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Maskette

Maskette
Maskette.jpg
Maskette in 1908.
Sire Disguise
Grandsire Domino
Dam Biturica
Damsire Hamburg
Sex Filly
Foaled 1906
Country United States
Colour Brown
Breeder James R. Keene
Owner James R. Keene
Trainer James G. Rowe, Sr.
Record 17: 12-3-0
Earnings $77,090
Major wins
Belmont Futurity Stakes (1908)
Spinaway Stakes (1908)
Matron Stakes (1908)
Alabama Stakes (1909)
Gazelle Handicap (1909)
Ladies Handicap (1909)
Mermaid Stakes (1909)
Pierrepont Handicap (1909)
Awards
American Champion Three-Year-Old Filly (1909)
Honours
United States Racing Hall of Fame (2001)
Last updated on April 2, 2007

Maskette (1906–1930) was an American Thoroughbred Hall of Fame racehorse who never lost a race against other fillies.

Bred by James R. Keene at his Castleton Farm near Lexington, Kentucky, Maskette was trained by future Hall of Fame inductee James G. Rowe, Sr.

Although she did not begin racing until late in the summer of 1908, the New York based two-year-old was nonetheless the top filly in the U.S. that year. Of her six starts, she finished second once and won the other five races, including setting a track record for the Saratoga Race Course in winning the Spinaway Stakes, a premier event of the racing season for juvenile fillies.

The leading filly again at age three, Maskette repeated with five wins and a second in six starts. Of her several major stakes race wins, she captured the Pierrepont Handicap against colts. At age four, she won two of five starts that included another track record, this time at Aqueduct Racetrack.

Retired to broodmare duty at her owner's Castleton Farm near Lexington, Kentucky, after producing a filly in 1912 Maskette was sold to prominent American owner/breeder William Kissam Vanderbilt, who shipped her to his Haras du Quesnay breeding farm near Deauville in Lower Normandy, France. Maskette produced four stakes winners before her death at age twenty-four in 1930.

In 1954, Belmont Park in Elmont, New York honored her memory with the Maskette Stakes, a race for fillies & mares 3-years-old & up. In 1992, the race was renamed for its ill-fated 1990 winner, Go For Wand.


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