1964-Voice Of The Tennessee Walking Horse 1964 January Voice | Page 18

JANUARY TEli^|^wjHj(|NG H0BSE LESLIE WHITE! BREEDER OF CHAMPIONS By Fred E. Friend Leslie White, Route #1, Wil­ liamsport, Tennessee, grew up with Walking Horses on the rolling hills of his native Maury County, where he still lives; and this life­ long love of the breed has led Mr. White into a prominent position among the recognized quality breeders of the country. For the past fifteen years he has been specializing in the careful selection of a band of outstanding brood mares and the studied matching of these with some of the most renowned sires in Tennessee. As a result of this selective breed­ ing program, Mr. White has pro­ duced year after year a consistent­ ly high quality of colts. At pre­ sent he is supervising seventeen brood mares and some fifteen colts. Each of these seventeen mares has been carefully chosen for her bloodlines and for her quality as an individual. In determining quality in mares, Mr. White looks for general conformation and good size; in determining bloodlines, he relies upon the major strains that have brought the Tennessee Walk­ ing Horse to its present excellence as a breed. Most of these major bloodlines are represented in his band of mares at all times, and the band of mares is constantly being improved by the purchase of proven producers and the sale of those who do not measure up to Mr. White’s exacting standards. In addition to all this attention given to his broodmares, Mr. White studies carefully the stallions which will best cross with his mares to produce outstanding colts. He regularly breeds several mares to MIDNIGHT SUN and SUN’S BIG SHOT; and he often breeds to SUN DUST, MIDNIGHT MACK K, and STATELEY’S GO BOY. In the opinion of this expert, it pays to breed to the best available stal­ lions, for a quality-bred colt not only upgrades the breed but also usually rewards his breeder by commanding a premium price. Mr. White usually sells his colts as yearlings, often entering them in the Harlinsdale Farm Sale and the Murray Farm Sale. Among the many fine colts raised and sold by Mr. White in recent years are: GO BOY’S TROOPER, shown by David Welsh as a two-year-old and later sold to an owner on the West Coast; SUN DUST LACEY, shown by Floyd King to the Reserve Championship in the two-year-old Filly Class and to sixth in the two- year-old stake at the 1963 National Celebration (Solitude Stock Farm has bought SUN DUST DEBBIE, a full sister to this filly, for its entry in the two-year-old classes of 1964); BELLE’S KNIGHT, suc­ cessfully shown as a two-year-old stallion in 1963 by Carl Edwards; SUN DUSTER, in training with Billy Brantley at Battleground Stables, Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia; MACK’S BELLE, a fine two-year- old filly bought by Mr. R. D. Keene at the October, 1963, Murray Farm Sale; SUN DOCTOR, a two-year- old stallion that shows a remark­ able resemblance to his renowned sire (this colt was bought at the 1963 Harlingsdale Farm Sale by Mr J. W. Dotson); and SUN DUST S SCOOTER, a very promis­ ing two-year-old stallion owned bv Mr. James Wallace. But Mr. White’s real pride and joy now is SUN’S LINDA W tbv MIDNIGHT SUN out of ANNIE ALLEN T); this beautiful chestnut was Champion Weanling Filly in the 1963 Futurity of the Tennessee Walking Horse Breeders and Ex­ hibitors Association of America, and expert observers are predict­ ing a great future for her when she goes under saddle. She certainly has the quality and the breeding of which champions are made. Although his horses take much of his time and receive much of his attention, Mr. White enters into all the activities of his well-operated farm with vigor and enthusiasm He and Mrs. White, the former Elizabeth Kinzer, also enjoy their family, especially the grandchild­ ren. Their son, Robert White, his wife and their two children, ’ live near by in Columbia, from which Robert travels as a representative of Schering Drug Company. The White’s daughter, together with her husband, Dr. Jack Handcox, and their five children, now live in Orleans, France, where they serve in organizational missionary work for the Baptist Church. Mrs. White recently visited them for several weeks, and Mr. White is considering a short visit before they return to the United States. Mr. White is a respected citizen of his community and the sincerity and the integrity of the man are readily apparent from even a brief acquaintance with him. “The future of the Tennessee Walking Horse lies in better quality animals, produced by in­ creasingly selective breeding”, Mr. White declared when asked to com­ ment upon prospects for the Walk­ ing Horse business. “Although we are producing better conformation and more fineness than ever be­ fore,” he emphasized, “we must continue to select and retain as breeding stock only those stallions and mares which prove that they can be produce colts that are both beautiful in appearance and true in their gaits. Since the mare sup­ plies one-half of the traits of the colt, we must be sure to choose our dams as carefully as our sire