Background
Lucille Parker was born in Maysville, Kentucky on December 14, 1896. The youngest of seven children, she was the daughter of a tobacco grower who also owned a Livery stable. She is a distant relative, on her mother"s side, of Confederate General Robert E. Lee.
In 1919 she married Warren Wright, Senior
(1875-1950); their son, Warren, Junior. (died 1978) was born in 1920 and married and had four children.
Career
Her family, the Parkers, were reported to be relatives of Mary Todd Lincoln. On September 27, 1952, Lucille Wright married screenwriter Admiral Gene Markey. She owned a Yorkshire Terrier, Timmy Tammy, and carried the dog with her in her purse everywhere she went - even on airplanes.
lieutenant has been speculated that Calumet"s outstanding thoroughbred Tim Tam was named after the dog, but this has never been absolutely proven to be the case.
Among her hobbies were needlepoint and collecting statues of eagles. In 18th century Kentucky, eagles were widely believed to be a symbol of good luck.
In 1978, when Calumet Farm"s outstanding three year old colt Alydar (named for Prince Aly Khan, and half-brother of Our Mims), ran in the Bluegrass States at Keeneland the Markeys (due to their failing health) were brought to the rail to watch him run. Admiral Markey died in 1980.
She established the Lucille P. Markey Charitable Trust.
The Trust"s aims were to benefit basic medical research. The University of Virginia"s Molecular Biology Institute is among the many recipients of grants from the Trust. Lucille Markey died on July 24, 1982 at the of age 85 at the Miami Heart Institute in Miami, Florida.
She is buried next to her second husband, Admiral Gene Markey, in Lexington Cemetery in Lexington, Kentucky.
Calumet Farm is now part of an investment trust company.