Lexington (horse)
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Lexington (March 29, 1850 - July 1, 1875) was a United States champion thoroughbred race horse who became the most successful sire during the second half of the nineteenth Century.
A blood bay colt from the mare Alice Carneal by Sarpedon, eventually reaching 15 hands 3 inches, he was sired by Hall of Famer Boston for his breeder, Dr. Elisha Warfield. Under the name of "Darley" he easily won his first two races for Dr. Warfield and his partner, "Burbridge's Harry," a once slave and then well known horse trainer. Burbridge, being black, was not allowed to enter "Darley" in races in his own name, so the horse ran in Dr. Warfield's name and colors. He caught the eye of Richard Ten Broeck who asked Dr. Warfield to name his price. "Darley," the son of Boston, was sold to Ten Broeck who renamed him Lexington. Affixed to Lexington's pedigree Dr. Warfield wrote: "The colt was bred by me, as was also his dam, which I now and will ever, own...E. Warfield."
Ten Broeck bought the great horse for $2,500 between heats (or sometime during the running of his race), so tried claiming the purse money when he won. Failing that, he tried to deduct the purse money from the sale price. But Dr. Warfield held out.
Richard Ten Broeck immediately sent Lexington to Natchez, Mississippi to train under J. B. Pryor.
Lexington raced at age three and four and although he only competed seven times, many of his races were grueling four-mile events. Lexington won six of his seven races and finished second once. Even with his complex and and hard-fought rivalry with the wonderful horse Lecomte (a half-brother, also a son of Boston, both born just after Boston died), he was known as the best race horse of his day...but had to be retired at the end of 1855 as a result of poor eyesight. His sire, Boston, had also gone blind.
He stood for a time at the Nantura Stock Farm of Uncle John Harper in Midway, Kentucky, along with the famous racer and sire, Glencoe. Sold to Robert A. Alexander for $15,000 in 1858, reportedly the then highest price ever paid for an American horse, Lexington was sent to Alexander's Woodburn Stud at Spring Station, Kentucky.
Called "The Blind Hero of Woodburn," Lexington became the Leading Sire in the U.S. sixteen times, from 1861 through 1874, and then again in 1876 and 1878. Nine of the first fifteen Travers Stakes were won by one of his sons or daughters, a list that included Kentucky (owned by William Travers himself), the first winner in 1864, and one of his last offspring, Duke of Magenta who won the Travers in 1878...as well as the Withers Stakes, the Preakness Stakes, and the Belmont Stakes. Lexington sired three Preakness Stakes winners: Tom Ochiltree (1875), Shirley (1876), and the Duke of Magenta (1878). His three Preakness winners tie him with another great sire, Broomstick. Lexington also sired Cincinnati, General Ulysses S. Grant's favorite horse. Cincinnati was depicted in numerous statues of Grant that remain to this day.
During the American Civil War, horses were forcibly conscripted from the Kentucky Farms to serve as mounts in the bloody fray. Lexington, 15 years old and blind, had to be hidden away to save him from such a fate.
Lexington was part of the first group of horses inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 1955.
Not so long ago, Lexington was so forgotten that on a fourth-floor attic catwalk of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History, the blind hero of Woodburn was listed simply as Catalog No. 16020.