Abe Hawkins

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Abe Hawkins
OccupationSugar plantation slave:
Jockey
DiedMay 4, 1867
Darrow, Louisiana
Resting placeAshland Plantation
Major racing wins
Jerome Stakes (1866)
Travers Stakes (1866)
Honors
Fair Grounds Racing Hall of Fame (1997)[1]
Significant horses
Arrow, Asteroid, Louis d'Or, Merrill, Minnehaha, Panic, Rhynodine, Whale

Abe Hawkins, also known in later years as Uncle Able Hawkins, The Black Prince, The Dark Sage of Louisiana, and The Slayer of Lexington, was a slave on the Ashland sugar plantation located in Darrow, Louisiana, in Ascension Parish. Duncan Farrar Kenner owned the plantation and for ten years Abe was his slave. He rode some 25 horses to victory.

Kenner was a businessman that owned and raced horses with a track located on the plantation grounds. In 1854, Kenner purchased slave jockey Abe Hawkins.[2] Abe was considered small and of "light figure" and suited to being a jockey. Abe rode for Kenner until he became a freeman in 1864, and then for Robert A. Alexander and was nationally known for fifteen years.[3]

By 1865, Abe was rated the second best known athlete behind white jockey , known as Gilpatrick, and won against him in a match race before a crowd of 25,000 in New York City.[4] Abe had a career twenty-five wins, including the two 1866 wins while under the employ of Robert A. Alexander, the Travers Stakes riding Merrill with former slave trainer Ansel Williamson, and the first Jerome Stakes riding Watson with trainer .[5]

Abe returned to Ashland in 1866 and lived there until he died on May 4, 1867.

References[]

  1. ^ "Fair Grounds Hall of Fame Biographies". Doc.Player.net. 2011-03-24. Retrieved 2019-09-09.
  2. ^ A Legacy of Triumph: More Stories of Duncan F. Kenner and Abe Hawkins at Ashland Plantation- Retrieved 2014-06-09
  3. ^ The Baltimore Sun: Forgotten black jockeys take their place in history- Posted March 14, 1999, by Tom Keyser; Retrieved 2014-06-09
  4. ^ Cincinnati.com: First star athletes; Abe Hawkins- Retrieved 2014-06-09
  5. ^ Transatlantica: African American Jockeys; Abe- Retrieved 2014-06-09


Retrieved from ""