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Thomas Barry Edit Profile

horse trainer

Thomas J. "Tom" Barry was a trainer of Thoroughbred racehorse who won two with foreign-bred horses.

Career

Born in Ireland, as a young man he emigrated to the United States where he became a citizen around 1930. In 1952, Barry began the race conditioning of a colt named Errard King for owner Joseph Gavegnano. In his only appearance in the Kentucky Derby, in 1956 Tom Barry trained High King to a tenth-place finish.

He had two horses run in the Preakness Stakes: Celtic Ash finished third in 1960, and Vimy Ridge earned fourth place in 1962.

Foreign owner Joseph O"Connell, a banker from Boston, Massachusetts, Barry used his knowledge of the Irish Thoroughbred industry and had O"Connell buy Cavan in the belief that the Irish-born colt was genetically suited to run its best at longer distances. Two years later in 1960, Tom Barry and Joseph O"Connell"s Green Dunes Farm did the same thing when they purchased the British-bred colt Celtic Ash in Ireland.

Bought for $22,000, in the United States Celtic Ash earned more than $130,000. Tom Barry owned Ardmore Farm in Darlington, Maryland where he was living at the time of his death in 1987.

The property was purchased from his Estate by Audrey and Allen Murray who renamed it Murmur Farm.

Achievements

  • In 1951 Tom Barry won the training title at Monmouth Park Racetrack in Oceanport, New Jersey which marked the beginning of a decade in which he enjoyed considerable racing success. Under regular jockey Sam Boulmetis, Senior, in 1953 the two-year-old Errard King won the Tyro Stakes and the Laurel Futurity Stakes and the following year captured two very important races, the American Derby and Arlington Classic. However, from two entries in the third leg of the United States. Triple Crown series, the Belmont Stakes, Tom Barry"s horses won both. Barry proved correct as the colt won the 1958 Belmont Stakes, at a mile and a half, the longest of the United States. Triple Crown races. In winning, Cavan spoiled Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes winner Tim Tam"s bid to capture the Triple Crown. In the 1 3/16 mile Preakness Stakes of 1960, Celtic Ash finished third but then won the much longer Belmont Stakes.