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This category is for individual horses who served as foundation sires for their breed. Pages in category "Foundation horse sires" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total.
Through his sire Midnight Sun was a great-grandson of Black Allan, also known as Allan F-1, who was the foundation sire of the Tennessee Walking Horse breed. Midnight Sun's half-brother on his sire's side, Strolling Jim, became the first ever National Champion in 1939, and three of his other siblings were early champions as well. In 1944 ...
Foundation Sires of the American Quarter Horse. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-1337-5. Goodhue, Jim (1993). "A History of Early AQHA Registration". Legends: Outstanding Quarter Horse Stallions and Mares. Western Horseman. pp. 4–10. ISBN 0-911647-26-0. OL 1141633M. Haynes, Glynn W. (1976). The American Paint Horse. University of ...
Foundation stock or foundation bloodstock refers to animals that are the progenitors, or foundation, of a breed or of a given bloodline within such. Many modern breeds can be traced to specific, named foundation animals, but a group of animals may be referred to collectively as foundation bloodstock when one distinct population (including both landrace breeds or a group of animals linked to a ...
A second foundation sire was recognized in 1991, Harrison Chief. This sire was a descendant of the gray Thoroughbred stallion Messenger (1780 – January 28, 1808), who is also considered a foundation stallion for the Standardbred breed, and who also shows up frequently in Morgan horse bloodlines. [17]
The Japanese Brown (Japanese: 褐毛和種, Akage Washu or 赤牛, Aka Ushi) is a breed of small Japanese beef cattle.It is one of six native Japanese cattle breeds, [2] and one of the four Japanese breeds known as wagyū, the others being the Japanese Black, the Japanese Polled and the Japanese Shorthorn.
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The original foundation ancestors of the Colorado Ranger were two stallions brought to the United States and given to US president Ulysses S. Grant by the Turkish Sultan Abdul Hamid II in 1878. The first horse was a gray Barb named Linden Tree, foaled in 1874. The second was a desert-bred Arabian, also gray, named Leopard, foaled in 1873. [2]