Black Toney

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Black Toney
Sire Peter Pan
Grandsire Commando
Dam Belgravia
Damsire Ben Brush
Sex Stallion
Foaled 1911
Country USA Flag of the United States
Colour Brown
Breeder James R. Keene
Owner Colonel Edward R. Bradley
Trainer H. J. "Derby Dick" Thompson
Record 40 Starts: 13-11-7
Earnings $13,565
Major Racing Wins, Awards and Honours
Major Racing Wins
Valuation Stakes (1913)
Latonia Independence Handicap (1914)
Honours
Leading Juvenile Sire in 1939
Among the top 20 American sires by earnings ten times.
The Black Toney Purse once run at Latonia Race Track
Infobox last updated on: December 6, 2007.


Black Toney (foaled 1911 – died 1938) was bred by James R. Keene’s Castleton Farm. Keene, whose health was failing (he died in 1913), sold all his holdings in 1912 to Colonel Edward R. Bradley’s Idle Hour Stock Farm in Lexington, Kentucky. Some confusion occurred over this sale, and Bradley resold most of the lot, but one of those he kept was a very dark brown yearling he named Black Toney. The price tag for the son of Hall of Famer Peter Pan whose own sire was another Hall of Famer, Commando by the great Domino, was $1,600. Black Toney’s dam was Belgravia, the best daughter of Hall of Famer, Ben Brush. This meant that the almost black yearling with no white markings and a fine head and body was a member of the last crop bred by Keene from his famous Domino/Ben Brush cross.

Black Toney was a good racehorse but far from a great one. He raced for four years coming in the money in 31 of his 40 starts. But it was not Black Toney’s ability on the track that made his name, it was his success as a stallion. Black Toney became the most important stallion Bradley ever owned and one of the most important sires in American Thoroughbred history. It was Black Toney who sired many of the horses the Idle Hour Stock Farm was to become famous for. (The names of Bradley’s horses all began with a “B,” a quirk of Bradley’s…perhaps because his own name began with a B, or perhaps because of Black Toney.)

Briefly retired from the races due to injury, Black Toney sired one crop of horses. Of the resulting handful, one was Miss Jemima, an immediate stakes winner.

Once Black Toney was truly retired, Bradley bred him sparingly and yet, even from twenty one small crops and a total of 221 foals, the quality of his get was very high. From his very first crop came Miss Jemima, a champion at two years of age. Overall, he sired 40 stakes winners which amounts to 18 percent of his foals.

Bradley’s Black Toney was among the Top Twenty American sires by earnings ten times. He was second on the general sire list in 1933 and fifth in 1939.

[edit] Black Toney’s progeny

Sire of:

Grandsire of:

[edit] End of the line

Black Toney spent his whole stud career at Idle Hour, producing a great many fine broodmares as well as winners. He died there on September 19, 1938, at the age of 27 of an apparent heart attack. Colonel Bradley commissioned a bronze statue which he placed over his greatest stallion’s grave. It is still there today, on a part of the Darby Dan Farm.

[edit] External links