History of AQHA - AQHA (2024)

Since 1940, the American Quarter Horse Association has been paving a way for passionate horseman and horsewomen to come together in the name of the American Quarter Horse for the breed’s preservation, celebration, and advancement.The rich history of the Association and the breed of horse is just as bountiful as America itself. From humble beginnings to our record-breaking present, the American Quarter Horse Association has grown into the largest breed association in the world.

On March 15, 1940, the first official AQHA Convention was held in Ft. Worth, Texas at the Fort Worth Club during the Southwestern Exposition and Fat Stock Show (now called the Fort Worth Livestock Show and Rodeo). AQHA pioneer Bob Denhardtgathered 75 driven and generous breeders and owners to inaugurate the Association and designate shareholders. At the time, these shareholders were the primary decision-makers for the Association and its endeavors.

“All Quarter Horses must be able to run a quarter mile in twenty-three seconds or show that they are capable of Quarter Horse Performance under ranch conditions.”

– AQHA Executive Committee meeting minutes from April 22, 1940

History of AQHA - AQHA (1)During March of 1941, the association’s first registered horse came in the form of a stocky and hardy ranch stallion named “Wimpy."The King Ranch stallion won the grand championship at the Southwestern Exposition and Fat Stock Show in FortWorth, TX, also earning him the AQHA registration No. 1.

During that same time, the American Quarter Racing Association named Clabber the first world champion Quarter Running horse and racing stallion in 1940-41. Clabber was nicknamed “Iron Horse” for his supreme athleticism in Quarter Racing at the time. The Association also saw its first Pari-mutuel race for Quarter Horses later in 1947 at the Hollywood Park (Ruidoso Downs). Since then, the track at Ruidoso, New Mexico has become a mainstay of Quarter Horse racing and is home to the All American Futurity, the first horse race in the worldto offer $ 1 million to its winner.

Though these milestones in Quarter Horse history were tremendous, the successes of these different breed disciplines were continuing to broaden the rift between the “Bulldog” men – those who liked chunky horses and focused on conformation and the type – vs. the racing breeders who placed emphasis on performance instead. During the 1946 AQHA convention, these disagreements grew to be so hostile that the opposing men came close to blows with one another in a near fist fight. Shortly after, outgoing president Lee Underwood suffered a heart attack and Albert Mitchell of New Mexico was elected as president. With these unfortunate events behind them, the stakeholders were ready to move towards a better tomorrow for the Association.

In 1946, as AQHA President Albert Mitchell strove to bring unity to the new association, the New Mexican tasked Raymond Hollingsworth of Amarillo with setting up headquarters to oversee the daily operations. Since 1946, AQHA has called Amarillo home.

In 1948, AQHA publishedthe first issue of The Quarter Horse Journal. With this positive momentum, stakeholders at the 1950 AQHA Convention unanimously voted for AQHA to become a membership-controlled organization, open to the world. This change of jurisdiction has allowed AQHA to grow to the largest breed organization in the world to-date.

First, read how the Quarter Horse breed came to be.

Noteworthy Dates in AQHA History

1910-1927 – Defining a Breed

  • William Anson was the first to formally describe the “Quarter Horse” as an established type.

  • His "Breeding a Rough Country Horse" article appeared in The Breeders Gazette in May 1910.

  • Anson published a second, similar article in 1922. The second article attracted the attention of Dan Casem*nt.

  • Casem*nt's first article on horses, "Steeldusts as I Have Known Them," was published in 1927 in the American Hereford Journal.

1937-1939 – Bob Denhardt Gets to Work

  • Robert "Bob" Denhardt receives in a master's degree from the University of California-Davis in 1937, his thesis focusing on Spanish horses in America.

  • Denhardt accepts a teaching position at Texas A&M University; his friend, Paul Albert, editor of Western Horseman, suggests that Denhardt start to unravel the mystery of the horses called Steeldusts.

  • For three years, Denhardt conducts research and his first article, "The Quarter Horse, Then and Now" is published in the January 1939 issue of Western Horseman.

March 1939 – First Meeting of Breeders

  • Bob Denhardt meets with several breeders in Fort Worth, Texas, during the Southwestern Exposition and Fat Stock Show (now called the Fort Worth Livestock Show).

  • He presents his idea for the Western Quarter Horse Breeders Association.

  • Receives encouragement, but not enough support.

March 15, 1940 – First AQHA Convention

What is a Quarter Horse?

