Breeding and Breeding Esfablisbments 329 



Campbell Brown stood in the front rank of 

 Tennessee breeders; and R. H. Plant is the best- 

 known breeder in Georgia. In Wyoming we 

 have A. C. Beckwith, and in Canada J. P. Wiser, 

 Cyrille Laurin, and Simon James. To West 

 Virginia I credit Henry Schmulbach and W. G. 

 Bennett; to Virginia, H. C. Chamblin and Floyd 

 Brothers ; to Texas, Henry Exall and J. W. Bailey ; 

 to North Carolina, L. B. Holt; to Maryland, C. M. 

 Garmendia ; to Maine, C. H. Nelson, J. M. John- 

 son, and B. F. Briggs ; to Connecticut, C. M. Pond, 

 \\\ B. Smith, Rundle & White, Albert C. Hall, 

 Charles H. Maury, and Miss A. A. Marks; to 

 Rhode Island, F. E. Perkins and F. C. Sayles ; 

 and to Vermont, Edwin Bates and Joseph Bat- 

 tell. Miller & Sibley founded a second Palo 

 Alto at Franklin, Pennsylvania, and for years it 

 was the greatest breeding establishment of the 

 state. Other prominent Pennsylvania breeders are 

 Robert Steel, A. H. Moore, H. S. Henry, Powell 

 Brothers, and John P. Crozier. In New Hamp- 

 shire, Frank Jones, during his lifetime, stood in 

 the very front rank. Massachusetts is one of the 

 greatest among trotting-horse breeding states. 

 At Pittsfield we have Allen Farm, upon which 

 W. R. Allen has spent hundreds of thousands of 



