1962-Voice Of The Tennessee Walking Horse 1962 August Voice | Page 7

Voice of the Tennessee Walking Horse (Continued from Page 4) Boy is purebred and registered. It is predicted he will become one of the great pony studs of history—with extraordinary bloodlines in the mod­ ern horse generations. This pony has been trained all year by Doug Wolaver of Giles County— who rode Mack K’s Handshaker to the 1960 World’s Championship. Jimmy “broke” the pony at the 5,000- acre Ellis plantation near Selma, Ala., where Jimmy trains six of the plan­ tation’s 30 head of Walking Horses. He and his father decided Sun’s Glory Boy needed professional train­ ing as the pony showed such great promise. Jimmy is one of Alabama’s great high school athletes, starring as a foot­ ball quarterback (weighing 185 pounds), basketball center (scored 700 points last season) and pitches baseball (had a 10-2 record for last spring.) In Celebration competition his rib­ bons include reserve champion on Merry Little Lady at age 14, first place in a preliminary, and another reserve championship. In 1955 he won the Tennessee State Fair champion­ ship for pony riders at age 10. This year at the Celebration he will also compete in the 2-year-old stallion class with Hobo Boy, sired by the plantation stallion, Go Boy's Cadillac, out of Easter Morn. Last year he won the Alabama junior championship on “The Governor,” a gelding. Jimmy is an expert mechanic, keeps all the plantation motorized equip­ ment in running shape and is a mem­ ber of the Orrville High School’s Beta Club. He plans to study agriculture in college—then return to the plan­ tation to help his father run the big show there. Cattle, cotton, other field crops, horses and humans make up the big farming team where Jimmy will be in competition with Nature for the rest of his life. His father is one of the modern pioneers in Tennessee Walking Horse history, attended the first meeting of the Breeders’ Assn, at Lewisburg in 1935, and served as a judge at the 1951 Celebration when Talk of the Town began his unparalleled 3-year reign as World’s Grand Champion. Jimmy McFarlin Graduated From Shetlands To Walkers Murfreesboro’s J i m m y McFarlin, who cut his “riding teeth” on Shet­ land ponies, will have one of the Cele­ bration pony favorites of 1962 well 5 in hand when he enters the ring at Shelbyville. He has shown Scat Man, his 6-year- old pony, in a host of Tennessee com­ petition this season with consistent results. Jimmy has taken eight blue ribbons during the current season on Scat Man. These included the highly im­ portant Spring Jubilee at Columbia, Clarksville, Nashville Junior Riding Club, Lafayette, Woodbine in the Nashville area, Chapel Hill, Erin and Jamestown. Last season the McFarlin Stables acquired Scat Man immediately after the Celebration—buying him from Bill Adams of Edgerton, Ky. Jimmy rode Scat Man in the Walking Pony Championship Stake for Adams and placed sixth. He took ninth in the preliminary event. Scat Man is now six years old and in the prime, according to show- watchers in Tennessee. After the Celebration last year Jimmy won fourth in the Southern Championship show at Montgomery and first at McMinnville. Jimmy is a senior at Murfreesboro Senior High School this year, active in the FFA, and plans to study agri­ culture in college. His father, E. P. McFarlin, operates Puritan Feed Mill at Murfreesboro, and distributes livestock and poultry feed over a wide area in Middle Ten­ nesse e. He has been in the milling business for 32 years. Last year he built new facilities for McFarlin Stables on Highway 41— near the city limits of Murfreesboro. The 20-stall barn is 168 feet long and 44 feet wide. McFarlin was born on a farm 10 miles east of Murfreesboro, and the farm had Tennessee Walking Horses on it. Mrs. McFarlin, the former Lorene Mason, was born about 20 miles southeast of Murfreesboro at Noah— formerly known as Need Mo (when the community needed more fami­ lies—but it was changed to Noah when the community had enough, the story goes.) The Masons were neighbors to the James R. Brantley family—and she witnessed great pioneering of the Tennessee Walking Horse at the Brantley establishment—where major contributions to the breed took place. Therefore Jimmy McFarlin, age 16, carries a heritage of the Walkers on both sides of his family when he enters the Celebration ring in late August. 'Queen' Jan Wright Clucks, Talks Her Horses To Throne When blonde, blue-eyed, Texas- born Jan Wright, age 10, of Lone Star Stables, clucks and talks to Walkaway Dark Shadow, the 5-year-old mare gives out and goes on with something extra. This consistent team makes 84- pound Jan a heavy favorite for top honors in her age juvenile class at the 1962 Celebration in Shelbyville. The Nacogdoches nympth also goes on with other horses, such as Walk­ away Honeytime and Jet’s Untouch­ able, the last-mentioned owned by O. D. (Peck) Carlton of Albany, Ga. Those tlrree horses carried Jan to the throne as “Little Queen of the Southwest Circuit” with the follow­ ing triumphs this season: New Orleans, La.—First in Equi­ tation Class, Reserve Championship in Equitation, First in Juvenile Walk­ ing Stake; Beaumont, Tex.—Reserve in Juve­ nile Walking Stake; Little Rock, Ark.—First in Equi­ tation Class, First in Equitation Championship, Third in Juvenile Walking Stake; Oklahoma City, Okla.—First in Juvenile Equitation Stake; First in Juvenile Walking Stake; Tulsa, Okla.—First in Juvenile Walking Stake; Houston, Tex.—F i r s t in Juvenile Walking Stake. This stretch of victories, unparal­ leled in all history of the Southwest shows, was not made by a professional person. They were piled up by a live­ ly little girl who made “straight A’s” in her fifth grade school work for the last month of the term—and who took a 6-week vacation at camp after rid­ ing the circuit. It was Jan’s first long stay away from home, but she loved the camp and Lhe camp loved her. She was one of 12 campers, out of 237, to win mem­ bership in all seven of the “camp clubs”—from which she chose four. On a vacation visit to Tennessee and Georgia, Jan found no juvenile or lady riders classes where she was eligible with her mare, so she entered open mare classes at Ardmore, Fayette­ ville and Pulaski in Tennessee and at Canersville, Ga. Her wins were sec­ ond, third and two firsts respectively. In the process there were 30 men riders placed behind her—a competi­ tive riding exhibition believed un­ precedented in Tennessee Walking Horse circles for a 10-year-old girl. (Continued on Page 12)