“All Quarter Horses must be able to run a quarter of a mile in 23 seconds, or show that they are capable of Quarter Horse performance under ranch conditions.”

– AQHA Executive Committee meeting minutes from April 22, 1940

1940-41 – First World Champion Quarter Horse Running Horse

  • The American Quarter Racing Association named Clabber the first world champion Quarter Running Horse and racing stallion in 1940-41

  • Nicknamed “Iron Horse.”

March 1941 – Choosing the First Registered Horse

  • King Ranch stallion Wimpy won the grand championship at the Southwestern Exposition and Fat Stock Show in Fort Worth, earning the AQHA registration No. 1.

  • A rift had already started between the "Bulldog" men – those who liked chunky horses and focused on conformation and type – vs. the racing breeders who placed emphasis on performance.

1946 – AQHA at the Edge of Collapse

  • The rift between the Bulldog men and those in the racing industry continuedto worsen.

  • 1946 AQHA Convention – came close to fist fights, outgoing President Lee Underwood suffered a heart attack.

  • Albert Mitchell of New Mexico was elected as president.

1947 – Hollywood Park (Ruidoso Downs)

  • Ruidoso, New Mexico, racetrack heldits first pari-mutuel race for Quarter Horses in 1947.

  • Since then, it has become a mainstay of Quarter Horse racing and is home to the All American Futurity, the first horse race to offer $1 million to its winner.

1948 – AQHA Publishes the First Issue of The Quarter Horse Journal

  • Fast forward to 2020, and the Journal is now sent to all 225,000 members.

1950 – AQHA Becomes Membership Organization

  • AQHA stockholders voted unanimously to amend its charter, changing AQHA into a membership-controlled organization, open to the world.

1952 – First AQHA Champions Named

These horses all met stiff requirements in approved halter and performance events; note that there was a mix of “bulldog” and Thoroughbred blood.

  • Poco Tivio (by Poco Bueno)

  • Little Egypt (by Texas Dandy)

  • Star Jack Jr (by Scoggins Littlestar)

  • Paul A (by Star Deck)

  • JB King (by Harmon Baker’s Star)

  • Skipper W (by Pretty Buck)

  • Pondora (by Pondie)

  • Babe Mac C (by Macanudo)

1956 – AQHA Gives Quarter Horses to President Eisenhower

  • American Quarter Horse Hall of Famers AQHA Past President Lester Goodson and trainer Charles W. “Bubba” Cascio traveled to Washington, D.C., to give Doodle De Do and Sporty Miss to United States President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

  • Cascio even rodeone of the horses in a reining pattern right there on the White House lawn.

1962 – The New Appendix

  • A compromise formed at the 1962 convention went into effect, establishing one numbered registry for AQHA, eliminating the labels “Permanent” and “Tentative.”

  • The only outcross blood permitted was Thoroughbred: The offspring of a numbered Quarter Horse and a registered Thoroughbred can enter the “new Appendix.”

  • To move from the Appendix to the Numbered registry, a horse must:

    • 1) Earn a Register of Merit in open classes, and
    • 2) Have a veterinarian vouch that the horse has no undesirable traits.

P, T and X: What do they all mean?

  • “P” = a horse in the Permanent registry (now called “Numbered”).
  • “T” = Tentative, or pending conformation inspection and pedigree approval.
  • “X” = Appendix.

1967 – Kid Meyers Becomes the First Open Supreme Champion

  • Racing champion Miss Meyers dieda month after foaling a colt by Three Bars (TB), leaving owner A.B. Green to bottle-feed the orphan.

  • Kid Meyers became AQHA’s first open Supreme Champion, excelling at halter, in the performance arena and on the racetrack

1968 – The Mixer Horse

  • Oklahoma artist Orren Mixer was commissioned to paint the ideal Quarter Horse, known now as “the Mixer horse.”

1970 – AQJHA

  • The first meeting of the American Junior Quarter Horse Association is held, with an initial membership of 3,000.

  • Today, this organization is known as the American Quarter Horse Youth Association, with more than 18,000 members.

1972 – First AQHA Youth Finals

  • This precursor to the AQHYA World Championship Show was first held in Amarillo.

  • The show eventually movedto Tulsa, Oklahoma, then Fort Worth, Texas, and finally to Oklahoma City.

1973 – Amateur Competition Debuts

  • Amateur competition began with just western pleasure and bridle path hack (hunter under saddle).

  • Reining, hunt seat equitation and horsemanship were added in 1978.

  • All amateur classes (except showmanship) were offered at the 1980 AQHA World Show; showmanship was added in 1988.

