Whiskery
| Whiskery | |
|---|---|
| Sire | Whisk Broom II | 
| Grandsire | Broomstick | 
| Dam | Prudery | 
| Damsire | Peter Pan | 
| Sex | Stallion, eventually Gelding | 
| Foaled | 1924 | 
| Country | United States | 
| Colour | Bay | 
| Breeder | Harry Payne Whitney | 
| Owner | Harry Payne Whitney | 
| Trainer | Fred Hopkins | 
| Record | 70: 14-16-32 | 
| Earnings | $122,211 | 
| Major wins | |
| Ardsley Handicap (1926) Huron Handicap (1927) Stanley Produce Stakes (1927) Twin City Handicap (1927) Chesapeake Stakes (1927) American Classics wins:  | |
| Awards | |
| American Champion 3-Year-Old Male Horse (1927) | |
| Last updated on 4/15/2016 | |
Whiskery (foaled 1924 - died 1937) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse. He was the winner of the 1927 Kentucky Derby after defeating Osmand by a nose in the stretch.[1] Whiskery won the Ardsley Handicap at age two and the Chesapeake Stakes at age three. He was third in the 1927 Preakness Stakes and would be named American Champion Three-Year-Old Male Horse that year.[2]
Whiskery was sold in 1927 to the Stone-Hancock-Woodward partnership for $60,000 for use as a stud horse. However, he proved to be sterile and was put back into training as a gelding. Whiskery did not achieve his previous racing success and was finally shipped in 1931 to the Charles Stone's Morven Stud in Charlottesville, Virginia for use as a saddle horse.[3][4]
Whiskery's time of death was not officially reported to The Jockey Club, but it is assumed that he died around 1936 as the result of a catastrophic leg injury, either sustained by colliding with a tree while fulfilling his duty as the night watchman's horse or as a result of a track injury.[4]
References
- ^ "75,000 See Whiskery Win Kentucky Derby". New York Times. May 15, 1927. Section 10, page 1. Retrieved July 10, 2019.
 - ^ "Whitney Silks First and Third in Preakness". Daily Racing Form at University of Kentucky Archives. May 10, 1927. Retrieved July 21, 2018.
 - ^ "Whiskery's Adieu To Turf". Daily Racing Form at University of Kentucky Archives. June 26, 1931. Retrieved July 10, 2019.
 - ^ a b Bolus, Jim (1997). Derby Magic. Gretna, Louisiana: Pelican Publishing Company. ISBN 978-1-56554-276-1.