Rowdy
The following is an article Tony W Greaves wrote at the request of David McBride
for "The Miniature Horse" before it ceased being published:


Generation after Generation of Excellence - Rowdy

One of my favorite remembrances of being a child with parents in the Shetland pony business is
going to shows and sales all over the United States. At one such show, I saw one of the most
fabulous black and white show ponies that ever existed, Kewpie Doll’s Oracle by Hillswicke
Oracle, who was foaled in 1945. He was as refined and elegant as any horse that ever stepped
into the show ring. Some years later, in the mid 1960s, my parents took me to a production sale at
the J. A. Stovall farm in Era, Texas, where I saw the reason behind that beautiful stallion, his
dam, Streamliners Kewpie Doll, who was the model mare of the Shetland Congress in 1948 and
1949. She was a beautiful-headed, tri-colored mare with the highest tailset that I had ever seen. I
begged my parents to buy her, but to no avail. She was in her late teens and brought around
$10,000, which was way out of our budget! One of Kewpie Doll’s daughters and a full sister to
Kewpie Doll’s Oracle, Hillswicke Q P Doll, Grand Champion Mare of the National Shetland
Congress as a yearling in 1952, had topped the sale in Perry, Oklahoma, not once, but twice.
The first time, she was in show shape and had a beautiful foal by her side. I couldn’t believe that
she could have a foal and still look ready to go into the show ring. For those miniature readers who
have never shown Shetlands, show shape meant with a four inch "show hoof" with weighted shoes,
tucked up, and looking like a million!
Fast forward to 1980. Carol, my wife, and our daughter, Lisa, then only six, had just returned
from almost four years of living in New York City. We were back in Texas building a quarter
horse stud farm in Valley View, Texas, thirty miles north of Dallas. I still had a stallion from the
Shetland years who was the smallest that we had ever raised, Greaves Big Un, 31" tall and a
grandson of one of the stallions that we had bought at that Stovall sale around 1960-61. I told my
dad that I wanted to get some miniature mares to breed to Big Un. He told me that his long-time
friend, Jno. W. Norman, in Winters, Texas, still had quite a few Shetlands and he thought he
also had a few miniatures, too. On a trip to West Texas to pick up a quarter horse for my dad, I
decided to swing by Mr. Norman’s Lazy N Stables to see what he had. At this time Mr. Norman
was in his mid-eighties, I think, and was fairly incapacitated. I remember visiting him when I was eight
or nine and riding in his stage coach. It was pulled by six ponies trained by his trainer, Vern Brewer.
It was called the Red, White, and Blue hitch - Two white, two sorrel, and two blue roans!

Anyway, after a nice visit, Mr. Norman called the man who worked for him and told him to take me
out to look at his ponies. He did not want to sell any of the smallest, but he would sell me some of
the "borderline" miniatures if I was interested. When I saw his weanlings, I knew that they were a
special lot. They were much more refined than most of the miniatures that I had seen. Looked
much more like the modern show horses but in miniature! My guide told me that they were all by a
bay stallion that Mr. Norman was using. The name of that stallion was Rowdy. I picked out three
yearlings that I thought were the best along with six mares. When I went back to the house to talk
to Mr. Norman, he said that the three yearlings were not available because he was giving them to a
friend. I later found out that that friend was Vern Brewer, and those three started the Brewer
Family Miniature adventure! By the way, one of those three turned out to be the National Grand
Champion, Rowdy’s Charm, some time later! It turned out that Mr. Norman had persuaded Vern
to come out and look at the horses. Always having an eye for a show horse, Vern had accepted
the gift of the three miniatures and bought three more to go along with them. Vern had never liked
the little Shetlands in the early days because they were so coarse and heavy boned, but these
were an entirely different style. Anyway, I made a deal with him and bought six mares all bred to
Rowdy. After getting home I started doing some investigation and found to my amazement that
the sire of Rowdy was Kewpie’s Sun who was a son of the horse that I had admired as a child:
Kewpie Doll’s Oracle!! I had wanted him as a child, but now I had some of his descendants. In
1984 because of advanced age and failing health, Mr. Norman had a dispersal sale at which time
Rowdy was sold. Vern and Betty Brewer were putting on the sale for their long-time friend and
encouraged Bob and Sandy Erwin of NFC Farm to purchase the 34" stallion to add to their
stallion roster. They bought the 1973 stallion for $5,500 along with two daughters. After the sale
I asked Vern why he didn’t buy Rowdy. He replied that because of Rowdy’s size and Vern’s age
he felt he couldn’t use him. He wanted to breed them down and already had five Rowdy
daughters and one son to start his breeding program.

The rest, as they say is history. That bay stallion sired some of the leading winners in the
AMHA history including, but not limited to:


Lazy N Boogerman
who sold at the NFC Dispersal sale in 1993 for an unprecedented $110,000
and is the winningest stallion in AMHA history being the
1992 National Grand Champion
NFC Rowdy’s Can Do: 1986 National Grand Champion Jr. Gelding

NFC Rowdy’s Supreme:`1987 National Grand Champion Jr. Mare

Rowdy’s Charm: 1987 National Grand Champion Sr. Stallion

Rowdys Surprise: 1988 National Grand Champion Sr. Gelding

Glenn’s Southern Legend: 1989 National Grand Champion Jr. Stallion

NFC Rowdy’s Gem: 1990 National Grand Champion Sr. Mare

Little Man’s Blue Baby Rowdy: 1990 Reserve National Grand Champion Sr. Mare

Runnin Bear’s Classy Comet: 1991 National Grand Champion Jr. Mare
1993 National Grand Champion Sr. Mare

NFC Rowdy’s Bold Tradition: 1990 Reserve National Grand Champion Jr. Gelding
1992 Reserve National Grand Champion Sr. Gelding


Quality will tell and goes on telling through generation after generation. Rowdy died in 1990 at the
age of seventeen, but the show records of his future generations are still being written.
Kewpies Sun
Kewpie Dolls
Oracle
Hillswick Oracle
Silver Crescent
II
Silver Crescent
Lady Sunrise
Bonny Bride
Jolly Boy Polk
Crescent Irene
of Linwood
Streamliners
Kewpie Doll
Streamliner
Radio D
Juanita D
Laura S
Topy Boy S
Cherry S
Toppers Larigo
Starlight
Larigos Topper
King Larigo II
King Larigo
Lady Harum
Marigold III
Radio D
Marigold II
Larigos IInd
Starlight
King Larigo II
King Larigo
Lady Harum
Flora Silver
Silver Crescent
Priscilla
Alman Baby
Doll
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Rowdys Pedigree
Unofficial but believed to be correct -
information is from stud books