Seward's Arabians
By Ben Hur
(Western Horseman Sept/Oct '45)
Maanake Hedroge
ABRAHAM LINCOLN, as
a youth, may have been too poor to own a horse. Historians
invariably picture him as walking long distances through
southern Indiana and central Illinois. Lincoln has been sculptured
more often possibly than any other American, but never astride
a horse as so many of the other immortals. Do you recall
a single statue of Lincoln where he is astride or beside
a horse?
Lincoln,
as president of the United States, aided, although indirectly,
in the importation of purebred Arabian horses. He selected
as a member of his cabinet a very able and well known New
York lawyer, William H. Seward, whom he sent shortly after
to Syria to adjust some difficulties between the two countries.
The matter was finally settled amicably, and os satisfactorily
adjusted that the Syrian government, to show its appreciation
of Mr. Seward's diplomacy, asked him to express some wish.
Mr. Seward, always interested in the agricultural needs of
his country, especially his own New York state, replied that
if the Syrian government would help him procure some pureblooded
Arabian horses to send home, they could not only confer upon
him a personal favor, but would benefit the United States
immeasurably.
Ayoub
Bey Trabulsky, assistant of the Criminal Court of the Ayalet
of Sayda was delegated to act on behalf of the Syrian government.
He selected a blood-bay stallion, eight years old, of the
Maneghi strain or family, and a chestnut colt, two years
old, of the Seglawi-Jedran strain; also a grey mare, which
unfortunately died Siklauy-Gidran on
the way. Shipped from
Beryout, the two stallions arrived in New York in 1860, expenses
of their journey amounting to ten thousand dollars.
|
| Mr.
Seward offered them as a gift to the New York State Agricultural
Society, if the society would pay the expenses of their importation.
It was a poor return for Mr. Seward's generosity -- even when
excused by the great excitement attendant upon the breaking
out of civil war -- that the society refused to comply with
his proposal. In this emergency, Mr. Seward presented the two-year-old
colt to Mr. Ezra Cornell of Ithaca, New York and the older
stallion to the Hon. John E. Van Etten, of Kingston, New York.
Standing 15 hands high the latter was noted for depth of chest
and shoulders and "withers as strong as that of a bull," quoting
from a description shortly after his arrival in this country.
He was known to be the sire of only two foals. One was a grey
filly, bred by Judge Westbrook of Kingston, and the other a
colt, bred by a nephew of Judge Sackett of Auburn, New York.
The
younger stallion stood 15 hands high when two years 10 months
old. He was described as "a noble specimen of the Arabian
horse. Beautiful as a statue, fiery as the sun that tints
his native sands, he awakens in the mind of the beholder
a sense of admiration and wonder; while a glance at his graceful
head and neck is sufficient to confirm all that we have heard
or read of the superior beauty of the Arabian horse." He
was shown as a three-year-old at the state fair held at Rochester,
and won a special gold medal for being the handsomest horse
on the grounds. Subsequently he was sold to a breeder at
Canton, Ohio, where he died, leaving only two fillies. The
chestnut stallion died from neglect. The war was causing
such absorption of all men's thoughts that all else seemed
of little importance.
At
that time many of our best and most noted trotters were always
spoken of with pride as coming from Arabian ancestry. No
doubt the blood of the two half-blood Arabian fillies bred
from the chestnut stallion and the grey filly and horse colt
sired by the bay stallion flows in the veins of many well
known American harness and saddle horses today.
|
| Justin
Morgan was undoubtedly an Anglo-Arabian. The dam of Dolly Spanker
was an inbred Morgan mare. Sherman Morgan and Buckshot were
doubly inbred to Morgan. Gano was by American Eclipse, also
of Arabian strain. Thus it was that the Arabian blood was spread
throughout the United States from many different sources before
the civil war. Arabian blood was not only known and most highly
valued by intelligent breeders, but was considered absolutely
essential to the making of a perfect horse. It should be noted
that the early importations were invariably stallions, and
the pure blood of the Arabian was in each instance lost upon
the death of the imported stallions. Had the grey mare lived
which Mr. Seward attempted to import she, rather than Naomi,
might have had the distinction of being the first Arabian mare
in this country as progenitor of pureblood Arabians bred in
the United States.
The
portraits of the Seward Arabians were drawings made by the
well known artist of his day, mr. T.C.Carpendale, and are
pen sketches highly embellished in Oriental fashion as if
the horses were being shown upon a stage and the curtain
drawn to one side. The drawings were then engraved in wood,
which also required the services of a skilled artist, as
those wood blocks were used by Harper's Weekly in full page
illustrations in their issue of January 12, 1861, before
photography made it possible to record more lifelike pictures
and reproduce them by the modern halftone method. Artist
Carpendale may have been a noted artist of his day, but his
drawings fell short of his word descriptions of these two
horses quoted above, for his drawings are rather stilted
and fail to portray the beauty he saw in the horses before
him. Worthy of interest is the euphonious spelling of the
strain or family names of the horses appearing below the
pictures. The young stallion is a "Siklauy-Gidran," more
properly and correctly spelled today Seglawi-Jedran, while
the older stallion is called a "Maanake-Hedroge," which to
the modern student of Arabic is known as a Maneghi-Hedruj.
|
|