Hallmark Stables
18795 North 200th Street
Beecher City , IL 62414
ph: 1-217-690-9185
gotipper


Rose and Jet colt arrived 5/4/2009!
Hallmark Stables 1st Jet foal!!!

Say Hello to Storm!
Hallmark Stables Breeding Horses with Bloodlines
Speed and Brains
Need a fast horse with exceptional bloodlines????
L☺☺K what's available right here in the Midwest!!!!!
One or more of my horses have these bloodlines on their papers
Secretariat
Seattle Slew
Depth Charge
Three Bars
Pacific Bailey
Jet Deck
Easy Jet
GO Man GO
Bugs Alive in 75
Rocket Wrangler
Dash For Cash
Peppy San Badger
Doc Bar
Poco Bueno
and many more!
Wall of Champions!
Secretariat
(March 30, 1970 – October 4, 1989) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse, who in 1973 became the first U.S. Triple Crown champion in twenty-five years, setting new race records in two of the three events in the Series - the Kentucky Derby (1:59 2/5), and the Belmont Stakes (2:24) - records that still stand today.
Secretariat was the son of Bold Ruler (a grandson of Nearco) out of Somethingroyal. He was born at Meadow Farm in Caroline County, Virginia. Like the equally famous horse Man o' War, Secretariat was a large chestnut colt and was given the same nickname, "Big Red."
Owned by Penny Chenery (aka Penny Tweedy), he was trained by Canadian Lucien Laurin and mainly ridden by fellow Canadian jockey Ron Turcotte, along with apprentice jockey Paul Feliciano (first two races), and veteran Eddie Maple (last race). He raced in Penny Chenery's Meadow Stable's blue and white checkered colors. He was approximately 16 hands 2 inches tall, and weighed 1,175 pounds in his racing prime.


Seattle Slew (February 15, 1974 – May 7, 2002) was an American thoroughbred race horse who won the United States Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing in 1977, the tenth of eleven horses to accomplish the feat. He remains the only horse to win the Triple Crown while undefeated. In the Blood-Horse magazine List of Top 100 Racehorses of the 20th Century, Seattle Slew is ranked ninth.
A descendant of the great sire Nearco through his son, Nasrullah, Seattle Slew was sired by Bold Reasoning and out of My Charmer. He was foaled at Ben Castleman's White Horse Acres Farm near Lexington, Kentucky. Not expected to be a great racehorse, he was sold to Karen and Mickey Taylor of White Swan, Washington. They named him for the city of Seattle, and for the sloughs loggers once used to transport heavy logs. But Karen felt that the spelling of slough—a slow-moving channel of the Pacific Northwest—would be too hard for people to remember, so the spelling was changed to Slew. The colt's co-owners were Jim and Sally Hill. Another co-owner was Glenn Rasmussen, the Certified Public Accountant for the horse partnerships.


Depth Charge was a registered Thoroughbred son of Bold Venture. His dam was a mare named Quickly, a descendant of The Tetrarch and *Rock Sand.[2] Depth Charge was bred by John D. Hertz.[3] Quickly was also the dam of Count Fleet, a U. S. Triple Crown winner.[4] Depth Charge was a year younger than his famous half brother.
He raced on the Thoroughbred tracks, piling up a record of five wins, three seconds and two thirds from sixteen starts. His total earnings were $5943.00, including a third place finish in the Myles Standish Stakes.[1] He died at Shamrock, Texas in 1965.[1]
He sired 174 Thoroughbred foals, with 149 starters and 121 winners.[5] He also sired 220 Quarter Horse foals, with 80 of them earning their AQHA Race Register of Merits.[1] Among his offspring were the Quarter Horse racehorses Johnny Dial, Super Charge, Tiny Charger, Dividend, and Miss Queenie.[6] He also sired Thoroughbred stakes winners including Dark Charger, Free Stride, Queen Margie and Baloma.[5] His highest race earning Quarter Horse foal was Three Deep, who earned $35,258.00.[7]
Depth Charge died in 1965.[3] He was inducted into the AQHA Hall of Fame.[8]

Three Bars TB
Speed H. AQHA Hall Of Fame & AQHA Hall Of Fame Sire, Earner of ROM Race, Stakes Winner.
Sire of 4 AQHA H Of F: Sugar Bars, Zippo Pat Bars, Rocket Bar (TB),& Lenas Bar (TB). Sired 577 foals, 461 strtrs, 358 wnrs, 66 SWs & 16 Chs. A Lding Sire & Mtrnl Grndsire of AQHA Race Qualfrs, A Lding Sire & Mtrnl Grndsire Of AQHA Chs, A Lding Sire of AQHA Arena ROM, A Lding Sire Of AQHA Money Earners. Died Apr 6, 1968.

