Harry Payne Whitney

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Harry Payne Whitney

Birthdate:
Birthplace: New York, New York County, New York, United States
Death: October 26, 1930 (58)
Portland, Cumberland County, Maine, United States
Place of Burial: 4199 Webster Avenue, The Bronx, Bronx County, New York, 10470, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of William Collins Whitney, U.S Secretary of the Navy and Flora Whitney
Husband of Gertrude Whitney
Father of Flora Payne Whitney; Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney and Barbara "Barbie" Headley
Brother of Pauline Payne Paget; Payne Whitney; Dorothy Payne Straight and Oliver Whitney
Half brother of Flora Payne Whitney

Occupation: American businessman, thoroughbred horsebreeder, and member of the prominent Whitney family
Managed by: Ric Dickinson, Geni Curator
Last Updated:

About Harry Payne Whitney

Harry Payne Whitney

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/1100/harry-payne-whitney

Whitney was an American businessman, thoroughbred horsebreeder, and member of the prominent Whitney family.

Born in New York City, he was the eldest son of the very wealthy businessman and United States Secretary of the Navy, William C. Whitney and brother to William Payne Whitney.

Harry Payne Whitney was sent to study at Groton School in Groton, Massachusetts then attended Yale University, graduating with a law degree in 1894. He was a member of the Skull and Bones.

He married Gertrude Vanderbilt with whom he had three children: Flora Payne Whitney, Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney (a founder of Pan American Airways) and Barbara Whitney.

An avid sportman, he was a ten-goal polo player. His love of the sport was inherited from his father who had been involved with polo when it was first organized in the United States in 1876 by James Gordon Bennett, Jr.. H. P. Whitney organized the U. S. polo team that beat England in 1909. As well, he was a board member of the Montauk Yacht Club and competed with his yacht "Vanitie" in the America's Cup. Whitney also served on the board of directors of the Long Island Motor Parkway, built by his wife's cousin, William Kissam Vanderbilt II.

Harry Payne Whitney was a major figure in thoroughbred horse racing. He owned a large stable and in 1915 established a horse breeding farm in Lexington, Kentucky where he developed the American polo pony by breeding American Quarter Horse stallions with his thoroughbred mares. He was thoroughbred racing's leading owner of the year in the United States on eight occasions and the breeder of almost two hundred stakes race winners. His Kentucky-bred horse Whisk Broom II raced in England then at age six came back to the U.S. where he won the New York Handicap Triple.

Whitney had nineteen horses who ran in the Kentucky Derby, winning it the first time in 1915 with Regret, the first filly ever to capture the race. Regret went on to earn Horse of the Year honors and was named to the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame. Whitney won the Kentucky Derby for the second time in 1927 with the colt, Whiskery. His record of six wins in the Preakness Stakes stood as the most by any breeder until 1968 when Calumet Farm broke the record. Whitney's colt, Burgomaster, won the Belmont Stakes and also received Horse of the Year honors. Amongst many, Whitney's breeding operation produced Equipoise and Johren.

Whitney's stable won the following prestigious U.S. Triple Crown races:

Kentucky Derby:

1915 : Regret (voted Horse of the Year)

1927 : Whiskery

Preakness Stakes:

1908 : Royal Tourist

1913 : Buskin

1914 : Holiday

1921 : Broomspun

1927 : Bostonian

1928 : Victorian

Belmont Stakes:

1905 : Tanya (filly)

1906 : Burgomaster (voted Horse of the Year)

1913 : Prince Eugene

1918 : Johren

His Lexington, Kentucky stud farm was passed on to his son, C.V. Whitney, who owned it until 1989 when it became part of Gainesway Farm.

The benefactor to many organizations, in 1920 H. P. Whitney financed the Whitney Expedition of the American Museum of Natural History, Rollo Beck's major zoological expedition that sent teams of scientists and naturalists to undertake botanical research and to study the bird population of several thousand islands in the Pacific Ocean.

The Whitney Collection of Sporting Art was donated in his memory to the Yale University Art Gallery.

Harry Whitney died in 1930 at age fifty-eight. He and his wife are interred in the Woodlawn Cemetery, The Bronx.

His Lexington, Kentucky stud farm was passed on to his son, C.V. Whitney, who owned it until 1989 when it became part of Gainesway Farm.

Sportsman. The son of businessman William Collins Whitney, he established a horse breeding farm in Kentucky that produced twelve champion horses from 1905 to 1928.

Family links:

Parents:
 William Collins Whitney (1841 - 1904)
 Flora Payne Whitney (1842 - 1893)

Spouse:

 Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney (1875 - 1942)*

Children:

 Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney (1899 - 1992)*

Siblings:

 Harry Payne Whitney (1872 - 1930)
 Pauline Payne Whitney (1874 - 1916)*
 Payne Whitney (1876 - 1927)*
 Dorothy Payne Whitney Elmhirst (1887 - 1968)*

Burial: Woodlawn Cemetery Bronx Bronx County New York, USA

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Harry Payne Whitney's Timeline

1872
April 29, 1872
New York, New York County, New York, United States
1897
July 27, 1897
New York, New York, United States
1899
February 20, 1899
Old Westbury, Nassau County, New York, United States
1903
March 20, 1903
New City, Rockland County, New York, United States
1930
October 26, 1930
Age 58
Portland, Cumberland County, Maine, United States
????
Woodlawn Cemetery, 4199 Webster Avenue, The Bronx, Bronx County, New York, 10470, United States