Tom smith seabiscuit biography
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It was the height of the depression and America was in desperate need of a hero.
They found it in the most unlikely of places . . . a battler who looked about as beat up as the nation itself. For a racehorse, he didn’t have much going for him. His legs were too short, his neck was too thick and he had a swaying foreleg that jutted out wildly. Worst of all, he had a mind of his own. When he felt like running he’d run, when he didn’t, he wouldn’t.
It’s hard to believe that this horse, having lost his first 17 starts, would become a legend – the greatest racehorse in history. In this episode of Biographics we reveal the amazing story of Seabiscuit – the horse that brought a nation together.
Pedigree
Seabiscuit was born (or more accurately ‘foaled’) on May 23rd, 1933 in Lexington, Kentucky. He was the son of a nasty-tempered rogue named Hard Tack, and a gentle mare named Swing On. Seabiscuit’s father had great speed, no doubt owing to his own pedigree. His father, Man o’ War, was considered by most experts at the time to have been the greatest racehorse ever produced… although his grandson would certainly go on to challenge that claim. The problem with Hard Tack was that he was uncontrollable… Even hall of fame trainer ‘Sunny’ Jim Fitzsimmons couldn’t tame him.
Seab
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Seabiscuit: A Work out Rags-to-Riches Story
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As proposal article in print on Apr 27, 1940 in picture Saturday Day Post read: “Seabiscuit bash the Horatio Alger exemplar of say publicly turf, interpretation horse make certain came recuperate from ruin on his own foster and drive to win.”
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He would race 35 times style a 2-year-old – wish unheard albatross grind these days – and add five gains with sevener second-p
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Tom Smith (horse trainer)
American Thoroughbred racehorse trainer of Seabiscuit
Not to be confused with Tom Smith.
Tom Smith | |
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Tom Smith with Seabiscuit | |
Occupation | Trainer, Farrier |
Born | (1878-05-20)May 20, 1878 Georgia, U.S. |
Died | January 23, 1957(1957-01-23) (aged 78) |
Career wins | Not found |
Bay Meadows Handicap (1937, 1938) Brooklyn Handicap (1937) Butler Handicap (1937) Massachusetts Handicap (1937) Agua Caliente Handicap (1938) Havre de Grace Handicap (1938) Hollywood Gold Cup (1938, 1939) Pimlico Special Match Race (1938) Santa Anita Handicap (1939, 1940) American Derby (1940) Potomac Handicap (1940) Chesapeake Stakes (1941) Santa Anita Derby (1941) Arlington-Washington Lassie Stakes (1945) Beldame Stakes (1945) Belmont Futurity Stakes (1945) Fashion Stakes (1945) Hopeful Stakes (1945) Juvenile Stakes (1945) Matron Stakes (1945) Walden Stakes (1945) Tremont Stakes (1946) Jamaica Handicap (1947) Great American Stakes (1950) American Classic Race wins: | |
U.S. Champion Thoroughbred Trainer by earnings (1940, 1945) | |
National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame (2001) Washington Racing Hall of Fame (2003) | |
Kayak II, Seabiscuit, Beaugay, Star Pilot, Jet Pilot |
Robert Thomas Smith (May 20, 1878 – January 23, 1