When I write about the model horse hobby, I want to help collectors have a better understanding of how the model horses we all enjoy are sometimes directly connected to real horses known to the designer of the model horse figurines.
Some collectors have identified "Nancy" and "Tony" as Thoroughbreds or horses of unknown breed, but the Hagen-Renaker factory's handwritten Mold Book identifies them as Morgans.
I believe they are Morgans, because Monrovia/Duarte, California horse rancher Merle Little's older daughter, Marlene, told me that her own Hagen-Renaker "Nancy" model was based on her father's Morgan mare, Betty Joaquin. I can place Maureen at Merle's El Rancho Poco in Monrovia, California -- the home of Hagen-Renaker at the time, too -- in 1953, when Merle's children still lived at home. They remember seeing Maureen in the pasture with her art supplies.
Merle kept many photographs of Betty Joaquin. When Marlene passed away, she left her father's "horse stuff" to me.
Betty Joaquin and her person, Merle Little |
This first-person testimony, and the notation in the Mold Book that "Nancy" and "Tony" were Morgans, is borne out by photographs of Betty Joaquin and her 1953 foal. Marlene said that she called him "Tuffy Morgan," but her father called him by another name (she didn't say what).
They also show how good Maureen was at capturing the body language of a mare with a very young foal at her side.
There's other evidence. Back in 2013, many of Maureen Love's original sketches of horses were sold by her heirs on eBay. Ed Alcorn archived the eBay photos on his Hagen-Renaker Online Museum website. At least one of them appears to show Betty Joaquin and a foal.
I believe that it's at least plausible that Betty Joaquin and her foal known as "Tuffy Morgan" inspired the Hagen-Renaker "Nancy" and "Tony" Morgans.
Certain images in this post are provided under the Fair Use provision in Section 107 of the United States Copyright Act. "Fair Use" specifically allows for the use of copyrighted materials for educational purposes only.
___________________________________________
You can see the Hagen-Renaker Mold Book on Hagen-Renaker historian Nancy Kelly's website:
https://ketain.com/hagen-renaker-mold-book/
You can see Betty Joaquin's pedigree here:
All Breed Pedigree, above, says she was a silver dapple, but her registration papers say she was dun.
And this ad in Western Livestock Journal, from 1943, shows that her previous owner described her as "chocolate brown, with a white mane and tail."