1919 Kentucky Derby Winner

  

UNREMEMBERED SPORTS: The Kentucky Derby, the First Triple Crown, and You’re in the Army Now

  1. Who Won The Kentucky Derby In 2020
  2. 1919 Kentucky Derby Winner
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  4. 1919 Kentucky Derby Winners
  5. Kentucky Derby Winner 1919

A list of Kentucky Derby winners since 1919 who did not participate in the Preakness. 1919 was the first year that a Kentucky Derby winner ran in the Preakness: Year — Horse. Below is a list of the the most recent Kentucky Derby champions, all of the Triple Crown winners and other longshot and record-winning horses at Churchill Downs. Join DAZN to watch Canelo vs. The Triple Crown title was formally proclaimed in December 1950 at the annual awards dinner of the Thoroughbred Racing Associations in New York and retroactively awarded to Sir Barton, the first horse to win all three races (1919). The title was then given to subsequent pre-1950 winners at following annual dinners of the organization. Secretariat still holds the Kentucky Derby record at 1:59.40, set in 1973. He ran the 1 1/4-mile race nearly a minute faster than Kingman did in 1891 (2:52.25). The 1919 Kentucky Derby was the 45th running of the Kentucky Derby. The race took place on May 10, 1919. Horses Corson and Clermont scratched before the race. Winner Sir Barton went on to win in the Preakness and Belmont Stakes, becoming the first winner of the American Triple Crown.

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By Ken Zurski

Sir Barton is officially the first horse to capture the elusive Triple Crown, a feat that requires winning three prestigious races as a three-year-old: the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes. Sir Barton did it in 1919, but the distinction was not given until 1948. That’s because at the time there was no award for winning all three races, only accolades for being a good horse.

But all that changed in 1930.

That year, Gallant Fox won each of the three races in a row and the New York Times proclaimed: “[The jockey] gave all the credit to his mount which by winning the Preakness, Kentucky Derby, and Belmont had equaled the feat of Sir Barton. These two horses are the only ones to win the ‘triple crown.’ ”

That’s the first time, claims the Times, that the words “triple crown” were used in relation to horseracing.

It’s interesting to note that the term has often been ascribed to Charles Hatton, a writer for the Daily Racing Form, who started using “triple crown”’ five years later when Omaha accomplished the same three race sweep as Gallant Fox. “‘Triple Crown’ was a journalistic device,” Hatton later recalled. “It kind of fell out of my typewriter.”

Who Won The Kentucky Derby In 2020

Regardless of who penned the phrase, after Omaha’s victories, the words “Triple Crown” were widely used to describe the three race achievement – and has been ever since. Later, when the racing board officials went back to assign the very first winner of the Triple Crown, Sir Barton was retroactively given that stature nearly 28 years after accomplishing the feat.

Sir Barton had good bloodlines, but entered the starting gate in Churchill Downs on May 10, 1919 as a maiden, meaning he had never won a race. He was expected to be a rabbit, or a horse that sets the pace for a stablemate horse who presumably has a better chance of winning. Sir Barton’s job was simple: Take the lead, keep a quick pace, and let his stablemate Billy Kelly benefit from a fast time up front and come running hard down the stretch at the end. There was nothing illegal about such a ploy. Both horses had the same owner and were coupled in the betting. But unpredictably reigned supreme that day. Sir Barton took the lead as ordered, but never relinquished it, beating all eleven horses in the field and capturing the 45th Kentucky Derby by five lengths. “Sir Barton raced into the lead at once and well, ridden, led under restraint until reaching the stretch, where he was shaken up and easily held Billy Kelly safe in the eighth (pole),” the race notes read.

Four days later Sir Barton was entered in the Preakness Stakes and again led all the way. He won another race, the Withers Stakes, before easily taking the Belmont Stakes in New York and setting an American record for a mile-and-three-eighths, the distance for the Belmont at the time (it’s now the longest of the three Triple Crown races at a mile-and-a half). Sir Barton accomplished all this – four victories in all – in just 32 days. Today the time distance between the Kentucky Derby and Belmont is 35 days.

The following year Sir Barton continued his winning ways, but a match race against another accomplished racehorse Man O’ War effectively ended his career. The contest between the two horses was run on the notoriously hard surface of Kenilworth Park in Windsor, Ontario. Barton, who suffered from hoof problems, never challenged Man O’ War and lost by seven lengths. He was retired to stud after the defeat and although sired several foals who won stake races, there were no Triple Crown winners in his stock. He was considered a failure in the barn.

So in 1933, at the age of 17, he was enlisted.

Technically, Sir Barton became a “working” horse.

1919 kentucky derby winners

Officially, he had joined the U.S. Army.

The U.S. Army Remount Service was originally a part of the Union Army and began during early days of the Civil War. Its purpose was clear: to train horses for battle. It’s objective obvious: provide all Calvary and artillery units with useful horses. By contrast, on the Confederate side, each participate was asked to bring his own horse.

But there was more confusion than organization at the Union Remount Service depots. No one knew exactly what to do or how to do it. Questions and debates, rather than solutions, kept piling up. Like how many horses were needed? What type of training was necessary? Where will the horses come from? And how much would the government pay? Plus, there were staffing issues, poor leadership and as usual with any new institution without historical legalities to back it up– corruption. But it was useful. Horses were a vital tool in ground warfare and the Remount Service provided quality horses. Each depot could handle between 10-thousand and 16-thousand horses each. There were about a half dozen depots in the country.

The government purchased Sir Barton from a stud farm in Wyoming for just under $500 and assigned the colt to the depot in Nebraska, named Fort Robinson, a makeshift horse farm.