November 8, 1974 – One Million Registrations

  • Special ceremony at the office in Amarillo.

  • AQHA Executive Committeedecided to hold the millionth certificate, so the next certificate issued after 999999 was 1000001.

  • AQHA was the first equine breed association to register a million horses.

1974 – First AQHA World Show Held

  • Held in Louisville, Kentucky, then moved to Oklahoma City in 1976.

  • 692 horses were entered in the first world show.

  • 40 states and five Canadian provinces represented.

  • 42 world titles.

1979 – First AQHA Superhorse Crowned

  • Vickie Lee Pine won the first AQHA Superhorse title at the AQHA World Show for her breeder and owner, Howard Pitzer.

  • By Two Eyed Jack and out of Poco Coed by Poco Pine, she showed in aged mares, heading and heeling.

1982 – First Hall of Fame Inductees

  • Bob Denhardt and Ernest Browning, an Arizona rancher and AQHA past president, were the first two people inducted into the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame.

1983 – Registers 2,000,000th Horse

  • The King Ranch purchased Registration No. 2000000 through an auction to benefit the American Quarter Horse Foundation.

  • Two Million, a filly by Mr San Peppy, was approximately the 6,500th horse registered by the King Ranch.

  • From 1940 to 1974 – how long it took to register 1,000,000 horses.

  • From 1974 to 1983 – how long it took to register another 1,000,000 horses.

September 1984 – New AQHA Headquarters Building

  • Ground was broken in 1983 for the building along Interstate 40 in Amarillo, Texas, with the unveilingin September 1984.

1989 – First Horses Inducted Into Hall of Fame

  • Wimpy P-1

  • King P-234

  • Leo

  • Three Bars (TB)

  • That same year, ground was broken on the .

1992 – Best Remuda Award

  • of Nebraska became the first winner of the AQHA Best Remuda Award.

1996 – Zippo Pine Bar

  • By Zippo Pat Bars and out of Dollie Pine by Poco Pine, Zippo Pine Bar became the breed’s all-time leading sire by AQHA points earned.

  • Long after his death in 1998, Zippo Pine bar held the lead until 2014, when he was passed by Invitation Only.

2002 – Versatility Ranch Horse

  • Open and amateur divisions of these classes are first offered to AQHA-approved shows.

  • The first AQHA Versatility Ranch Horse World Championships were held in 2008 during the National Western Stock Show in Denver.

  • Major changes were made to the VRH classes in 2015.

2003 – Select World Show Offered

  • The first AQHA Select World Championship Show was held in Amarillo, Texas, for exhibitors age 50 and over.

  • The first Select classes were offered in 1997.

2007 – Performance Halter

  • Performance halter was added to the roster of AQHA classes.

  • To date, it’s the only conformation class with a performance requirement.

2011 – Cowboy Mounted Shooting

  • With the help of alliance partner Cowboy Mounted Shooting Association, AQHA cowboy mounted shooting classes were first held in 2011.

  • The AQHA Cowboy Mounted Shooting World Championshipswere first held in 2012 in conjunction with the AQHA Versatility Ranch Horse World Championships at the Houston Livestock Show & Rodeo in March.

2012 – Level 1 (Novice) Championships

  • Inaugural events offered in Las Vegas and Murfreesboro, Tennessee.

  • AQHA adds the Zoetis AQHA Cattle Level 1 Championships in 2014 in Oklahoma City.

  • Level 1 (Novice) was first added in 1988 with changes made to the program in 2013.

2012 – Ranching Heritage

  • The first three AQHA Ranching Heritage Challenge events are held, eligible to horses bred by AQHA Ranching Heritage Breeders.

  • The first AQHA Ranching Heritage Young Horse Development Program scholarships are awarded to AQHYA members, with 14-year-old Sivana Brewer winning the grand-prize $2,000 scholarship.

  • The first AQHA Ranching Heritage Challenge Finals were held in 2019 in conjunction with the AQHA VRH World in Guthrie, Oklahoma.

2015 – Adequan® Level 2 Championship

  • Adequan® Level 2 championship classes were first held at the 2015 Built Ford Tough AQHYA World Championshipand AQHA World Championship shows.

