The Talk of the Town (horse)

The Talk of the Town
Breed Tennessee Walking Horse
Discipline Show horse
Sire Midnight Sun
Grandsire Wilson's Allen
Dam Merry Rose
Maternal grandsire Merry Boy
Sex Gelding
Foaled 1947
Country United States
Color Bay
Trainer Steve Hill
Major wins
Three World Grand Championships

The Talk of the Town (foaled 1947) was the first Tennessee Walking Horse to win three World Grand Championships, and one of only two horses ever to do so.

Life

The Talk of the Town was foaled May 7, 1947, in Salisbury, Maryland.[1] He was by the influential sire Midnight Sun and out of a mare named Merry Rose, the daughter of the well-known sire Merry Boy.[2][3] His sire line traced directly back to Black Allan. He was a bay with no white markings. The Talk of the Town was sold at a dispersal sale as a weanling and went to Mississippi. From there he was sold again to an owner in Arkansas. While he was there, a Walking Horse trainer named Steve Hill came across the horse and bought a half interest in him. The Talk of the Town's other owner soon put him in full-time training at Hill's Tennessee stable. Hill described The Talk of the Town as an extremely tough horse to ride and handle for the first year and a half of his training. It was possibly because of this problem that the horse was gelded. Eventually, Hill was able to begin showing The Talk of the Town, with much success.

Show career

The Talk of the Town won the three-year-old geldings class at the 1950 Tennessee Walking Horse National Celebration.[4] A year later in 1951, he won his first World Grand Championship. He would win the class again in 1952 and 1953, making him the first of only two horses to win three World Grand Championships. The only other three-time winner, I Am Jose, won over 50 years later, in 2013, 2014, and 2015.[5] The Talk of the Town made a final appearance at the Celebration in 1976, at age 29. That year, instead of starting the show each night with the traditional white horse and rider carrying the American flag, organizers invited trainers to bring their favorite horses. Steve Hill chose to ride The Talk of the Town and carry the flag.[4]

References

  1. Green, Ben A. (1960). Biography of the Tennessee walking horse. Parthenon Press, originally from Cornell University.
  2. Tennessee Dept. of Agriculture (1951). The horse and its heritage in Tennessee. University of Wisconsin – Madison.
  3. Ward, Kathleen Rauschl (1991). The American horse: from conquistadors to the 21st century. Belleville, Mich.: Maple Yard Publications. ISBN 9780962893100.
  4. 1 2 "Tennessee Walking horse – Talk Of The Town #473791, home page by Walkers West".
  5. "I Am Jose 3-peats at Tennessee Walking Horse National Celebration". The Tennessean. 6 September 2015.
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