To be sure, there have been many great Quarter Horse race mares. Since the very beginning of the American Quarter Horse Association, female runners have more than held their own against their male rivals. In fact, eight of the first ten World Championship honors were earned by mares, beginning in 1941, the second year in which the title was awarded (the first went to the stallion Clabber). That skein began with Shue Fly, who won three consecutive World Champion titles, in 1941, 1942 and 1943. Shue Fly was famously defeated at Albuquerque by another mare, a King Ranch Thoroughbred called Miss Princess at the time, (though her registered name was Woven Web) who was voted World Champion in 1946, 1947 and 1948. Another sensational mare, Maddon’s Bright Eyes, claimed the title in 1949 and again in 1951 (sharing the title that year with another mare, Monita). Miss Meyers, a daughter of Leo, won the title in 1953 and Josie’s Bar, a daughter of Three Bars, swept the title in 1954 as she completed her streak of 14 consecutive wins.
Go Man Go ended that female domination with his three consecutive World Champion titles in 1955, 1956 and 1957 and things seemed to even out after that. Males held the title six out of the ten years of the 1960s, with No Butt, Go Josie Go, Goetta and Laico Bird being the exceptions. Only three females won the title in the 1970s, beginning in 1971 with the unforgettable Charger Bar. While all the aforementioned female Champions earned their honors, none did so more compellingly than did Charger Bar.
A foal of 1968, Charger Bar was by Tiny Charger and out of La Ree Bar, by Rocket Bar. As such she possessed the fire of Depth Charge and the musculature of Three Bars. She was bred in Utah by Wayne Charlton who sold her late in her moderately successful two-year-old campaign to doctors Ed Allred and Kenneth Wright. However, Charlton reserved the right to train his homebred filly and did so with remarkable skill throughout her career. Like her sire, Tiny Charger, Charger Bar was very long-backed. This conformation feature, combined with the tremendous weights carried in many of her races, led to sporadic back problems, which Charlton handled with judicious care. With input from Dr. Allred, Charger Bar’s races were carefully scheduled. Yet she never backed down from a challenge.
Charger Bar’s career began at Los Alamitos in mid-August of her two-year-old year and she promptly served notice, winning at odds of even money. She returned to the winners circle ten days later but following that victory, finished third in the Moon Deck Stakes, her…



