Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Mound Station was established as a post office in 1860; the Village of Mound Station incorporated December 23, 1901. In 1903, the post office name changed to Timewell, to avoid confusion with the town of Mounds, Illinois. [4] The Timewell name has supplanted the original name of Mound Station in local use, but the legal village name has never ...
He later stood at Cloverleaf Farms II in Ocala, Florida and finally at JEH Stallion Station near Hondo, New Mexico, where he and five other horses died in a barn fire on June 6, 2006. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] A modestly successful sire of both Thoroughbreds and American Quarter Horses , Favorite Trick sired 16 stakes winners.
Honour and Glory (foaled March 24, 1993 in Kentucky – July 17, 2018) [1] was an American Thoroughbred racehorse who won important races during his career. He was bred by William T. Young's Overbrook Farm and purchased by British businessman and prominent racehorse owner, Michael Tabor.
Pope County Mound 2: Kincaid site, Pope County, Illinois: 1050–1400 CE Middle Mississippian culture Adjacent to the Ohio River, the site straddles the modern-day counties of Massac and Pope in deep southern Illinois, an area colloquially known as Little Egypt. On the eastern edge of the site is a low circular mound which was used as a burial ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
When the University of Chicago excavated Kincaid in the 1930s and 1940s, their team identified nine mounds on the site's Massac County portion. In 2003, a tenth mound was identified. It is a small mound that was later covered with a midden, and it lies along the current road near the county line on the southeastern corner of the town plaza ...
In October 2009 he was sold to Shizunai Stallion Station on the island of Hokkaido, Japan. [2] His progeny include the Group 2 winner Hamoody and Scat Daddy, winner of the 2007 Grade I Florida Derby and sire of 2018 Triple Crown winner Justify. He also sired Group 1 AJC Oaks and Group 2 ATC Chairmans Handicap winner Once Were Wild when at stud ...
His estate auctioned the horse and on December 24 he was purchased for $362,345.70 by Louis P. Doherty, owner of The Stallion Station on Muir Station Road in Lexington, Kentucky. [2] Traffic Judge's race conditioning was then taken over by another Hall of Fame inductee, James W. Maloney .