An Almost Accidental Snapshot–Penn
State Conqueror
by Maurice Telleen
published in The Draft Horse
Journal, Winter 2001 - 2002
That May 4 dateline is important for only
one reason. May 4 was the photographer’s 89th birthday
and I owe him one. His name is Lawrence Dedrick, Belfast,
New York.
The horse is the famous Penn State Conqueror, foaled in
1952. He was about as royally bred as a Belgian could be
in 1952. His sire was Conqueror himself, the signature sire
of Meadow Brook in the late ‘40s and the ‘50s–or
until he was replaced by his own son, Conquest. Conqueror,
in turn, was a son of Progress–so those three generations
of sires and sons, in large measure, were responsible for
the bulk of those famous Meadow Brook horses with names that
start with “Con.”
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| Penn State
Conqueror taking some exercise on a brisk winter
morning at
the Charles Orndorff farm in 1959. If Lawrence
Dedrick hadn’t taken this snapshot, we would
have been skunked on a picture of this great sire. |
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Here is our
Winter 1977 cover, taken at Beldale Farm, Belfast,
New York. Lawrence Dedrick
had bought three mares at the 1975 Eastern States
Sale in Columbus, Ohio. Pictured here are two
of them; the
blaze faced mare, May Queen, was consigned by Dr.
A. D. Allen, Plain City, Ohio and the plain-faced
mare,
Orndorff’s Lark Jane, was consigned by Donald
Wack, Zelienople, PA. Both mares did well for Lawrence
and both carried Orndorff breeding. This
photo first came to us in the form of the Dedrick
Christmas card. Here is what Lawrence had
to say
about it: “It was just good luck that we had
one of those early November snowfalls, awakening
one morning to find the ground blanketed with snow
and as the poet John Greenleaf Whittier wrote, ‘Every
pine and fir and hemlock wore an ermine too dear
for an earl, and the poorest wig of the elm tree
was ridged inch deep with pearl.’
“So, I called our son,
Dave, whose interest in pictures started long ago,
when he was enrolled
in a 4-H photography project. We headed down toward
the creek which meanders through our small farm,
and found two of our friendly mares willing to pose.
Hence the picture.” |
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Beldale Perky
Polly, a grand champion mare at the New York State
Fair
for Kenneth L. Spingler & Family,
Weedsport, NY. That looks like Doc Sears on the lead
shank. I understand Polly won that award more than
once.... She was the kind Lawrence had set out to breed. |
Penn State Conqueror’s
dam was Lisa Farceur, the sensational yearling filly of 1949,
junior and reserve grand champion mare and winner of the
King Albert cup at Chicago that year. She was also reserve
junior champion at Ohio and Waterloo that same year. She
was a daughter of Master Farceur Jr., and was bred by Charley
House of Indiana. So two of the greatest architects of the
modern Belgian were breeders of the sire and dam of Penn
State Conqueror.
He was foaled at Penn State University, where Elmer Taft–another
great horseman of that era–was presiding over the last
great collegiate stable of draft horses. Michigan State may
dispute that claim, or at least say it was a dead heat. In
either case, both programs were near death in 1952.
In better times, this colt surely would have been headed
for a life of opportunity and privilege. But 1952 was not
a good time for draft horses, whether they be commoners or
royalty. But Penn State Conqueror got lucky. He was discovered
by Charley Orndorff, another of that small cadre of dedicated
breeders who took breeding great horses personally–in
spite of the lousy market and public indifference. When Charley
found the horse, he was owned by a fellow named Ennis Himelick,
Losantville, Indiana. Both Charley and Mr. Himelick were
horse traders, born to the trade. So they swapped a couple
of mares and the one Charley got was carrying a foal by Penn
State Conqueror. The resulting foal was Dixie Conqueror,
one of Penn State’s first registered sons. Dixie Conqueror
was an impressive colt, winning his class at Harrisburg in
both 1957 and 1958 as a yearling and two year old. So Charley
tried to buy the sire. He recalled that Himelick was standing
him at $25 and getting mighty few takers. One of the reasons
being that Modern Trend, also a famous horse at that time,
was standing in the same area at $15. Not only was he cheaper
but he was a smaller, trimmer kind of horse and more in tune
with the fashion of the ‘40s and ‘50s. In fact,
Himelick’s best offer, prior to Charley’s, was
from a puller who wanted a heavyweight pulling horse. To
heck with the papers.
