"Top Flight" 1934 by Franklin B. Voss (SOLD)

Classic colour plate #10 limited edition #243/ 260 by F(ranklin) B Voss (1880-1953) pencil signed (LL) depicting Mr C.V. Whitney's 'Top Flight' published by at the Sign of the Gosden Head, New York, 1934 from the estate of Cynthia Phipps (1945-2007) of Old Westbury, LI

Print Sz: 13 1/2"H x 15 1/4"W

Frame Sz: 22"H x 24"W

VG

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Top Flight (April 15, 1929 – 1949) was an American U.S. Hall of Fame Thoroughbred racehorse. She was the leading American filly of her generation at two and three years of age.

Background
Bred in Kentucky by the very prominent horseman Harry Payne Whitney, she was a daughter of the French stakes winner Dis Donc, a son of the French Champion Sire Sardanapale. She was out of the mare Flyatit, a daughter of U.S. Racing Hall of Fame inductee Peter Pan.

Racing career
Raced under the colors of Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney, who had inherited Top Flight on his father's death in 1930, at age two the filly went undefeated in her seven starts and earned a record $219,000. Even a muddy track couldn't stop her from winning June's Clover Stakes, and she also beat top colts in the prestigious Futurity Stakes at New York's Belmont Park and the Pimlico Futurity at Laurel Park Racecourse in Laurel, Maryland. Top Flight's performances earned her 1931 American Champion Two-Year-Old Filly honors.

Racing at age three, she won five of her nine starts, with three of her losses coming against males. After finishing fourth in the Potomac Handicap, she was retired as the all-time money earning filly or mare in American racing history. Top Flight was retrospectively named American Champion Three-Year-Old Filly.


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