1969 Voice Of The Tennessee Walking Horse 1969 January Voice RS | Page 23

THIS PICTURE IS A REPRODUCTION OF AN OIL PAINTING BY VICTOR LALLIER WHICH NOW HANGS IN THE OFFICE OF THE TENNESSEE WALKING HORSE BREEDERS’ ASSOCIATION. - j : miles from the Dement homeplace, I spent two or three days breaking MERRY LEGS. Then I won first place with her at the show, and there was plenty of strong competition. I followed the entire circuit that year and rode MERRY LEGS in every show. She won every time, in spite of the fact that her tail — chewed off by calves on Mr. Dement’s farm — didn’t reach down to her hocks. "That fall I took MERRY LEGS to the Tennessee State Fair in Nashville, where she won her class. In the stake, where there were 10 or 12 horses, she tied for second place. I can remember the remarks made by P. B. Jones of Memphis at that show. *1 don’t know how this class will come out, but if I were in there judging, I’d tie that little bob-tail filly Henry Davis is riding for first place,’ he said. "In 1914 I took MERRY LEGS on the same circuit and won at each show. Again we ended the season at the State Fair at Nashville where MERRY LEGS won her class as well as the stake. So far as I know, she won the first cup that was ever offered in a Walking Horse class at the State Fair. MERRY LEGS was the first three-year-old that ever won the stake at the Fair, and I don’t believe another three-year-old won it until 1936 when her granddaughter, commonly known January, 1969 as LITTLE MERRY LEGS, achieved this distinction. Incidentally, LITTLE MERRY LEGS was ridden in that show of 1936 by the late Floyd Carothers of Wartrace. "Mr. Dement, always anxious and obliging in his endeavors to promote good will for the Tennessee Walking Horse breed, oftentimes loaned MERRY LEGS to various friends who showed her in different sec­ tions. In 1915 the late J. G. Miller of Bell Buckle, Tennessee, took MERRY LEGS to Kentucky, where she won every place she was shown. He ended the season that year at the State Fair in Nashville and she won the stake again. Z. R. Pickens of Bell Buckle showed this mare at different times in Kentucky and Tennessee and won first places with her at dozens of shows. In 1922, when MERRY LEGS was an eleven- year-old brood mare, she was shown by Floyd Caro­ thers and Orman Gilmore of Tullahoma on another Tennessee circuit, around Lebanon, and she continued to win every time she was ridden. "MERRY LEGS was without a doubt the greatest show mare I’ve ever seen. Why, I’ve even seen her win first places at shows while one of her colts was left in the stall.” "As a brood mare, MERRY LEGS was as good as 23