Riley (horse)
Riley | |
---|---|
Sire | Longfellow |
Grandsire | Leamington |
Dam | Geneva |
Damsire | War Dance |
Sex | Stallion |
Foaled | 1887 |
Country | United States |
Colour | Bay |
Breeder | C. H. Durkee |
Owner | Edward Corrigan |
Trainer | Edward Corrigan |
Record | 64: 30-17-4 |
Earnings | $43,430 |
Major wins | |
Kentucky Derby (1890) |
Riley (1887 – July 1, 1910) was a bay colt sired by Longfellow out of Geneva and was the winner of the 1890 Kentucky Derby, finishing the race at the slowest time recorded to that point, at 2 minutes 45 seconds, due to a very muddy track.[1] Riley was originally named Shortfellow[2] and had a relatively long and successful career winning the Railway Stakes, Trial Stakes, Merchants' Stakes, Clark Stakes, Speculation Handicap, Fairwiew Lightweight Handicap, Pelham Bay Handicap, Monmouth Cup, Shrewsbury Handicap, Coney Island Cup, Bay Ridge Handicap, Free Handicap, Brooklyn Cup, and Montgomery Stakes[2]. Over his career he had 64 starts with 30 wins, 17 places and 4 shows.
Riley died on July 1, 1910 at the age of 23 while being cared for by a racehorse rescue association.[3]
Riley's only offspring of note was his daughter, Hurley Burley, who was the dam of Burgomaster, a successful sire.[4]
References
- ↑ "Riley won the derby; a great crowd to see the slowest Kentucky Derby ever run- NY Times"
- ↑ Riley's Pedigree
- ↑ "Riley" The New York Times Death Notice
- ↑ "1875 - Past winners' influence - 1939.". Daily Racing Form. May 2, 1964. Retrieved 1 December 2010.