Bred by 

 Mr. John Osborne. 



AND TIMES OF JOHN OSBORNE 43 



PRODUCE OF AGNES. 



Bred by Mr. Minor in 1844, got by Clarion, her dam, Annette, by Priam, out 



of I'otentato's dam, by Don John, 



1849 — br f Lady Agnes, by Irish Birdcatcher. 

 1850 — br f Miss Agnes, by Irish Birdcatcher. 

 *1851 — br f S^veet Agnes, by Sweetmeat. 

 1852 — gr c Lord Alfred, by Chanticleer. 

 1853 — b c Alfred, by Birdcatcher. 

 1854 — b f Lady Albert, by Chanticleer. 

 1855 — br f Lady Alice, by Chanticleer. 

 1859 — b c Lord Albert, by Fandango. 

 1860 — br c Lord Arthur, by Fandango. 

 1861 — b c Lord Adolphxis, by The Cure. 

 1862 — br c King Alfred, by Voltigeur. 



1863— b c ' by "Weatherbit. (Shot.) 



1864 — br c Alexander, by Musjid. 

 1865 by Colsterdale. 



Some account here of Amies's descendants mav not 

 be out of place. 



Polly Agnes, bred by Sir Tatton Sykes in 1865, 

 was by The Cure, her dam being Miss Agnes by Bird- 

 catcher out of Agnes by Clarion. Her first foal in 1869 

 was Rural Dean by Cathedral, and in 1871 she bore 

 Lily Agnes (dam of Ormonde) by Macaroni. Mr. John 

 Snarry bred these two, and afterwards Polly Agnes 

 became the proj^erty of Mr. James Snarry, in whose 

 ownei-ship she bore Fleur de Lis, Tiger Lily, and Jessie 

 Agnes. Barren in 1870, 1872, and 1873, she sHpped 

 a foal in 1877. The following year she had a filly by 

 Macaroni. Her next foal, a chestnut filly, by Macaroni, 

 died young, and after producing Bay Agnes in 1880, 

 Polly Agnes died in 1881 after foaling Orphan Agnes, 

 by Speculum. Old John Osborne, who held a deep- 



* Sweet Agnes produced in 1859 b c by The Cure, and was sold to the 

 King of Sardinia in June, 18G0, covered by General Williams, having had no 

 other living produce in England. Sweet Agnes (in Mr. J. Osborne's stud) 

 had a dead foal by Voltigeur in 1856, and was covered by Stockwell. Agnes 

 was barren in 1865, and died in the spring of 1866. 



