James G. Rowe Jr.
James G. Rowe Jr. | |
---|---|
Occupation | Trainer |
Born | c.1889 |
Died |
October 21, 1931 Baltimore, Maryland, United States |
Major racing wins | |
Brookdale Handicap (1928) Preakness Stakes (1928) Kentucky Derby (1931) Belmont Stakes (1931) | |
Racing awards | |
United States Champion Thoroughbred Trainer by earnings (1929) | |
Significant horses | |
Twenty Grand, Victorian |
James Gordon "Jimmy" Rowe Jr. (c.1889 - October 21, 1931) was an American Thoroughbred horse trainer.
The son of U.S. Hall of Fame trainer James G. Rowe Sr., he initially planned to become a mechanical engineer and graduated from Fordham and Cornell universities.[1] However, in 1913 he went to work for his father as an assistant and by the mid-1920s had several Greentree Stable horses under his exclusive conditioning. In 1929, he took over from his father as head trainer for Harry Payne Whitney's Brookdale Farm. After Whitney died, James Rowe Jr. went to work for Helen Hay Whitney's Greentree Stable in the latter part of 1930, replacing Thomas W. Murphy.
Triple Crown wins
Rowe Jr. won all three of the U.S. Triple Crown races. He trained the 1928 Preakness Stakes winner Victorian,[2] and in 1929 was the Leading trainer in the United States by earnings with $314,881 in purse money.[3]
Rowe Jr.'s most famous horse was the Hall of Fame inductee Twenty Grand with which he won the other two Triple Crown races in 1931 and earned American Horse of the Year honors. Twenty Grand won the Kentucky Derby,[4] was second in the Preakness which was run before the Derby that year,[5] and won the Belmont Stakes.[6] Rowe Jr. lived for only a few months after these victories, dying at age 42 of a heart attack in October of that year.[7] He was buried next to his father in Red Bank, New Jersey.[8] One of five children, his brother, Belmont A. Rowe, who was also involved in horse racing, died at a young age in 1927.[9]
References
- ↑ Youngstown (Ohio) Vindicator' - October 22, 1931
- ↑ Chicago Tribune - May 12, 1928
- ↑ New York Times - September 24, 1929
- ↑ New York Times - May 18, 1931
- ↑ Milwaukee Journal - May 10, 1931
- ↑ Pittsburgh Press - Jun 14, 1931
- ↑ New York Times - October 22, 1931
- ↑ Painesville (Ohio) Telegraph - Oct 22, 1931
- ↑ Boston Daily Globe - April 20, 1927