Ta Wee

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Ta Wee
Sire Intentionally
Grandsire Intent
Dam Aspidistra
Damsire Better Self
Sex Filly
Foaled March 26, 1966
Country USA (Florida) Flag of the United States
Colour Dark Bay
Breeder Tartan Farms
Owner Tartan Stable
Trainer Flint S. Schulhofer
Record 21 Starts: 15-2-1
Earnings $284,941
Major Racing Wins, Awards and Honours
Major Racing Wins
Jasmine Stakes (1969)
Vosburgh Stakes (1969)
Miss Woodford Stakes (1969)
Fall Highweight Handicap (1969 & 1970)
Prioress Stakes (1969)
Comely Stakes (1969)
Test Stakes (1969)
Interborough Handicap (1969 & 1970)
Correction Handicap (1970)
Hempstead Handicap (1970)
Regret Stakes (1970)
Racing Awards
American Champion Sprint Horse (1969 & 1970]]
Honours
U.S. Racing Hall of Fame (1994)
#80 - Top 100 U.S. Racehorses of the 20th Century
Infobox last updated on: December 12, 2007.

Ta Wee was a Thoroughbred race horse bred and foaled in 1966 at the Tartan Stable of William L. McKnight (chairman of the board of Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Co.). (The W. L. McKnight Handicap is race run in his honor at Calder Race Course.) Her sire was Intentionally, the American Champion Sprint Horse of 1959. Man o' War appears on both sides of Ta Wee’s pedigree, but Ta Wee’s dam was the great broodmare Aspidistra by Better Self by Bimelech by Black Toney. Aspidistra also goes back to the influential Ben Brush.

A birthday gift in 1957 to McKnight by his employees, Aspidistra cost a reputed $6,500. Aspidistra was risked in claiming races. No one claimed her and at the time she retired, McKnight still owned her. Two years prior to the birth of Ta Wee, the mare had given birth to Dr. Fager. Aside from Dr. Fager and Ta Wee, Aspidistra is the tail-female ancestress of Unbridled.

Ta Wee’s training was assumed by the Hall of Famer, “Scotty” Schulhofer. Her introduction to racing at the age of two proved a modest success, but in her first year as a three-year-old sprinter, she won eight stakes races, five of them consecutively. In the Vosburgh Stakes she beat older males.

Because of her triumphs in her third year, her fourth year saw her weighted almost beyond good sense. Even so, she won five of her seven races. In her last two races, her second Fall Highweight Handicap and her second Interborough Handicap, she ran under 140 and 142 pounds, giving away 19 pounds to the runner up in the Fall Highweight and 29 pounds in the Interborough. For this she won her second consecutive American Champion Sprint Horse award.

Retired to broodmare duties, Ta Wee had six foals, five of them winners, and four stakes winners. Her first foal was the sprint stakes winner, Great Above, who sired Holy Bull.

The name Ta Wee comes from the Sioux language and means “Beautiful Girl.’’ Ta Wee died in 1980.

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