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Encyclopedia > The Minstrel

The Minstrel, (1974-1990), was a champion thoroughbred racehorse.


Born at E. P. Taylor's Windfields Farm in Oshawa, Ontario, Canada, The Minstrel was the son of legendary sire Northern Dancer out of the mare Fleur, who was a daughter of Victoria Park. He was a half-brother to the 1970 English Triple Crown champion, Nijinsky II.


A powerfully built and beautiful chestnut colt with four white-stockings and a gentle disposition, The Minstrel was purchased at the 1975 Keeneland yearling auction by a group headed by the flamboyant British racing enthusiast Robert Sangster (1936-2004). Shipped to England, under trainer Vincent O'Brien and ridden by champion jockey Lester Piggott, the horse entered only three races as a two year old, but won them all.


In 1977, The Minstrel won major races at racetracks in England and Ireland. His win in the Epsom Derby, the most prestigious race in the United Kingdom, brought Sangster and his partners into the racing limelight and he soon became one of the world's leading racehorse owners. In addition to the Epsom Derby, The Minstrel won the Irish Derby Stakes and the Ascot Two Thousand Guineas Trial and in his most impressive race against the best horses around, he won the grueling one and a half mile King George VI & Queen Elizabeth Diamond Stakes. His performances earned him England's Horse-of-the Year honors for 1977.


After owner Robert Sangster's affair with Jerry Hall, the wife of Rolling Stones lead singer, Mick Jagger, he claimed that Jagger had threatened to do what The Godfather had done in the film and put The Minstrel's head in its owner's bed.


By the end of his brilliant career, out of his nine starts, The Minstrel won seven races, and finished second and third one time. He was re-acquired by Windfields Farm and syndicated for $9 million to stand at stud in Maryland. After the sale of Windfields Farm's Maryland division in 1988, The Minstrel was sent to Overbrook Farm, in Lexington, Kentucky.


The Minstrel died in 1990 and was buried in Overbrook Farm's equine cemetery in Lexington.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Dr. Horsehair - What is minstrel music? (557 words)
Minstrel music was established in the late 1830s with the development of the five-string banjo by Joel Sweeney of Appomattox Court House, Virginia.
From this point, "minstrel mania" swept the nation as hundreds of minstrel troupes toured throughout the country.
The banjo was the foundation of the minstrel show, and was always played with the back of the fingernail in the "stroke" or "banjo" style.
Minstrel show (1849 words)
The minstrel show as a complete evening's entertainment was invented when Dan Emmett[?] and the Virginia Minstrels[?] gave their first performance at the New York Bowery Amphitheatre[?] in 1843.
Minstrels took on a much more decidedly abolitionist stance, and performers such as The Fighting Hutchinson Family[?] became popular advocates of abolition, women's rights, and the temperance movement.
The inauthenticity of the minstrel music and the Irish and Scottish elements in it are explained by the fact that slaves were rarely allowed to play native African music and therefore had to adopt and adapt the folk songs of Europe.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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