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    Texas | Column | Stories of the Ark-La-Tex

    The Million Dollar Nag

    by Nolan Maxie
    Nolan Maxie
    The Ark-La-Tex has many things of great worth. High value homes around large cities, classic cars, valuable sports cars, race horses, railroads, prime rural acreage, rich widows, doctors, lawyers, banks and department stores, to name a few. You name it, someone living here in this vastly diversified area will have it.

    This story of a valuable horse caught my eye several years back. It seems a farmer and land-owner neighboring along the railroad tracks somewhere between Texarkana and Tyler, or maybe Sulphur Springs and Paris, had a ‘less-than-desirable’, broken down horse he wanted to get rid of. So he devised a plan where-in the horse would get run over by a freight train and maybe, just maybe he could sell that horse to the railroad.

    So, one night, beyond his control the horse got free and roamed the tracks. It got hit and killed by a fast moving ‘blue-streak’ merchandise train. Later, the owner filed a very high million dollar claim against the railroad. He claimed he had lost a high value quarter-horse, a ‘thorough-bred’ race horse with a good potential of winning millions of dollars at the derby. And he was, holding the railroad responsible for his present and future losses.

    After the railroad engineer on the train reported hitting a horse, the company Claims Agent met with the engineer. He was told, as the train quickly approached the horse that night, the headlight was oscillating back and forth; the horn blowing loudly, and the engineer said, with his bright headlight, he could see the horse from a long way off. It acted so scared, like it wanted very badly to move. The horse jerked and pulled at it’s feet, but seemed really, really too frightened to move; frozen in place.

    Now, the next order of business was to go with camera, find the dead horse and examine it, thoroughly. Like, examine the ‘thorough-bred’ very thoroughly.

    The Claim Agent’s report and photos revealed the horse had large nails driven into all four hoofs. Someone had nailed the poor horse’s feet to the cross-ties on the track so that it couldn’t move and would surely be hit and killed.

    No wonder the poor nag was jerking, jumping and trying to pull free, but couldn’t move. Claim denied..... And the owner was later charged with filing a false claim and ‘Cruelty To An Animal’.

    © Nolan Maxie
    "Stories of the Ark-La-Tex"
    May 1, 2011 Column
    piddlinacres@consolidated.net

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    This page last modified: May 1, 2011