146 HORSE-RACING IN ENGLAND 



neys', Lord Chesterfield's, George IV.'s, and 

 William IV.'s) Zinganee (son of Tramp), third 

 to Cadland and The Colonel in the dead heat 

 year 1828 for the Derby, and winner of the most 

 lordly Ascot Cup ever run for up to that date 

 (1829), and perhaps since then. For the 'field' 

 contained two winners of the Derby (Mameluke 

 and Cadland), a winner of the St. Leger (The 

 Colonel), a horse (Lamplighter) that was to be 

 sire of a Derby-winner (Phosphorus) and of two 

 winners of the One Thousand (Mayday in 1834 

 and Firebrand in 1842), a winner of the Oaks 

 (Green Mantle), and two others of less renown. 

 And yet one of these two — namely, Mr. Molony's 

 (Lord Sefton's) Bobadilla (winner, however, of 

 the Ascot Cup, and of the Drawing-room Stakes 

 at Goodwood, the year before, 1828) — is prob- 

 ably the most interesting of the whole bunch. 

 For she became (by her co-competitor Mameluke) 

 the dam of a filly that was foaled in 1834, was 

 imported by the Americans at the period of which 

 we are now treating (in 1836), and (called Myrtle) 

 was the dam (by Glencoe) of Magnolia, dam of 

 Madeline (by Boston), dam of Maggie B. B. (by 

 Imported Australian), dam of IROQUOIS. 



