Auctioneer Keith Babb Retires After A Distinguished Tenure In A Unique Profession
Presided over the LQHBA Yearling Sale for 40+ Years
The 2024 Louisiana Quarter Horse Breeders Association (LQHBA) Yearling Sale will have its usual two-days of excitement, thrills and potential stars of Louisiana Quarter Horse racing, but one key element will be missing, the voice of auctioneer Keith Babb.
After over 40 years of ushering in 500-plus young horses into the sale ring, Babb, who celebrated his 80th birthday early this year, has retired. He was honored on Friday, August 2 in a presentation at the 2024 LQHBA Yearling Sale.
The son of a Baptist preacher, Babb remembers attending farm machinery auctions as a child and he sold farm machinery, personal property, real estate and many other goods since graduating from the Certified Auctioneers Institute, Indiana University.
It is certainly a profession that requires vocal talent, tremendous focus and charisma and Babb had it all. He credits an important mentor, Colonel Ike Hamilton, for sharing his experience in the auction ring.
“He was a great guy and we worked together on the first edition of the LQHBA Yearling Sale at Delta Downs in 1976,” recalled Babb.
Traversing the country in the early stages of his career, Babb remembered some of the less sophisticated auction rings than the state of the art set-ups in California, Oklahoma and of, course, Louisiana.
“I was selling Thoroughbreds many years ago at Louisiana Downs, with just a banner in the front of the stand,” he shared. “A horse kicked me, and I was rushed to the hospital for treatment; they wrapped up my leg and I returned to finish the sale!”
Babb was the auctioneer at the 1985 Phillips Ranch Yearling Sale when he sold First Down Dash, one of the most prolific stallions in Quarter Horse history. His first million-dollar sale had a Louisiana connection when Queen For Cash was…