- Tod Sloan (jockey)
Horseracing personalities infobox
name = Tod Sloan
caption = Tod Sloan (c.1900)
occupation =Jockey
birthplace =Bunker Hill, Indiana ,United States
birth date = August 10, 1874
death date = December 21, 1933
career wins = Not found
race =Manhattan Handicap (1896)Lawrence Realization Stakes (1898)International race wins:
1,000 Guineas (1899)Ascot Gold Cup (1900)
awards =
honours = United States Racing Hall of Fame (1955)
horses = Hamburg, Clifford,Sibola , Belmar, Merman,
updated = June 9, 2007James Forman "Tod" Sloan (
August 10 1874 -December 21 1933 ) was an Americanthoroughbred horse racing jockey . He was elected to theNational Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 1955.Sloan was born in Bunker Hill,
Indiana , near Kokomo, the son of aUnion Army soldier. He was a tiny and frail child, and after his mother died when he was five, his father sent him to live with a nearby family. He was still a young boy when he struck out on his own, taking jobs in the nearby gas and oil fields. For a time he ended up working at a horse racingstable in St. Louis, but later in Kansas City was employed by a thoroughbredhorse trainer who encouraged him to take advantage of his diminutive stature and become a jockey. By 1886, Sloan was working atLatonia Race Track inCovington, Kentucky where trainerSam Hildreth gave him the opportunity to ride one of his horses. Sloan's performance was not impressive, and his horse finished in the back of the pack. However, he persisted and a few years later was riding at theFair Grounds Race Course in New Orleans, and on March 6, 1889 scored his first win there. In 1893, Sloan went to race in northernCalifornia where he met with considerable success. In 1896 he moved toNew York City where within a short time he was the most dominant rider in the thoroughbred racing circuit on the East Coast.It was Tod Sloan who popularized the forward seat style of riding, or the "monkey crouch" as the British called it, when he began riding there in 1897. Initially laughed at, his style revolutionized the sport worldwide.
Despite his many career victories, Sloan said that Hamburg (1895-1915) was the only great horse he ever rode. Sloan took over as jockey for Hamburg when the horse's career was near its end after the three-year-old had been soundly defeated in the
Belmont Stakes . Ridden by Sloan, the horse won theLawrence Realization , easily defeatingKentucky Derby winnerPlaudit , and then scored the most impressive win of his career in the grueling 2¼ mile American Brighton Cup.Such were Sloan's abilities that in 1896 he won nearly 30% of all his races, increased it to 37% in 1897, and upped it to an astonishing 46% in 1898.
Charles F. Dwyer , a close friend and son of prominent racehorse owner Mike Dwyer, was part of a syndicate that backed Sloane's mounts when he rode inEngland .cite news
author=
title=CHARLES F. DWYER'S MARRIAGE.; He Won the Hand of Miss May Webber of San Francisco.
date=
work=New York Times
url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9B03E4D9153DE633A25753C2A9649C94689ED7CF
accessdate=2008-08-09Racing there onSeptember 30 ,1898 , Sloan rode five consecutive winners at theNewmarket Racecourse . Returning to England the following year he won a number of important races including the 1899 1,000 Guineas aboard "Sibola" and in 1900 theAscot Gold Cup riding "Merman." The prestigiousEpsom Derby was a race that Sloan always felt he would have won, had it not been for a terrible tragedy. In the 1899 race, his horse "Holocauste" took the early lead, and near the end of the race "Holocauste" and Flying Fox, winner of the 2,000 Guineas, were racing head-to-head far in front of the rest of the field. At that point in the race Sloan said he was still holding back on the horse, in preparation for the stretch run, when his horse stopped abruptly and collapsed to the ground with a shattered leg. "Holocauste" had to be euthanized while "Flying Fox" went on to win the race. Later that year "Flying Fox" won theSt. Leger Stakes to become the 1899 British Triple Crown Champion. In 1900, Edward,Prince of Wales offered Sloan the job to ride for his stable in the 1901 racing season.Sloan's success on the racetrack, combined with a flamboyant lifestyle filled with beautiful women, made him one of the first to become a major international celebrity in the sport. He hung out with the likes of Diamond Jim Brady and traveled with a personal
valet and a trunk full of clothes. His reputation was such that he was the "Yankee Doodle" in theGeorge M. Cohan Broadway musical "Little Johnny Jones " and the basis forErnest Hemingway 'sshort story "My Old Man". Although Sloan's racing career was spectacular, it was relatively short, ending by 1901 under a cloud of suspicion that he had been betting on races in which he had competed. Advised by the BritishJockey Club that they would not renew his license, he never rode for the Prince of Wales. The ban in Britain was maintained by American racing authorities, and Sloan's jockey career came to an end.After Sloan left racing, Oscar Hammerstein arranged for him to star in a one-man show in a New York
vaudeville theatre, but it did not last. He eventually went toParis ,France , where in 1911 he converted a smallbistro into what became the famousHarry's New York Bar (located at 5 rue Daunou between theAvenue de l'Opéra and theRue de la Paix ). Financial problems from overspending on a lavish lifestyle forced Sloan to sell the bar and return to the U.S. His money gone, in 1920 he tried acting in motion pictures, but by then his name no longer had the star value to carry him.Married and divorced twice, Tod Sloan died of
cirrhosis in 1933 inLos Angeles, California , and was interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale. Ultimately, British racing historians restored his reputation, as his betting on races had been a dubious charge at best. He was posthumously inducted into theNational Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 1955.Tod Sloan told his life story in a book titled "Tod Sloan by Himself" that was published in 1915 of which 200 were signed by Tod Sloan and are highly sought after. Following his death,
Beryl Markham received an advance fromHoughton Mifflin to write a book on Sloan, but it too was never published because of Markham's own problems.Rhyming slang
The name of Tod Sloan left a mark on the
English language . His name was already famous inLondon because he rode many winners in England where his first name was adopted into therhyming slang used by the Cockneys of the East end of London to mean 'own' as in 'on his own' (from Tod Sl'oan'). Hence, someone 'on his tod' is alone. This adoption of a rhyming phrase then the dropping of the word(s) that rhyme [s] was normal Cockney usage. Compare 'Use your loaf' (of "bread" - for "head"), or "That's a load of cobblers" (. . a load of cobbler's awls for 'balls') etc.References
*"" byJohn Dizikes (National Book Critics Circle Award winner) -Yale University Press (2000 - ISBN 0-300-08334-3)
* [http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=0300083343 Yale University Press book information]
*New York Times Book Review [http://www.nytimes.com/books/00/10/22/reviews/001022.22brucknt.html by J. R. Bruckner]
* [http://www.racingmuseum.org/hall/jockey.asp?ID=222 Tod Sloan at the United States' National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame]External links
*imdb name|id=0806023|name=Tod Sloan
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