Monday, April 26, 2021

Great Heart; World Record High Jumping Horse at Fort Sheridan, Illinois, in 1923.

One of the greatest high jumping horses of all times, "Great Heart" made an appearance at Fort Sheridan in the 1920s.

This champion horse has escaped the local history books, but fortunately, this photograph survived to document the event.

At the beginning of the 20th century, horse high jumps were an integral part of horse shows. In the Chicago area, there were a number of horse shows held each year at Fort Sheridan, Onwentsia Club in Lake Forest, Soldier Field, Chicago Riding Club, South Shore Country Club, and so on.

In 1910, the world's record high jump was reportedly set by a horse named 'Confidense' who cleared 8 feet and 1/2 inch at an event in Ontario, Canada.

In 1922, Charles Weeghman's (pre-Wrigley Field), chestnut gelding, Strongheart, won the high jump at the International Horse Show in Chicago, clearing the bars at 5 feet 6 inches. That same year, at the South Shore Country Club's horse show, Great Heart cleared the bar at 7 feet 6 inches to win the high jump championship but failed in his attempt to beat the world record.

Chicago coal baron and founder of Peabody Coal, Francis S. Peabody (1858-1922) had purchased Great Heart as a young colt, and after Peabody's death in 1922, his son Stuyvesant "Jack" Peabody continued to train the horse. Great Heart had an affinity for jumping, especially bars set at 6 feet and above.

Great Heart was entered into the South Shore Country Club's horse show in 1923 with the intent of breaking the world record. On June 8, 1923, Great Heart cleared the mark, becoming the world's greatest high jumper with the bars set at 8 feet and 3 inches.
On June 9, 1923, Great Heart cleared the hurdles at 8 feet 13/16 inches at the South Shore Country Club Horse Show, Chicago.

















Great Heart clearing an obstacle set at 8 feet 3 inches at Fort Sheridan, ridden by Fred Vesey in 1923.




Great Heart was retired to the Peabody farm (presumably Stuyvesant "Jack" Peabody's rural farm in Lemont, Illinois) soon after winning the world's champion title. In 1924, the family honored the horse by choosing "Great Heart" as the trade name for the fine grade of coal being mined at Peabody's Mine 30 in Kenvir, Kentucky.

One source claims the world champion high jumping horse is Huaso, a horse ridden by Chilean Captain Alberto Larraguibel, who set the high-jump world record on February 5, 1949, by jumping 8 feet and 1 inch—two inches less than Great Heart's jump of 1923.

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.

Sunday, April 25, 2021

Early Portent of Lincoln's Death.

That the assassination of Abraham Lincoln had been planned for many months is evidenced by a little-known incident that occurred in Meadville, Pennsylvania, almost eight months prior to the shooting in Ford's Theatre, in Washington D.C.
John Wilkes Booth


John Wilkes Booth was an overnight guest at the famous McHenry House, adjoining the Erie railroad station in Meadville on August 13, 1864, after a theatrical engagement at the opera house.
The McHenry House and grand railroad depot in Meadville, Pennsylvania was the most splendid building of its kind outside of New York City.






Atlantic & Great Western Railway Depot with McHenry House to the left in 1869.


Whatever possessed him to be so brazen as to divulge the plans he and his friends had made for Lincoln's death probably will never be known. However, on the next morning after Booth had left the city a chambermaid discovered that he had scratched upon the window of his room, evidently with the stone in his diamond ring, the following words:
"Abe Lincoln departed this life August 13, 1864, by the effects of poison."
The chambermaid immediately notified R.M.U. Taylor, the manager of the McHenry House. For some, unknown reason, Taylor gave the matter no immediate attention.
The Depot decorated to receive McHenry and the European dignitaries.




The circumstances of Booth's visit to Meadville, and his knowledge of a plot upon the Great Emancipator's life, were immediately recalled as the sad news passed over the telegraph wires the morning of April 16, 1865, that Lincoln had been mortally wounded by Booth in Ford's Theatre on the evening of the 14th, while the President was attending a performance of "Our American Cousin."

The glass was then removed from the window frame and afterward exhibited by Taylor, along with Booth's signature which he cut from the hotel register. He framed the two with a black velour facing to facilitate reading. Later Taylor sent the glass to Miss Mary McHenry of Philadelphia, daughter of the man for whom the hotel was named. It remained in her possession until 1879. That autumn while on a visit to Washington D.C., she saw some other Booth relics in the office of the judge advocate general and added the pane of glass to the collection. It remained there until December 1, 1939, when it was transferred to the Lincoln Museum in Washington D.C., where it is now stored.

Research indicates that John Wilkes Booth's scratching of the prediction quoted above was something more than an idle pastime. For several months before, during the summer of 1864, David E. Harold, the vainglorious, shallow-minded drug clerk who rode with Booth that night of April 1865, was employed in William S. Thompson's drug store at Fifteenth street and Pennsylvania Avenue, in Washington D.C. There the President was accustomed to having his prescriptions filled, and it was known that Harold was an easy tool in Booth's hands. It is believed that on one occasion during the summer of 1864, the President actually had unknowingly taken poison in the drugs which had been prescribed by his physician, and prepared by Harold, to no ill effect. 

There were numerous other plots to assassinate Lincoln dating back to his first trip to Washington D.C. after his election to the presidency. Booth knew of the plan to poison him, and it is even probable he was the instigator. 

No evidence has ever been found which would unravel the real story of this plot, other than Booth's prediction scratched upon the window of his room in the McHenry House. Nor is there any evidence to show why the plot failed. 

                                                               —The Kansas City Star, Saturday, February 12, 1949
                                                                                                                             By L.O. Honig 

Edited by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.