His Eminence | |
---|---|
1901 drawing
|
|
Sire | Falsetto |
Grandsire | Enquirer |
Dam | Patroness |
Damsire | Pat Malloy |
Sex | Stallion |
Foaled | 1898 |
Country | United States |
Colour | Bay |
Breeder | O. H. Chenault |
Owner | 1) J. B. Lewman 2) Frank B. Van Meter 3) Clarence H. Mackay 4) Fred Gebhard 5) A.C. Jaeger 6) William Collins Whitney |
Trainer | Frank B. Van Meter |
Record | 53: 11-7-8 |
Earnings | $16,295 |
Major wins | |
Clark Handicap (1901) Kentucky Derby (1901) |
Clark Handicap (1901)
Omnium Handicap (1903)
His Eminence (1898 – c.1906) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse that was bred in Kentucky and is best known for winning the 1901 Kentucky Derby. He was a bay colt sired by the great turf-racer Falsetto out of the mare Patroness. His dam (with His Eminence in utero) was sold to O. H. Chenault at the 1897 Woodburn Stud dispersal sale for $75. As a yearling, he was sold to J. B. Lewman for $500[1].
His Eminence was ridden in the 1901 Derby by African-American jockey James Winkfield. His Eminence also won the Wenona Stakes as a two-year-old and the Clark Handicap as a three-year-old.
The colt was purchased in the latter part of 1901 for $15,000 by millionaire racing enthusiast Clarence H. Mackay as a stud horse, but was later sold in 1902 due to the death of Mackay's father. His Eminence was then returned to racing by his new owner, Fred Gebhard, as a five-year-old, winning the 1903 Omnium Handicap at the Sheepshead Bay Race Track.
The stallion was once again sold at auction in September 1903 to A.C. Jaeger for $2,900. He was again sold to William Collins Whitney who trained him for steeplechasing, but His Eminence was killed while trying to jump a hurdle sometime before 1910.