More American Quarter Horse History

  • What Is a Quarter Horse? Known for speed, athleticism and trainability, the American Quarter Horse is incredibly versatile. Learn how the world’s most popular horse breed came to be.
  • 10 Random Facts You Didn't Know About AQHA.Learn a few facts about the American Quarter Horse Association, the world's largest equine-breed association.
  • AQHA History: Building America’s Horse. How the American Quarter Horse breed came to be, as told by Linda Davis, the daughter of Albert Mitchell, one of the most influential men in AQHA history.
History of AQHA - AQHA (2024)

FAQs

What is the best Quarter Horse bloodline? ›

The American Quarter Horse industry cruised in the early years aboard the stout shoulders of a few hardy bloodlines: Hanco*ck, Two Eyed Jack, Driftwood, Sun Frost and Peppy San Badger. Their descendants still make premier head and heel horses. Plus, you can rope both ends on most of them, do multiple events and ranch.

What Quarter Horse has made the most money? ›

The 4-year-old gelding has reached a record of $2,796,363 in career earnings. With a victory at Ruidoso Downs on August 5, 2023, KJ Desparado has become the sport of American Quarter Horse racing's all-time leading money earner.

What was the first horse in the AQHA? ›

During March of 1941, the association's first registered horse came in the form of a stocky and hardy ranch stallion named “Wimpy." The King Ranch stallion won the grand championship at the Southwestern Exposition and Fat Stock Show in Fort Worth, TX, also earning him the AQHA registration No. 1.

What is the most famous of all series in the Quarter Horse breed? ›

The most famous of all sires in the establishment of the Quarter Horse breed was Peter McCue, foaled in 1895, and bred by Samuel Watkins of Petersburg, Illinois.

What is the most sought after horse breed? ›

The thoroughbred is the most expensive horse in the world. It's one of the fastest horse breeds in the world, with an enviable record on the racetrack. Moreover, the breed has produced some of the biggest names in the horse racing hall of fame, including the American Pharoah and the famous Secretariat.

What is the rarest horse pattern? ›

One of the rarest colors, a true genetic white horse has white hair and fully or largely unpigmented (pink) skin. These horses are born white or mostly white and remain white for life. The vast majority of so-called "white" horses are actually grays with a fully white hair coat.

What is the fastest Quarter Horse breed? ›

The American Quarter Horse was first celebrated for quick bursts of speed, up to 55 mph. It is consistently the fastest horse in the world in the quarter-mile.

What state has the most Quarter Horses? ›

Oklahoma has more registered quarter horses per capita than anywhere else in the world, he said.

What horse was bought for $1000? ›

Medina Spirit is the seventh Florida-bred horse to win the Kentucky Derby. The horse came from a humble background and sold for a mere $1,000 as a yearling. Breeder Gail Rice used to whisper in his ears that he would be a champion.

What is the AQHA controversy? ›

The AQHA, acting through its board and a registration committee, denied registration to cloned horses. Plaintiffs filed suit in April 2012 contesting the AQHA's refusal to register their horses. The plaintiffs in this case raised two antitrust issues in the federal action.

What two breeds make a Quarter Horse? ›

American Colonists began crossing their hardy English stock horses with speedy Chickasaw horses (descendants from Spanish Barbs). This breeding became known as the "Celebrated American Quarter Running Horse."

Are Quarter Horses faster than Thoroughbreds? ›

Fastest and slowest times were removed and the 3 remaining times averaged. Results: Quarter Horses averaged faster speeds than Thoroughbreds even when Thoroughbreds were raced at a distance (402 m) similar to Quarter Horse races. Both breeds were substantially faster than Arabians.

Who is the most famous Quarter Horse stallion? ›

Inducted into the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame in 2011, First Down Dash is arguably the greatest race sire of all time. First Down Dash has sired 1,476 winners, which includes 259 stakes winners.

What is the most bought horse breed? ›

  • American Quarter Horse. By a wide margin, the American Quarter Horse is the most popular breed in North America. ...
  • Thoroughbred. The Thoroughbred is the second most popular equine breed in North America. ...
  • American Paint Horse. ...
  • Miniature Horse. ...
  • Draft Horses. ...
  • Tennessee Walking Horse. ...
  • Grade Horse. ...
  • Arabian.
Dec 20, 2023

What are the three major bloodline of horses? ›

Nearly all of today's racehorses can be traced back to one of three 'foundation' stallions – The Darley Arabian, The Godolphin Arabian and The Byerley Turk.

What are the 3 types of Quarter Horses? ›

There are a number of types of Quarter Horse: the stock Quarter Horse, the racing and hunter type Quarter Horse, and the halter Quarter Horse. Each is suited to a different purpose and has a slightly different appearance.

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