1962-Voice Of The Tennessee Walking Horse 1962 August Voice | Page 4

August, 1962 2 The Diana Stephens Story As Told By Her Mother Cairo, Illinois July 20, 1962 Dear Mr. Green: I am writing quite a bit about Diana—proud mother that I am—and you can use whatever you'd like. I know this material is too much but take what you choose. On Diana’s 6th birthday, July 7th, 1958—instead of having a party she wanted to ride a horse. She had never ridden even a pony before. We rented a 20-year-old broke horse out at a farm, which has some riding horses and ponies. I believe I rented “Maggie” for 8 hours. Diana rode all day—in bright sun at all times and in the ring all alone. To make the story short, she rode “Maggie” 3 or 4 times a week and just loved the old horse. She learned all by herself to canter and was posting some. We finally bought the horse for her. The horse had a nail in her foot. We discovered this about 2 days later and among other developments, the horse died. I doubt if Diana ever forgot her. We bought her a 14.2 (14 hands, 2 inches) pleasure pony in the winter and she rode him as much as she could. By summer (she was still 6 years old), she showed once in a local showy pleasure class, and tied 3rd. We then senL her up to Milan, Mo., to “Annie Lawson Cowgills’ School of Horsemanship.” Diana was deter­ mined to ride horses. We had sense enough to have someone teach her correctly. She was to slay only 2 weeks but she maneuvered 5 weeks out of us. Diana learned fast and was a natural. She spent her 7th birthday up Lhere. We had bought her a beautiful 5-gaited solid white 14.2 pony and she loved her to pieces. Later during the Cele­ bration (1959) we bought “Miss Ster­ ling," a Walking mare, from Mrs. Paul Randolph of Clearwater, Fla. They made a good pair. Under di­ rection, 7-year-old Diana showed her at Kennett, Mo. in an open class and tied 4th. She also owned “Mr. Frosty,” an equitation horse. He was hard to ride but she managed him pretty well. We had our horses stabled over in Mis­ souri 16 miles from Cairo. So all in all, we built a beautiful stable only 2i/o blocks from our home and named it “Diana Stephens Stables.” We had a trainer, etc., and we sent Diana and Ronnie, our son who is 20 years old, back up to Mrs. Cowgills. We could hardly get either of them home. Diana had shown "Miss Sterling” at the Visitation Show' in St. Louis early that spring and again w'on 4th against Leon Hall, Dr. Dalton and Mr. Burrow's, who were in the same class with her. Diana wanted a 5-gaited horse, so with Mrs. Cow'gill behind her and leaching her so well, we bought “Modern Traveler,” the best Juvenile 5-gaited horse I’ve ever seen. She shou'ed both Walking Horse and 5- gaited all around here and won the Juvenile Walking Horse Class at Germantown (Memphis) —and also came back and tied 3rd on her 5- gaited horse. This was last summer at age 8. She w'on the H. H. Lovitt Trophy in open class at Benton, Ivy. on “Mod­ ern Traveler” and also won the Juve­ nile Walking Horse Class on her brother’s horse—“Little Man’s Treas­ ure”—not “Miss Sterling.” The last mentioned horse had been quicked (suffered an injury from a horseshoe nail in her foot). A l the Celebration (1961) she won 4 th in the 5-gaited but only 10th in the Juvenile Walking Class (for rid­ ers 12 years and under). But Diana had to show again her brother’s horse, “Little Man’s Treasure,” and he just wasn’t 1-2-3 as good a horse as “Miss Sterling.” The trainer we had then didn't think “Miss Sterling's" foot wras well enough for her to show. Diana had ridden both horses earlier at the Springfield, 111., show and tied again. We changed trainers and had a barn full of horses—13 here. We had bought a 2-year-old filly that Jimmy Waddell won first riding at the Cele­ bration in the 2-Year-Old Filly Class. She is “Go Boy’s Shadow Rocket.” All brought on because of Diana’s love of horses. Our son, Ronnie, started rid­ ing and my husband also showed some, but again, we had bad luck with his horse as lie was injured in a fall and later sold. (Edgar M. Stephens is fondly known as "Cap” among horse lovers and is regarded as one of the great sportsmen in the horse show world.) Max Parkins