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Arlington Downs was an American horse-racing track located in Arlington, Texas in Tarrant County, about 20 miles (32 km) from downtown Fort Worth, Texas. The $3 million facility, a 1¼-mile track with a 6,000-seat grandstand, was constructed on W.T. Waggoner's Three D's Stock Farm, and opened in November 1929.
These areas served to control both the breeding programs and purchasing functions of the Remount Service and worked in conjunction with the depots. The Areas had headquarters at Front Royal (Virginia), Lexington (Kentucky), Colorado Springs (Colorado), Sheridan (Wyoming), San Angelo (Texas), and Pomona Quartermaster Depot (California). [14]
Royal Stables may refer to: Royal Mews, United Kingdom; Royal Stables (Denmark) Royal Stables (Netherlands) Royal Stables (Sweden) Royal Stables of Córdoba, Spain
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Born on the stud and trained in Newmarket, he won the Dubai World Cup in 2000 [8] and was the eight-length winner of the Prince of Wales's Stakes at Royal Ascot in the same year. When he retired from horse racing , Dubai Millennium returned to the stud but sired just one crop of foals before dying of grass sickness .
The Royal Mews is a mews, or collection of equestrian stables, of the British royal family. In London these stables and stable-hands' quarters have occupied two main sites in turn, being located at first on the north side of Charing Cross , and then (since the 1820s) within the grounds of Buckingham Palace .
Although Spendthrift Farm is known mostly as a commercial breeding operation, they maintain a small racing stable as well. Their most notable runners are Beholder , a 4-time Eclipse Award winning mare, Lord Nelson, a three-time Gr.I winning sprinter, Court Vision, who won the Breeders' Cup Mile , Tamara, a Gr.1 winning daughter of Beholder and ...
Together with the Petite Écurie (literal French for "The Small Stable"), it formed the Royal Stables (an institution that employed around a thousand people [note 1] under Louis XIV), and was built under the direction of architect Jules Hardouin-Mansart and completed in 1682. [1] Equipped with a riding hall, it housed the king's hunting and war ...