Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Raceland (horse)

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Dam
  
Calomel

Foaled
  
1885

Colour
  
Sex
  
Breeder
  
Damsire
  
Canwell

Country
  
United States

Species
  
Equus caballus

Earnings
  
116,391 USD

Grandsire
  
Owner
  
1) Joseph F. Ullman2) Dave Johnson (10/28/1887)3) August Belmont (11/12/1887)4) Mike Dwyer (12/28/1890)

Raceland (1885–1894) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse.

Contents

Background

Out of the mare Calomel, his British sire, Billet, was imported to stand at stud in the United States where in 1883 he was the Leading sire in North America. Grandsire Voltigeur won England's Epsom Derby and St. Leger Stakes in 1850.

Raceland was purchased and raced by Joseph F. Ullman, a native of St. Louis, Missouri who held a controlling interest in the East St. Louis Jockey Club and who was the preeminent bookmaker of the day.

Racing career

Raceland became the dominant two-year-old competing in the United States in 1887. In mid September, Raceland won the Great Eastern Handicap at Sheepshead Bay Race Track, beating a field of sixteen of the best two-year-olds in the United States. After defeating Emperor of Norfolk in the Arlington Stakes at the Ivy City racetrack in Washington, D.C. on October 25, 1887, three days later in what the New York Times described as a "phenomenal performance," he won the six furlong Capital Stakes at Washington D.C. Immediately after the race, owner Joseph Ullman sold Raceland to Dave Johnson of the New York City betting firm, Appleby & Johnson. On November 12, August Belmont announced he had acquired the gelding from Johnson.

Among his wins at age three, Raceland defeated the great Firenze to win the mile and a half Grand National Handicap at Jerome Park Racetrack. Raceland went on to compete successfully for another six years during which time he would affectionately be called "Old Bones" by his fans. In 1889, he won the Suburban Handicap, at the time the most important race for older horses in the United States. In October he again beat Firenze to win his second straight edition of the Grand National Handicap at Jerome Park Racetrack. The following year, Raceland added the prestigious Manhattan Handicap to his résumé of wins.

At age six he won the Freehold Stakes at the Long Branch Racetrack in New Jersey, and at seven won the 1892 Cherry Diamond and New York Jockey Club Handicaps at Morris Park Racecourse as well as the Delaware Handicap at Long Branch Racetrack and was still winning at age eight in 1893. On May 16, 1894 he ran third in the Myrtle Stakes at Gravesend Race Track but in June was reported by the New York Times as dying from spinal meningitis. On June 28, 1894 at Sheepshead Bay racecourse, Raceland was euthanized.

References

Raceland (horse) Wikipedia


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