1963-Voice Of The Tennessee Walking Horse 1963 May Voice | Page 5
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Voice of the Tennessee Walking Horse
Mew TWH Stables To Place Breed On Scenic Parade
(Editor’s Note—An event of spe
cial importance to all Tennessee
Walking Horse people is taking place
very near to Chickamauga National
Park — second only to Gettysburg
National Park in the annual head
count of visitors to National Military
Parks in the U.S.A. Here's a story
about it. BAG.)
l-'oaled in a blanket of history that
may well make it one of the scenic
attractions of the United States—the
Battleground Stables of Ft. Ogle
thorpe, Ga. is being brought to life by
Chattanooga, Tenn. people. The ma
jor beneficiary is expected to become
the Tennessee Walking Horse indus
try.
Within another 30 days this 24-stall
barn in the virtual center of a $125,000
site should echo with the whinnies and
neighs of Walking Horses under the
training of 27-year-old Billy Brantley—
a grand-nephew of the late great James
R. Brantley, founder of the lowering
Allen Family in Tennessee Walking
history.
Dream Of Trio Comes True
It’s a dream come true for horse-
loving L. O. (Sheriff) Ledford, a lead
ing Tennessee industrialist who
helped pioneer the way for “industrial
and residential heating by radiant
Ceilheat electric cable;’’ his blown-
haired, attractive daughter, Gloria,
who has one of the most exciting
“ways of riding" in the “Ladies to
Ride” category of Walking Horse
showing; and Gloria’s husband, Bruce
Spencer, a 30-year-old Chattanooga
graduate of the University of Georgia
—who carries on his own advertising
agency business.
This triumvirate of proprietors—all
Walking Horse lovers—is building for
the future on hallowed ground.
This site in within a Civil War can
non ball shot of the area where the
Battle of Chickamauga was fought in
1864—to become one of the bloodiest
engagements in all warfare. The site
itself occupies ground once a part of
Fort Oglethorpe, a former U.S. Army
post where cavalry were trained as late
as World War II—before federal own
ership of the area was largely discon
tinued. The exact location was used
for barracks in which German prison
ers of war were housed.
The barn itself measures 192 feet
long and 44 feet wide with a 20-foot
riding hall from end to end.
Various innovations are incorpor
ated in the barn to provide gravity
flow of feed, both hay and grain;
Battleground Stables at Ft. Ogle
thorpe, Ga., was just a dream in this
picture—but today it is rapidly near
ing reality. Standing are President
Fred Friend of the Tennessee Valley
Walking Horse Assn, and Mrs. Gloria
Spencer, secretary; below are Bruce
Spencer and Trainer Billy Brantley.
water connections in all stalls; the
usual electric walker tor horse-cooling;
an upstairs balcony for spectators,
warmed by electric heating facilities
promoted by “the Sheriff” — who
earned the nickname early in life for
no reason at all.
City Water, Sewage Available
All modern conveniences, including
city (of Ft. Oglethorpe) water, a city
sewer system, and other facilities are
available to the structure. The site
dedicated to Walking Horse develop
ments covers approximately 12 acres
with more available il needed. The
facility will eventually front on
Georgia State Highway 21 near U.S.
Expressway 72 that is designed to be
one of the major North-South traffic
arteries of the nation.
This highway development will pro
ject Battleground Stables into the
tourist eyesight of the nation; and the
millions who motor to and from can
not escape the sight of Tennessee
Walking Horses in their natural way
of living.
The 12-acre project will include a
lighted practice track 225 feet long,
and some 120 feet wide; with seats for
spectators who will have the sun on
their backs in the afternoon—not in
their eyes.
Youngsters will have a well-
equipped, tree-shaded playground to
romp in, while the older folks are rid
ing or watching horses. Weekly prac
tice events are contemplated as the
project develops. Plans specify no Sun
day operations of any kind, except
feeding and watering horses.
Not far from the Battleground Sta
bles is the Chickamauga National Park
monument erected to the memory of
Union General John Thomas Wilder
—who with Iris Indiana cavalry staged
one of the truly historic moments in
the historical life of the Tennessee
Walking Horse. General Wilder and
his band raided Maury County in 1864
and stole McMeen’s Traveler from the
farm of Mrs. W . J. Webster, daughter
of a one-time sheriff at Columbia,
Tenn.
Mrs. Webster chased the raiders 30
miles on horseback, and found Travel
er dead on the roadside at the county
line. Exposure during this valiant trip
apparently caused her to become fatal
ly ill of pneumonia. Traveler was the
greatest Tennessee Walking Horse
sire of his day, and his untimely death
at age 15 years changed the course of
breed history from Maury County—
with major factors of the breed later
developing in Bedford County
(Shelbyville) and Coffee County
(Manchester).
(Continued on page 4)