Spotted Bull’s story is an interesting one, I think. Unquestionable, he was, probably to this day, the finest sprinting Thoroughbred stud to ever come into Arizona. The noted horseman, Dink Parker and Ed Echols, who was sheriff in Tucson for many years, went back to Lexington, Kentucky, to look at Spotted Bull in about 1950. I don’t recall who owned him at the time, but Mel Haskell, Rukin Jelks, the Finley boys, and others I cannot remember, were interested in the horse. They wanted to syndicate him, and in those days, syndication in Arizona was almost unheard of. Prior to that, Three Bars and Piggin String were the leading Thoroughbreds to cross on Quarter mares in the Tucson area, and they wanted an outcross for these Three Bars and Piggin String mares, as well as colder mares. When Dink looked at Spotted Bull, (and he could look at a horse!) he didn’t particularly like him, because he was breaking type. Three Bars and Piggin String were Quarter type Thoroughbreds. Spotted Bull was a grand looking horse, but more on the classic lines in conformation. He should be, being by *Bull Dog and out of one of the greatest of all Man O’ War mares, and he was. We don’t run backwards from horses like him today, but at that time, it was quite a different story. Dink wasn’t enthusiastic in recommending him to the other investors until he saw his mother, and he flatly stated that Spotted Beauty was far and away the best broodmare he had ever seen. She was a dapple gray, and that’s why her breeder named her Spotted Beauty. So I’m told.
Dink told Echols, “Hell, Ed, we can’t go wrong on this horse!” He was a champion sprinter, and being by *Bull Dog on top and out of this great Man O’ War mare, he said, “Let’s buy him. If the other fellows don’t like him, I’ll buy him myself!” So they brought him back to Arizona and sold shares in him for $1000 a share. The syndication was called the Arizona Syndicate, and this was the first syndicate around Tucson, to my knowledge. They are very common now throughout the Quarter Horse industry, and of course, the Thoroughbred people had been doing this sort of thing forever. I knew so little about it at that time, I recall asking Dink to explain…