Blue Girl | |
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Blue Girl in 1901. |
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Sire | Sir Dixon |
Grandsire | Billet |
Dam | Bonnie Blue |
Damsire | Hindoo |
Sex | Mare |
Foaled | 1899 |
Country | United States |
Colour | Chestnut |
Breeder | Clay and Woodford |
Owner | 1) John E. Madden 2) William Collins Whitney 3) Harry Payne Whitney |
Trainer | John E. Madden |
Record | 12: 7-3-1 |
Earnings | US$ 68,950 |
Major wins | |
Great American Stakes (1901) Juvenile Stakes (1901) Eclipse Stakes (1901) Great Trial Stakes (1901) Great Filly Stakes (1901) Ladies Handicap (1902) Gazelle Handicap (1902) |
|
Awards | |
American Co-Champion Two-Year-Old Female (1901) American Champion Three-Year-Old Female (1902) |
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Horse (Equus ferus caballus) | |
Last updated on January 5, 2011 |
Blue Girl (1899—1919) was an American Thoroughbred racemare that was the Champion 2 and 3-year old female in 1901 and 1902, respectively.
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Blue Girl was foaled in Kentucky at Runnymeade Stud, the farm of Ezekiel Clay and Catesby Woodford.[1] She was sired by Sir Dixon, the 1888 Belmont Stakes winner, out of the mare Bonnie Blue.[2] Bonnie Blue was sired by the influential American sire Hindoo and also produced the semi-successful stallion Blues. Blue Girl was sold as a 2-year-old in 1901 to John E. Madden, the owner of the Lexington stud farm Hamburg Place.[1]
Blue Girl was trained by John Madden as a two-year-old and won the Juvenile Stakes, Eclipse, Great Trial, and Great American Stakes for Madden, netting $38,230 in purse money. She was bought by William Collins Whitney in late 1901 and won the Great Filly Stakes winning $23,975. As a 3-year-old, Blue Girl won the Gazelle and Ladies Handicap. She started in the Flying Handicap, run at Sheepshead Bay, but she became lame during the race.[1] This was her last start, and overall Blue Girl started 12 times and won 7 races.[3]
Blue Girl was retired in 1903 and was sent to Whitney's Brookdale Stud farm. She was sold to Frederick Johnson (as representative for Harry Payne Whitney) for $10,000 in October 1904 after William Whitney's death.[4] Blue Girl was sent to Britain in 1912, but returned to the United States in 1915[5] due to anti-American Thoroughbred sentiment and the passage of the Jersey Act. She produced thirteen foals, but none were as successful as Blue Girl. Her offspring include:[6]
Blue Girl died in 1919 at the Brookdale Stud.[7]