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				  Beloved Belinda - The Champion 
				  Cinderella Beauty of the Year(Reprinted from
				  
		  The Voice of the Tennessee Walking Horse)
 
				  "Even the cowboys went wild" on a 
				  Saturday afternoon at the Fort Worth Livestock Exposistion and 
				  Stock Show when Beloved Belinda worked out in the excercise 
				  ring. Later thousands joined them in hurrahs as she won the 
				  4-Year-Old and up Tennessee Walking Mare Class, and served 
				  notice she is reigning as Queen of the Breed in the 
				  five-year-old bracket.  Her performance so early in the season 
				  was called a re-run of her race to the World Championship Mare 
				  throne at the 1961 Tennessee Walking Hose Celebration at 
				  Shelbyville, Tenn. "Even faster than last year," declared her 
				  spectators who saw her in 1961 triumphs and again at Ft. 
				  Worth. Trainer-Rider Sam Paschal of 
				  Murfreesboro, Tenn., says she's faster than ever - smarter 
				  than ever - and better than eve. That's going a long way. Last 
				  year she placed 4th in the Celebration Grand Championship 
				  Stake despite an epidemic of shoe trouble. Belinda is a proved champion mare. She 
				  proved herself in 1960 with the 3-year-old title of the world 
				  among mares just 10 months after she left her home pasture as 
				  a pleasure horse. In 1961 she took mare classes at the 
				  Celebration; in Dallas; at the Kansas City American Royal 
				  where she also took stake honors; at Baton Rouge's Dixie 
				  Jubilee; at Montgomery's Southern Championship and at a host 
				  of other shows.   The speckled grey horse is great today 
				  - but the greatest story is about where she came from, and why 
				  she is sometimes called "The Cinderella Horse" or "Sleeping 
				  Beauty." That story parallels some other fantastic stories of 
				  the breed - told in the history book about the Tennessee 
				  Walking Hose, compiled by the Editor of this magazine. Why Cinderella? The answer is simple. 
				  She had the simple origin of Cinderella, she was "broke as a 
				  2-year-old pleasure horse" not thought of as a star at any 
				  ball (show). Then came along Sam Paschal who took this 
				  Cinderella-Sleeping Beauty in hand, and look where she is 
				  today. Not long ago, her owner, Miss Gene 
				  Wild of Sarcoxie, Missouri, reportedly turned down a $50,000 
				  offer for her - and she has received other bids. Belinda's 
				  amazin background story, as related by Paschal and others, 
				  presents this picture. Her mother, Youree's Grey Lady, was 
				  bred by E.H. Padgett of Wartrace, sired by Top Wilson out of 
				  June Beauty, a granddaughter of the super speedy Giovanni. As 
				  a yearling she was traded to C.O. Barker of Readyville in 
				  Cannon County, Tenn., for a reported $17. Barker sold her to 
				  Marland Summers of near Murfressboro for $40 as a work horse. 
				  He used her to make crops on his farm and teamed her with a 
				  mule to take his wagon to town. He did not breed the mare. The late Irving S. Bugg of near 
				  Murfreesboro bought Grey Lady and bred her to Paschal's Little 
				  Merry Boy, a son of the great Old Merry Boy out of Sally 
				  Weaver. Paschal took the stallion to the Bugg farm where he 
				  bred Youree's Grey Lady. Breeding took place March 14, 1957. 
				  Eleven months later she foaled a grey filly who immediately 
				  because Irving's Grey Lady. That was Belinda's first 
				  registered name.   Ernest Bugg, son of Irving, broke the 
				  filly as a 2-year-old pleasure horse with no thought of her 
				  true destiny in the show ring. Paschal and Charley Martin 
				  visited the Bugg farm, and bought her for $400. Martin rode 
				  the horse from Oct. 25, 1959 to April 1, 1960. Paschal began 
				  to ride her and no othe rperson has been on her back since 
				  that April date, according to this veteran trainer. She was beaten only twice as a 3 
				  year-old. By Celebration time that September (1960) she was 
				  good enough to win the 3-year-old  mare World's 
				  championship. She went on to win the Junior stake at the 
				  American Royal in Kansas City, Mo. Her leap from pasture to 
				  this championship recalls the amazing records of Strolling Jim 
				  and Haynes Peacock, early Celebration champions of the world.  It was  at Kansas City in 1960 
				  that Miss Wild saw Belinda perform in a preliminary. She went 
				  home that night and told her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Wild, 
				  "I want that horse." They said "Buy her then." So she did, the 
				  very next day - and she was Belinda's owner when she won the 
				  Junior Stake at that show. In 1961 Miss Wild owned the World 
				  Champion Mare when Belinda won this Celebration event as a 
				  4-year-old. Her parents were said to be among the world's 
				  greatest growers of flowers with 500 Missouri acres in peonies 
				  alone. Beloved Belinda's 1962 season is 
				  certain to make history, to thrill many thousands and also to 
				  "sell horses." (The Editor of the Voice received a letter last 
				  year from an Illinois woman who said she bought a Tennessee 
				  Walking Horse because she got such a thrill from seeing 
				  Beloved Belinda at Kansas City. If there is one, there must be 
				  many.) The great Grey Queen with the romantic 
				  name (coined by Paschal) stands 15 hands, 3 inches; weighs 
				  1,175 pounds; has an unsurpassed personality; loves to hit the 
				  running walk. She reminds veteran Walking Horse lovers of the 
				  great Honey Gold, 3-year-old Mare World Champion in the 1947 
				  Celebration for W.M. Duncan of Inverness, Miss. That mare sold 
				  for a reported $30,000. Sam Paschal says he will provide that 
				  Belinda, the daughter of a $17 mother, the pleasure horse 
				  bought out of a field, will be the "greatest show mare ever 
				  know for the Tennessee Walking Horse breed." She appears to be 
				  on her way. One other point, Belinda's background, 
				  as shown by her pedigree, shows superior bloodlines that make 
				  for champions. Here is her heritage:  Sire: 
				  Little Merry Boy, by 
				  Merry Boy, 
				  by Roan Allen F-38, by 
				  Allan F-1 out of Gertrude F-84; Merry 
				  Boy's dam, Merry Legs F-4 by 
				  Allan F-1, out of Nell Dement; 
				  Little Merry Boy's dam, Sally Weaver, by 
				  Brown Allen, by
				  Hunter's Allen F-10 out of Mary McDaniel (great grandaughter 
				  of Tom Hal F-20); Sally Weaver's dam, Nell Weaver, by Roe's 
				  Chief F-35 out of a daughter of Night Rider F-36. Dam: Youree's Grey Lady by 
				  Top Wilson, 
				  by Wilson's Allen, by
				  Roan Allen F-38 out of Birdie Messick 
				  F-81; Top Wilson's dam, Sade Starnes by Doc out of Princess.  |