FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact:
Marty Bauman, (508) 698-6810, uset.pr@verizon.net
USEF Mourns Passing of
Celebrated Horseman Billy Haggard Gladstone, NJJanuary
8, 2004U.S. Equestrian (USEF) mourns the passing of William D. Billy
Haggard, one of the nations notable horsemen, who passed away on January
5, 2004. Haggard is survived by his wife, Janet; two sons, William D.
Haggard, IV, and Edward Haggard; and a brother, John Haggard;
as well as three grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Despite the
fact that he never had any formal training, Haggard continually earned the right
to compete at the highest levels of international competition. He began his equestrian
career in steeplechasing and was the leading amateur steeplechase rider in 1957.
Afterward, Haggard shifted to show hunters and later to eventing. Haggard
was best known for his success aboard Bold Minstrel, the only horse ever
to represent the United States at the World Championship level in two different
disciplines. Early on, Haggard rode Bold Minstrel in the hunter ring at many shows,
earning the Reserve Championship in the conformation division at the National
Horse Show. After changing disciplines, Haggard rode Bold Minstrel in two
consecutive Pan American Games, earning the eventing team Silver Medal
in 1959 and the team Gold in 1963. In 1964, he loaned Bold Minstrel
to fellow eventer Mike Plumb who piloted him to the team Silver Medal
in the Olympic Games in Tokyo. Later on, under Haggards ownership,
the wonderfully versatile Bold Minstrel began to train in show jumping with William
Steinkraus in the saddle. Steinkraus and Bold Minstrel went on to win the
team Silver in the 1967 Pan American Games in Winnipeg. The pair competed
in the show jumping World Championships in 1970, rode on several winning Nations
Cup teams, and had numerous puissance wins at many shows, including the
National Horse Show in Madison Square Garden. Haggard also owned
and lent other talented mounts to members of the U.S. show jumping team. Steinkraus
rode Haggards Mainspring to a team Silver Medal in the 1972 Olympics
in Munich, and Frank Chapot teamed with Mainspring to win the
individual Bronze Medal at the World Championships in Hickstead in 1974. Mainspring
was on several winning Nations Cup teams with both Steinkraus and Chapot,
and he was Chapots mount when he won the King George V Gold Cup in England
in 1974. In 1996, a tragic accident in the warm-up ring left Haggard
paralyzed, but his cheerful and optimistic spirit never wavered. He cherished
the memories of the horses he had loved throughout his lifetime and the privilege
he had known in sharing them with others. Memorials in honor of Billy Haggard
may be sent to the Hitchcock Foundation in Aiken, SC, or the United
States Equestrian Foundation, PO Box 355, Gladstone, NJ 07934.
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