Charles S. Howard

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For other persons named Charles Howard, see Charles Howard (disambiguation).

Charles Stewart Howard (1877-1950) was an American businessman who made his fortune as an automobile dealer and who became a prominent Thoroughbred racehorse owner.

Howard was stamped perhaps the most successful Buick salesman of all time. He lost a son, ironically, to a car accident in 1926 at an early age and later bought the soon-to-be-famous horse Seabiscuit. According to Laura Hillenbrand's biography of Seabiscuit, Howard's early Buick dealership in San Francisco was given a boost by the hand of fate; on the day of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, he was one of the few individuals who had operational vehicles in the city, and was thus able to help the rescue effort significantly.

In 1921, long before he bought Seabiscuit, Charles Howard purchased the 16,000 acre Ridgewood Ranch at Willits in Mendocino County. Tragically, his 15-year-old son, Frankie, died there in 1926 after a truck accident on the property. Used as a secondary residence, by the 1930s Howard had converted part of the ranch into a Thoroughbred horse breeding and training. Although Seabiscuit was the most famous resident at Ridgewood Ranch, Charles Howard owned many horses in his secondary career as a Thoroughbred owner including Kayak II and Hall of Fame colt Noor, the only horse to defeat two U.S. Triple Crown champions.

Charles Howard died of a heart attack in 1950 and was buried in the Cypress Lawn Memorial Park in Colma, California. Ridgewood Ranch was sold by his heirs, with some of the horses sent to his son Lindsay's Binglin Stable in Moorpark, California.

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