PETER PAN I


'Peter Pan' (1904-1933) was an American Hall of Fame Thoroughbred racehorse whose sire and grandsire were also Hall of Fame inductees, as was his daughter Top Flight.
Bred and raced by prominent horseman, James R. Keene, Peter Pan was out of the mare Cinderella whose sire was Hermit, the 1867 winner of England's most important race, the Epsom Derby. Peter Pan was sired by Commando, a Hall of Fame inductee and a 1901 American Classic Race winner who in turn was a son of Domino, himself a Hall of Fame inductee and the 1893 United States Horse of the Year.
Conditioned by future Hall of Fame trainer James G. Rowe, Sr., at age two Peter Pan won four of his eight starts including the prestigious 1906 Hopeful Stakes.
For 1907, Peter Pan won six of his nine starts with two seconds, one of which was in the spring in the Withers Stakes. At a time where the U.S. Triple Crown concept had not been formed, three-year-old Peter Pan was not entered in the Kentucky Derby or the Preakness Stakes. However, he won the then 1⅜ miles Belmont Stakes, a race that is now the third leg of the Triple Crown series. In winning the Belmont, he defeated Frank Gill who had beaten him in the Withers Stakes. In 1907, Peter Pan also won the important Brooklyn Derby, the Standard Stakes at Gravesend Race Track, as well as the Advance and the Tidal Stakes at Sheepshead Bay Race Track. Shortly after winning the Brighton Handicap he suffered a tendon injury and was retired to stallion duty at his owner's Castelton Stud.
Peter Pan stood at stud in Kentucky then was sent to a breeding farm in France. Brought back to the United States, he was sold to Harry Payne Whitney and stood at Brookdale Stud in New Jersey until 1915 when he became the foundation sire for the new Whitney Farm in Lexington, Kentucky.
Peter Pan's progeny includes:

Black Toney (1911) - Foundation sire for Idle Hour stock Farm, among the U.S. top twenty sires on ten occasions

Puss In Boots (1913) - 1915 U.S. Champion Two Year Old Filly

Vexatious (1916) - 1919 Champion Three Year Old Filly

Prudery (1918) - 1920 U.S. Champion Two Year Old Filly & 1921 Champion Three Year Old Filly

Tryster (1918) - U.S. Champion Two Year Old Colt
Damsire of notable horses such as:

Bostonian (1924) - won 1927 Preakness Stakes

Whiskery (1924) - won 1927 Kentucky Derby, Champion Three Year Old Colt

Victorian (1925) - won 1928 Preakness Stakes

Top Flight (1929) - U.S. Racing Hall of Fame inductee, 1931 U.S. Champion Two Year Old Filly & 1932 Champion Three Year Old Filly
Grandsire of notable horses such as:

Black Gold (1921) - Hall of Fame inductee, 1924 Kentucky Derby winner

Equipose (1928-1938) - National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame inductee, Two Time Horse of the Year (1932,1933)

Brokers Tip (1930) - 1933 Kentucky Derby winner

Bimelech (1937) - Hall of Fame inductee, 1940 Preakness and Belmont Stakes winner
Peter Pan died in December of 1933 at the age of twenty-nine and was buried at the Whitney Farm in Lexington (now part of the Gainesway Farm). Following its creation, Peter Pan was inducted in the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 1956.

Contents
References

References



Peter Pan's pedigree and paertial racing stats

Peter Pan's profile at the United States' National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame

Peter Pan's offspring at the Triple Crown database by Kathleen Irwin and Joy Reeves

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