APPENDIX. 435 



and one white foot behind, a grandson of Vermont Black 

 Hawk, was my next purchase, and no man ever yet owned a 

 handsomer one. He proved himself a good stock horse and im- 

 proved the stock of Southwestern E. I. quite considerably. 



Emanuel. A beautiful dapple gray, was my next. He was 

 the grandson of an Imported Arabian mare crossed on a 

 Morgan stallion, and was quite a popular horse of his time, 

 locality considered. 



Narragansett. A red-roan was my next stallion. He 

 was quite a good horse, and traced to the Narragansett pacing 

 family. 



Uncle Tqai, (black and all black,) was a black Morgan 

 horse of the old Vermont stock, tracing in an unbroken line to 

 Justin Morgan. 



Main's Morgan was a brown Morgan horse with no white, 

 was considered quite well-bred and sired good stock, " Island 

 Nellie " among others. 



Island King was a buckskin with full black points, quite a 

 fine horse, and tracing to the Narragansetts with a Morgan 

 " top cross " — as the short-horn breeders would say. 



Dimon's Pathfinder. A bright bay horse without white, 

 one of my own breeding and one of the finest of his day. He 

 was a cross betw T een the best branch of. the Morgan family, 

 and the thoroughbred, his dam being Dollie Hale, by Imported 

 Consternation. 



Confidence. Black with white stripe and one white stock- 

 ing behind, bred similar to Pathfinder, his sire being the 

 Morgan Stallion " Potter Horse," and his dam Fanny Fern, 

 sister to Dollie Hale, by Imported Consternation. He was also 

 bred by myself. 



Goldfinder. A mahogany bay, solid color, bred at Dimon 

 Stock Farm. Sire Figaro, by Imported Consternation, dam 

 Dollie Hale, by Imported Consternation. A blood horse and 

 showing his breeding. A fine animal. 



Hampton Court. Imported thoroughbred. Foaled in 1864. 

 Bred by Mr. C. C. Greville at Hampton Court Paddocks, Eng- 



