1964-Voice Of The Tennessee Walking Horse 1964 July Voice | Page 20

AIRLINE PILOT VARIES FROM HORSEPOWER TO HORSES Walking Horses Provide Hobby And Family Fun For Boyd Beveridge When on the job as co-pilot of a multi-million dollar Eastern Air Lines Electro prop-jet Airliner, Boyd R. Beveridge concentrates on handling the thousands of horse­ power at his disposal and pays strict attention to the job at hand. But when he touches down and has completed another of the sche­ duled runs along the Eastern Sea­ board from New York to Florida. Boyd hops in a little pick-up truck and heads for home. Home is in Shelbyville, Tennessee and is a beautiful fifty acre farm complete with big white colonial house and naturally, Tennessee Walking Horses. The type of flying that Boyd Beveridge does for a living is strenuous and requires maximum physical and mental capabilities. His trips carry him all over the eastern part of the country. On a weekly, round trip schedule, Boyd will spend several nights in motels and hotels in Washington, Pitts­ burg, New York and other cities in the area. Here is a man that has a zest for living and is a credit to the Walking Horse business. Before moving to Shelbyville, the Beveridge family was living in Atlanta where he had worked for Eastern Air Lines for some eight or nine years. He had spent time in the air with Uncle Sam 20 ANOTIIEIt WIN . . . Boyd Beveridge is seen receiving one of many ribbons won in several years of coni pel it ion. and Southern Airlines before join­ ing Eastern. Boyd’s love for horses was so great that he purchased a farm outside Atlanta, which he still owns, and as his interest in Walk­ ing Horses grew he decided that they should be a little closer to the center of activities so they moved to “Walking Horse Country” for good. The Flying “B” Farm, located just south of Shelbyville on the Lynchburg Pike is a perfect set­ ting for his horse activities. Here he has 10 brood mares and several top colts and what time he doesn’t spend with his own stock is spent in the stables and on the farms of Bedford County. It is said that Bovd Beveridge knows as much about the top Walking Horses in the Middle Tennessee area as any­ one. Boyd has horses in training at the Green and Hugh Stables in Shelbyville and when his schedule will permit he shows as an ama­ teur. He is an excellent exhibitor and a top competitor. Around the stables it is hard to conceive that the fellow in the Levis and the T shirt, gently whittling away on a cedar stick and talking horses like a professional, is also an airline pilot. Mr. and Mrs. Boyd R. Beveridge and their children live the same type of rural family life as many Boyd Beveridge of Shelbyville, Ten­ nessee. Walking Horse enthusiast and airline pilot. other people in and around Middle Tennessee, but when the phone rings and he is again on schedule to fly, Boyd hops in his little pick­ up truck and heads for Nashville where he once again assumes his duties as co-pilot, jockeying horse­ power instead of horses. Our thanks to Mr. L. C. Fritzsche of Shelbyville for telling us about our PROFILES subject for this month. If you know people in the Walking Horse business whose story would be of interest to our readers please let us know and we will be glad to “Profile" them in the VOICE. VOICE of The Tennessee Walking Horse