A Look Back -- Jerry person
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Jerry Person
The other day a lady stopped into the Newland House and wanted to know
what we knew about “Serano, the wonder horse” stabled at Beach Boulevard
and Talbert Avenue many years ago. That got me to thinking of how our
four-footed friends have contributed to our area’s rich history.
This week our story deals with a famous horse who was once owned by
royalty and is linked to the history of our neighboring town of Fountain
Valley.
The Plavan family goes back a long way in Fountain Valley’s history
and we are going to look at Taj Akbar, a royal stallion that roamed the
Urban H. Plavan pastures.
Our blue-blooded bay came into this world in 1933 from a royal line of
horses. He was sired by Fairway-Taj Shirin by way of Gainsborough and he
was owned by the Aga Khan when he lived in England.
Taj’s early years were happy years romping in the English countryside.
When Taj was three the Aga Khan ran him in the 1936 Epson Derby in
England along with his stablemate Mahmoud.
Mahmoud was the Khan’s favorite and legend has it that the Khan gave
instructions to his jockeys that Taj Akbar was not to pass his favorite
gray, Mahmoud.
During the race Taj kept up with his stablemate and in the end came in
second by a head to Mahmoud.
Some racing people at the time felt that Taj Akbad could have won that
race. But in other races Taj went on to distinguish himself.
When Taj was four the Aga Khan sold him to Major Hartmann Pauly, an
Austrian horseman, for breeding on Pauly’s farm in France.
But as a stud Taj’s career was to be cut short by the opening days of
World War II. When Hitler’s army invaded France, Pauly feared that the
Nazis would seize Taj and the rest of his horses as their “prisoners of
war” and so under the Nazis’ very noses Pauly had Taj Akbar secretly
taken out of France to Austria to live.
Taj would remain in Austria during most of the war, but as the
Russians pushed toward Taj’s home, Pauly had Taj and his stablemates
removed to a safer place. He feared that the Russians would either take
or kill the horses if they found them.
The Russians never found Taj but the American Army did and Taj was
seized by an American cavalry officer. Taj was shipped off to America by
Colonel Fred L. Hamilton of the U.S. Army.
Hamilton had hoped that Taj and his other “horse fugitives” would be
admitted into the American Stud Book. Hamilton needed the Jockey Club to
certify the blood lines of these animals. But the Jockey Club would not
give the necessary papers to Hamilton.
But Hamilton became more insistent and even threatened to bring the
Congress in to help him.
If Taj had his papers he would have made a lot of money for Hamilton,
but as it were Taj and his stablemates were just plain horses.
Enter again Major Pauly, who had fled his Nazi-occupied Austria for
America and was now claiming his horse.
During this time Taj went to live on the Rex Ellsworth ranch for a
couple of years while ownership was straightened out.
On the Ellsworth ranch Taj would be bred with several of Ellsworth’s
mares. While there he was mated with a 2-year-old filly named Naiad. But
Naiad was ultimately sold and Taj was left alone.
In April 1953 Urban Plavan bought Taj and brought him to live on his
ranch at 19501 Cannery St. (now Magnolia Street) in Fountain Valley to
live.
In May of that year the Jockey Club finally accepted Taj Akbar to be
added to its list and so after so many years Taj was now registered.
But when Taj first arrived at the Plavan racing stables he found his
mate Naiad and the two would roam the Plavan’s pastures with their new
offspring.
And so we end this story with the royal couple in their happy home in
Fountain Valley and becoming part of this town’s rich history.
* JERRY PERSON is a local historian and longtime Huntington Beach
resident. If you have ideas for future columns, write him at P.O. Box
7182, Huntington Beach, CA 92615.
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