Courtesy of the Pedigree Database, for use by Expressers and MRFers, copyrighted by Jenniffer Reid | |
Three Bars-r 1940 chestnut horse Bred by unknown real breeder, United States Race Record Last foal crop 1969
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Three Bars-r 1940 chestnut horse Bred by real breeder, United States |
Percentage 1923 |
Midway1914 | Ballot 1904 |
Thirty-Third 1902 | |||
Gossip Avenue 1918 |
Bulse 1913 |
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Rosewood 1914 |
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Myrtle Dee 1923 |
Luke McLuke 1911 |
Ultimus |
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Midge |
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Civil Maid 1915 |
Patriot |
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Civil Rule |
Sire Record
Barred-r,'46 ch.QH c.ex Ready, AAA
Lena's Bar-r, '54 f.ex Lena Valenti, unraced
Triple Chick, '55 blk.QH.c.ex Chicado V, Unraced
Three Chicks, '59 br.QH.c.ex Chicado V, SW/AAAT
The Ole Man, '62 ch.QH.c.ex Chicado V, SW/AAAT
Kid Meyers-r, '63 s.QH c.ex Miss Meyers, Winner, AAA
Other Information
From Western Horseman, March 1990 - "In March of 1989, the American Quarter Horse Association inducted the first four horses into its new Hall of Fame. One of those four was a Thoroughbred - Three Bars, whose genetic influence has been so pervasive that there can be no question that he helped shaped the horse we admire today.
In retrospect, it is a stroke of great fortune that Three Bars was able to stand 23 seasons at stud. In that time, he sired more than 500 registered foals, and his name has appeared on all leading sire and maternal grandsire listings covering everything from racing to arena performance.
As a broodmare sire, Three Bars is outranked only be the immortal Leo. in the sire of sire category, he is without peer.
From 1940 to 1988, 287 Quarter Horses achieved the status of running champion. Fifty-Five of those are by Three Bars or by his sons and grandsons. In 1967, AQHA introduced the Supreme Champion Award for horses that exceled in racing, open performance, and halter. Through 1984, 44 horses earned that award, and 20 of those descend from Three Bars, with 4 of them his own get.
Twenty-three stallions, as of 1989, are designated all-time leading sires of AQHA Champions. Three Bars, with 29 champions is outranked only be one of his own sons Sugar Bars(30), plus Poco Bueno(36), Poco Pine(37), and Two Eyed Jack(119). Eight other stallions on the all-time leaders' list descend from Three Bars.
Three Bars did not have an auspicious start. Foaled in 1940, the son of Myrtle Dee and a stallion named Percentage, Three Bars showed speed, but had recurring lameness in a hind leg. He was sold, then given away to a trainer named Vernon Cloud. Cloud got the colt on the track in 1944, and the horse won three out of four starts.
He didn't race the next year, but in 1946 started 17 times, winning 8 and placing second in 3. At the age of 7, he placed once, and was then retired to stud. Total racing earnings: $20,840.
Along the way, he had changed hands again in a claiming race, and his owners took him home to Arizona. Enter Sid Vail.
For a man without a racing background (he spent some time rodeoing and worked as a guide in Yellowstone), Vail certainly knew a good horse. He assembled $10,00 to buy Three Bars, whose stud fee at first was $100, with no overload of customers. By 1955, the fee had bloomed to $5,000 and later went to $10,000. The story has a dark chapter, however. In the 1950s, the stud was rustled, and during the episode, Three Bars was clubbed, which broke his nose. The horse was found, however, wandering around in a junkyard.
Three Bars was at Vail's Dart Ranch at Douglas, Ariz., from 1947 to 1951. In 1952, the horse went to Oklahoma on a lease to Walter Merrick, and he was bred live cover to about 70 mares that year. Merrick had hoped to buy the horse, and failing that, continued to send mares to him even after vail moved to Apple Valley, California.
Finally, in 1967, Sid Vail sent Three Bars back to Walter Merrick, and the legendary sire stood half of the 1968 season in Oklahoma. He died of a massive heart attack April 6, 1968."
© by Jenniffer Reid
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