- Old Sorrel
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Old Sorrel
–Breed Quarter Horse Sire Hickory Bill Grandsire Peter McCue Dam Dr. Rose mare Maternal grandsire unknown Sex Stallion Foaled 1915 Country United States Color Chestnut Breeder George Clegg Owner King Ranch Honors Honors American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame Old Sorrel, sometimes known as The Old Sorrel, (1915–1945) was a Quarter Horse stallion who was the foundation of the King Ranch linebreeding program for Quarter Horses, and the cornerstone of the King Ranch horse breeding program.[1]
Contents
Life
Old Sorrel was foaled in 1915 and was sold that same year to the King Ranch of Texas.[2] He proved himself worth breeding on through ranch work on the ranch, before being used as the foundation of the King Ranch Quarter Horse linebreeding program.[2] He died in 1945, with his last foal crop being in 1943.[1] He was a sorrel stallion bred by George Clegg of Alice, Texas and sold by Clegg as a foal along with his dam for $125 to the King Ranch. The King Ranch owned him until he died.[3]
J. K. Northway, the veterinarian on the King Ranch, described Old Sorrel as
I saw Richard Kleberg and George Clegg rope off him and ride him all morning, and then race him in the afternoon. Although a stallion, and treated as such, his daily work consisted of regular ranch routine with the remuda. Bob had made him into a superior cow horse in every respect. You could rope, cut, or do any other ranch work on him, and he was not just adequate – he was superior in every respect.
Bob Kleberg, the Bob in the quote from Northway, who one of the owners of the King Ranch and who managed it during from the 1920s through the 1950s, said that the Old Sorrel was "the best cow horse I ever rode, but he was also a good running horse. He had that well balanced look and the feel of a racehorse."[3]
When the American Quarter Horse Association (or AQHA) was founded in 1940, The Old Sorrel was already twenty-five years old, but the King Ranch registered him amongst the very first horses that the AQHA accepted for registration. He was given number 209 in the registry, and registered as bred by George Clegg of Alice, Texas. His sire was Hickory Bill by Peter McCue and out of a Dr. Rose mare.[4][5] The dam was a mare of Thoroughbred breeding that Clegg had bought from a Dr. Rose who was a dentist in Mexico as well as running a few ranches. Rose had bought some Thoroughbred mares in Kentucky to improve his horses, and eventually sold some of the mares to Clegg, without any breeding being attributed to any of them.[3]
The Old Sorrel sired 116 horses registered with the AQHA, but through the linebreeding program the King Ranch used, almost every horse the King Ranch registered from 1940 to the early 1960s was at least a descendant of Old Sorrel, and most were heavily inbred to him.[3]
Among his famous offspring were Cardinal, Solis, Little Richard P-17, Tomate Laureles P-19, Silver King, Macanudo and Hired Hand.[2] His grandsons included Wimpy P-1, Ranchero, Peppy, and Pep-Up.[1]
He was inducted into the AQHA Hall of Fame.[6]
Pedigree
Barney Owens Dan Tucker Lady Bug (Butt Cut) Peter McCue Voltigeur (TB) Nora M (TB) Kitty Clyde (TB) Hickory Bill Himyar (TB) The Hero (TB) Lulu S (TB) Lucretia M Jack Traveler Bird Kitty Clyde (TB) Old Sorrel 1915 Chestnut unknown Dr. Rose Mare unknown Notes
- ^ a b c Denhardt King Ranch Quarter Horses pp. 87–153
- ^ a b c Swan Legends 3 pp. 15–26
- ^ a b c d Beckman "El Alazan Viejo" Quarter Horse Journal pp. 36, 94, 102
- ^ AQHA Official Stud Book and Registry Combined 1–5 p. 85
- ^ Old Sorrel Pedigree at All Breed Pedigree retrieved on June 26, 2007
- ^ AQHA Hall of Fame
References
- All Breed Pedigree Database Pedigree for Old Sorrel retrieved on June 26, 2007
- AQHA Hall of Fame accessed on October 30, 2011
- American Quarter Horse Association (1961). Official Stud Book and Registry Combined Books 1-2-3-4-5. Amarillo, TX: American Quarter Horse Association.
- Beckman, Bruce (August 1992). "El Alazan Viejo: The Progenitor of the King Ranch Quarter Horse". Quarter Horse Journal: 36, 94, 102.
- Denhardt, Robert M. (1978). The King Ranch Quarter Horses: And Something of the Ranch and Men That Bred Them. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press.
- Swan, Kathy, ed (1997). "Legends 3:Outstanding Quarter Horse Stallions and Mares". Legends 3:Outstanding Quarter Horse Stallions and Mares. Colorado Springs: Western Horseman.
External links
Categories:- Influential Quarter horse sires
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