If you wanted a runner with tenacity, blinding speed, and a singular personality, you couldn’t do much better than Kaweah Bar. Known as the “Palomino Express,” the gelding started 114 times and earned 38 wins and $386,516 during his nine-year career. “[He] did not look like a typical racehorse,” his AQHA Hall of Fame page states. “He was not the lean, trim type, but neither was he the blocky, bulldog cow horse type. Kaweah Bar was somewhere in between, but he could run.”
Kaweah Bar was born in 1966 at Hadan Ranch, near Sacramento, California, which was owned by Susanne Hawkins and her daughter Vicki. Like many of the Quarter Horses bred there, he was named after the Kaweah River, which flowed through the ranch.
Kaweah Bar’s prospects were bright from the start. His dam, the hardy Angie Miss, was an AAA-rated runner who started 34 times and won four races and earned $7,033. She was known for producing “sound and ornery foals.” Angie Miss’s dam, Johnny Angel, was also an AAA-rated racehorse and winner. Her lineage traces back to foundation Quarter Horses like Peter McCue and Joe Hancock, as well as Thoroughbreds like Upset, the only horse to ever defeat the legendary Man O’ War. As if that weren’t enough, Angie Miss was a daughter of the great Go Man Go, an AQHA Hall of Famer and three-time World Champion.
Kaweah Bar’s sire, Alamitos Bar, boasted an equally solid pedigree. An AAAT-rated racehorse and stakes-winner, Alamitos Bar was a son of Three Bars. His dam, Do Good Bam, was a winner who produced Hall of Fame broodmare…