Muriel Vanderbilt

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Miss Muriel Vanderbilt, 1915
Miss Muriel Vanderbilt, 1915

Muriel Vanderbilt (November 24, 1902 - December, 1982) was an American socialite and a Thoroughbred racehorse owner/breeder who was a member of the wealthy Vanderbilt family.

The daughter of William Kissam Vanderbilt II (1878-1944) and Virginia Graham Fair (1875-1935), New York born Muriel Vanderbilt shared her father and grandfather Vandebilt's love of horses. Her mother was also a fan of Thoroughbred horse racing and established Fair Stable that in 1924 and 1925 won back-to-back Horse of the Year honors with Sarazen. Her parents separated when she was a small girl and she would grow up on Long Island and on the West Coast of the United States where her mother had been born.

Muriel Vanderbilt married three times, the first in 1925 to Frederic Cameron Church, Jr., a Boston insurance executive. The marriage ended in divorce in 1929 and in September of 1931, she married New Yorker and member of the prominent Astor family, Henry Delafield Phelps (1902-1976). She owned a ranch near Carmel, California where she built stables and kept thoroughbred racehorses. Divorced from her second husband in 1936, she married for a third time to J. P. Adams. With him, in 1947 she bought Edenvale Farms, a horse farm south of San Jose, California where she bred and raised Thoroughbreds and built her own private training track. Her horse Miche won the 1952 Santa Anita Handicap.

Later in life, Muriel Vanderbilt Adams owned an 80 acre horse farm in Marion County, Florida. Bred and trained at her Ocala farm in 1970, Desert Vixen was the most famous horse she ever owned and bred and in 1979 the filly was inducted into the United States' National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame. The farm is now part of the exclusive gated community, Jumbolair.

Muriel Vanderbilt Church Phelps Adams passed in 1982 away at the age of eighty.


[edit] References