Seabiscuit |
Article
In the 1930s, impoverished state governments returned to the potential honey pot of horse racing to increase revenues.
Seabiscuit |
Article
Woolf earned his spurs riding in Montana and soon became a phenomenon in the minor leagues of racing.
Seabiscuit |
Article
For as much attention as Seabiscuit received, the horse was not considered the fastest for most of his career. That distinction went to War Admiral.
Seabiscuit |
Article
Again and again, Tom Smith took ordinary horses and made them winners.
Seabiscuit |
Article
Jockey Red Pollard fell in love with his private nurse, Agnes Conlon, who cared for him at the hospital.Â
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Seabiscuit |
Article
By the time Pollard was in his early teens, he had decided that he wanted to be a jockey.
Seabiscuit |
Article
Hoping for a chance to fight in the the Spanish-American War, Howard enlisted in the cavalry and became a skilled horseman.
Seabiscuit |
Article
From 1936 to 1940, Americans thronged to racetracks to watch the small, ungainly racehorse become a champion.
Seabiscuit |
Article
Best-selling author Laura Hillenbrand describes the people closest to Seabiscuit.
Seabiscuit |
Timeline
Learn about American horse racing from 1750 through the 20th century.
Tupperware! |
Trailer
Catch a glimpse of this funny, probing program that re-examines assumptions about American culture in the 1950s.
Tupperware! |
Image Gallery
Take a tour of Earl Tupper's invention notebooks.