| Giovanni 
				  370291by WJ McGill
 
				   When 
				  Editor Lee of "The Tennessee Walking Horse" asked for another 
				  article on prominent sires of the Tennessee Walking Horse 
				  breed and GIOVANNI 370291 was suggested, frankly I admit, I 
				  wasn't so enthusiastic over it as we usually are on 
				  approaching Christmas holidays. But when I conferred with some 
				  of our leading prominent horsemen, three owners of GIOVANNI, 
				  Henry Davis, Steve Hill and Tom Brown, and then Fred Walker, 
				  Winston Wiser and others who had experience in training and 
				  showing his offspring; well these top horsemen and trainers 
				  soon had me thinking that GIOVANNI was a superior horse and 
				  had made a great contribution to our Tennessee Walkers though 
				  he had originated from the saddle or gaited horses. When I asked Henry Davis why he purchased 
				  GIOVANNI in the long ago, he readily responded that in his 
				  training days and when he was showing Tennessee Walking 
				  Horses, he noted the celebrated gaited stallion, McDONALD'S 
				  CHIEF, and his offspring would frequently leave the arena in 
				  the gaited class in an amble and Walking Horse stride. So when 
				  he read in the old "Farmer's Home Journal" of this grandson, 
				  GIOVANNI, being offered for sale, he went with a group of our 
				  horsemen, Albert Dement, Joe Crawford, Jim Miller, Hall Jones, 
				  Walter Woods and ohters, to Kentucky and Henry bought 
				  GIOVANNI; the others filling in a car load of Kentucky horses. 
				  When I remembered that I had had a gelding and a mare with 
				  McDONALD'S CHIEF bloodline and how well they could walk 
				  regardless of their five-gaited breeding, I readily concluded 
				  that Henry Davis was a wise selector of breeding stallions.
				   He bought GIOVANNI 370291 in the spring of 
				  1914 from John Buster of Harrodsburg, Kentucky. He had been 
				  bred by William A. Wade at Versailles, Ky. GIOVANNI was sired 
				  by DANDY JIM, ASR 1531, one of the most beautiful stallions 
				  and he was sired by the famous McDONALD'S CHIEF. THE dam of 
				  GIOVANNI was FRANCESCA, ASR 6940. GIOVANNI'S saddle horse or 
				  gaited breeding was perfect and he possessed a great deal of 
				  style and stamina. While his tail was never set, no horse 
				  surpassed him in style. He was also upheaded, a beautiful 
				  head, neck and ears, large expressive eyes, a perfect 
				  shoulder, but some would say that his back had one vertebra 
				  too many; but as his back was short the bad coupling caused 
				  this appearance. His color wand markings were good, a small 
				  star and white coronets, excellent mane and tail.  GIOVANNI was foaled in June, 1910, and was 
				  put to death in May, 1940, having sired 26 colts at the age of 
				  29. He was noted for his stamina, style and good qualities. 
				  And records show that GIOVANNI continued a productive sire a 
				  few years longer than most of our horses. He did not die a 
				  natural death at the age of 30, but was thought to be no 
				  longer serviceable and so he was put to death. In all this he 
				  emphasizes his great endurance and stamina, and those 
				  qualities are recognized by his bloodlines through two to four 
				  generations.  GIOVANNI'S first season was made in the 
				  Middle Tennessee area IN 1914 and 55 mares were brought to his 
				  court. Forty-seven of them produced colts, however, his owner, 
				  Henry Davis, recognized that many of these mares came to 
				  GIOVANNI's court on account of the friendship to the owner and 
				  not on account of the admiration to the sire. In a few years, 
				  Henry Davis noted that many of the buyers that came to his 
				  barn in search of good Tennessee Walking Horses would specify 
				  some GIOVANNI blood, and some of his breeders have stated that 
				  they preferred the second generation of his colts rather than 
				  the first; however, I am not sure that the records will 
