Chenery Brothers
Randolph Macon
Secretariat Wore Azure & Argent – Chenery brothers incorporated Phi Delta Theta into Secretariat's colors
Secretariat Wore Azure & Argent?
Written By Sean Wagner, Associate Executive Vice President
Phi Delta Theta’s azure and argent will race across the big screen in movie theatres when the film Secretariat starring Diane Lane and John Malkovich and produced by Walt Disney Studios is released this October.
The film tells the story of Penny Chenery, the daughter of Christopher Chenery, Washington and Lee 1909,
owner of Virginia-based Meadow Stables who takes the reins from her
father after he falls ill in the early 1970s – despite her lack of
horse-racing knowledge. Thanks to the help of veteran horse trainer
Lucien Laurin, Chenery navigates the male-dominated sport and produces
the first U.S. Triple Crown winner in 25 years. The film was inspired
by an incredible true story and suggested by William Nack’s book Secretariat: The Making of a Champion.
While the story of Secretariat is familiar to many as he was an icon in the 1970’s, gracing the cover of such publications as Time, Newsweek, and Sports Illustrated, many don’t know the reason for his trademark colors of blue and white.
Brother Christopher Chenery was born and raised in Ashland, Virginia and
attended both Randolph Macon and Washington and Lee College, where he
was initiated into Phi Delta Theta and graduated in 1909 with a Bachelor
of Science in Engineering. After serving with the United States Army
Corps of Engineers in World War I and establishing the Chenery
Corporation, he purchased the Meadow Stables in 1932 near his childhood
home in Virginia.
According to Alan Chenery, Jr., Randolph Macon ’50,
Christopher’s nephew, not long after the stable was purchased the
colors were to be selected. Christopher was a proud Phi Delt and came
from a family of Phis so when he was to make this decision he gathered
his two fellow Phis,“blood brothers” and ranch “side advisers” Alan Sr.
and William who were Phis from the Virginia Gamma Chapter at Randolph
Macon. The Brothers Chenery decided that the horses from Meadow Stables
would wear the same colors of their beloved Fraternity, blue and white.
From then on, all horses including the 1950 Horse of the Year, Hill
Prince, and the storied stallion Secretariat wore those colors.
Phi Delta Theta has yet another Triple Crown Connection as the 1946
Triple Crown Winner, Assault, was foaled at the King Ranch in Texas, a
farm that primarily raised cattle. The Triple Crown Ranch was owned and
operated by King Ranch. Tio Kleberg, Texas Tech ’69, Trustee
Emeritus of the Phi Delta Theta Foundation, is the great grandson of its
founder, Richard King, and continues to serve on the King Ranch’s board
of directors.
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