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The Legendary Jay Trump - Steeplechase
Wonder

Among horseracing's elite, one horse stands out in Indian Hill memory--the celebrated Jay Trump. This thoroughbred's story is one of the great sporting accomplishments of all time, shared by owner Mary C. Stephenson (now LeBlond,) and rider Crompton "Tommy" Smith.
Jay Trump was the result of an unplanned breeding between dam Be Trump (thought to be infertile) and sire Tonga Prince, when the two were pastured together. Foaled in 1957, the strong colt with a white diamond on his forehead was named for his mother and his owner Jay Sensenich. Jay Trump was raised in "Shanty Town", a stable area between two race tracks in West Virginia. His racing debut at a local track was a near disaster: the jockey's whip struck the horse in the eye, the horse collided with a post, and both horse and rider were severely injured. Word spread that Jay Trump was a rogue - too dangerous to ride.
Tommy Smith grew up in the horse country of Virginia, surrounded by equestrians. After graduating from Taft, and while still enrolled in Princeton, Tommy entered many steeplechase races. Leaving college to pursue a riding career, he won the 1959 Maryland Hunt Cup, and in 1960 gained the Martini and Rossi Award as leading point-to-point rider in the United States.
Mary Stephenson, a friend of Tommy Smith's mother, followed his progress in her frequent trips East from Indian Hill to foxhunt and attend hunt meetings. A member of the Camargo Hunt and an avid rider, Mrs. Stephenson had never before owned a racing thoroughbred; but she asked Smith to find her a sound horse that could compete. In "Shanty Town" in 1960, Smith purchased Jay Trump from Sensenich for $2000. Moved to a Maryland farm, the gelding was trained as a hunter and in dressage. During visits to Maryland, Mrs. Stephenson and her granddaughter would hack or hunt on Jay Trump.
Jay Trump won his first race in 1962, followed by 3 successive victories in the Virginia point-to-point circuit. Then, in 1963, in a powerful victory, he shattered the course record in the prestigious and challenging Maryland Hunt Cup. Tommy approached Mrs. Stephenson about taking Jay Trump to the Grand National in Aintree, England, a lifelong dream for the rider. Mrs. Stephenson said to wait another year; and when Jay Trump and Smith won Maryland's Big Three Steeplechasing Events in 1964, Mrs. Stephenson decided to try the greatest race in Great Britain. Jay Trump was flown to England in July, 1964 to be trained by the famed Fred Winter. Horse, jockey and trainer spent the next nine months training for the nine minutes it takes to run the Grand National Course. The Aintree course was two circuits around a 2 1/2 mile track. To the jockey the 30 fences looked "like mountains" whose height left no way of discerning hazards on the other side; and many had a drop--the ground was higher on the take-off than the landing.
Despite odds of 110 to 6, Jay Trump won the Grand National on March 27, 1965. Twelfth after the first circuit, he used his superb jumping ability to move up on the favorite, avoiding fallen horses by changing angles mid-jump like a hunter and exhibiting the handiness he had acquired from dressage. After an astonishing race, Jay Trump was proclaimed by Britain's newspapers as a "nothing runner... (who has become) the kingpin of the world's jumpers." An unprecedented triumph, it was the first and only time a horse that was American bred, owned, and ridden had won the Aintree Grand National.
Jay Trump returned to the U.S. a national celebrity. The following spring, after winning the Maryland Hunt Cup for the third time, the bay horse retired to Mrs. Stephenson's Meshewa Farm, where he lived until 1988, cared for by her granddaughter, Serena. After his death, Jay Trump was buried at the finish line of Kentucky Horse Park's steeplechase course--a worthy champion, an exceptional mount, and a peerless horse in steeplechasing history.
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