| Perfect records
are sparse in horse racing, which makes Red’s Hawk a rare
animal.
A foal of 1954 by Dark Hawk out of Dallas Babe,
Red’s Hawk produced a dozen foals and all 12 turned out
to be winners on the racetrack. Four of them won major stakes
in Western Canada.
Lucky Spot won the Ascot Sophomore Stakes at
Hastings and the Oneonta Handicap at Santa Anita. Major Mack captured
the Alberta Derby and the Derby Trial. Nancy Hawk, one of the
most explosive stretch runners in Hastings history, won the B.C.
Oaks and Brighouse Belles and Winning Red starred in the Canadian
Derby, the Alberta Derby and the Victoria Park Derby.
She is only the third broodmare to join the Hall
of Fame, joining So And So and Alta Mira.
Red’s Hawk was owned and bred by the late
Nels Jensen (1912 – 1974) and named after his wife Isabelle,
whose nickname was “Red”.
Nels was a resourceful entrepreneur and at different
times ran a convenience store, several butcher shops, a tack shop,
and dabbed in cattle. But his first love was horses and he brought
them from California and Washington by the truckload for resale
in British Columbia.
One horse be brought north was Dark Hawk. He
was sold to Bill and Al McLean and became one of the greatest
sires in the province. His best son was George Royal, who becomes
more of a legend with each passing year.
Red’s Hawk was a direct result of Jensen’s
deep love of horses.
He rescued Red’s Hawk’s dam, Dallas
Babe, from deplorable circumstances in Washington. The horse was
in such shocking condition that she had to be hoisted on to a
truck to be transported to the farm. Her ankles had calcified
and she had trouble walking.
Despite These problems the mare responded to
the care of the Jensen’s and produced four foals including
the stakes-placed Tui-Lyke. Red’s Hawk had one win and three
seconds in six starts for modest earnings of $1,200. But her foals
earned a total of $285,000. |