The Morgan Horse and Register, Containing the Names, Morgan Rating, Rule by Which Admitted, and in Case of Stallions the Registration Number of All Horses Registered up to the Time Registrations Were Begun in Volume IV., Vol. III [Volume 3]
The Morgan Horse and Register, Containing the Names, Morgan Rating, Rule by Which Admitted, and in Case of Stallions the Registration Number of All Horses Registered up to the Time Registrations Were Begun in Volume IV., Vol. III [Volume 3]

The Morgan Horse and Register, Containing the Names, Morgan Rating, Rule by Which Admitted, and in Case of Stallions the Registration Number of All Horses Registered up to the Time Registrations Were Begun in Volume IV., Vol. III [Volume 3]

Regular price $ 125.00
691 pp. Black-and-white photographs throughout. The last volume of the register published under the name of the author who started the series in the 1890s, released shortly after his death in February 1915. The Morgan horse is one of the earliest horse breeds developed in the United States. Tracing back to the foundation sire Figure, later named Justin Morgan after his best-known owner, Morgans served many roles in 19th-century American history, being used as coach horses and for harness racing, as general riding animals, and as cavalry horses during the American Civil War on both sides of the conflict. Morgans have influenced other major American breeds, including the American Quarter Horse, Tennessee Walking Horse and the Standardbred. During the 19th and 20th centuries, they were exported to other countries, including England, where a Morgan stallion influenced the breeding of the Hackney horse. In 1907, the US Department of Agriculture established the US Morgan Horse Farm near Middlebury, Vermont for the purpose of perpetuating and improving the Morgan breed; the farm was later transferred to the University of Vermont. The first breed registry was established in 1909, and since then many organizations in the US, Europe and Oceania have developed. Popular children's authors, including Marguerite Henry and Ellen Feld, have portrayed the breed in their books; Henry's Justin Morgan Had a Horse was later made into a Disney movie.