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Christopher Chenery, the son of Ida and James Chenery, was born in Richmond and raised in Ashland, Virginia. [1] He had three brothers, William Ludlow Chenery, who became editor of Collier's, [2] Dr. Alan Chenery, [3] and Charles Morris Chenery. (A fourth brother died young.)
Bryan G. was bred by Christopher Chenery at his Meadow Stud in Doswell, Virginia. Raced by Chenery, he was trained by Casey Hayes . Among his most important race wins, Bryan G. won the 1951 Pimlico Special , at the time a prestigious winner-take-all event that became the first ever race to be televised nationally.
Chenery moved many of the remaining horses to Long Island, N.Y. and continued racing. Although Penny Chenery gets the credit for managing Secretariat's racing career, Christopher Chenery was the genius behind the matching of Somethingroyal and Bold Ruler to produce Secretariat. In 1965 he set up the deal by which two Meadow mares would be bred ...
Chenery is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Ben Chenery (born 1977), British footballer; Charles Chenery (1850–1928), British footballer; Christopher Chenery (1886–1973), American engineer, businessman and racehorse breeder; Craig W. Chenery, British-born author and screenwriter
Chenery was born in Richmond, son of Christopher Chenery, a businessman and horseman.He was educated in Virginia, Pelham Manor, New York and at the University of Arizona (BSc Mathematics, 1939), the University of Oklahoma (BSc Engineering, 1941), and California Institute of Technology (MSc Engineering, 1943).
Christopher Bradley: Eta Lambda / Virginia Tech Director of Sanitation Facilities Construction, Albuquerque Area Indian Health Service Mo Brooks: Gamma Sigma / Duke Alabama Republican Ralph Brooks: Gamma Phi / Nebraska Wesleyan Former governor of Nebraska Dennis Cardoza: Eta Tau / Stanislaus State U.S. Representative for 18th District of California
The Territorial Enterprise, founded by William Jernegan and Alfred James on 18 December 1858, was a newspaper published in Virginia City, Nevada.Published for its first two years in Genoa in what was then Utah Territory, new owners Jonathan Williams and J. B. Woolard moved the paper to Carson City, the capital of the territory, in 1859. [1]
Securities and Exchange Commission v. Chenery Corp., 332 U.S. 194 (1947), is a United States Supreme Court case. It is often referred to as Chenery II. Background