1967-Voice Of The Tennessee Walking Horse 1967 July Voice RS | Seite 7

Muriel Lee and her husband Cebern have been active in the Walking Horse business for five years. They saw their first Tennessee Walking Horse in the spring of 1963 and have since followed a course that has led them into the big-time of national Walking Horse activity. Their trainer, Mr. David Welsh, has been with them since the winter of 1963 and has guided their activities very carefully. In 1964, when they were just beginning to get established and purchase some show stock and some brood mares, Mrs. Lee happened to see a horse named SOCIETY SOUVENIR, which was being shown throughout the northeast by trainer Bill Sloat for Mr. Clayton Palmer of Great Barrington, Massachusetts. One look was all she needed. Her immediate comment was “that is my kind of horse.” It all started at the Professional Horsemens Associa­ tion show in Syracuse, N. Y., in 1965 where she saw him for the first time. Over a period of two years Muriel rode in many shows and observed many different horses but she never forgot SOCIETY SOUVENIR. Prelimi­ nary investigation found that he was “not for sale.” They always received the common answer “where would I find one to beat him?” Circumstances changed, however, and eventually, some two years later, Cebern Lee was able to purchase the horse. Mr. Lee tells the story, saying, “We were at a horse show and Muriel had just won the Ama­ teur Championship on STORM WARNING. Everyone was sitting around in the stable at the showgrounds talk­ ing and they all looked up to see Bill Sloat leading SOCIETY SOUVENIR down the hall. He walked right up to Mrs. Lee and handed her the reins. Surprised is not the word to describe her expression.” He was a stallion at the time but was gelded shortly thereafter to become a Ladies Amateur Horse. JULY, 1967 In 1965 SOUVENIR won twenty-two blues out of twenty-five shows. Since then Mrs. Lee has shown him to many top ribbons. Her victories included winning the Amateur Class and Championship at Columbus, Ohio, her first time out. She won a total of eighteen blues in twenty shows in 1966. Her most impressive accomplish­ ment, however, was winning the Reserve “Horse of the Year” award of the American Horse Show Association. SOUVENIR was also acclaimed the high point amateur horse of this same organization in 1966. Muriel Lee and SOCIETY SOUVENIR have worked together only three times in 1967, but they will probably make several shows before the Celebration in their prepa­ ration for Ladies Amateur competition at the national classic. Other activity at Leeswood Stables includes a full- scale breeding program as well as showing. GO BOY’S REBEL O, the 1966 “Horse of the Year” of the American Horse Show Association, is the featured breeding horse. The program has been curtailed recently while trainer David Welsh gets the big sorrel stallion ready for Cele­ bration competition. In addition to SOUVENIR and REBEL, Leeswood Stables will have several other fine horses in hot competition for Celebration honors. A total of fifty-six horses grace the 110-acres com­ prising Leeswood Stables located just outside the small New England community of Oaks Corners, New York. They have had an excellent year for young colts. Several more are on the way and should do much to enhance the position of Leeswood Stables in the Walking Horse business. BELOW—Mr. and Mrs. Cebern Lee are pictured with two of their horses as they stand near the front of their Lees­ wood Stables. 1