1964-Voice Of The Tennessee Walking Horse 1964 January Voice | Page 13

INC H0RSE JANUARY ing, the stallion had received his first acclaim in the 1930’s; but as seven of the first eight Grand Champions crowned at the Nation­ al Celebration were recognized as the offspring of WILSON’S ALLEN, he began to be called the “Premier Walking Horse Sire” and other titles of supreme praise. It must be admitted that, in addition to a virtual monopoly on Grand Championships in the early days of the Celebration, his descendents dominated the Walking Horse classes in all kinds of shows throughout the 1940’s and that his more recent descendents have con­ tinued to further the great repu­ tation of this very great sire. Since WILSON’S ALLEN is not known as a show horse (indeed, the present writer has seen nothing to indicate that he was ever shown), his importance rests solely upon his record as a sire. Several years ago, a close student of horses wrote: “there must have been a medium of inheritance that gave to this sire power to impart to his get the fast running walk, long stride and a particular gliding gait in the running walk which is be­ lieved to have been inherited directly from ROAN ALLEN F-38. . . . through the blood of WIL­ SON’S ALLEN, there is the happy blending of, Trotter, Pacer, Ameri­ can Saddle Horse and the true blood of the Tennessee Walking Horse. ... In any appraisal of WILSON’S ALLEN, there can be no question regarding his great­ ness as a super sire that trans­ mitted accurately the inherited gait, the fast running walk, for which the breed is named. . . . Tennessee Walking Horse lovers, and especially students of parti­ cular breeding, believe that WIL­ SON’S ALLEN will impart to his offspring the power to reproduce the running walk for generations.” The far-sighted accuracy of these estimates will be more apparent from our look at the most famous son of this famous stallion, who during a long lifetime (foaled, 1917; died August 24, 1939) sired some of the best Walking Horses the world had seen up to that ( Continued on Page 15U WILSON’S ALLEN, from a photograph made in the 1930’s(?) when WIL­ SON’S ALLEN was beginning to receive much attention as a sire. (Photo­ graph by courtesy of Harold Wise) MERRY BOY, from a photograph made about 1941, when MERRY BOY was approximately 16 years of age. (Photograph by courtesy of Margaret Lindsley Warden)