Howard Weiss

Howard Weiss

He was inducted into the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame in 1997.

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“Howard Weiss represented the new face of the Association – of folks who had been attracted to Quarter Horses in the pursuit of wholesome, family-oriented activity,” wrote Don Hedgpeth in “They Rode Good Horses.”

Weiss became involved with Quarter Horses through his daughters, who were active in the show ring.  By 1969, he had acquired the stallion Lane’s Super Son, and soon after, he was building a broodmare band that would encompass about one-third racing stock and two-thirds performance mares.

Horses that Weiss owned include Lane’s Super Son, AQHA Champion and Superior halter horse by Super Charge; Nite Watch Chex, 1971 high-point western riding gelding and 1975 world champion in senior reining by King Fritz; and Docs Breeze Bar by Doc’s Doctor, a gray gelding that played the role of Captain Call’s (actor Tommy Lee Jones) mount in the “Lonesome Dove” mini-series.

Weiss became an AQHA Director in 1970.  He chaired the Association’s judges committee and was a member of the youth activities and AJQHA scholarship committees.  He became 37th AQHA president in 1986.

Weiss’s term as AQHA president brought an end to the turbulent debate over the proposed separate racing association.  A racing council was elected to make recommendations to the AQHA Executive Committee regarding the future of Quarter Horse racing.  Also while Weiss was in office, plans were finalized for a television series called “America’s Horse,” which highlights Quarter Horse events around the country.

Weiss served the horse industry in other ways as well.  He served as president for the Pacific Coast Quarter Horse and Valley Quarter Horse associations.  Weiss was a member of the U. C. Davis equine research committee and the California Department of Agriculture Horse Drug Committee.

Weiss was inducted into the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame in 1997.

 

Biography updated as of March 1997.