436 APPENDIX. 



land. Imported by R. W. Cameron of Clifton, Staten Island, 

 in 1865. Got by Young Melbourne, dam Durindana, by Or- 

 lando ; second dam, Dispatch, by Defence ; third dam, Ean- 

 nette (sister to Glaucus), by Partisan ; fourth dam, Nanine, by 

 Selim ; fifth dam, Bazarre, by Peruvian ; sixth dam, Yiolante, 

 by John Bull ; seventh dam, sister to Skyscraper, by High- 

 flyer ; eighth dam, Everlasting, by Eclipse ; ninth dam, Hyaena, 

 by Snap ; tenth dam, Miss Bulsea, by Regulus ; eleventh dam, 

 by Bartlett's Childers ; twelfth dam, by Honey wood's Arabian ; 

 thirteenth dam, Byerley Mare, bred by Mr. Bowes, the dam of 

 the two True Blues. 



Hickoey Star. A chestnut horse, by Hickory Jack, son of 

 Ethan Allen, dam crossed on thoroughbred stock. A hand- 

 some horse of the Ethan Allen type. 



Lord Canwell. Thoroughbred. Sire Imported Canwell; 

 dam Minnie Boston, by Imported Bonnie Scotland. He was a 

 natural trotter. Solid bay in color. I sold him to go to South 

 America for stock purposes. 



Speague's Hambletonian. Brown bay horse, without white. 

 One of the best individual sons of Alexander's Abdallah ; dam 

 a Morgan mare, pedigree untraced. He was formerly called 

 New York, and was, with his mate, Belle Brandon, at one time 

 the fastest road team in New York city. He sired Gov. 

 Sprague, 2.22£ (five-years'-old record), in 1870 ; Gov. Dimon 

 and Col. Sprague in 1875. His stud services were very limited, 

 and he died in Pomfret, Conn., in 1876. He also sired Boston 

 Boy Hambletonian, 2.25, and a few (very few) others. 



Boston Boy Hambletonian, 2.25. A bay horse sired by 

 Sprague's Hambletonian (see above) ; dam Boston Girl, etc. 

 Stood for mares at Dimon Stock Farm season of 1877, and I 

 drove him some on the road. A strong-moving horse. 



Comtjs. Chestnut horse, without white. A beautiful son 

 of Green's Bashaw and Topsy, by Prophet, son of Black Hawk. 

 I kept him at the Dimon Stock Farm for mares and for driving 

 purposes, and while his duties in the stud were quite light, he 



