Gaines' Denmark (foaled 1851) was one of the most influential stallions in the development of the American Saddlebred.
Life
Gaines' Denmark was foaled in 1851 in Bardstown, Kentucky. He was a black stallion with two white hind socks, sired by the Thoroughbred stallion Denmark out of a part-bred mare known as the "Stevenson mare".[1] Gaines' Denmark sired four influential sons: Washington Denmark, Diamond Denmark, Star Denmark, and Sumpter Denmark.
As a stud, Gaines' Denmark first caught the attention of American Saddlebred Horse Association founder and president John B. Castleman in 1857. Castleman, then a 16-year-old teenager, purchased a 3-year-old, "three-fourths Thoroughbred" gelding named Lightfoot that was sired by Gaines' Denmark out of "a mare by Boston". With the assistance of Isaac Byrd, an enslavedAfrican American who was owned by Castleman's family, Castleman trained Lightfoot to be a "saddle" show horse, and entered him into a local horse show. The horse fetched an "unprecedented price", and Castleman became further interested in Gaines' Denmark as a foundational sire for the Saddlebred.[4]
^The Missouri Fox Trotting Horse Breed Association (MFTHBA) lists the "Stevenson mare" dam as a Narragansett Pacer, but most academic and pedigree sources indicate that the Pacer had largely gone extinct as a breed by 1848. Another source lists the dam as a "Canadian Horse mare", which is more likely.