Charley couldn’t get him bought outright so he leased
him, bred 14 mares, got 12 foals and when they hit the ground
he was determined more than ever to own him. So he traded
Dixie Conqueror and a six year old mare to Himelick, and
Penn State Conqueror came to the hills of western Pennsylvania.
And there he spent the rest of his life.
Charley recalls him as standing over 18 hands at five years
of age and weighing 2,765 pounds over the scale. He took
breeding seriously, wouldn’t eat much during the breeding
season and would “get poor as a snake.” Breeding
season over, he would go back to the dinner table and by
the time the next breeding season rolled around he was, again,
a different looking horse.
As we stated in the Spring 1982 DHJ–in an article
on Charley Orndorff and his Belgians, “The 1960s were
a triumphant march for the Penn State Conqueror foals.” Not
bad, for a horse who might have become a heavyweight puller.
He was famous but I had never seen a picture of the horse.
Now the scene shifts to a 25 acre place called Beldale Farm
up in Allegany County, New York. The proprietor was a man
named Lawrence Dedrick, who was engaged in extension work,
primarily 4-H. He was keen on horses and numbered people
like Doc Sears, Jack Briggs and John Beard among his friends
and home state colleagues, all great horsemen. He resolved
to breed some good ones himself. He, like many others, decided
to go to the place where good Belgians were being bred, for
his foundation animals. That is usually a good idea.
So in 1959, Larry went down to see Mr. Orndorff and he came
home with a couple of weanling fillies, both sired by Penn
State Conqueror. He took his camera along, I would guess
a long standing habit from extension work. He wanted a picture
of the sire. Charley told him he had a professional photographer
engaged to come out and take a picture of Penn State Conqueror
because he wanted one, too, and he would send Larry a print.
That was all good and well but since Larry had a camera along,
he just shot a couple frames of the horse taking some exercise
at the Orndorff farm on a brisk winter morning.
Good thing, because before Charley got that professional
out to take his picture, he came out one morning and found
the stallion “dead at my feet”–as he put
it. So the photo you see here (as in the Winter, 1977, DHJ)
is–so far as I know, the only picture ever published
of that breed-building sire. He was not, to my knowledge,
ever shown.
Larry recalls him as a big horse, long-necked and strong
topped–but he would not have been a top show horse.
He travelled wide behind and his hocks were not ideal–as
he recalls. So that is the story on this, more or less, accidental
picture of a great breeding stallion.
As for Larry Dedrick, he continued with this line of breeding.
After he retired from extension 25-26 years ago, he started
frequenting the Columbus sale. In 1975, he came home with
two mares, also carrying the Orndorff breeding. And those
two mares became the subject of our Winter 1977 cover.
Dedrick continued to breed Belgians in a modest way. One
of which he recalls with great pleasure was Beldale Perky
Polly, shown to grand champion at the New York State Fair
a couple of times in the late 1980s by Kenneth L. Spingler
and Family, from Weedsport, New York.
We will run her photo (from the 1990 Belgian Review) and
that cover photo on the Winter 1977 DHJ taken at Beldale
Farm itself. Larry isn’t breeding horses these days
but, an educator first and foremost, he takes pride in the
Belgians being bred by his friend, protege and neighbor,
David H. Spencer. So, as with anyone who puts their hearts,
as well as their time, into their work–it lives on.
I believe that desire, to have your work live on, has always
been one of the strong inducements to breed good livestock.
It tends to attract outstanding people. The same sort of
thing motivated him in his extension work with 4-H. When
we first met him, some thirty years ago, he was concerned
with who was going to serve as mentors to young people with
an interest in heavy horses–with so many of their one-time
mentors such as dads, uncles, neighbors either gone or no
longer horse-minded. The universities, 4-H and FFA had also
given up on them. This was Larry Dedrick’s concern
before “teamster schools” had popped up all over
the country. He was, as they say, ahead of the curve with
his concern.
If you would like to send him a belated card wishing him
a “Happy 89th Birthday,” his address is 6801
Gleason Hill Road, Belfast, New York 14711. It would be a
day late and a dollar short, but that is scarcely a new experience
to most of us.
And if you don’t have a “professional” picture
of old Captain or Dolly, maybe you better take one yourself.
It is called “insurance.
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