Imperatrice


Imperatrice was an American Thoroughbred racehorse and broodmare. She was the dam of Somethingroyal and second dam of the 1973 U.S. Triple Crown champion and Hall of Fame inductee Secretariat.
A bay mare, Imperatrice was bred in New Jersey by William H. LaBoyteaux, president of Johnson & Higgins. He died in 1947 and his horses were all sold by the executors of the LaBoyteaux Estate. Imperatrice was purchased for $30,000 by Christopher Chenery's and spent the remainder of her life at his Meadow Stud in Virginia. Trained for LaBoyteaux by George M. Odom, she raced 31 times with 11 wins, 7 shows, and 2 places. Some of her winning efforts included the New England Oaks, New Rochelle Handicap, the Test Stakes, and the Fall Highweight Handicap.

She was pensioned after being reported barren in 1962. Imperatrice lived to the age of 34 before being euthanized due to age-related urinal and digestive complications. She was the dam of winners Imperial Hill, Scattered, Speedwell, Squared Away2 and was the third dam of successful New York sire Cure the Blues. Her daughter Scattered also lived nearly as long.

Influence

Imperatrice's influence is not limited only to Thoroughbreds, but also extends to Quarter Horses as well, as Imperatrice is the fourth dam of Quarter Horse Dash For Cash through daughter Scattered.
Imperatrice is considered to be a Reines-de-Course.