				  sustain this idea because many horses sired by him made 
				  enviable careers and show records. There are so many of these 
				  that I hesitate to direct your attention to them for fear of 
				  leaving off some important ones, but thinking it would be 
				  justly due the old sire, I will enumerate some that come to 
				  mind.  SPIDER, that great Walking Horse owned and 
				  ridden by Henry Davis and successfully shown by him two years, 
				  will not soon be forgotten by the patrons of the numerous 
				  fairs where he was shown. SPIDER was a large horse, sired by 
				  GIOVANNI, his dam the celebrated mare, DUTCH, by old
				  BLACK ALLEN that was 
				  successfully shown by Joe Crawford. joe continues to think she 
				  is the greatest Walking mare the Middle Tennessee country has 
				  ever produced. While she was a successful breeder, producing 
				  several good colts including LITTLE DUTCH and others, it is 
				  usually recognized that SPIDER, by GIOVANNI, was her best 
				  colt.  After two years of successful showing by 
				  Henry Davis and winning the championship at the Tennessee 
				  state Fair in 1922, SPIDER was sold at a large price to Lee 
				  wilson of Wilson, Arkansas, and he rode him for a number of 
				  years on his large plantation. SPIDER was about 16 hands high, 
				  weighed 1230 pounds, Black when not sunburned, good 
				  conformation, style, long stride, Henry could walk SPIDER to 
				  Shelbyville, 10 miles, from Wartrace, in an hour and return 
				  the same way. Hill Walker bred SPIDER from old DUTCH, sired by
				  ALLAN F-1, before 
				  she was sold to Joe Crawford.  Another of our good horsemen, the noted Joe 
				  Crawford, of the gaited horse fame, is also a booster for 
				  GIOVANNI. Joe gives credit to GIOVANNI for teaching him to 
				  ride gaited horses and further states that GIOVANNI and ROE'S 
				  CHIEF both saddlebred horses, are the only stallions that he 
				  has ever known that would sire Tennessee walking Horses, 
				  although it was necessary to mate them with our Walking mares 
				  in order to get Walking colts. Each of these stallions sired 
				  some good Tennessee Walking Horses when mated with the right 
				  Walking mares.  Likely the GIOVANNI colt with the greatest 
				  show record was JONES' SIR MACALVANNI 350054. MACALVANNI was 
				  named by Henry Davis when owned by Charles Kempkau and he had 
				  an unheard of record of 113 blue ribbons in 115 shows. 
				  MACALVANNI'S dam was WALKERS LIETHA 360090, A
				  HUNTER'S ALLEN F-10 
				  mare. These famous 
				  HUNTER'S ALLEN F-10 mares produced well with 
				  GIOVANNI as you will note from other records. SIR MACALVANNI 
				  was burned in the Clyde Westbrook Mississippi fire. He was 
				  fully recognized as one of the greatest show horses of the 
				  age.  GIOVANNI sired a trio-three full sisters - 
				  from the great Z.R. Pickens' mare, MARY ALLEN 360101, and she 
				  was by HUNTER'S ALLEN. 
				  The first, foaled in 1929, MARGARET SUE 350064, a roan mare 
				  with white markings and a great show mare was sold by Henry 
				  Davis to a California buyer. The second, foaled 1931, WALKING 
				  DREAM 360100, a sorrel mare with white stockings, was sold to 
				  Hayne's Haven by Z.R. Pickens, Jr., their breeder. The third, 
				  a red sorrel mare with beautiful white markings shown by our 
				  breeder, Z.R. Pickens, Jr., was SPRINGTIME 350147, foaled in 
				  1933, a winner at the Tennessee State Fair and now owned by 
				  Dr. George Garrett of Shreveport, Louisiana. These three full 
				  sisters, richly colored and marked and with perfect 
				  conformation, are a credit to the Tennessee Walking Horse 
				  breed.  Another fine GIOVANNI mare that gave good 
				  account of herself was JUNE KNIGHT 350036, owned by Charles 
				  Kempkau, a black mare bred by the late Albert Dement from SNIP 
				  350038. SNIP's dam was the renowned 
				  MERRY LEGS F-4, sired by old
				  ROAN ALLEN F-38. 
