DESCENDANTS OF SHERMAN MORGAN 34 8-j 



Y. ; got by Seely's American Star : dam gray, said to be by Orange Childers, 

 son of Flying Childers. 



AMERICAN STAR JR 



Foaled 1860; bred by Edmund Seely, Orange county, N. Y. ; got by 

 Seely's American Star : dam said to be by Osceola, son of Wildair. Owned, 

 1870, by Charles Heinyel, Westchester county, N. Y. 



STARLIGHT 



Chestnut; foaled 1861 ; bred by Phillip Rockefellow, Montgomery, 

 N. Y. ; get by Seely's American Star : dam said to be by Beak's Wildair, 

 son of Decator. Owned by H. P. Wade, Jefferson, O. 



STAR (LE FEVRE'S) 



Bred by Luther Lefevre, Ulster county, N. Y. ; got by Seely's American 

 Star. 



Sire of dam of Frank Wood 2 .-24. 

 Second dam of Argentine 2 :2i%. 



STAR (COLEMAN'S) 



Chestnut; foaled 1860; bred in Orange county, N. Y. ; said to be by 

 Seely's American Star : dam by Hector, son of Bellfounder. Owned by Ira 

 H. Coleman, Seneca county, N. Y. 

 Sire of dam of Schuyler 2 -.26. 



STAR (CARPENTER'S) 

 Said to be by Seely's American Star. 



Sire of dam of Star 2 125%. 



STAR (GOLDSMITH'S) 



Said to be by Seely's American Star. 

 Sire of dam of Clarence 2 130. 



We will add here another Orange Co., N. Y., horse that was unquestion- 

 ably a Morgan, and very probably the horse Morgan Post Boy, advertised, 

 1836, with Cock of the Rock, and spoken of in interview with Mr. Wier. 



TOM THUMB 



Bay or dark brown, 14^ hands, about 900 pounds. Owned about 1840 

 and for several years by Wm. Webber, Orange county, N. Y., but previously 

 by a butcher in New York city who had him of Lyle Weeks, also a butcher 

 in Fulton Market. 



A very handsome and perfect small horse and a very fast trotter for his 

 day. Got very good stock. 



W. C. Tremble, the well known horseman of Newburgh, N. Y., said : 



" Tom Thumb was a chestnut pony, blocky, stout-built, handsome, very 

 handsome, a perfect beauty ; a perfect little horse. He was a trotter, one 

 of the fastest in the county. That was in 1843. He was here some years." 



Mr. Hoyt of Goshen, N. Y., an old and experienced horseman, in an 



