Blue Larkspur
Blue
Larkspur (1926–1947) was a bay Kentucky-bred thoroughbred race horse.
He was inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in
1957,[1] and ranks Number 100 in Blood-Horse magazine's top 100 U.S.
thoroughbred champions of the 20th Century. Of the 127 stakes winners
bred by Colonel Edward Riley Bradley at his Idle Hour Stock Farm in
Lexington, Kentucky – which includes Bimelech out of La Troienne – Blue
Larkspur was considered the Colonel's finest horse.
Blue Larkspur
was sired by Black Servant, who was second in the 1921 Kentucky Derby,
just behind his Idle Hour stablemate Behave Yourself.. Black Servant was
a son of Black Toney, who also sired Kentucky Derby winner Black Gold).
Blue Larkspur's dam was Blossom Time, by North Star III and out of
Vaila, an influential mare imported by Bradley.
Bradley's
Idle Hour farm was also known as the "Lucky B" because he named most of
his horses with "B" names. Blue Larkspur raced in Bradley's silks
(white with green hoops and cap). Bradley also won the 1926 Kentucky
Derby with Bubbling Over (sire of Baby League, dam of Busher); the 1932
Derby with Burgoo King; and the 1933 Derby with Brokers Tip. But his
loss in 1921 with Black Servant rankled him, even though another of his
horses took home the roses. He was furious with Black Servant's jockey,
Charles Thompson, who had apparently defied orders to save the horse for
the stretch run; rumors flew that Bradley (and many Idle Hour
employees) had a great deal of money riding on Black Servant.
Racing career
Blue
Larkspur was trained by Herbert J. "Derby Dick" Thompson, an inductee
of the National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame. Derby Dick was not kind
to horses, working them hard. Thompson won more Kentucky Derbies than
any other trainer before Ben Jones.
Racing as a two-year-old, Blue
Larkspur started seven times. He won the Juvenile Stakes, the National
Stallion Stakes, and the Saratoga Special Stakes. He was beaten in the
Hopeful Stakes by Jack High (whom he had defeated three times), getting
stuck in traffic and carrying high weight of 130 pounds. At the start of
the Belmont Futurity, he was kicked by another horse, finished eighth
and was rested for the remainder of the season.
In
Blue Larkspur's time, there was no Southern racing circuit to prepare
for the Kentucky Derby, so he was trained hard all winter in Lexington.
In his first race as a three-year-old, he beat Clyde Van Dusen, a gelded
son of Man o' War. On Derby Day, however, the track was deep and muddy.
Because Thompson was suffering from appendicitis, an apprentice trainer
prepared Blue Larkspur for the race and neglected to have him shod in
"stickers" (special shoes for slippery mud). Blue Larkspur struggled to
finish fourth, defeated by Clyde Van Dusen.
Later
in his 3-year-old season, however, Blue Larkspur convincingly won the
one-mile Withers Stakes. Ridden by Mack Garner, he closed with a rush.
He also took the 1½-mile Belmont Stakes, although he was again kicked at
the post and the track was muddy. He was kicked yet again in a later
start. Although he won the race, the wound became infected and he was
sidelined for a time. Following the layoff, he won the Arlington Classic
by five lengths. His season ended with a bowed tendon, but he has still
been retrospectively regarded as 1929's Horse of the Year.[3] In
contemporary sources he is credited with being the year's leading money
winner, but there is no record of a formal award.
As
a 4-year-old, Blue Larkspur raced three times (winning the Stars and
Stripes Handicap and the Arlington Cup) before his leg again failed him.
During his career (from 1928 to 1930) he raced 16 times with 10 wins, 3
seconds, and 1 third, earning $272,070.
As a sire
As
a stallion at Idle Hour Stock Farm, Blue Larkspur excelled as he had on
the track – especially with his daughters. Among his progeny was
Oedipus, the 1950 and 1951 American steeplechase champion. Blue Larkspur
made the broodmare sires list every year from 1944 through 1960, with
his daughters producing 114 stakes winners and six champions. This may
be because he is thought to have been a carrier of the X factor (a
genetic trait which causes an extraordinarily large heart, and is only
passed on to a stallion's daughters via the x-chromosome).
Blue
Larkspur also produced the Hall of Famer Myrtlewood and Blue Denim, a
mare who produced six stakes winners. Blue Denim's most important
offspring was her daughter Ampola, who never won a stakes race but
became one of the Stud Book's most important foundation mares for
Gertrude T. Widener.
Blue Larkspur died in 1947, aged 21