Hurley Burley
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Hurley Burley | |
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Sire | Riley |
Grandsire | Longfellow |
Dam | Helter Skelter |
Damsire | Pell Mell |
Sex | Filly |
Foaled | 1895 |
Country | USA |
Colour | Chestnut |
Breeder | Ed Corrigan |
Owner | Ed Corrigan Sam Hildreth |
Trainer | Sam Hildreth |
Record | Unknown |
Earnings | Unknown |
Major Racing Wins, Awards and Honours | |
Honours | |
Weber & Fields musical named after her. They also named one after her dam, Helter Skelter. |
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Infobox last updated on: January 20, 2008. |
Hurley Burley (b. 1895), was an American Thoroughbred race horse. Her breeder and owner was Ed Corrigan who raced out of the old Washington Park Race Track track in Chicago, Illinois. In Corrigan’s time, he was the most powerful man in mid-Western racing.
Hurley Burley was by Riley who had won the 1890 Kentucky Derby and was a son of the great stallion Longfellow. (Riley was originally called “Shortfellow.”) Her dam was Helter Skelter, a good racing mare also running under the Corrigan colors.
Corrigan raced Hurley Burley as a selling plater, meaning she competed only in claiming races. As a claimer, she could be bought by a trainer right out of the race. In about 1898, Corrigan claimed a horse the eventual Hall of Fame trainer Sam Hildreth was running. Miffed at the loss of a horse he liked, Lucky Dog, Hildreth retaliated by claiming Corrigan’s Hurley Burley for $1,500. His claim wasn’t merely to get back at Corrigan though; he’d seen something in the chestnut plater.
Under Hildreth’s colors, Hurley Burley stepped up in class in the racing world. She won nine of her thirteen starts for him, set a Washington Park track record for six furlongs and also one for one mile and twenty yards.
Lew Fields and his theatrical partner Joe Weber liked the increasingly popular filly’s name, so asked Hildreth if they could use it for a new musical. They liked the name of her dam as well, so used that too, Helter Skelter.
When she retired from the track, Hildreth sold her for $10,000 to William Collins Whitney. As a broodmare, Hurley Burley was as good as she was a racehorse. Her best foal was the 1906 Belmont Stakes winner, Burgomaster out of the Whitney owned Hamburg. He was also the American Horse of the Year in 1906.
Her birthplace and date of death is, so far, unknown.
[edit] References
- Hurley Burley’s pedigree
- “The Spell of the Turf, by Samuel C. Hildreth & James R. Crowell, J. B. Lippincott & Co., 1926