Nellie Morse | |
---|---|
Sire | Luke McLuke |
Grandsire | Ultimus |
Dam | La Venganza |
Damsire | Abercorn |
Sex | Filly |
Foaled | 1921 |
Country | United States |
Colour | Bay |
Breeder | John Oliver (Jack) Keene and William Cleveland |
Owner | Bud Fisher |
Trainer | Albert B. Gordon |
Record | 34: 7-?-? |
Earnings | $73,565 |
Major wins | |
Fashion Stakes (1923) Preakness Stakes (1924) |
|
Honours | |
Nellie Morse Stakes at Laurel Park Racecourse | |
Last updated on June 28, 2007 |
Fashion Stakes (1923)
Black-Eyed Susan Stakes (1924)
Pimlico Oaks (1924)
Nellie Morse (1921–1941) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse best known as the fourth filly to win the Preakness Stakes. After her retirement from racing, she became a successful and influential broodmare.
Her sire was Luke McLuke, who won the 1914 Belmont Stakes and was a son of the important but unraced Ultimus, who was sired by Commando. From the mare La Venganza, Nellie Morse's damsire was the Australian multi-race winner Abercorn.
Owned by the prominent American cartoonist Bud Fisher, Nellie Morse was trained by Albert B. Gordon.
Sent to the track at age two, the filly won the five-furlong Fashion Stakes at Belmont Park and was second in the Spinaway Stakes. In the Matron Stakes, she finished ahead of future U.S. Racing Hall of Fame inductee Princess Doreen but was second to Greentree Stables' winning filly Tree Top.
In 1924, she won the 1⅛ mile Pimlico Oaks at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Maryland. Racing against colts, on May 12, 1924, Nellie Morse won the second of what became the American Classic Races: the Preakness Stakes. She was the fourth filly to win the Preakness since its inception fifty-one years earlier in 1873, and was the last filly winner until Rachel Alexandra won the 2009. Nellie Morse then finished third - placed second via disqualification of the apparent winner Glide - to Princess Doreen in the Kentucky Oaks at Churchill Downs.