Beau Purple (foaled in 1957) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse. He is most famous for defeating the champion gelding Kelso and champion colt Carry Back in three of their four meetings.
Beau Purple | |
---|---|
Sire | Beau Gar |
Grandsire | Count Fleet |
Dam | Waterqueen |
Damsire | Johnstown |
Sex | Stallion |
Country | United States |
Colour | Bay |
Breeder | Hobeau Farm |
Owner | Hobeau Farm |
Trainer | George P. Odom H. Allen Jerkens |
Record | 32: 12-4-2 |
Earnings | US$445,785 |
Major wins | |
Derby Trial Stakes (1960) Appleton Handicap (1962) Brooklyn Handicap (1962) Hawthorne Gold Cup Handicap (1962) Man o' War Stakes (1962) Suburban Handicap (1962) Widener Handicap (1963) |
Background
editHe was trained by George P. Odom until mid 1962, when H. Allen Jerkens, a 1975 inductee into the U.S. Racing Hall of Fame, took over. Beau Purple was the first horse ever bred by Hobeau Farm of Wall Street mutual-fund developer Jack Dreyfus.
Racing career
editAfter winning the 1960 Derby Trial Stakes, Beau Purple was withdrawn from the Kentucky Derby as a result of a sore left front shin.[1] This injury kept him out of the U.S. Triple Crown series and severely limited his racing for nearly two years. He ran only four times in 1961, but had his best year at age five in 1962. Among his major wins, Beau Purple set a new track record at Belmont Park for the 1+1⁄2 miles distance in defeating Kelso in the 1962 Man o' War Stakes,[2] and he twice broke the track record for a mile and a quarter on dirt at Aqueduct Racetrack[3] in winning both the 1962 Suburban Handicap and Brooklyn Handicap. In February 1963, Beau Purple beat Kelso for the third time, making it three of four wins over Kelso in his career, when he won the Widener Handicap at Hialeah Park Race Track in Florida.[4]
Pedigree
editSire Beau Gar |
Count Fleet | Reigh Count | Sunreigh |
---|---|---|---|
Contessina | |||
Quickly | Haste | ||
Stephanie | |||
Bellesoeur | Beau Pere | Son-in-Law | |
Cinna | |||
Donatrice | Donatello | ||
Tivoli | |||
Dam Water Queen |
Johnstown | Jamestown | St. James |
Mille. Dazie | |||
La France | Sir Gallahad III | ||
Flambette | |||
Admiral's Lady | War Admiral | Man o' War | |
Brushup | |||
Boola Brook | Bull Dog | ||
Brookdale |
References
edit- ^ "Beau Purple Scratched from Derby"[permanent dead link ],Milwaukee Sentinel, 5 May 1960,p.47 of 55, Google News.
- ^ "Beau Purple Beats Kelso; Carry Back Runs 5th As 20-1 Shot Hangs Up Record At Belmont; Victor, Under Boland Scores By 6 1/2 Lengths – (race 7: held 27 October 1962)". Baltimore Sun. The Associated Press. 28 October 1962. p. 121. Retrieved 22 April 2021.
- ^ "Beau Purple Sets Track Record in Brooklyn Handicap",Reading Eagle, 22 July 1962, p.31 of 95, Google News.
- ^ "Beau Purple Beats Kelso in Widener",The Pittsburgh Press, 23 February 1963, p.39 of 91,Google News.
- Sources
- Beau Purple's pedigree and partial racing stats, PedigreeQuery.com.