616 THE AMERICAN TROTTING HORSE. 



been so long acknowledged in tlie breeding of thorough-breds 

 for ninning races. But when trotting became more popular as 

 a public amusement, when the value of good trotting horses 

 for road driving became more fully appreciated, and when the 

 increased demand ran the prices of even good roadsters into the 

 thousands, enlightened breeders began to apply to the breeding 

 of trotters the laws of hereditary descent, that had been discovered 

 in the breeding of other animals, and with the usual result. 



Now there are numerous large breeding establishments in Ken- 

 tucky, New York, Iowa, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, 

 Michigan, and perhaps some other states, in which especial atten- 

 tion is given to breeding trotters. Beside these breeding studs, 

 where much care and judgment are used in the matter, there are 

 thousands of farmers and others who, in breeding horses, always 

 have in their minds the possibility of drawing a capital prize in 

 the shape of a fiist trotter, but who have never had an opportunity 

 to be well informed in regard to the best method of accomplishing 

 that desirable result. 



These farmers and others who only rear one or two colts a year, 

 each, are in the aggregate the great horse breeders of the country; 

 and it is to them chiefly that the facts and arguments of this 

 essay are addressed. 



A very slight examination of the pedigrees of distinguished 

 trotters will show their relationship to each other in so many cases, 

 that no one can doubt the derivation of their trotting speed from 

 a common ancestry. A few tabulated pedigrees are given at the end 

 of this essay, to facilitate the examination of them, and to more fully 

 impress on the minds of breeders the importance of breeding their 

 mares to stallions of good families, if they would reasonably expect 

 success. A horse may trot fast enough to make a public reputation, 

 and never beget fast colts, because he docs not himself inherit the 

 quality strongly from his anc<:stors ; for it may be that the quality 

 comes down to him through a single line of descent, and perhaps 

 that has been broken by one or niore generations that showed no 

 speed. In such a case, the horse would be said to have " bred 

 back" to a speedy ancestor, and though he might beget last colts 

 with fast mares, the probabilities of their being fast from common 

 mares would be very small. John Henry, a chestnut stallion, bred 

 in Salem county, New Jersey, trotted well, and begot many colts; 

 but the best of them all, l>(;b Johnson, was nothing remarkable. 

 John Henry had not the trotting quality by a long and continuous 

 line of hereditary descent, and hence the disappointment of breed- 

 ers, who depended on his speed alone to give the trotting to his 

 colts. Similar cases are quite common. 



If a mare that cannot trot better than four minutes was by a 



