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A
lifelong horseman, Harry R. Gill has been
a major force in the world of Grand Prix
Show Jumping. A longtime supporter of some
of show jumping's leading riders, Gill has
owned many of the country's most famed horses.
One of the sport's foremost authorities
on footing, Gill has served the industry
by improving horse show venues and riding
conditions, and as a member of several Boards
of Directors and Organizing Committees.
Gill's slew of champions is headed by the
legendary Idle Dice, a charter inductee
into the Show Jumping Hall of Fame. Ridden
to greatness by Hall of Famer Rodney Jenkins,
"Ike," won honors as the AHSA Horse of the
Year, rode for the USET in the 1974 World
Championships and won the American Gold
Cup three times. Gill also owned the PHA
Horse of the Year, Gustavus; the AHSA Horse
of the Year, Beanbag; and the AGA Horse
of the Year, Viktor. Other horses ridden
under Gill's ownership included such superstars
as Number One Spy, Sloopy, Brendan, Philco,
French Rapture, Ping Pong, Robin Hood, Another
March and Twist du Valon.
As owner of these horses, Gill created partnerships
with some of the nation's leading riders
including Jenkins, McLain Ward, Michael
Matz, Katie Monahan Prudent, Debbie Stephens
and Beezie Madden. Quietly, Gill has been
known to provide several riders who lacked
a horse or the funds with the horse power
needed to become champions.
Growing up on a family farm, Gill spent
his childhood riding a pony or giant work
horse instead of a bicycle. As a young man,
he enjoyed fox hunting as well as showing.
He ran a successful show stable in Pennsylvania
with his wife Marjorie Gill as rider until
his father's death, when he assumed control
of the family business, Gill Quarries. Unwilling
to completely give up horses, he hired Rodney
Jenkins to ride for him. The partnership
proved to be a winning combination as the
two men rewrote the record books of American
show jumping with the famed Idle Dice and
Number One Spy.
Gill has also contributed to the sport by
serving on the Board of Directors for Stadium
Jumping, Inc., the American Grandprix Association,
and the Devon Horse Show. In 1981, Gill
played an enormous role as a member of the
Organizing Committee for the World Cup Final
held in Baltimore, helping to bring the
Final to the United States for the first
time. He has also been a member of the Organizing
Committee for the Baltimore Jumping Classic,
Devon Horse Show and the American Gold Cup,
which he helped out of its financial troubles
years ago and then helped establish it as
one of the sport's premier events at its
current home in Pennsylvania.
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