				  SNIP was sired by GREY LAD, by BRAMBLETT F-9, a great horse of 
				  the GREY JOHN breeding. He was also in the stud for Henry 
				  Davis in 1926 and 1927 and sired some good Walkers.  After Henry sold GIOVANNI, his next horse 
				  in 1916 was RED ALLEN, a good breeder for him for a year or 
				  two, but in 1917, Davis began with MITCH F-5 and continued 
				  with him five years. He, too, was a great breeder, the sire of 
				  MAJOR ALLEN and old BUD and others that are recognized as good 
				  breeders. Henry usually had a good stallion or two that would 
				  produce Walkers and he knew good ones, as demonstrated in his 
				  selecting GIOVANNI against the judgement of some of our best 
				  horsemen.  The former good horseman, the late Jim 
				  Miller, had a sorrel GIOVANNI horse that was a Tennessee State 
				  Fair champion that he showed as a four-to six-year-old from 
				  1923 to 1925. He and a sister were sold to Pennsylvania 
				  parties and they continued good show careers. BRUCE FISHER was 
				  another of GIOVANNI colts that as a five-year-old in Kentucky 
				  was a good winner. Winston Wiser came into the arena about 
				  that time and as a 13- and 14-year-old, he showed DIMPLES by 
				  GIOVANNI. As a two-year-old, Winston won with her at the old 
				  Shelbyville fair and then DIMPLES was a grand champion at 
				  Wartrace, an unusual record as a two-year-old. He sold her for 
				  $350, a top price in those days.  Another horse that Wiser likes to reflect 
				  on was DAN, a sorrel horse that he showed about 1924. His dam 
				  was WISER'S MINNIE, by old BLACK 
				  ALLAN. This BLACK 
				  ALLAN mare had an enviable show record, and also 
				  was WISER'S DIMPLES, the dam of 
				  MERRY GO BOY. Here again Wiser succeeds 
				  with an offspring of GIOVANNI. Winston says he could win 
				  easily with DIMPLES now, just as he could with old DAN.  While DAN and WISER'S DIMPLES were from 
				  WISER'S MINNIE, by ALLAN F-1 
				  and both sired by GIOVANNI, 
				  MERRY GO BOY was a second generation or a 
				  grandson of GIOVANNI from WISER'S DIMPLES. Needless to say, 
				  the above horses enthused and helped to make the good showman, 
				  Winston Wiser, and while the other second generation from 
				  GIOVANNI, there is none that has surpassed the twice grand 
				  champion, MERRY GO BOY. 
				  But it all demonstrates that the blood of GIOVANNI carries on.
				   GIOVANNI was about 15.1 hands, 
				  approximately 1100 pounds, a good driving and riding horse 
				  with much endurance and a fair show horse. He was very kind 
				  and gentle, and while old BLACK 
				  ALLAN gave stamina, endurance and quality to our 
				  present day Walkers, this was all further increased by 
				  GIOVANNI. He too, contributed stamina and qualities. GIOVANNI 
				  made his first season here in 1914 at Henry Davis' barn at 
				  Wartrace and was sold to John S. Davis, Jr., who in turn sold 
				  him to R.T. Walker and Walker made seasons with him 
				  continuously from 191 through 1930. Davis bought the horse 
				  again, making the seasons of 1931 and 1932 and sold him to 
				  that good horseman, Steve Hill, in the spring of 1933. Steve 
				  kept him two or three seasons, selling to Clyde Westbrooks in 
				  Mississippi, and he sold him to Tom Brown at Columbia, 
				  Tennessee when GIOVANNI was 29 years old, for $250 (Adjusted 
				  for inflation to 2014:
	  $4,413.80). Early the 
				  next spring, Brown sold him back to Westbrooks for $300 
				  (Adjusted for inflation to 2014 $5,217.51), and 
				  he lived until May, 1940, when he no longer seemed serviceable 
				  and was put to death. However, GIOVANNI sired 26 colts when he 
				  was 29 years old, a longer record in the stud than most any of 
				  our stallions.  All the owners and users of GIOVANNI refer 
				  to him as a satisfactory using horse, no bad habits. He was 
				  always kind and a most satisfactory mannered horse. Two or 
				  three of Bob Walker's children used him for a school horse. I 
				  have been unable to find anyone who knew him or his 
				  descendants that would dare criticize him. His colts and 
				  grand-colts were always in demand and usually sold to 
				  out-of-state buyers. They soon learned that the GIOVANNI blood 
				  was desirable and they often inquired of Henry Davis if he 
				  could furnish them with horses that traced to him.  If GIOVANNI were living today and near 
				  human as most of those well acquainted with him thought him to 
				  be, I would take off my hat to him and apologize for not 
				  thinking he was the peer of any sire of tahe Tennessee Walking 
				  Horse breed. I have never traced a horse that has persistently 
				  shown a better record and stand than GIOVANNI. |