Tampa, FL—April
5, 2004—The Show Jumping Hall of Fame
conducted its annual induction ceremonies during
the intermission at the Budweiser American Invitational
on Saturday, April 3, at Raymond James Stadium
in Tampa, FL. J. Russell Stewart, Sr. and Main
Spring were inducted into the Show Jumping Hall
of Fame. They join 52 previous inductees whose
contributions to the sport set them apart and
earned them the honor of enshrinement in the
Show Jumping Hall of Fame.
J. Russell Stewart, Sr. was
born in Albany, NY, in 1926. He began riding
at age 11, and though he had no formal training,
subsequently began showing successfully in the
jumper divisions. By the time he returned to
New York after serving in the army during World
War II, he was well recognized for his riding
and training abilities.
During the 1940s and ‘50s, Stewart continued
to hone his self-taught riding skills and he
made a name for himself in the jumper ring with
such well known horses as My Play Boy, on whom
he earned the 1941 AHSA Open Jumper Championship.
In 1961, Stewart took over the management of
Coosaw Farms and Airy Hall Plantation in South
Carolina for Mr. and Mrs. Albert Love of Atlanta,
GA. While there he continued to train hunters
and jumpers into the early 1970s, having much
success with horses such as Big John and Blue
Plum.
Stewart had great success with Blue Plum, winning
numerous classes, including a Puissance at Hot
Springs, VA, and the Grand Prix at the Pennsylvania
National Horse Show. Stewart’s success
with Blue Plum led to his being purchased by
Bertram Firestone who then loaned him to the
U.S. Equestrian Team.
Stewart also teamed with Grey Ghost to win
the 1964 and 1965 Open Speed Stakes at the National
Horse Show in Madison Square Garden in dramatic
fashion.
It was during the mid-‘60s that Stewart
accomplished the feat for which he is best known:
three consecutive wins in the National Horse
Show’s famed Puissance Stake. Stewart
first rode Airy Hall’s 17-hand brown gelding,
Dear Brutus, to capture the win in 1965. The
duo followed up with another Puissance win in
1966, leaping to a then-record height of 7’1”.
To retire the Chrysler Imperial Challenge Trophy
in 1967, Stewart and Dear Brutus bettered their
previous year’s jump by two inches, claiming
victory for the third time in a row and setting
National Horse Show and U.S. records. The pair’s
record held until 1973.
Stewart moved to Christimar Farms in Santa
Barbara, CA, in 1971. Two years later, he rode
Grey Chief to win the AHSA Open Jumper Championship.
Grey Chief was also named Horse of the Year
later that year. Stewart and Grey Chief also
won the $10,000 World Championship Jumper Class
held at the Cow Palace in San Francisco, CA,
in 1974. During his tenure, Stewart led Christimar’s
entries to victory in 14 out of 17 High Score
Championships offered on the Pacific coast.
Besides his numerous show jumping successes,
Stewart also had many great accomplishments
in the hunter ring, winning multiple AHSA Hunter
Championships throughout his career.
Because of his noted achievements in the various
hunter and jumper disciplines, Stewart was selected
as the AHSA Horseman of the Year in 1974. He
was later honored as the California Professional
Horsemen’s Association Horseman of the
Year in 1985. Stewart retired in 1986, ending
his nearly half-century-long career. His legacy
of success in the hunter/jumper world was carried
on by his son, J. Russell “Rusty”
Stewart, Jr.
Main Spring, a Canadian-bred
gelding owned by the late William D. “Billy”
Haggard, III, was the second outstanding mount
Haggard loaned to the United States Equestrian
Team during the 1960s and ‘70s following
the retirement of Bold Minstrel. Purchased by
Haggard after a sensational National Horse Show
debut in 1971 under Rodney Jenkins, Main Spring
went on to chalk up many international victories
under the piloting of Show Jumping Hall of Famers,
William Steinkraus and Frank Chapot.
Perhaps his most memorable career highlight
came in Munich in 1972 in his role as backup
to the 1968 Gold Medalist, Snowbound. When the
latter sustained a leg injury in the individual
competition of the Games, Steinkraus went on
to compete Main Spring in the team event and
turned in the best overall score of the day
in the Nations’ Cup, producing one of
only three clear rounds in the entire event.
The duo helped the U.S. team win the Silver
Medal, finishing a mere .25 faults behind the
Gold Medal-winning Federal Republic of Germany.
Following the Olympics, Steinkraus and Main
Spring went on to help the United States clinch
three Nations Cup wins on the fall circuit at
the end of 1972, when they came away with victories
at Harrisburg, New York, and Toronto. The year
also included wins in the Gubelin Preis at Lucerne
and the Munchner Versicherung at Aachen as well
as the Grand Prix of Toronto. Steinkraus also
rode Main Spring to two victories at the National
Horse Show in Madison Square Garden, winning
the Volco Trophy and the Stake, and also to
the International Individual Championship in
Harrisburg.
After Steinkraus retired at the end of 1972,
Main Spring acquired a new partner in Steinkraus’s
teammate Frank Chapot. Main Spring and Chapot
aided the U.S. team to two Nations Cup victories
that year — one in Washington and one
in Toronto. They also emerged victorious in
the Grand Prix of Toronto. Nationally, Chapot
and Main Spring won the Volco Trophy at the
National Horse Show as well as the Bonus Class
in Washington.
The highlight of Main Spring’s partnership
with Chapot came in 1974 when the pair earned
the individual Bronze Medal at the Show Jumping
World Championships in Hickstead, England. That
same year, they won the prestigious King George
V Gold Cup in London and helped the United States
clinch victory in the Nations Cup competition
in New York. For the second year in a row, Chapot
rode Main Spring to the win in the Grand Prix
of Toronto. Following Steinkraus’s win
with the horse there in 1972, this win marked
the third consecutive year that Main Spring
had earned the title in that prestigious Grand
Prix, serving as a fitting finish to a successful
career.
Since 1987, the Show Jumping Hall of Fame has
inducted William C. Steinkraus, Bertalan deNemethy
and Idle Dice (1987); Patrick Butler
and August A. Busch, Jr. (1988); David Kelly,
Jimmy Williams, Ben O’Meara and Frances
Row (1989); Arthur McCashin, Kathy
Kusner, Brigadier General Harry D. Chamberlin
and San Lucas (1990); Adolph Mogavero,
Whitney Stone, Morton “Cappy Smith”
and Pat Dixon (1991); Eleonora “Eleo”
Sears, Mary Mairs Chapot, Barbara Worth Oakford
and Snowman (1992); Dr. Robert C. Rost
and Joe Green (1993); Frank Chapot and Gordon
Wright (1994); Mickey Walsh and Trail Guide
(1995); Pamela Carruthers, Jet Run,
Richard “Dick” Donnelly and Heatherbloom
(1996); Edward “Ned” King, Bobby
Egan and Sun Beau (1997); Fred “Freddy”
Wettach, Jr., Melanie Smith Taylor and Johnny
Bell (1998); Rodney Jenkins, Sinjon,
Franklin F. “Fuddy” Wing, Jr. and
Democrat (1999); George Morris, Carol
Durand and Touch of Class (2000); Eugene
R. Mische, Lt. Colonel John W. Russell, Bobby
Burke, and Untouchable (2001); Harry
R. Gill, Clarence L. “Honey” Craven,
Calypso and Gem Twist (2002).
For further information about the Show Jumping
Hall of Fame and Museum, please visit the Hall
of Fame website at www.showjumpinghalloffame.net.
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