Selima (horse)

Selima (b. 30 April 1745) was one of the most important Thoroughbred horses of the 18th century and became one of the foundation mares of the American Thoroughbred. She was imported to Maryland between 1750 and 1752 by Benjamin Tasker, Jr.

History
Selima was foaled on 30 April 1745 at the stud farm of Francis Godolphin, 2nd Earl of Godolphin in England. She was sired by the Godolphin Arabian out of the "Shireborn Mare", by the stallion Hobgoblin. Shireborn reportedly same from the royal stables of the Stuart monarch Anne, Queen of Great Britain.

A bay mare with a faint white star on her forehead, and a splash of white on her left hind ankle, Selima was among the first Thoroughbreds to cross the Atlantic Ocean and race in the American colonies. She was imported by Benjamin Tasker, Jr. of Maryland around September 1750, at the age of 5, and was supposedly pregnant when she was shipped across the Atlantic, according to the Earl of Godolphin's studbook. However, no foal was produced, meaning that Selima likely miscarried.

However, John L. Hervey, the author of Racing in America 1665-1865 (1944), disputes this:

Selima was trained to race at Belair in 1751 and 1752, and she made her racing debut was in Annapolis, Maryland in May 1752. There, she defeated another English mare, Creeping Kate, winning 40 pounds, or about 50 pistoles.

In 1752, Selima won the biggest prize of the era, 2,500 pistoles at Gloucester, Virginia which marked "the beginning of the remarkable racing contests between the rival colonies of Maryland and Virginia", according to former Annapolis mayor Ellen Moyer. Selima won, followed by Tryal (Trial) - William Byrd III's gray mare - followed by two imported (c. 1751) English Thoroughbred horses also owned by the Tayloes, Jenny Cameron and Childers, with Childers later becoming a popular broodmare sire.

Legacy
Selima produced many foals during her career as a broodmare:


 * 1755 - Ariel, a stallion by Morton's Traveller (1746, by Partner out of Bay Bloody Buttocks, by Bloody Buttocks)
 * 1756 - Partner II, a stallion by Morton's Traveller (1746, by Partner out of Bay Bloody Buttocks, by Bloody Buttocks)
 * 1757 - "Leonidas' Dam", a mare by Morton's Traveller (1746, by Partner out of Bay Bloody Buttocks, by Bloody Buttocks)
 * 1758 - Stella, a mare by Othello (1743, by Crab, by Alcock's Arabian, out of Miss Slamerkin, by Honywood's Arabian)
 * 1759 - Galloway's Selim, a stallion by Othello (1743, by Crab, by Alcock's Arabian, out of Miss Slamerkin, by Honywood's Arabian)
 * 1760 - Ebony, a mare by Othello (1743, by Crab, by Alcock's Arabian, out of Miss Slamerkin, by Honywood's Arabian)
 * 1762 - Wilkins Spadille, a stallion by Janus II (1746, also a grandson of the Godolphin Arabian by Janus I)
 * 1763 - Little Juniper, a stallion by Juniper (1752, also a grandson of the Godolphin Arabian by Babraham)
 * 1765 - Black Selima, a mare by Fearnought (1755, also a grandson of the Godolphin Arabian by Regulus)
 * 176x - Camilla, a mare by Tanner (1757, also a great-grandson of the Godolphin Arabian through Cade)

However, records are conflicted on which foal she had in 1761, with two different ones being recorded:


 * Bellair I (Tayloe's), a stallion by Morton's Traveller (1746, by Partner out of Bay Bloody Buttocks, by Bloody Buttocks)
 * Babraham II, a stallion by Juniper (1752, also a grandson of the Godolphin Arabian by Babraham)

The annual Selima Stakes, now raced at Laurel Park Racecourse, was named after Selima in 1926 and first held at the Maryland State Fair with a $30,000 challenge cup for two-year-old fillies.