Oliver Lewis (1856-1924)
Isaac Burns Murphy (1861-1896)
Sunday, February 26, 2017
Hazel Singer writes:
The Sport of Kings and a Select Few African Americans
Thoroughbred horse breeding and racing
in its modern form has a long history dating back to 17th century
England and is inextricably linked with American history. Thoroughbred
racing developed in all the British Colonies, Europe, Argentina, Japan.
All modern Thoroughbred stallions can trace their lineage to three
horses brought to England from the Middle East. Thoroughbred mares are
traced back to Northern Europe and the Middle East.
So, how are African Americans involved in this illustrious history?
Maryland and Virginia were the centers of thoroughbred breeding in the
American Colonies, as well as South Carolina and New York. Horse racing
in New York goes back to 1665. After the American Revolution, Kentucky
and Tennessee became the centers of activity. Except for New York, all
the other states were slave-holding states. Enslaved Africans and their descendants were
central to the business of thoroughbred horse breeding and then in the
racing industry as well. Enslaved workers were skilled riders, grooms,
and trainers on the plantations. As a result, they were dominant as
jockeys: in the first Kentucky Derby in 1875, thirteen of the fifteen
jockeys were black and the race was one black jockey Oliver Lewis riding Aristides, the horse trained by former enslaved Ansel Williamson.
African American jockeys won 15 out of the first 28 runnings of the
Kentucky Derby. Two years after Oliver, the race was claimed by
seventeen year-old William Walker. Isaac Murphy,
the son of a formerly enslaved man, is considered the greatest American
jockey in history. Murphy rode 628 winners of his 1412 mounts. He won
the Kentucky Derby three times, the American Derby four, and the Latonia
Derby five times. Four more black jockeys would win fame at the Kentucky Derby: Alonzo "Lonnie" Clayton (at 15, the youngest to ever win), James "Soup" Perkins, Willie Simms, and Jimmy "Wink" Winkfield.
Winkfield would be the last African American to ride in the Kentucky
Derby. Murphy, Simms, and Winkfield have been inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in Saratoga Springs, New York.
This dominance of black jockeys in thoroughbred racing did not last. By 1921, there were no blacks racing at all. The rising tide of institutional racism, cemented by Plessy vs. Ferguson in
1896, the demands by white jockeys in New York to eliminate black
jockeys from the circuit, and the rise of Jim Crow meant that by 1904,
virtually no black jockeys were racing. Many black jockeys left the
American circuits to race in Europe (particularly Germany, France, and
Poland) and Russia. The history of blacks in thoroughbred racing
seemed to come to an end. As time went on, with the connection to the
past broken blacks were rare in any segment of the racing industry, with
Latino jockeys taking precedent.
At the 139th Kentucky Derby in 2013, St. Croix native Kevin Krigger was the second black jockey to race in 92 years. The first had been Marlon St, Julien in 2000. On Martin Luther King Jr's Birthday January, 2017, there was a rare occurrence: the winner of the feature race at Aqueduct in Queens, New York, was Green Gatto owned by brothers Gaston (trainer) and Anthony Grant, ridden by jockey Kendrick Carmouche,
with the placing judge who presented the trophy being Sentell Taylor,
Jr: all of these men are black. Whether this is a harbinger of a greater
involvement of African Americans in the sport remains to be seen.
Comment by email:
Hello Bill, As usual, I appreciate your support, thanks. Warmly, -Hazel [Hazel Singer]