Pacific Bailey
SI 100, Stakes Winner,
AQHA Champion, Race ROM, Superior Race, set 4 track records.
Sire of 654 Race Winners, 610 Race ROMs, 1428 Performers, 58 Stakes Winners, Multiple World and Res. World Champions.

Jet Deck
Speed Index-100(AAAT)/ROM Race, 31-22-4-2, $200,625.
AQHA World Champion
Multiple Running Champion.AQHA Hall of Fame
In only 8 foal crops, Jet Deck sired the all-time race money earner, Easy Jet, plus progeny that earned more than $6,804,289.00.
On 8/26/1971, Jet Deck was found dead in his paddock, the result of an overdose of barbituates.
The killers were never found.
Foaled April 19, 1960 in California, Jet Deck was the offspring of Moon Deck and a daughter of Barred named Miss Night Bar.[1] Miss Night Bar was a granddaughter of Three Bars (TB).[2]
He was a multiple stakes winner and was named by the American Quarter Horse Association (or AQHA) the 1962 Champion Quarter Running Two Year Old Colt and Stallion, as well as the 1963 World Champion Quarter Running Horse.[1] He raced for two years, with thirty-one starts. He won twenty-two of his starts, coming in second fourt times and placing third twice. He earned forty-two AQHA racing points to go with his money earnings of $200,625.00. His highest speed rating was AAAT.[3]
After his racing career he was retired to stud duties, but died on August 26, 1971 from an injection of barbiturates into his bloodstream. The identity of the person who injected him has never been determined.[1] Before his death he sired 383 race Register of Merit earning horses, several world champion Quarter running horses, two AQHA High Point horses, and five AQHA Champions.[4] Among his offspring are Easy Jet, Jet Smooth, Jet Threat, and Mr Jet West.[4]
He was inducted into the AQHA Hall of Fame.[5]

Last photo taken before he was killed.


Go Man Go
si 100, AQHA Hall Of Fame. AAAT, Race ROM, Multiple World Champ.
Go Man Go (1953–1983) was an American Quarter Horse stallion and race horse. He was named World Champion Quarter Running Horse three times in a row, one of only two horses to achieve that distinction. Go Man Go was considered to be of difficult temperament. While waiting in the starting gate for his very first race, he threw his jockey, broke down the gate, and ran alone around the track; he was eventually caught and went on to win the race. During his five years of competition before he was retired from racing in 1960, he had 27 wins and brought earnings of more than $86,000 ($652,213 as of 2009).
Neither of his parents raced. His sire (father), the Thoroughbred stallion Top Deck, was bred by the King Ranch. His dam (mother) hailed from Louisiana; Go Man Go is thought to have gained his swiftness on the track from her. For the first years of Go Man Go's racing career, his owner faced difficulty in registering him with the American Quarter Horse Association (AQHA), a matter that remained unresolved until 1958.
Go Man Go went on to sire two All American Futurity winners and seven Champion Quarter Running Horses. He was inducted into the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame, as were two of his offspring. His daughters also produced, or were the mothers of, a number of race winners, including the Hall of Fame member Kaweah Bar. The director of racing for the AQHA once compared his impact on Quarter Horse racing and breeding to that of Man o' War in Thoroughbred racing, or that of human athletes such as Ben Hogan and Babe Ruth.


The Go Man Go face stripe can be seen on most of his offspring!

Easy Jet
Easy Jet was an American Quarter Horse foaled, or born, in 1967, and was one of only two horses to have been a member of the American Quarter Horse Association (or AQHA) Hall of Fame as well as being an offspring of members. Easy Jet won the 1969 All American Futurity, the highest race for Quarter Horse racehorses, and was named World Champion Quarter Race Horse in the same year. He earned the highest speed rating awarded at the time—AAAT. After winning 27 of his 38 races in two years of racing, he retired from the race track and became a breeding stallion.
As a sire, or father, he was the first All American Futurity winner to sire an All American Futurity winner, and went on to sire three winners of that race, and nine Champion Quarter Running Horses. Ultimately, his ownership and breeding rights were split into 60 shares worth $500,000 each—a total of $30 million. By 1993, the year after his death, his foals had earned more than $25 million on the racetrack.

