Artful (horse)
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Artful | |
---|---|
Sire | Hamburg |
Grandsire | Hanover |
Dam | Martha II |
Damsire | Dandie Dinmont |
Sex | Filly |
Foaled | (unknown) 1902 |
Country | USA |
Colour | Brown |
Breeder | William Collins Whitney |
Owner | Harry Payne Whitney |
Trainer | John W. Rogers |
Record | 8 Starts: 6-2-0 |
Earnings | $81,125 |
Major Racing Wins, Awards and Honours | |
Major Racing Wins | |
Futurity Stakes (1904) Great Filly Stakes (1904) White Plains Handicap (1904) Brighton Handicap (1905) |
|
Racing Awards | |
United States Champion Juvenile Filly (1904) | |
Honours | |
U.S. Racing Hall of Fame (1956) #94 - Top 100 U.S. Racehorses of the 20th Century Grade III Artful Handicap at Washington Park Race Track |
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Infobox last updated on: December 1, 2007. |
Artful was born in 1902 at the Westbury Stable at Old Westbury on Long Island into a family of racing royalty begun in 1898 by William Collins Whitney, who had had a hand in many a venture, mainly political. The Whitney’s quickly became (and remain to this day) leading names in the sport of Thoroughbred horse racing.
Artful raced in the days when horses could be “declared” to win. This meant that if a stable entered more than one of its horses, it would announce beforehand which horse they expected to win the event. In both of Artful’s first two starts at age two at Saratoga Race Course (a track that William Collins Whitney had a hand in rejuvenating), her stablemate was declared to win against her. In the first of these races in August of 1904 that horse was her stablemate Dreamer. In order to achieve this result, Artful had to be held back...or such is the opinion of today’s racing experts, although it has never been proven. Certainly those who watched and wrote about her inaugural races noted the problem, though did not go so far as to say so. The Daily Racing Form’s Frank Brunnell hailed her as "a genuine crackerjack" who should have won both races with ease. On both occasions it was written that she was: “…hard held and close up throughout, finished as easily and probably could have won the race.” Her second race was “won” by Princess Rupert.
These two “declared” races were the only races Artful ever lost. She never lost again.
In her third “undeclared” race, the Futurity Stakes, Artful handed the very great Sysonby his only defeat by five lengths. It appears he might well have been drugged by his groom for this event, but even so, Artful’s victory was also over a field of exceptional strength (and said at the time to be finest juvenile field ever assembled): the Canadian champion Oiseau, the fillies and future classic winners Tanya and Agile, and the unbeaten filly Tradition. Artful raced four days later in the Great Filly Stakes, cantering to a win. And then again, under 130 pounds, taking the White Plains Handicap, giving away 29 pounds to a colt named Dandelion, and setting a new track record of 1:08 for six furlongs. That record stood for fifty years, only broken on a straight course and under a much lighter burden of 115 pounds.
William Whitney died in Artful's two-year-old season and his son, Harry Payne Whitney, succeeded him.
In her three-year-old season, Artful won two sprints to prepare for the Brighton Handicap which she took “pulling up,” or in other words, slowing down. She won against the great filly, Beldame as well as Delhi, the winner of that year’s Belmont Stakes. Her last win was a quarter of a mile race.
As a broodmare, as is often the case, Artful did not reproduce herself. Her few foals were winners but not stakes winners. She died in 1927 at the age of twenty five.
[edit] References
- "The History of Thoroughbred Racing in America" by William H.P. Roberton, Bonanza Books, New York, 1964
- "Champions, The Lives, Times, and Past Performances of America's Greatest Thoroughbreds, Revised Edition, Champions from 1893-2004," the Daily Racing Form