Johren
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Johren | |
|---|---|
| Sire | Spearmint |
| Grandsire | Carbine |
| Dam | Mineola |
| Damsire | Meddler |
| Sex | Stallion |
| Foaled | 1915 |
| Country | Great Britain |
| Colour | Bay |
| Breeder | Harry Payne Whitney |
| Owner | Harry Payne Whitney |
| Trainer | James G. Rowe, Sr. & Albert Simons |
| Record | 22: 9-5-3 |
| Earnings | $49,156 |
| Major Racing Wins, Awards and Honours | |
| Major Racing Wins | |
| Latonia Derby (1918) Suburban Handicap (1918) Saratoga Cup (1918) Lawrence Realization Stakes (1918) American Classic Race wins: |
|
| Racing Awards | |
| American Co-Champion 3-Year-Old Colt (1918) American Horse of the Year (1918) |
|
| Infobox last updated on: August 29, 2007. | |
Johren (foaled 1915 in England) was a Thoroughbred racehorse who competed in the United States. Owned and bred by Harry Payne Whitney, he was sired by Spearmint, the 1906 Grand Prix de Paris winner and a son of Australian Racing Hall of Fame inductee Carbine. As well as being the sire of the Belmont Stakes-winning filly Tanya, Johren's damsire Meddler was also the damsire of U.S. Racing Hall of Fame inductee Grey Lag.
Harry Whitney had racing operations at Newmarket in England and in his native United States. He brought Johren as a yearling to his Brookdale Farm in Lincroft, New Jersey where his race training was overseen by head trainer, James G. Rowe, Sr.
Johren was not sufficiently developed to race at age two and started his three-year-old racing season with nine straight losses before finally getting a win. In the pre-U.S. Triple Crown era, he was not entered in the 1918 Kentucky Derby, instead, his handlers chose to run stablemate, Vindex. Entered in the Preakness Stakes, Johren ran fourth but then won the Belmont Stakes, defeating Preakness winner, War Cloud. By the summer of 1918, the colt had become one of the dominant horses in American racing, winning a number of other important races including the 1918 Latonia Derby in which he defeated Kentucky Derby winner Exterminator. Johren's 1918 performances earned him Horse of the Year honors.
Retired to stud duty, Johen had only modest success as a sire. His most noteworthy progeny was Edisto who raced for the Seagram Stables and won several races in Canada and the U.S.

