Author Answers: Mary Perdue

Last week, the Books of Note series looked at the recent biography Landaluce: The Story of Seattle Slew’s First Champion, an examination of the short life of the star-crossed filly Landaluce. For February’s Author Answers, let’s hear more from author Mary Perdue, who parlayed her love of the daughter of Seattle Slew into a book that not only covers the filly’s five starts but also the people, places, and names that made her.

I met Mary in 2019 as she was writing Landaluce and was delighted to see the fruit of her labors in this gorgeous book. She captures the spirit of the best that the sport can be and what happens when great Thoroughbreds take root in our souls. If you haven’t had a chance to pick up Landaluce, find it at your favorite bookseller. In the meantime, find Mary’s Author Answers below.

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Books of Note: Landaluce

All right, I need to confess something here: my connection to this month’s Book of Note goes beyond simply reading it. I have had the great privilege of getting to know author Mary Perdue and her work since our initial conversation in 2019. I read an early draft of the manuscript so I got to know both Mary and Landaluce in a way that most readers do not get to. I realize that might make anyone reading this post say, “Well, of course, you enjoyed this and recommend it.”

While that is true, let me say that, as a lifelong reader and writer with years of experience behind me, Landaluce: the Story of Seattle Slew’s First Champion would still earn my deep respect and enthusiasm with or without that early access. This story has a heart that beats with a passion and reverence that belongs not just to the woman who wrote it, but also to those who bore witness to this story. It is that awe and veneration of this tragic filly that makes Landaluce a book that I would recommend to anyone who loves this sport, its history, and the animals at the center of it.

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Marguerite, Mother of Champions

In her twenty-five years, Marguerite’s nine foals included more than one overachiever of the first half of the 20th century, including a Triple Crown winner and a Travers victor, her impact so great that she was buried intact, a high honor for a horse. Best known for her first foal by Sir Gallahad III, this daughter of Celt is not only the mother of Gallant Fox but also one of William Woodward’s favorite mares, a light chestnut recognized by Horse and Horseman magazine in 1939 as “America’s most eminent broodmare.”

Claiborne Through and Through

When Fairy Ray arrived in the United States, her new American owner Frederick Johnson thought she was a poor specimen of a broodmare. Yet her pedigree, laden with English classic winners, promised much, even if her looks left something to be desired. Johnson sold the mare and her yearling by Cock o’ the Walk at a dispersal sale, and, as luck would have it, Arthur B. Hancock, master of Claiborne Farm, came away with the daughter of Radium, twice winner of the Jockey Club Cup in England. Hancock bred Fairy Ray to Celt, one of Claiborne’s flagship stallions of the early 20th century.

Celt was one of those horses whose potential on the racetrack was never quite realized owing to circumstance and injury. He happened to be a stablemate of the undefeated Colin, himself rated alongside Man o’ War in the estimation of turf writers of the day. Though Celt could not prove himself in the same ways Colin had, injury preventing him from racing more than his scant six starts, he proved to be a much better sire than his stablemate. By 1919, he already had a Futurity winner in Dunboyne and a Coaching Club American Oaks winner in Polka Dot. The choice to breed him to Fairy Ray was a fortuitous one: the result was Marguerite.

Belair’s Beginnings

At the Saratoga yearling sales in 1921, William Woodward, master of Belair Stud, spotted Marguerite and purchased her for $4,700, adding her to his burgeoning broodmare band. Though Belair was an ample estate with plenty of land, Woodward kept his broodmares at Claiborne, so, when it was time for Marguerite to transition to that phase of her life, she returned to her place of birth and became one of his owner’s best producers, a foundational mare for this dynasty of the 1930s.

Her first cover was Wrack, the imported stallion who had won on the flat and over the jumps. The result was Petee-Wrack, 1928 Travers winner who later added the Suburban and Metropolitan Handicaps to his resume. In Sir Gallahad’s first season at stud, 1926, Woodward sent Marguerite to the newly imported stallion and produced a bay colt with a blaze and a precocity that gave his owner great hopes. That was Gallant Fox.

The Fox was the first of her seven foals by Sir Gallahad III, their pairing producing Flying Fox and Foxbrough, both stakes winners, as well as daughters like Marguery and Marigal, who also had stakes winners of their own. From Gallant Fox came Granville, Flares, and, of course, Omaha. Down the line from Omaha came Nijinsky II, the last of the English Triple Crown winners.

From Marguerite came a long list of winners, helping give rise to the Belair dynasty of the 1930s.

A Life of Consequence

Marguerite’s impact as a broodmare merited her inclusion in historian Edward Bowen’s book Matriarchs as well as a stakes race at Pimlico Race Course from 1945 to 1965. You can read more about her in The Foxes of Belair: Gallant Fox, Omaha, and the Quest for the Triple Crown, coming soon from the University Press of Kentucky.