This information was
taken from "Biography of the Tennessee Walking Horse" by
Ben
Green, published by
Four Craftsman Publishing, Lakeside,
ArizonaThese
excerpts are comments from horse show judges from the 1950's:
"The flat-foot walk should be
bold, square, and straight, above all it should stay flat and
loose, like a horse going after cows." by O.R. Matthews,
Reelsville, Indiana.
"A horse doing a good
flat-foot walk will naturally have head motion. He just can't
do a good flat-foot walk without using his head. There is no
swing in a flat-foot walk", by Henry S. Alexander, Clinton,
Kentucky.
"The running walk should be
straight, loose and airy, without any trace or degree of rack,
pace, or stepping pace. The horse should reach out in front
and pull with his shoulders, and not go too high off the
ground. The lick should be followed through without causing
either end of the horse to swing - if either end of the horse
does swing, the horse is probably pacing." by O.R. Matthews,
Reelsville, Indiana.
"The canter should be
executed with a moderate rolling, "rocking chair" motion, not
too fast nor too high, with head set up, neck slightly arched,
chin slightly tucked and head motion in time with leg
movement." by John C. Askew, Jr., Nashville, Tennessee.
"I like a horse with
substance and bone, and one which can take it, one with good
wind, good head and neck, smart pop eyes that miss nothing,
good throat latch, with his tail coming out of his hips on the
right manner, and a horse with lots of driving power. With
hips just a little long in a Walking Horse, I believe it can
give him power and stride." by B.A. Skipper, Jr., Longview,
Texas.
One of Mr. Green's concerns
in writing this book, originally published in 1960, was that
the breed at that time was in peril as primarily due to
external societal and economic changes. He stressed the need
to promote the pleasure horse. It was Dr. J.M. Jones who
identified soring and artificial gaits as a peril to the
breed.
In May of 1960, the Breeders
Association adopted rules and regulations to discourage and
prevent soring and it called upon judges not to award ribbons
to horses that had been sored. The Biography goes on to say,
"We have talked three times with a 76-year old veterinarian of
50 years experience with Tennessee Walking Horses to discuss
this 'soring' practice. Horses have been sent to him from
faraway California for diagnosis and treatment. He is Dr. J.M.
Jones, whose rock home and barn are three miles from
Lewisburg.
Dr. Jones told us he believes
the practice of "painfully torturing and soring horses" for
show purposes constitutes a "definite threat to the breed for
two specific reasons:"
1. Horses tortured to
man-make an exaggerated or artificial gait cannot transmit the
gait to their progeny because they do not have it naturally.
The breed itself could be virtually eliminated in time if
artificially-gaited horses were to win show stakes and become
major factors in the breeding of Tennessee Walking Horses
2. In my opinion the
torturing of horses, either stallion or mare, to produce these
gaits artificially interferes with their nervous systems and
they do not breed properly. Certainly if persisted in this
treatment of horses can have a most detrimental effect.
The footnote from Four
Craftsman to these statements says, "The 35 years since this
was written have proven Dr. Jones correct. The
artificially-gaited horses did become the stakes winners and
major factors in the breeding of Tennessee Walking Horses. In
1995 the natural gait behavior of registered Tennessee Walking
Horses is indistinguishable from that of Foxtrotters, Racking
Horses, Singlefooters, Spotted Saddle Horses, and Tennessee
pacers." and "the use of chemicals as soring agents has been
implicated as a cause of kidney failure, liver failure, colic,
and mysterious premature death from health problems not
usually found in horses."
The TWH Heritage Society
members have not been heavily involved in the Middle Tennessee
show scene and none have ever owned or exhibited a sored
horse.
Horses & Health Go Hand In Hand

Even during
the ravages of World War II, people realized that the outside
of a Tennessee Walking Horse was good for the inside of a man
or woman. The following article is from the 1943 Blue Ribbon
magazine:
"It matters not
whether your battle is in the office, in the factory or on the
farm, you'll need strength to fight. Strength comes through
health. Health comes from exercise and proper care of your
body.
That's where the
horse comes into the picture, for it is univerally recognized
that horseback riding is one of the finest forms of exercise
that man or woman can take. It is not strenuous, yet it is
invigorating. It tones up the muscles and gives one a glow of
health.
We all need
health today. That's why you need a horse.
And in choosing
a horse you'll probably want one which is easy in the saddle
and smooth in gaits, for you don't want to wrestle with your
mount wile you ride. In other words you don't want to work
while you play. And all of us need a little "play" through
these strenuous days to keep us fit.
The Tennessee
Walking Horse is known as "The World's Greatest Pleasure
Horse." But the word pleasure is rather passe now! Yet, it is
sensible and right and proper to conserve our health in the
highest possible degree while we carry on with the work that
is before us on the home front.
When you have
left the office or are out of the store or factory you need
some form of recreation to build you up for another day. You
can find this on the back of a Tennessee Walking Horse when he
carries you along the bridle path, the open road, or around
your own premises. That's the tonic you need just now.
The Tennessee
Walking Horse is gentle and sensible, easy to saddle, easy to
mount and easy to ride. He'll take you there and bring you
back and he'll do it in such a smooth manner that you will
feel no fatigue after your ride. He's famous for his "free and
easy" gaits. No other horse can give you the delightful and
gliding ride that he can and will give you, for no other horse
has his delightful and gliding gaits.
These gaits are
the flat-foot walk, the running walk, and the rolling canter.
They'll take you from four to eight miles an hour. After sixty
minutes in the saddle on the back of a Tennessee Walking Horse
you'll rested and mended, you'll feel fit and fine, you'll be
ready for peaceful sleep, and you'll be able to hit the ball
all the harder on the morrow."
This fine
description of the Walking Horse fits exactly what the
breeders of the Heritage Horses are producing today. Although
the above article was from the World War II era, the Heritage
Horse has remained the same through many generations of
careful breeding.