Bugs Alive in 75
Foaled in 1973, the 15.2 hand sorrel stallion was named for the year he would be eligible to run in the All-American Futurity. And run he did. In 1975 he lived up to his name, winning the All-American and with it the richest purse quarter horse racing had witnessed up to that time. That same year he was named Quarter Horse Running 2-year-old Colt and Stallion, and was the 1975 High Money-Earning Horse.

Rocket Wrangler
1968/Dead. SI 97, Stakes Winner, Winner of the All American Futurity & Rainbow Futurity, World Champion 2 YO Colt, Hi Money Earner, $252,168.00, Race ROM. Sire of 1,221 Race Starters earning $9,407,809.00, 56 Stakes Winners, World Champion, Regional Champions, 47 Superiors, 835 ROMs, including Dash For Cash.

Dash for Cash
He won $507,688 during his career. He was elected Racing World Champion in 1976 and 1977. His victory races are the Champion of Champions (1976, 1977), Sun Country Futurity, Los Alamitos Invitational Champ, Los Alamitos Derby, Vessels Maturity, Lubbock Downs Futurity.
He is currently the number 2 all-time leading sire by earnings, and the sire of the number 1, First Down Dash. He sired 827 winners (145 stakes winners) from 1,155 starters and the earners of $39,990,245. He is currently number 5 all-time sire by winners. He is currently the all time leading broodmare sire by earnings at $56,104,925. He is currently number 2 all time broodmare sire by winners with 2027 winners (235 stakes winners) from 3154 starters. He is probably the most important modern sire in the Quarter Horse industry. He shows up in the first three generations in 9 of the 10 top earning horses for 2006 as an example.
He was inducted into the AQHA Hall of Fame.[1]



Peppy San Badger
1974/Dead. LTE $172,710.00. #1-leading cutting horse sire of all time. Sired earners of over $23,789,180.00 Wrld Ch, NCHA CUT 3 times. Resrve Wrld Ch, 1980 NCHA Open. Bronze Silver Gold Platinum ROM Perf, 1978 Open Perf Pt Earner, Hall of Fame, NCHA Ttl Pts Earned: 41; Perf Pts: 41; NCHA Earnings: $172,711. Euthanized at the King Ranch on July 8, 2005

Poco Bueno
Poco Bueno a brown quarter horse stallion foaled April 10, 1944.[1] He was sired by the great Quarter horse stallion King P-234 and out of the mare Miss Taylor who was by Old Poco Bueno. Poco Bueno was named for his maternal grandsire, and the name means pretty good in Spanish.[2] Poco Bueno is the stallion that is linked to the genetic disease Hereditary Equine Regional Dermal Asthenia (HERDA) in stock horses.
He was a plain brown horse with no white markings at all. When mature, he stood about 15 hands high and weighed about 1200 pounds.[2]
Poco Bueno earned his American Quarter Horse Association, or AQHA, Championship and dominated the quarter horse breed for decades. He was purchased by E. Paul Waggoner, of the Waggoner Ranch near Vernon, Texas in 1945 for $5,700.[1] His show career started when he was named champion yearling stallion at the Texas Cowboy Reunion Quarter Horse Show in Stamford, Texas. He was grand champion stallion in the 1940s at Denver's National Western Stock Show, the Southwestern Exposition and Fat Stock Show in Fort Worth, State Fair of Texas in Dallas and the American Royal Livestock Show in Kansas City.[1]
As a 4-year-old, in 1948, Poco Bueno started his performance career as a cutting horse. He was the first quarter horse to be insured for $100,000.00.[1][3] Poco Bueno sired 405 registered AQHA foals, 222 were performers.[1] His most successful crosses were on the daughters of Blackburn. Among his famous get were Poco Stampede, Poco Tivio, Poco Lena, Poco Mona, Poco Bob, Poco Dell, and Poco Pine.[4]
Poco Bueno died November 28, 1969. Mr. Waggoner left specific instructions in his will that Poco Bueno was to be buried in a standing position in a grave across from the ranch entrance on Texas Highway 283. The plot of ground was landscaped with trees and grass. A granite marker, weighing four tons, was engraved with his name, picture and the following: Champion and Sire of Champions.[1][3] In 1990, Poco Bueno was inducted into the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame.[5]

