedigree enough for registration-so esteemed were his horses by other breeders
and by founders of the breed association.5 Four other breeders who have had
considerable influence in the development of the Quarter Horse through their
long association with the breed and through their successful breeding operations
were: Coke T. Roberds, Hayden, Colorado; George Clegg, Alice, Texas; S.C. Blake,
Pryor, Oklahoma; and Dan Casement, Manhattan, Kansas.
One of the best-known breeding establishments of Quarter Horses at the present
time is the King Ranch, Kingsville, Texas. The King Ranch raised good cattle
horses for many years and obtained Old Sorrel, a son of Hickory Bill, as a colt
from George Clegg of Alice, Texas; Old Sorrel was foaled in 1915 and died in
1945. This horse proved to be such an outstanding cow horse and sire of cow
horses that a line breeding program was developed at the King Ranch 6 to
maintain his relationship in the herd. Considerable Thoroughbred breeding has
been used in the development of the King Ranch Quarter Horses.
It would be very difficult to mention all the breeders that have contributed to
the Quarter Horse, because many breeders have not made an attempt to keep their
horses before the public but have been content to raise their own horses. Some
breeders have preferred to keep speed as a primary requisite and have
specialized more in horses for racing than for ranch work.
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