6o The American Thoroughbred 



the most distinguished of his stock, it will at 

 once be seen that from his old stock were de- 

 scended some of the best horses of their day : — 



Lottery by imported Bedford out of imported 

 Anvilina, a very noted racer and capital brood 

 mare. She produced young Lottery by Sir 

 Archy, Kosciusko, Saxe Weimar, Mary Single- 

 ton, Phenomenon — all by Sir Archy, and 

 Sylph by Hephestion, who was the dam of 

 Redgauntlet, a fine race-horse by Sir Archy. 



Pandora, another of his distinguished brood 

 mares, was the dam of Little John by Potomac, 

 Ganymede by Hephestion, etc. 



Imported Psyche was another of his brood 

 mares; she was the dam of Mark Time by 

 Gallatin, Lambelle by Kosciusko, etc. 



Colonel Singleton imported, in 1834, in the 

 ship Dalhousie Castle, from Liverpool, bound 

 direct to Charleston, a bay horse Non Plus, 

 by Cotton out of Miss Garforth by Walton. 

 He kept him for a while, and tried him as a 

 stallion ; but, not equalling his expectations in 

 the stud, he offered him for sale at the Columbia 

 Races in January, 1836. Colonel Butler, who 

 was killed at the head of the South Carolina 

 regiment, gallantly leading it on to victory in 



