1965-Voice Of The Tennessee Walking Horse 1965 July Voice | Page 4

THE CROWDER FAMILY - ANITA, TOMMY (16 months old), and CHARLES Crowder. GREENBACK MONEYTREE - DUDE CROWDER up. Just one of the many fine Walking Horses trained and shown by this young trainer. GENERAL INTEREST IN HORSES LEADS TO PROFESSIONAL CAREER FOR "DUDE”CROWDER In our continued effort to bring the reader an inside view of the professional trainers in our growing Walking Horse industry, we travel throughout the country talk­ ing with veteran trainers as well as the new young trainers. The stories that these young men tell are not as varied in terms of years or perhaps as interest­ ing as those of the older trainers, for their years in the saddle are shorter. However, if you look in the show rings of today you will see more and more of these young men riding through the gate. We have wondered what is drawing these men from other professions into the Walking Horse business, so we found such a man, CHARLES CROWDER, JR., better known as DUDE, and asked him. DUDE was bom in Harriraan, Tennessee in 1942, but spent most of his younger years in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. When he first became interested in horses he became a member of the East Tennessee Riding Club and, at eleven years of age, he began showing a black road pony. Soon his interest changed to Walk­ ing Horses and he and his father traded this pony for a yearling bay colt, Merry Boy’s Potentate. DUDE showed this colt from the time it was a two-year-old until, at the age of five, it was bought by JOHN VIV­ IAN and ROBERT POST in Dallas, Pennsylvania. This young trainer’s first actual job with horses was with the Riding Club, working after school. Soon after graduating from high school in Oak Ridge, DUDE be­ gan working with WINK GROOVER in Etowah, Ten­ nessee. Although DUDE only stayed at Wink’s stable for one year, he tells us that Wink has been a friend through the years, helping him in many ways. Another helping hand has come from SAM PASCHAL, a veteran trainer who has assisted many young men get a good start in the right direction. f Continued on page 32) 4 ONE OF THE BEST - Trainer DUDE CROWDER and Mr. J. B. SAPP line up with one of their several outstanding two-year- olds. PROFESSIONALS ^ on /■ By Gloria L. Spencer VOICE of the Tennessee Walking Horse