RACEALONG 183 



the Great. In the early seventies while in Tennessee, 

 S. A. Brown purchased Lady Duncan. She had been 

 brought from Guthrie, Ky., to Nashville and trotted 

 a trial in 2:33. Brown shipped Lady Duncan to 

 Michigan and after three or four starts found that 

 she was too high keyed for the track so he bred her 

 to Grand Sentinel. The produce of this mare, whose 

 name was changed to Shadow, was a filly. She 

 was named Santos and consigned to one of Fasig's 

 sales at Cleveland, Ohio. She was purchased by 

 J. L Case of Racine, Wis. He sold her through an- 

 other sale to H. D. McKinney, Jamesville, Wis., and 

 he in turn traded her back to S. A. Brown. After 

 mating Santos with Ambassador, Brown sold her to 

 D. D. Streeter and in 1925 she produced Peter the 

 Great. 



The Iowa inheritance of Hollyrood Bob goes back 

 to the genesis of the trotting turf as Topsy, the 

 first link, was got by Green's Bashaw, a horse whose 

 dam was a half sister of Hambletonian. She in turn 

 produced Misty by the thoroughbred horse Jones- 

 boro, a son of Lexington. From Misty the line of 

 inheritance runs through Sally by Tramp, a son 

 of Gage's Logan. Sally was mated with Attorney 

 and produced Adinda as well as the trotter Mabel 

 A. that made a record of 2:23l^ at the Cleveland 

 Grand Circuit meeting in 1886. As Atlanta, an- 

 other daughter of Attorney, produced Alix, 2:03%, 

 a Wisconsin breeder purchased Adinda and mated 

 her with Redwald, a son of Lord Russell, brother 

 to Maud S., 2:08%. He expected to get a trotter 