Doc Bar
Doc Bar was foaled in 1956, and died July 20, 1992.[1] His sire was Lightning Bar, a son of Three Bars (TB). His dam was Dandy Doll, a daughter of Texas Dandy. Dandy Doll's dam was a descendant of Joe Reed P-3.[2]
Among his famous offspring are Doc O'Lena, Doc's Oak, Dry Doc, Doc's Marmoset, Doc's Dandy Doll, Doc's Haida, Doc's Starlight, Handle Bar Doc, Doc's Prescription, and Doc's Play Mate.[3] Among his grandget are Smart Little Lena, Lenas Peppy, Royal Mahogany, and Lynx Melody.[1]
He died in 1992 and was buried on the Jensen/Ward Doc Bar Ranch in Paicines, California.[4]
He was inducted into the American Quarter Horse Association's (or AQHA) AQHA Hall of Fame.[5] In 2007 Western Horseman magazine chose Doc as number two on their list of top ten ranch horse bloodlines.[6]


I started breeding Barrel horses 4 years ago. I was tired of buying problem horses. I have a small herd of great horses and breed Barrel Horses for everyone!!!
Rose
Rose AQHA # X0640056 A Pretty Red Dun Great Granddaughter of Secretariat 1973 Triple Crown Winner!! Super Nice Mare!

Sorry Rose is NOT FOR SALE
Rose 1st colt Jet Storm is for sale!


Red Rose of Tralee X0640056 2003 red dun mare | |||
SIRE side of pedigree | Sir Teddy Too 1965 | Sir Teddy 1955 | |
Ima Torch Bearer 1971 | Skipa Maria 1958 | ||
Best of Luck 1966 | Poco Luck 1956 | ||
Just Sir Teddys Luck 1997 | Doll Baby Red 1959 | ||
Ima Torch Bearer 1971 | Sir Teddy Too 1965 | ||
Try to Skip 1986 | Best of Luck 1966 | ||
Skipa Dexter 1979 | Parsons Sir Mingo 1975 | ||
Miss Bear Dexter 1965 | |||
DAM side of pedigree | Secretariat (TB) 1970 | Bold Ruler (TB) 1954 | |
Deregulation (TB) 1981 | Somethingroyal (TB) 1952 | ||
Calaki (TB) 1971 | T. V. Lark (TB) 1957 | ||
Dads Tullamore Dew 1994 | Miss Jr. (TB) 1961 | ||
Ultra Track 1979 | Mr Bar Watts 1969 | ||
Princess Diana 333 1984 | Anita Leo 1962 | ||
Drifters Maiden 1977 | Sagebrush Drifter 1973 | ||
Bootsy Bu Bar 1970 | |||
Jets 1st filly!


Rose and Jet colt arrived 5/4/2009!
Hallmark Stables 1st Jet foal!!!

Say Hello to Storm!
Sold and found Great Homes
Lara 2008 Sorrel Filly AQHA # 5155282, Demi is Dam and Tipper is Sire. Beautiful Filly Built to Run. Barrel Prospect or All Around Horse! Spunky!!! Sold Went to WI..

Lara and Demi

Laser and Lara
Laser 2008 Sorrel Stud Colt AQHA # 5155273, Deuce is Dam and Tipper is Sire. He is a Good-Looking Colt Built to Run. Very Nice Colt Super Friendly. Great Candidate for Sporting Events, 4-H Prospect or All Around Horse! Sold went WI...

Bullet 2007 Sorrel Stud Colt AQHA # 5015235 Demi is Dam and Tipper is Sire. He Will be Tall. And is a Pocket Colt. Would Make a Superior Cattle Horse or All Around Horse! Sold Thanks Brandy and Dustin from MO...

Lunar and Bullet last day on farm!
Lunar 2007 Sorrel Stud Colt AQHA # 5030393 Sarita is Dam and Tipper is Sire. He is the Fastest in the Pasture and a True Pocket Colt. Barrel Prospect Built for Speed. Sold Thanks Brandy and Dustin from MO...
Deuce AQHA # 4575705 Peppy San Badger and Three Bars.

Sold!!! Deuce is in Ohio Happily Running Barrels! Thanks Mandy Price
Demi 1996 Bay Broodmare AQHA # 3558386 Three Bars on Papers. Good Mare for Cutting or All Around Foals. Great Momma! Sold Thanks Brandy and Dustin from MO

Deuce and Hemi in OHIO. Hemi is Jets 1st filly!



Laser 3/22/2009


Hallmark Stables
18795 North 200th Street
Beecher City , IL 62414
ph: 1-217-690-9185
gotipper