What Sir Barton did in the Army is not exactly clear. After the Civil War ended, the Remount Service was used mostly for breeding and not much else. Many horses died in the war and needed to be replaced. So there was a purpose.

When America entered the first World War, the fighting took place overseas so men, not horses, traveled to Europe. The British used horses extensively during the Great War, but they had their own reserves. With nothing to serve and foals outnumbering demand, the U.S Remount Program was finally disbanded in 1948, shortly after the end of World War II.

Winner

Sir Barton likely had little do as military horse. He sired horses and was used for training mostly. Also, being a champion racehorse may not have had its advantages either. Sir Barton didn’t have to run fast or beat others, he simply had to work. Most of the horses were thoroughbreds, like Sir Barton, so he fit right in, despite being the only Kentucky Derby winner.

His time in the Army was short, however. He served less than a year before being sold to a Wyoming horseman named Doc Hylton who brought the champion colt back to his ranch for more stud duty.

In 1937, Sir Barton died of colic at the age of 21.

1919 kentucky derby winners

Eleven years later, after being posthumously honored as the first Triple Crown winner, his story became one for the record books.

45th Kentucky Derby
Kentucky Derby
LocationChurchill Downs,
Louisville, Kentucky
DateMay 10, 1919
Winning horseSir Barton
JockeyJohnny Loftus
TrainerH.G. Bedwell
OwnerJ.K.L. Ross
ConditionsHeavy
SurfaceDirt
1920 →

The 1919 Kentucky Derby was the 45th running of the Kentucky Derby. The race took place on May 10, 1919.[1][2] Horses Corson and Clermont scratched before the race.[3] Winner Sir Barton went on to win in the Preakness and Belmont Stakes, becoming the first winner of the American Triple Crown.[4]

Pre-race coverage[edit]

A New York Times writer believed that the Preakness Stakes was competing for attention with the Derby, as it was held four days following the Derby and offered a purse of $30,000, larger than the Derby's $20,000.[5] The author felt that the three-year old racing horses during the 1919 season were a 'good crop' and that the course record of 2:​0325 set by Old Rosebud in 1914 could be broken.[5] Sennings Park, a horse who stayed through the winter at Churchill Downs, ran a mile at the track in 1:43 3/5, the best time of the season in late April.[6]

1919 Kentucky Derby Winner

1919 Kentucky Derby Winner

Result[edit]

1929 Kentucky Derby Winner

Final placings (1–12)[7]
FinishPost PositionHorseJockeyTrainerOwnerFinal Odds[N 1]Stake[N 2]
11Sir BartonJohnny LoftusH. Guy BedwellJ. K. L. Ross$20,825
213Billy KellyEarl SandeH. Guy BedwellJ. K. L. Ross$2,500
38Under FireMack GarnerPatrick DunnePatrick Dunne$1,000
47VulcaniteCecil HowardJohn HoganWilliam F. Polson$275
59Sennings ParkHarry LunsfordOswald A. BianchiOswald A. Bianchi
62Be FrankJames ButwellWalter B. JenningsCornelius M. Garrison
711SailorJ. McIntyreKimball PattersonJames W. McClelland
85St. BernardEarl PoolB. J. BrannonB. J. Brannon
910RegaloFrank MurphyJohn C. GallaherGallaher Bros.
106EternalAndy SchuttingerKimball PattersonJames W. McClelland
1114FrogtownJohn MorysHenry E. McDanielWillis Sharpe Kilmer
123VindexWillie KnappJames G. Rowe, Sr.Harry Payne Whitney
  • Winning Breeder: John E. Madden & Vivian A. Gooch; (KY)
Kentucky Derby Payout Schedule[9]
Post PositionHorseWinPlaceShow
1Sir Barton$7.20$6.70$6.00
13Billy Kelly$6.70$6.00
8Under Fire$10.80

Aftermath[edit]

For the first time in race history two horses from the same owner finished in first and second place.[10] In addition, Ross became the first Canadian owner to have a horse win the Kentucky Derby.[10]

References[edit]

Endnotes[edit]

  1. ^The odds are all to $1; for example, Sir Barton's odds of winning were $ on a $1.00 wager.
  2. ^The total purse for the race was $24,600.[8][7]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^'Record May Fall In Kentucky Derby'. Chicago Daily Tribune. May 4, 1919. p. 18. ProQuest174480956 – via ProQuest.
  2. ^Kentucky Derby History, 1919
  3. ^1919 Kentucky Derby Results TablesArchived 2012-03-06 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^Stephanie Diaz (June 27, 1994). 'A Nearly Forgotten First'. Sports Illustrated. Time Inc. Archived from the original on May 29, 2016. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  5. ^ ab'Record May Fall In Kentucky Derby'. The New York Times. May 4, 1919. p. 6. ProQuest100535167 – via ProQuest.
  6. ^'Kentucky Derby To Be Run On May 10'. The Tuscaloosa News and Times–Gazette. May 1, 1919. p. 5. Retrieved October 27, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  7. ^ abO'Connor 1921, p. 137.
  8. ^'Sir Barton Crosses Wire First in Rich Kentucky Derby'. Nashville Tennessean and the Nashville American. May 11, 1919. p. 18. ProQuest905601822 – via ProQuest.
  9. ^'Kentucky Derby is Won By Sir Barton'. The New York Times. May 11, 1919. p. 21. ProQuest100522630 – via ProQuest.
  10. ^ abO'Connor 1921, p. 134.

1919 Kentucky Derby Winners

Bibliography[edit]

Kentucky derby winner 1919

Kentucky Derby Winner 1919

  • O'Connor, John L. (1921). 'Forty-Fifth Derby 1919'. History of the Kentucky Derby, 1875-1921. New York: Rider Press. pp. 134–137.
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