- Castleton Lyons
Castleton Lyons near
Lexington, Kentucky is an Americanhorse racing stable and breeding business best known by the name Castleton Farm.The farm was established in 1793 when
Virginia n John Breckinridge, a future U.S. Senator and Attorney General, purchased 2,467 acres (10 km²) of land and on a portion of it established athoroughbred horse breeding operation. On his passing, the property went to his daughter, the then Mrs. David Castleman who eventually built a mansion on the horse farm site and gave it the family name. Under Mr. & Mrs. Castleman, Castleton Farm continued as a thoroughbred operation but would add the breeding ofAmerican Saddlebred s as well as Standardbreds forharness racing .The original property changed hands several times with parts sold to different parties. In the early 1890s
Wall Street tycoonJames R. Keene acquired the farm and purchased additional land to bring the operation to almost 1,000 acres (4 km²). Keene usually referred to the farm as "Castleton Stud" and under his direction it became one of the greatest thoroughbred operations of its day. The farm bred and/or raced future U.S. racing Hall of Fame horses Kingston, Domino, Ben Brush, Colin,Sysonby ,Maskette , and Peter Pan.As part of a program honoring important horse racing tracks and racing stables, the
Pennsylvania Railroad named its baggage car #5865 the "Castleton Farm".Upon the death of James R. Keene in 1913, the farm was taken over by his son
Foxhall P. Keene . He continued the operation on a slightly reduced basis but sold it in the 1920s to fellow New Yorker, David Look. Look would have considerable success in harness racing but was forced to sell the farm after experiencing personal financial setbacks during theGreat Depression .In the early 1940's, heiress
Frances Dodge founded the Dodge Stable. She was the daughter ofMichigan automobile pioneer John F. Dodge and a half-sister of Isabel Dodge, owner of the highly successfulBrookmeade Stable . In 1945, Frances Dodge purchased Castleton Farm and relocated her Dodge stable there. After she marriedNew York City advertising executive Fredrick Van Lennep in 1949, the farm underwent major renovations in order to breed and raise both saddlebred show horses and standardbreds. The Van Lenneps made Castleton Farm one of the preeminent operations in both disciplines. Under Mrs. Van Lennep, Castleton's show horse Wing Commander became a six-time World Grand Champion and with her husband, she enjoyed enormous success in harness racing that included a number ofHambletonian andLittle Brown Jug victories from horses such as "Harness Horse of the Year" winnersVictory Song (1947),Emily's Pride (1948) andSpeedy Scot (1963). Among the other noteworthy Castleton harness horses wereHoot Mon ,Strike Out , andEnsign Hanover .In 2001, Irish businessman and racing enthusiast
Tony Ryan acquired Castleton Farm from the Van Lennep Family Trust. Ryan renamed it Castleton Lyons and undertook renovations to the property while returning to its original roots as a thoroughbred operation.Gravesite
The Castlefarm Farm Cemetery lies at an "intersection of two of the tree-lined farm roads, and is an open green space flanked on one end by a twelve foot high horseshoe-shaped hedge." It is not only the final resting spot of a number of Standardbred and saddlebred mares and stallions, including Wing Commander but also, in unmarked graves, the gravesite for the
thoroughbred stallions Commando (c. 1898-1905) and Kingston (c. 1884-1912).External links
* [http://www.castletonlyons.com/ Castleton Lyons website]
* [http://www.tbheritage.com/TurfHallmarks/Graves/cem/GraveMattersCastleton.html TB Heritage Grave Matters Castleton]
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