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Morgan Horse
The Morgan Horse - An American Legend
Justin Morgan was a living legend. In the manner of so many heroes, he
began as an unremarkable colt and became the father of an entire breed
of horses recognized for quality and dependability.
Born in 1789, Justin Morgan started life as a small, rough-coated colt
known as "Figure." In 1791, he left his birthplace in Springfield,
Massachusetts with his new owner, the soft-spoken schoolteacher Justin
Morgan, by whose name the stallion eventually became known. Although his
breeding was unknown (thought to be of Dutch, Thoroughbred, or Arabian
breeding), the quality of Justin Morgan's ancestry showed in his
straight clean legs; deep muscling over his quarters and shoulders; and
fine, intelligent head with large expressive eyes and short, pricked
ears. Add to these the quality of his movement, a thick but silky mane
and tail, and a clean-cut throatlatch, and you have the conformation of
the ideal light horse. Despite these fine qualities, Justin Morgan's
lack of size was such that his debt-ridden owner found no buyers on
their journey north to Randolph Center, Vermont. It was simply fate that
no one but, his new owner realized what a little giant he was.
Over the next 30 years, the little bay stallion worked long, hard hours
in the fields and on the roads of Vermont. Gradually, the local
population began to talk about the feats of "the Justin Morgan horse".
Standing just over 14 hands tall, Justin Morgan's exploits gained him
fame because he was not as big as colonial workhorses nor as tall and
long-legged as racehorses, yet he consistently outperformed both. There
was the time he pulled a log no draft horse could budge, the day only he
had the beauty, spirit and manners to carry President James Monroe on a
muster-day parade ground; and the time he outran the most winning
racehorse central Vermont had ever known, at least until that day.
Doing it all and doing it well, Justin Morgan remained sound of eye,
wind, and limb throughout a lifetime of two ordinary horses. That should
have been enough, but the stallion added still more: showy,
ground-covering gaits with speed to spare at any one of them; a gentle
disposition that made him safe enough for a child to handle yet spirited
enough for any horseman, beauty men would to recall decades after his
death; and a rare courage that made men who lost bets on him hit their
flagons of rum and say, 'To the little Morgan!' and drink deeply.
Justin Morgan also proved to be one of the greatest breeding horses of
all time. As the saga of the little stallion grew, countless mares were
bred to him. So prepotent were the genes of this stallion that no matter
what type of mare he was bred to, be she of heavy draft or refined
racing-type, his offspring inherited his image and abilities. While most
breeds develop by breeding horses of similar characteristics to each
other, Justin Morgan's ability to pass his characteristics to his
offspring for generations to come allowed this single stallion to found
an entire breed in his likeness. Today, every registered Morgan traces
back to Justin Morgan through his best-known sons Bulrush, Sherman and
Woodbury.
In the coming years, the offspring of these strong, willing, able light
horses grew along with the young nation that was building itself upon
hard work and determination. In the hands of American colonists, Morgans
cleared rugged Vermont mountainsides and converted them into rich
farmland. But they weren't mere workhorses, Morgans had the style and
elegance to capture the admiration of any city horseman. While some
Morgans earned their keep on the farm others were in high demand to
become smart roadsters for Boston and New York financiers. When harness
racing reached its heyday in the 1800s, the World's Fastest Trotting
Stallion was Ethan Allen 50, old Justin's handsome great-grandson.
As America grew so did the feats of the Morgan. New England men answered
the call of gold and headed for California on Morgans. In the Civil War,
the famed Vermont Cavalry was mounted on Morgan horses. Not only did the
Union's General Sheridan ride his Morgan Rienzi, Stonewall Jackson rode
his Morgan, 'Little Sorrel,' for the Confederacy as well! In the Indian
Wars, the only survivor in the Battle of the little Big Horn was Keogh's
Morgan-bred horse Comanche. If the pathways of history are paved with
the bones of the horse, surely America's are paved by Morgans.
While the offspring of Justin Morgan were taming the wilderness and
building the country, they were also creating the standards by which
other American breeds would become known. The stamina and vigor of the
Morgan together with his excellent conformation and way of going helped
make other American light horse breeds what they are today. The great
speed of today's racing Standardbreds was produced by crosses to the
fastest Morgan blood. in the 1860s, the Morgan stallion Shepherd F.
Knapp was exported to England where his trotting speed became a byword.
Today, many English Hackneys carry his name in their pedigrees. In
American Saddlebreds, such famous champions as Edna May, Bourbon King,
Rex Peavine, and Wing Commander trace to Justin Morgan. The foundation
sire of the Tennessee Walking horse,
Allen F-1, was a grandson of the Morgan stallion Bradford's Telegraph.
In addition, many good Morgan mares were sent to Texas only to lose
their breed identity in Quarter Horse bands, and to make the breed
greater for it. The oldest of all American breeds the Morgan was strong
enough to contribute greatly to almost every other American light horse
breed while retaining its own identity across two centuries.
Present-day Morgans differ little from their mighty progenitor. The
average size of a Morgan today is between 14.2-15.2 hands, with some
individuals over or under. Morgan coats are predominantly chestnut, bay,
or brown, although many black, palomino, buckskin, and even a few grays
appear in the breed. The breed's tremendous courage, disposition,
substance, and type has remained as important to breeders today as it
was 200 years ago. Whether you visit farms in New England, California,
or any state in between, you can see bands of Morgans with the same deep
bodies, lovely heads, and straight clean-boned legs. In barns and show
rings across the country, the Morgan show horses flash by with heads
high, eyes bright, and nostrils wide - Morgan quality showing in every
hair on their gleaming, muscular bodies.
Today, Morgans have few wildernesses to conquer or wars to win, but they
still accomplish great deeds. They are loved and revered as dynamite
performers in Morgan shows across the country, and as loyal, sensible
mounts on America's beautiful trails and pathways; they are treasured by
mounted police squads and therapeutic riding programs for their
intelligence, soundness, and gentleness; they are winning awards in
driving, dressage, reining and cutting competitions against horses bred
specifically for these jobs; and no matter what they may be doing or the
tack they wear, knowledgeable horsemen see them and know, 'That's a
Morgan!'
A bit of the hard-working, determined Morgan legend is with us whenever
a Morgan carries a saddle-weary cowhand down a Montana mountain, pulls a
carriage around a grueling obstacle course in record time, quietly
carries children along a wooded path, or flashes around show rings with
a style that causes spectators to cheer. The Morgan, our country's first
breed of light horse, is as much a part of America today as it was two
centuries ago.'
The Morgan legend has also spread around the world. Morgan owners and
dubs can be found in Canada, England, Germany, Italy, France, Australia,
New Zealand, Mexico and South America. The beauty, intelligence, and
willing personality of the Morgan will win you over too!
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