280 Making the American Thoroughbred 



White's Creek; $8; $10. Advertisement of sweepstakes in same 

 issue of this paper. 



PANTALOON, by imp Pantaloon, dam Capt. Ewing's noted 

 running mare, Kitty. Stood 1811 at Anthony Hogin's, Martin's 

 Creek, Jackson County; $10; $20. Imp Pantaloon was by Herod, 

 dam by Matchem, and was owned by Benjamin Harrison, signer 

 of the Declaration of Independence, at his famous estate, Brandon, 

 Virginia or by a son of the same name. 



PHENOMENON, by imp Diomed, dam by imp Master Stevens; 

 by Flimnap; he by imp Fearnought. Bred by Jourdan Reese, 

 Dinwiddie County, Virginia. Season 1810 at Thomas Fowlkes', 

 "on head waters of Dry Creek, two miles from Haysboro"; $4 

 per leap. 



PRESIDENT, by Goliah, dam by Dandridge's ; by imp 

 Janus; by imp Traveller. Goliah by Tippoo Saib, dam by 

 Blackburn's Why Not, son of imp Fearnought; by imp Forester. 

 Advertised by Simeon Buford, Season 1809. Advertised by James 

 Hicks to stand in Franklin in 1810. 



Buford, in advertising President in the Nashville paper, did not 

 give his pedigree. As stated in the Carthage paper, and here shown, 

 it is different from the pedigree given on page 52 of this volume 

 from information obtained elsewhere. 



WASHINGTON, by Comet, dam Pealon, by imp Black-and- 

 all-BIack. Season 1809 at John and James Cochran's, mouth of 

 Caney Fork River; $3 to $12. 



YOUNG CELAH, by old Celah, dam a full blooded Eclipse 

 mare (which Eclipse is not stated). Season 1809 at James Ware's, 

 Goose Creek. Services: Single leap 3 barrels of corn; season, 10 

 barrels; to insure, 20 barrels. 



YOUNG CYRON, by imp Cyron, dam William Stevenson's 

 Arabian mare, Romping Nell. Imp Cyron by Florizel, sire of imp 

 Diomed. Season 1810 at Morgan Williams', Carthage, and Solo- 

 man Blear's, Peyton's Creek. Services $4 to $16. 



YOUNG DIOMED (pedigree previously given) was adver- 

 tised in 1810 by John Elliott, of Brunswick County, Virginia, to 

 stand that season at Holland's Ferry, 6 miles east of Columbia, 

 Tenn.; $4 per leap; $15 to insure. 



The pedigrees of Alborak, Collector and Young Diomed are the 

 only ones above given that can be verified from stud books. Stud 

 book compilers did not realize the extent of Massachusetts enter- 

 prise. 



