Description:

Oil on canvas Signed. Bred by Daniel Swigert at Elmendorf Farm in Kentucky, Salvator was foaled in California after his dam, Salina, was purchased by James Ben Ali Haggin, who then shipped the mare to his 44,000- acre Rancho Del Paso. Salvator won the Flatbush and the Titan Stakes as a 2-year-old; won the September, Tidal, and Lawrence Realization Stakes as a 3-year-old; and at 4 won the Champion Stakes, Monmouth Cup, and the prized Suburban Handicap. Salvator was named the 1889 U.S. champion 3-year-old colt and the Horse of the Year in 1889 and 1890. Salvator was inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 1955. During his racing career Salvator would battle other prominent horses of the day in Proctor Knott and Tenny. After defeating rival Tenny in the Realization Stakes in 1889, Salvator beat Tenny again in the Suburban Handicap in 1890. After the loss in the Suburban, Tenny's owner, David Pulsifer, convinced he had the better horse, challenged Haggin to a match race for $10,000. The race was one for the ages and was immortalized in a lithograph produced by Currier and Ives, and in a poem by noted American poet Ella Wheeler Wilcox. The final stanza of the poem reads: Cheer, hoar headed patriarchs; cheer loud, I say; Tis the race of a century witnessed to-day! Though ye live twice that space that's allotted to men, Ye never will see such a grand race again. Let the shouts of the populace roar like the surf, For Salvator, Salvator, king of the turf! He has broken the record of thirteen long years; He has won the first place in a vast line of peers. 'Twas a neck-to-neck contest, a grand honest race, And even his enemies grant him his place. Down into the dust let old records be hurled, And hang out 2.05 in the gaze of the world. Salvator's journey would come full circle in 1899 when he returned to take up his career as a stallion at Haggin's newly purchased Elmendorf Farm, the place of the great horse's conception. John Martin Tracy (American, 1843-1893) Tracy was born in Rochester, Ohio, in 1843 and died in 1893 in Ocean Springs, Mississippi. He discovered the sporting art genre late in life but the art he produced certainly did not go unnoticed. In his early life he attended Oberlin College and Northwestern, where he began his art studies. His college years were interrupted when he joined the Civil War as a member of the Nineteenth Illinois Infantry. He quickly reached the rank of lieutenant and started to test his artistic capabilities. After his service, he traveled back home to work a variety of jobs to save money to study with artists in Paris. He returned to the United States in 1878.

  • Dimensions: 20 " x 30 "

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November 18, 2023 12:00 PM EST
Lexington, KY, US

Cross Gate Gallery

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